[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 71 (Monday, May 23, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H3324-H3328]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
JOBS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentlewoman from the Virgin Islands (Mrs.
Christensen) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the
minority leader.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to lead the Congressional
Black Caucus this hour to talk about jobs and the need for job creation
in communities across this country.
General Leave
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Before I begin, I would like to ask, Mr. Speaker,
unanimous consent that all Members may have 5 legislative days in which
to revise and extend their remarks and include extraneous material on
the subject of this Special Order, which is jobs.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentlewoman from the Virgin Islands?
There was no objection.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Amidst reports of improvement in the economy--and
the April jobs report was one of those examples--we are in a steady,
yet slow, recovery. But that recovery has not been felt by the millions
of Americans who are out of work or who are working in jobs that are
well below their potential. And no more is the pain of the recession
felt than in the African American community where unemployment is high
in good times but now remains the highest of all population groups in
this country at 16.1 percent.
And so along with saving homes, job creation remains a primary focus
of the Congressional Black Caucus and of House Democrats. We are
determined to build on the more than 3 million jobs created or saved by
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. And so as a key part of
this effort before we left for last week's constituent work period,
House Democrats launched a Make It in America agenda, which we
wholeheartedly support.
Over the past 3 years, we have passed legislation to prevent
multinational corporations from outsourcing jobs overseas, to give tax
credits to small businesses to hire new employees, to restore the
credit to small businesses because they are the engine of our economy
and of job creation. Our Make It in America agenda continues and
expands on that effort by a number of pieces of legislation introduced
by members of the Democratic Caucus: legislation to support developing
a national strategy to increase manufacturing, to invest in
infrastructure and support the flow of commerce, to keep our country
competitive in the global marketplace, to further support small
businesses, to develop an innovative education policy, and to put smart
regulations in place which protect our people and our environment while
improving government efficiency.
Democrats have already introduced bills to further these goals, and
we are calling on the Republican leadership to end the assaults on
health care reform and the blocking of the green economy we need to
build, asking them to support both of these important pillars of
President Obama's agenda which will create jobs. And I ask them to
bring our job-creating legislation to the floor.
At this time, Mr. Speaker, I would like to yield such time as he
might consume to the gentleman from Georgia, Congressman David Scott.
Mr. DAVID SCOTT of Georgia. I want to commend you, Congresswoman
Christensen, for your leadership and for what you're doing.
Ladies and gentlemen of America and this Congress, our economy is
struggling, and nowhere is it struggling more than in the area of
unemployment and joblessness, and, correspondingly, with home
foreclosures and the value of our housing stock going down. Those are
the two very serious points on the compass that we have got to declare
an emergency situation on because they are both so very related. If a
man does not have a job or a young lady does not have a job, how can
they stay in their home?
And so I want to just talk for a few minutes about, one, you really
can't figure how to get out of a situation unless you stop and you
think of how you got into it. The one thing I've noticed about people
who have lost their sight, they may need a little help as they come to
get into a room, but I will tell you, that person without his sight
feels his way of how he got into that room; and how he gets out of that
room, he can feel his way back out. So it might do well for us just to
pause for a moment.
We go back to our economic downturn. There were some failures that we
made. We rushed--rightfully so, in many respects--to bail out Wall
Street, to bail out America's big business structure. We did that. We
had to unfreeze the credit markets on Wall Street in order to keep it
moving. But if there is one thing we learned from our previous, very
challenging economic difficulties--and the most recent one being the
Depression. We got out of that Depression by not only making sure that
our big companies, making sure that Wall Street and our bankers and our
investors and our multinational corporations were able to survive. Our
failure was that we did nothing to help Main Street at the same time.
The one thing we learned in the Depression is, yes, you have to do
both: You've got to put money up at the top, you've got to put it in
the middle of the economic stream and at the lower end of the economic
stream, because you have to get people spending money. Jobs are created
when people spend money.
We are a mass consumption society, which means our economy moves not
on the wealthy being able to go buy a car; our economy moves on
thousands and millions of people being able to buy the car, to buy the
clothes, to buy the food in the restaurants. Our failure to do that.
And so we had a top-down economic recovery instead of a top, middle,
and bottom at the same time.
[[Page H3325]]
So here we are. And that's why right now our multi-corporations are
having staggering profits.
{time} 1930
Our CEOs are making huge salaries and bonuses, all that we helped.
And I don't begrudge them. I am a believer in capitalism. I graduated
from the citadel of capitalism, the Wharton School of Finance. I am a
businessman. So I don't begrudge that, but what I do begrudge is our
failure to help the little fellow. Now we're beginning to do that.
