[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 90 (Wednesday, June 16, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4953-S4954]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MISSED OPPORTUNITY
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, all of us watched the President's
remarks last night. It is rare for a President to make a speech from
the Oval Office. President Reagan did it with the Challenger tragedy.
President George W. Bush, spoke about 9/11. I thought the President was
right to focus on what the government is doing to clean up the oil
spill, and what we are doing to help those who are hurt. I think he
missed an opportunity, though, in terms of looking to the energy
future.
He mentioned the climate bill. Of course that is House passed cap-
and-trade bill which doesn't have enough support to pass the Senate. He
mentioned windmills and solar panels, which have nothing to do with
reducing our dependence on foreign oil. I thought the missed
opportunity was the President could have announced a mini-Manhattan
Project to reduce our dependence on foreign oil by electrifying half
our cars and trucks, which we could do without building any new
powerplants by plugging them in at night. The President is in favor of
that. Secretary Chu is a leader in it. In a bipartisan way we support
that goal. All 41 Republican Senators support electrifying our cars and
trucks. Senator Dorgan, Senator Merkley, and I support legislation for
that. He could have talked about that.
A second part of the clean energy future could have been creating the
environment to build 100 new nuclear power plants. The President has
taken some impressive steps to create a better environment for nuclear
power. All 41 Republican Senators support that. That would be for clean
electricity, not for fuel, but it would be a clean energy future.
Third, the President could have focused on mini-Manhattan Projects
for energy research and development, such as reducing the cost of solar
power by a factor of 4; recapturing carbon from coal plants; trying to
invent a 500-mile battery, which would have made sure that we electrify
a significant part of our cars and trucks in America; recycling used
nuclear fuel; and biofuels--all 41 Republican Senators support the goal
of doubling energy research and development. So does the President. So
those are three steps toward clean energy independence that we agree
on.
He mentioned windmills and solar panels, which have nothing to do
with reducing our dependence on foreign oil--those are for electricity,
not fuel. They are puny amounts of electricity, in any event. If he
would stick with the things that we and he agree on, he could have used
that speech for an important step forward for our country. In that
sense, I think it was a missed opportunity.
This past weekend the President sent a letter to Congress urging us
to approve $50 billion in emergency aid to State and local governments.
I want to speak about that today from the vantage point I have as a
former Governor and former U.S. Secretary of Education. According to
the Wall Street Journal on Monday, the letter said budget cuts at State
and local levels were leading to massive layoffs of teachers,
policemen, and firefighters.
The two points I want to make are that, No. 1, we here in
Washington--I tried not to, but the majority did--created this
financial cliff over which the States are about to run. And, No. 2,
when it comes to the question of $23 billion for teachers, I think we
need to ask, where is the money going to go? And from whose
schoolchildren are we going to borrow it? Because right now we do not
have extra money lying around in Washington, DC. We have a great big
problem with spending and debt.
Let me start with what I said first, which is that we in Washington
have created this financial cliff over which State Governors are
running. As we were debating the health care bill I said, not really in
jest, that everybody who votes for it ought to be forced to go home and
serve as Governor of their State under the new rules.
Take Tennessee, for example. We were very fortunate that our State
was one of the two winners in the Race to the Top education plan. Give
credit to the Governor and teachers in the State. Tennessee will get a
half billion dollars as a result of it. Yet, according to our Governor,
the health care bill will take away more than twice as much during the
same period of time by imposing $1.1 billion in new Medicaid costs on
the State between 2014 and 2019. So we are causing problems for the
State that caused the layoffs.
Let me not ask you to take my word for it. Here is a January op-ed
from the Wall Street Journal by the Democratic Lieutenant Governor of
New York, Mr. Ravitch, who says the Federal stimulus, which Congress
passed at the beginning of 2009:
. . . has provided significant budget relief to the states. .
. .
He approved of that.
but this relief is temporary and makes it harder for States
to cut expenditures. In major areas such as transportation,
education and health care, stimulus funds come with strings
attached. These strings prevent States from substituting
federal money for state funds, require states to spend
minimum amounts of their own funds, and prevent states from
tightening eligibility standards for benefits.
