[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 118 (Thursday, August 5, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6871-S6872]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO MARK KOSTER
Mr. BURR. Mr. President, today I wish to honor and recognize Mark
Koster. This month, the Senate will bid farewell to one of the unsung
heroes of this body. Mark, an associate counsel in the Office of Senate
Legislative Counsel, is retiring and concluding his career on Capitol
Hill.
Over the last two decades, there is hardly a major Federal education
law that doesnt have Marks imprint. Marks areas of focus have included
higher education, special education, career and technical education,
literacy, elementary and secondary education, and a number of early
education programs. Mark has more bipartisan legislative
accomplishments than many Members of Congress.
Mark has made certain our ideas are drafted into legislation with
technical precision, and his dedication to his
[[Page S6872]]
work over the past two decades exemplifies true professionalism. Mark
has treated every legislative initiative equally, no matter if he was
drafting a relatively small amendment or a major reauthorization
proposal for the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the Higher
Education Act, or the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
Senators and their staffs all knew that when one saw Marks legislative
signature, ``KOS,'' atop a document that the draft that had emerged
from legislative counsel was in perfect technical shape and it was now
up to us, as Members of the Senate, only to argue the draft's merits
and relevance, not the format.
As a member of the Senate HELP Committee, I am proud and honored to
say that we, both present and former committee members, have considered
Mark our staff, even though he has never been on the HELP Committee's
payroll. Mark has been one of our cornerstones because he has always
treated every HELP member and staffer with the greatest respect.
Additionally, Mark has demonstrated a rather large dose of patience in
dealing with time constraints, deadlines, and all the various
personalities that traverse the Halls of the Senate.
Although those of us who are members of the HELP Committee have
consumed most of Marks time during his years as legislative counsel,
Mark has always been of great assistance to every other Senate office
that has needed aid in drafting education-related issues. All of us,
Republican, Democrat, and Independent, have been lucky to have had Mark
Koster on our side.
Mark, we thank you for your service and dedication. The HELP
Committee will always consider you both an honorary member and a part
of our family. We and the entire Federal education lawmaking process
will miss you. May your next chapter in life be even more successful
and more rewarding than the one that is coming to a conclusion. We wish
you, your lovely wife, Kathy, and your two children the very best.
____________________