[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 94 (Tuesday, June 22, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H4655]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CAPRICIOUS, ARBITRARY, PUNITIVE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Poe) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, ``capricious, arbitrary, and
punitive.'' Those are the words of a Federal judge today in ruling
about the moratorium for offshore drilling. The Federal judge said that
the administration's decision to ban offshore drilling in the deepwater
was capricious, arbitrary, and punitive--therefore, illegal. And the
Federal judge granted an injunction by the hardworking folks in the
gulf States to stop the moratorium because of the detrimental impact it
would have.
You see, Mr. Speaker, 150,000 people would lose their jobs if that
moratorium continued. There are 3,900 wells in the gulf. Those 3,900
wells produce 31 percent of the Nation's domestic oil and 11 percent of
our natural gas. In the deepwater area, we receive 17 percent of the
Nation's domestic crude oil from that deepwater drilling. So those
affected parties--by the arbitrary, capricious, and punitive ban of the
Federal Government--decided to sue, and a Federal judge ruled that the
administration's moratorium was improper, granted an injunction by the
affected parties, and allowed them to now drill in deepwater. The
Federal judge said that the people that sued the oil-related industries
would suffer irreparable harm if this ban were to continue. The
government's response was, Well, their losses would be trivial. The
Federal judge didn't buy their argument.
Also, before a preliminary injunction can be granted, Mr. Speaker--
these are rare animals--what happens is, someone goes to court and says
that because they're going to be hurt so bad, the Federal judge has to
stop somebody's action. In this case, our own government's action. And
also, the Federal judge said, probably if there were a trial, the
plaintiffs--those suing the Federal Government--would prevail on the
merits and win in a jury trial. Granted the injunction because the harm
done to the gulf, to the related industries, to the loss of jobs were
massive and irreparable. When the Federal judge tried to hear what the
Federal Government said about banning offshore drilling, the judge
said, ``The government's explanation abuses reason and common sense.''
In other words, there was no reason, there is no common sense in the
almighty Federal Government coming in and banning deepwater drilling in
the Gulf of Mexico. It made no sense. Mr. Speaker, it makes no sense to
ban the whole deepwater drilling because of the actions of BP.
Recently in Texas, we had a BP refinery explode. People were killed.
Hundreds were hurt. But we didn't close all the refineries in the
United States because of one accident. It wouldn't make sense. It
defies reason and common sense. When a plane crashes and people die,
that's horrible, but we don't close down the airline industry for 6
months because the Federal Government wants to eventually get around to
finding out what happened.
So the Federal judge who ruled in this case did so properly, and it
was important for him to do so to prevent people from losing jobs. Jobs
that were lost or would be lost because of the Federal government's
action, not because of BP's action. So what's the Federal Government
going to do about this? They're going to appeal. They don't like the
ruling, so they want to appeal to the Fifth Circuit to try to overrule
this judge. Why didn't the Federal Government just follow the law and
allow deepwater drilling and not destroy the economy of the whole
country because of arrogance and because of the lack of reason and
common sense?
So, Mr. Speaker, the disaster in the gulf continues to be the second
disaster in the gulf for the lack of leadership. We still don't have a
Federal plan. We don't know what the Federal Government's response is.
It seems like, to me, FEMA is in charge of all of this because the
results are always delay, delay, delay, but let's punish deepwater
drilling.
The Federal judge's rules will be upheld. The Federal Government
needs to get with the program, understand there's a sense of urgency,
find out what caused this problem, not let it happen again, clean up
the mess, and move on down the road. Meanwhile, follow the law. Don't
destroy the jobs in the Gulf Coast, and the Federal Government needs to
get out of the way and let us continue safely to drill offshore and
provide the energy needs of this country and also provide good working
jobs for Americans. Otherwise, these jobs will leave the country, go to
Brazil and Indonesia, and never return.
And that's just the way it is.
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