Lieutenant Governor Ravitch goes on to say:
Because of these requirements, states, instead of cutting
spending in transportation, education and health care, have
been forced to keep most of their expenditures at previous
levels. . . .
We did that. Congress did that.
. . . and use federal funds only as supplements. The net
result is this: The federal stimulus has led States to
increase overall spending in these core areas, which in
effect has only raised the height of the cliff from which
state spending will fall if stimulus funds evaporate.
That is the Lieutenant Governor of New York talking about the
evaporation of stimulus funds which comes
[[Page S4954]]
at the end of this year and he is saying we made it harder for States
to pay their bills. At the time the stimulus package was passed,
everyone said it was one-time funding. All of us knew that Medicaid
costs were overwhelming the States. Still, Congress went ahead--the
majority, in any event--and increased the federal match for Medicaid,
and required States not to change eligibility requirements. Thus they
created this financial cliff at the end of the year which will cause
the States' share for Medicaid spending to increase from an average of
34 percent to 43 percent, a net increase of $39 billion in costs for
2011. We are getting close to the $50 billion we are being asked to
bail States out for.
Let me say a word about teacher salaries. The first question is,
where is the rest of the money going to go? The request, as it has been
talked about, says this will save 100,000, maybe 300,000 teacher jobs.
We are supposed to appropriate $23 billion for that purpose.
At $100,000 that works out to about $230,000 per teacher job saved.
If we are saving 300,000 teacher jobs with that $23 billion, that works
out to $76,667 per teacher job saved. The average national teacher's
salary is $46,752. Where does the rest of the money go?
At the beginning of this administration there was a huge increase in
education funds; $97 billion over 2 years for elementary and secondary
education and $53.6 billion for the State Fiscal Stabilization fund. We
were assured this was one-time funding. In April 2009, the Department
of Education itself said in its guidance to the States on how to spend
the money:
The [funds are] expected to be a one-time infusion of
substantial new resources. These funds should be invested in
ways that do not result in unsustainable continuing
commitments after the funding expires.
What we could have said is, we don't have any more money either,
States. We just print it up here. So don't expect us to send you
anymore.
The U.S. Department of Education helpfully suggested what some of
those one-time expenditures might be--making improvements in teacher
effectiveness; establishing pre-K-to-college-and-career data systems;
making progress toward rigorous college- and career-ready standards;
providing targeted, selective support; and effective interventions for
the lowest performing schools. In other words, the States and schools
were told: Don't spend this money on continuing programs. Spend it
once.
Our Governor, a Democratic Governor in Tennessee, got the message.
Governor Bredesen said in his State of the Union Address in 2009:
Please let me make it clear that no proposed version of the
stimulus is any panacea or silver bullet; substantial cuts
are still needed under any circumstances. Furthermore, it is
vital to remember that this stimulus money is one-time
funding.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The 10 minutes of the Senator has
expired.
Mr. ALEXANDER. I thank the Chair. I see none of my colleagues here.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Senator Barrasso from Wyoming is
waiting.
Mr. ALEXANDER. I ask for another 60 seconds to conclude my remarks. I
thank the Chair.
When we think about the funding, we need to remember the best things
for us to do. They are to stop imposing health care mandates on States,
which make it impossible for them to pay their bills; and to properly
support public education, especially public higher education, which is
going to take a terrible blow because of the passage of the health care
bill. Thanks to the health care bill, tuition payments for students are
going to rise.
Second, we should recognize that the stimulus money passed last year
was one-time funding. We created this financial cliff and now we have
an unprecedented level of debt in the Federal Government. We do not
have $23 billion lying around to send to the States.
Whether we are sending $230,000 per teaching job, $76,000 per
teaching job, or scaling it back and saying we are only going to send
the national average, which is $46,000, the question still remains:
From whose grandchildren will we borrow the money?
We need to reduce the growth of the Federal debt. We should not be
bailing out States with another $50 billion.
I thank the Senator from Wyoming and I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Wyoming is
recognized.
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, could you please inform me how much time
is remaining in morning business?
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. There is 17 minutes on the
Republican side.
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