But what we must do is realize that all of this time, we're in this
recovery now for almost 3 years, and we have 13 million Americans
without work. We have a national unemployment of 8.7 percent. It's
coming down. Some of our policies are working. In my own State of
Georgia, our unemployment rate is a staggering 9.9 percent--563
Georgians are without work.
And so that means that we're not doing enough. There are certain
areas we can work in. For example, we need to evaluate the programs
that we say we have put out there to help with the unemployment level.
Now, we know we have put a program together which will give
corporations a 6 percent reduction or a reduction of their part of the
payroll tax if they hire an unemployed person. Well, where is the
report card on that? How is that doing? That's one of the things that
we need to get; we need measurement to see how successful it really is.
We need to also look to the future and look at what policies we can
put together with corporations, because what we're doing is not enough.
I would submit that wouldn't it be interesting and wouldn't it be
worthy of consideration.
We know, for example, that we have just about the highest corporate
tax rate in the world. Clearly our multinational, our largest
corporations, our largest employers want to see that corporate tax rate
come down. Many are wanting it to come down to 25 percent. I am on the
side of taking a look at that, because we don't want to have the
highest corporate tax rate in the world. It hurts our marketplace. It
hurts everything. We know that. That is an issue.
But if we know these multinational corporations are having a record
now of outsourcing jobs, should we not have a conversation with them at
the table? Okay, you want your corporate tax rate reduced? Let's talk
about how you can stop sending jobs out of this country. We need
Americans who are working at American jobs in America.
I think that these large employers and corporations with these
international markets will be willing to sit down and say, you know
what, in exchange for us getting our corporate tax rate down, here's
what we can do to start bringing in our manufacturing and bring it back
to America so that we can make things in America. One of the reasons
we've got such a high jobless rate is because we don't make anything
here anymore. Manufacturing is the main source of jobs. We lost that.
Well, we can use this as an incentive to these companies. Say, okay,
we can bring that corporate tax rate down; but we want you to bring
those jobs back here, and we want you to start making things in this
country. Let's look out for America, look out for us. That is something
that we can do.
And so, Madam Congresslady from the Virgin Islands, you're doing a
wonderful job with this.
This is the number one issue facing this country. I can't tell you
how desperate people become when they can't find work. I can't tell you
how depressed people become when people are used to working and they
wake up every morning with no place to go. Or they have to make certain
decisions and some can't find food or buy the food to feed their
families. That is the situation we're in with these 13 million American
people.
We can do better. We've got to evaluate what we're doing, and we've
got to put more creative things on the table, such as the corporate tax
rate. Let us tie that to corporations bringing these jobs back and
doing what they can to help turn our country back into a manufacturing
base.
When you lose your capacity--when this country lost its capacity to
be the leader of the world in making things, we lost a lot. And by
George, we need to get it back. And that's the way America will
survive, and that's the way we'll bring this unemployment rate down.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Thank you, Congressman Scott. I thank you for
calling attention to the need to restore the manufacturing base in this
country as the Democrats are attempting to do with our Make It in
America agenda. And thank you for reminding everyone that Main Street
is still not taken care of and that there is a critical connection
between the jobs crisis and the housing crisis and why they need to be
dealt with now as an emergency.
I would just call on our leadership, the Republican leadership: Let's
stop trying to unravel President Obama's agenda, which is an agenda
that creates jobs. We've been here for almost 5 months, and not one job
has been created by any legislation that the majority has brought to
the floor. It's time to get busy. Main Street is calling on us.
At this point, I'd like to yield as much time as he would consume to
the Congressman from Illinois, Congressman Danny Davis.
Mr. DAVIS of Illinois. Thank you very much.
Let me, first of all, commend you for the tremendous leadership that
you provide to this effort each Monday evening.
As I was thinking about it, I was thinking of the fact that people
who observe racing oftentimes describe horses in two ways. Sometimes
they're the show horse, and then there's the workhorse. I guess when it
comes to working as a Member of Congress, I don't think you have any
peer. As a matter of fact, you have led our efforts. We came into the
Congress at the same time. We're classmates.
You've led our efforts on health care. You've led our efforts on
making sure that natural resources were divided in a serious way, and
you're leading our efforts as the first vice chairman of the
Congressional Black Caucus. So I am pleased to join with you this
evening.
As we consider policies to help Americans and our Nation recover from
the worst economic crisis in our history--and I never forget this
gentleman--I remember something that Dr. Martin Luther King said at one
time. He said that the ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands
in moments of comfort but where he stands at times of challenge and
controversy. I agree with him.
This is indeed a time of challenge for our country with a current
unemployment rate of 9.9 percent, an expected rate of over 8 percent
for the next several years, and record levels of food insecurity and
foreclosures.
