[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 64 (Wednesday, May 11, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2856-S2857]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ILLINOIS FLOODING
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, closer to home in Illinois, we are
fighting the floods. It happens regularly, and we have had a tough time
with it. The Ohio River, the Illinois River, and the Mississippi River
have all been threatening communities such as Metropolis and Old
Shawneetown. I was down in Cairo, IL, a couple of weeks ago and saw how
bad it was. It was a scary situation in a very poor town.
The Corps of Engineers had a tough decision to make. They had to blow
a levee, which means opening farm land to be flooded. To take the
pressure off the rivers, they did it. I said to General Walsh when he
was in the process of making the decision: Do what is right and I will
stand by you. I know what I want you to do, but do what is right. I
think he did the right thing, and I stand by him.
Now I stand by those living in Missouri who were affected by that
decision. If they in any way suffered hardship or inconvenience or loss
of income as farmers, we need to stand by them, as we do with so many
across America in times of disaster.
I know we have had a big challenge in our State. Governor Quinn and I
were on the phone the day before yesterday talking about the response.
He was on his way down to Metropolis. A mutual friend of ours, Mayor
Billy McDaniel, down there is working with Pulaski County Board
Chairman Monte Russell to find places for people to stay as they wait
for the flood waters to recede in Metropolis.
In Carmi, Mayor David Port and Golconda Mayor Bill Altman are working
with our office to make sure that pumps and other supplies are there
when they are needed. In Cairo, we had a change in administration. I
worked with Judson Childs, the former mayor. He has now been replaced
by Tyrone Coleman. We will continue to work with them. They vacated a
lot of homes. People are staying in gyms and other places and waiting
for a chance to go back home. We are going to do our best to make sure
that happens.
A special salute to our Illinois National Guard. These men and women
come to the rescue of our State every time we face a disaster. This is
no different. They are putting in long hours. I thank them for their
unselfish commitment. And GEN Bill Enyart can be proud of the men and
women of the Guard units across the State of Illinois.
The Illinois Emergency Management Agency under Director Jonathon Luck
has been in touch with our office every single day. They are assessing
the damage that has been done. They will measure that damage, and at
the appropriate moment--and I am sure it will be soon--will move
forward with our congressional delegation to ask for Federal disaster
status and Federal disaster assistance. That is something that I think
will definitely be needed and is appropriate for the magnitude of this
challenge.
I will work with my colleague Senator Kirk, who visited last week in
this region. We are going to work together, in a bipartisan way, to
make sure that our State and the people who are suffering under these
flooding conditions have a chance to recover, get back to their homes
and back to their businesses and back to work.
(The remarks of Mr. Durbin pertaining to the introduction of S. 952
are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills
and Joint Resolutions.'')
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Rhode Island.
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