[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 13 (Monday, January 31, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S355]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO CONGRESSIONAL STAFF
Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, this is the second week of the 112th
Congress. I welcome back the Presiding Officer. I have spent many a
Monday afternoon presiding over this Chamber as a new Member in my
first 2 years. While they are not here, I welcome my new colleagues in
the Senate and, obviously, our new colleagues in the House.
We still have an enormous number of challenges facing us as a
country, and I look forward to working with Members in both bodies to
make sure we meet these challenges in a bipartisan way.
Last year, I took up the banner that had actually been started by the
Presiding Officer's colleague who preceded him in this Chamber, and
that was the effort of honoring, on a regular basis, exemplary Federal
employees right here on the Senate floor. It is a tradition that was
begun by Senator Ted Kaufman.
I want to start this new 112th Congress with what will be a weekly
occurrence where I will come forward and recognize Federal employees
who play an extraordinarily important role in our country. I have been
blessed to have had a great number of those employees in the
Commonwealth of Virginia, as the occupant of the Chair has been in
Delaware.
Today, I thought I would actually rise on no specific employee but to
honor congressional staff on Capitol Hill and in the many congressional
districts across the country. There are nearly 6,000 Federal employees
in the Senate, and nearly 10,000 serve in the House of Representatives.
I am referring to the individuals who sort the mail, the clerks who sit
before you in the presiding chair, the folks who manage the Chamber day
in and day out, and the Capitol Police, who do an incredibly important
job of making sure we are able to work in a safe environment. I am also
referring to those folks who work directly for us as Members of
Congress. They work their hearts out for us. Beatriz is here with me
today. They work long hours and get little attention. Clearly, they
impact the lives of millions of Americans every day.
I know a little about this firsthand because I started my career in
politics as a staff member for then-Congressman Chris Dodd. I did
manage to get him lost a number of times when I drove him around his
district in eastern Connecticut. That experience taught me how
dedicated the congressional staff is and that they are truly public
servants and are instrumental to the democratic process that takes
place on the floor of the Senate and on the floor of the House.
Congressional staff help Members of Congress draft and analyze
legislation. They respond to literally thousands of letters, phone
calls, and e-mails on a regular basis. More often than not, they are
out in the district or back at home when we are in Washington.
I know my State staff has helped Virginians with securing adoptions,
reuniting families through our immigration casework, and simply helping
countless Virginia families navigate the complex bureaucracy that we
know as the Federal Government.
Congressional staff also help us plan events that bring us closer to
those we represent so we can continue to hear their views or complaints
as we try to communicate our agenda.
I want to take a special moment--and we did this as a body last
week--to pay tribute to those who were lost in the horrible shooting in
Tucson. It is important to remember as we pray for the recovery of
Congresswoman Giffords that we recall as well a member of her staff,
Gabe Zimmerman, who was Congresswoman Giffords' director of community
outreach. Gabe was one of the victims of that mass shooting. He was
simply doing his job organizing ``Congress On Your Corner'' for the
Congresswoman to make sure the folks who hired her, the people of
Arizona, had a chance to see her firsthand and express their views.
I want to make sure we also recognize and continue to keep in our
prayers Pamela Simon and Ronald Barber who were injured on that day and
are in the process of making their recovery.
As we keep in mind that tragedy, I think it is important that we
recall not only are those of us who are directly hired sometimes put in
harm's way by this job, but there are literally thousands of
particularly young people who work for us day in and day out without a
lot of recognition who are public servants as well. As we saw with the
tragedy a month or so ago in Tucson, they sometimes give the greatest
devotion of service as well.
I hope my colleagues will join me over the coming week or two and say
a special thanks to all of those who work long and hard for us on our
staffs, including the pages who keep the order; the reporters who make
sure, even when we are a little bit too long-winded, that they take
down virtually every word; and those special folks on the dais who have
been known at times to keep new Members awake during particularly long-
winded speeches by Members.
I thank our congressional staff. We will be back on a regular basis
to celebrate the very good work of Federal employees in various walks
of life. I can't think of a better way to restart this tradition than
this week honoring those great staff members who serve us in the Senate
and in the House.
With that, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the order for the
quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Manchin). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, we are in morning business; is that right?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. That is correct.
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