[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 43 (Tuesday, March 29, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1913-S1914]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SBIR/STTR REAUTHORIZATION ACT OF 2011
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will
resume consideration of S. 493, which the clerk will report.
The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
A bill (S. 493) to reauthorize and improve the SBIR and
STTR programs, and for other purposes.
Pending:
McConnell amendment No. 183, to prohibit the Administrator
of the Environmental Protection Agency from promulgating any
regulation concerning, taking action relating to, or taking
into consideration the emission of a greenhouse gas to
address climate change.
Vitter amendment No. 178, to require the Federal Government
to sell off unused Federal real property.
Inhofe (for Johanns) amendment No. 161, to amend the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to repeal the expansion of
information reporting requirements to payments made to
corporations, payments for property and other gross proceeds,
and rental property expense payments.
Cornyn amendment No. 186, to establish a bipartisan
commission for the purpose of improving oversight and
eliminating wasteful government spending.
Paul amendment No. 199, to cut $200,000,000,000 in spending
in fiscal year 2011.
Sanders amendment No. 207, to establish a point of order
against any efforts to reduce benefits paid to Social
Security recipients, raise the retirement age, or create
private retirement accounts under title II of the Social
Security Act.
Hutchison amendment No. 197, to delay the implementation of
the health reform law in the United States until there is
final resolution in pending lawsuits.
Coburn amendment No. 184, to provide a list of programs
administered by every Federal department and agency.
[[Page S1914]]
Pryor amendment No. 229, to establish the Patriot Express
Loan Program under which the Small Business Administration
may make loans to members of the military community wanting
to start or expand small business concerns.
Landrieu amendment No. 244 (to amendment No. 183), to
change the enactment date.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
Ms. LANDRIEU. Mr. President, could I ask the Chair--I know we are
discussing the bill. But do we have a time constraint? I understand
that at 12 o'clock there may be some additional commentary.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is no formal time constraints at this
time.
Ms. LANDRIEU. Let me try to recap for just a moment because it is my
understanding there may be some colleagues coming down to the Senate
floor around 12 o'clock to pay tribute to an extraordinary woman and
extraordinary American, Geraldine Ferraro, whom we lost this week. I
most certainly want to be respectful to the Members who are coming to
the floor to pay tribute to our former colleague and an extraordinary
leader. But let me remind colleagues we are still trying to get to this
bill, an important bill for the country, an important bill to help put
this recession in our rearview mirror, an important bill that gives us
yet one more very carefully crafted tool to help create jobs on Main
Street, in rural areas, in suburban areas, and in urban areas all
across this country; that is, the 8-year reauthorization of the Small
Business Innovation and Research Program and Small Business Technology
Transfer Program.
This program is approximately 20 years old, first passed by Senator
Warren Rudman, when a report found its way to Congress that said,
alarmingly, agencies of the Federal Government, whether it was the
Department of Defense or NASA or NIH, were not accessing the power and
the technology of the small business community; that when they went out
to do research they were just looking at research offered by either
just universities and we are very proud of the work that our
universities do, but they were looking at large businesses. What did GE
have to offer? What did IBM have to offer?
It occurred to many Members of Congress at that time that there was a
tremendous amount of brain power and agility and quickness and cutting-
edge, innovative technologies resting in the minds and hearts and
dreams of entrepreneurs and small businesses in America the taxpayers
were not benefiting from.
As you can imagine, people might think of all this technology coming
out of New York or California. They might skip over a place such as
Montana where the Presiding Officer is from or Louisiana where this
Senator is from. So there were some very wise Members who said: Let's
create a program that will direct at least a portion of the research
and development funding of these large agencies so small businesses can
compete.
Now, these are grants not given out by formula or on a first-come/
first-served basis. These grants and contracts are given out based on
merit, about what looks promising, about potential, and about what the
taxpayers need in terms of dealing with problems.
One thing that comes immediately to mind is the terrible tragedy
unfolding in Japan as we speak with the potential meltdown, the process
of a nuclear reactor melting down. Some of the technology being
deployed to that situation, which is technology developed in the field
of robotics, was developed, a portion of it, through this SBIR Program.
So that makes very relevant the debate that we are having on the floor
today.
When people go home and now are turning on their televisions or
listening to their radios or over the Internet following those
unfolding dramatic developments in Japan, they know that one of the
companies that has been deployed and some of the material from the
United States actually was developed through this program. So that is
just one of a thousand examples that Senator Snowe and I have provided
in terms of testimony before the Small Business Committee to the
Congressional Record, and in our numerous speeches on the floor to talk
about the importance of this program.
I would like, as the manager of this bill--I am not sure it is going
to be possible, but I would most certainly like to have this bill voted
on and passed by the end of this week. I am not sure the leadership has
decided that is something that is possible. But I would like to send a
strong bill over to the House--hopefully, a bill that does not have
amendments on it that would warrant a Presidential threat of a veto--
and get this bill passed through the House and then passed on to the
President so he can sign it and send a very positive signal for his
agenda and all of our agendas for innovation--having America be the
best educated, the best competitors in the world in terms of the
economy, and giving our small businesses yet another tool.
We have worked on reducing the abuses in the credit card industry. We
have worked on capital access through a new lending program. We have
reduced fees, reduced taxes to the tune of $12 billion to our small
businesses throughout the country in the last Congress. We want to
continue to work on lowering taxes where we can, eliminating
regulations and supporting programs like this that work.
Let's eliminate or modify those programs that are not working, and
let's step up our support and reauthorize the programs that are. The
assessments done and the reviews of this program by the independent
researchers have been very positive across the board and outstanding.
Senator Snowe and I have taken into consideration those many reports
in the drafting of this bill and made some changes to the program so
that as it moves forward for the 8 years it will even be better.
One of my key goals and objectives is to make sure States such as
Louisiana or Mississippi or Montana or Wyoming, States that have not
previously been awarded many of these grants, know we have stepped up
some technical assistance and help so we can find the best technology
in this country to apply to some of our most pressing problems,
regardless of whether they are in the big cities and big places such as
New York, Los Angeles, CA. But we need our entrepreneurs around the
country to benefit by a program that they have access to as well.
So I am pleased that we can get back on the small business innovation
and research bill and small business technology transfer bill. Senator
Snowe and I will be coming to the floor periodically during the day to
continue to move this bill along.
I see my colleague, the Senator from Maryland, who is scheduled to
speak in just a few minutes. So at this time I will yield the floor.
Again, I hope, and I thank our colleagues for their cooperative nature
that they have been working in in terms of trying to get our bill
passed that will be so important to so many people in all of our
States.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
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