As in many other States, the average unemployment rate in Illinois
during 2010 for blacks was above 15 percent, above 13 percent for
Latinos. And with persistently high unemployment numbers, the need for
Federal unemployment assistance remains a vital lifeline for millions
of our citizens.
In January of 2011, the share of unemployed workers who had been
without work for over 6 months was 43.8 percent--one of the highest
percentages on record--translating into about 6.2 million workers
remaining unemployed for longer than 6 months.
{time} 1940
In April 2011, just under 185,000 Illinoisans received extended
unemployment benefits, with an estimated 100,000 Illinoisans exhausting
the maximum 99 weeks of unemployment assistance in 2010. Although our
economy is gradually gaining, we cannot ignore the fact that the
economic crisis remains a daily reality for millions of Americans, nor
can we ignore the fact that the crisis unevenly affects African
Americans and Latino Americans.
During times of challenge, I sincerely believe that the mantle of
responsibility for caring for the poor and struggling falls squarely on
the shoulders of government, not primarily on the charity of individual
citizens. In such times of hardship and strife, government leaders
should extend help to the needy, not advance the wealth of the most
secure. For this reason, I am deeply disappointed in the Republican
bill moving in the House that would hurt both our economy and the long-
term unemployed, some of the most vulnerable citizens in our Nation.
The Republican plan would essentially curtail assistance to Americans
struggling with prolonged unemployment so that States could lower their
[[Page H3326]]
debt to the Federal Government. This approach is bad for the economy
and bad for Americans. Unemployment insurance is one of the most
effective methods of stimulating the economy, because the unemployed
workers spend most of the money that they get on critical purchases,
such as food and housing, other than the alternatives offered by the
Republican bill. If we allow this $31 billion to go to State debt
reduction, there is no new economic activity, and millions of families
will not be able to put food on their tables or roofs over their heads.
It is not only the 4 million workers who currently receive long-term
unemployment benefits who will suffer; it is our businesses as well.
The retail sector has been hard hit by this recession. Cutting
unemployment benefits for millions of people would take a tremendous
toll on these businesses as well. The Congressional Budget Office
estimates that current law generates approximately $40 billion in
economic activity and creates about 322,000 jobs. Enacting the
Republican approach would dramatically reduce the economic stimulus of
our Federal Government and cut jobs.
Unemployment benefits only provide an average of $290 a week, which
typically replaces only half of the average family's expenses. This
support is not a free ride or boon for families; it is a critical
lifeline during a national emergency to help our citizens who are
suffering. The Wall Street Journal reported that roughly 1 million
people across the Nation couldn't find work after exhausting their
unemployment benefits. There are about 7 million fewer jobs now than at
the beginning of the Great Recession, and the Department of Labor data
show that there are over four unemployed Americans for every job.
Needing unemployment assistance is about not being able to find work in
a weak economy with limited job opportunities. It's not about being
lazy.
The Republican bill is not a jobs bill. It is a jilting the jobless
bill. It pits States that are struggling with large deficits against
the millions of Americans who have lost their jobs through no fault of
their own. I urge that we continue the fight to secure improvements in
this proposal, to protect the hundreds of millions of hardworking
Americans who need the government's help to weather the extended storm
of economic hardship.
I commend you again for your tremendous leadership. Thank you very
much for leading this effort.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Thank you, Congressman Davis, for joining us this
evening, and thank you for your kind words. I am very proud to be a
part of a Congressional Black Caucus, which is made up of 43
workhorses, and I am just glad to be able to work along with all of
them.
Thank you for calling attention to the need to extend unemployment
benefits for the many who are still without a job. The jobs are just
not there, and the Republican majority is not creating any. We need to
continue this lifeline to our families and to the communities that they
live in. So thank you for raising that issue again.
Mr. DAVIS of Illinois. Thank you.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. I yield such time as he might consume to the
gentleman from Virginia, Congressman Bobby Scott.
Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Thank you. I appreciate you yielding time, and
appreciate you bringing to the attention of the American public the
need for continued support for those who are unemployed. The current
economic climate has taken a toll on many families across the Nation.
While the economy may be growing, there are still almost 14 million
unemployed people nationally, and the unemployment rate is hovering at
9 percent. We need to take serious steps to address this crisis and
create policies that create jobs.
From a long-term perspective, we need to be investing in our
workforce by investing in education, in job training, beginning with
early childhood education, and continuing through college and
vocational education, as well as adult education and training.
Unfortunately, the Republican budget makes huge cuts in our Nation's
education system by cutting investments in education by over 50 percent
and zeroing out many job-training investments. These cuts include
services such as elementary and secondary education, educational
innovation, career and technical education, cuts to community colleges,
and postsecondary education. The budget also cuts the maximum Pell
Grant, a vital program that makes college affordable for young
students, and takes away eligibility for over a million students.
So we should be trying to work to get people back to work and
increase innovation. So we ought to be actually spending more, not
less. But with these cuts, fewer people will have access to education
and training that they need to fuel the economic productivity and
compete for the good jobs that are occurring in our labor market today.
So on a long-term basis, we need to ensure that we are building a
strong and capable workforce. In the short term, we need to make sure
that people who have lost their jobs during the recession are not left
out in the cold. Currently, for every one job opening there are over
four people applying. This means that whatever the job applicants do to
help themselves, there will still be many people left out in the cold.
To add insult to injury, many applicants are not getting
consideration for jobs because they have been unemployed for too long.
Many employers will screen applicants and require that they are holding
a job to be considered for a new job. When they find out that they are
unemployed, many employers will not consider them for employment. So
those who are looking for a job and have been looking for a job for a
long time find that it's even harder to find a job. And these are the
people that have been unemployed for 60, 90, or even 99 weeks. They are
dejected, and being cut off from unemployment insurance, and not given
a fair shot at a job that they are applying for.
Our focus should be particularly on what to do about the long-term
unemployed and keeping them on their feet. In February, Congresswoman
Barbara Lee from California and I introduced the Emergency Unemployment
Compensation Extension Act to provide 14 additional weeks of
unemployment compensation for the chronically unemployed so that they
can stay afloat during their job search, at least until our recession
is over and jobs have returned. The Emergency Unemployment Compensation
Act would, if passed, give these hardworking Americans a little more
time to find a job without having to worry about making ends meet.
Now, we have to note that receipt of unemployment compensation is
conditioned first on the fact that you lost your job through no fault
of your own and that you are actively looking for a job and will accept
a reasonable job. So these are conditions of receiving unemployment
compensation. Unfortunately, this compassionate bill has been stalled
in committee, and the majority of the House has not taken action on it.
{time} 1950
To make matters worse, just a few weeks ago a new bill had been
introduced in the House, which will actually weaken the unemployment
compensation program. They call it the Jobs, Opportunity, Benefits, and
Services Act. They call it the JOBS Act.
It would allow States to divert the Federal funds it received to pay
for unemployment compensation to other purposes, including tax cuts.
Jobs, that so-called JOBS Act, will essentially allow States to
terminate payments of unemployment benefits, potentially eliminating
$40 billion in economic activity, according to CBO estimates. So not
only are they failing to extend benefits during a time of constant high
unemployment; some now want to cut off benefits all together.
Critics of the unemployment compensation believe that providing
unemployment benefits will give people an incentive not to work, that
people receiving unemployment compensation will merely collect the
benefits as long as they can without looking for a job. But a condition
of receiving the benefits, one of the conditions is you have to be
actively looking for a job.
While that criticism may apply to a few bad apples, the overwhelming
majority of Americans who are chronically unemployed would rather enjoy
the dignity of work instead of collecting a weekly check from the
government; many of these checks, on a national average, will average
$260 a
[[Page H3327]]
week, clearly not enough for a family to survive. The overwhelming
majority of chronically unemployed do not want a handout; they would
like a job.
While unemployment compensation helps the unemployed, unemployment
benefits also help the economy. Economists estimate that in the U.S.
economy, the U.S. economy grows by $1.61 for every dollar the
government spends on unemployment compensation, because unemployed
people will obviously spend every dime right away. This is in stark
contrast to the economic activity generated by tax cuts, where many of
the tax cuts will generate about 17 cents of economic activity for
every dollar of tax cuts. This is the $1.61 for every dollar in
unemployment compensation.
So, simply put, the unemployment compensation is one of the most
effective and efficient ways to stimulate the economy, and we should be
focusing on providing the kind of support and stimulus to the economy
in conjunction with making bold investments in our education system and
our workforce. We need to make sure that we make those long-term
investments in education and job training. We also need to make sure
that we have a compassionate short-term solution by providing the
safety net for millions of Americans who have lost their jobs through
no fault of their own and haven't found a job yet.
These jobs just don't exist, and we also have to oppose the
elimination of unemployment compensation by redirecting those funds to
whatever the States may want, including tax cuts. That is simply wrong.
So I thank you for pointing out the need for the unemployment
compensation program to continue and even be improved and oppose those
initiatives that want to sabotage the unemployment compensation system.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Thank you, Congressman Scott, for reminding us that
we are really not out of a recession. This is the time where we need to
invest and to continue those unemployment benefits, and thank you for
talking about the people who are unemployed.
We hear so many misconceptions spread about people who are receiving
unemployment. They really would prefer to have a job. They are actively
looking, as you have pointed out, to be able to receive those
unemployment benefits. It's a shame the way that some of our colleagues
speak about people who are really trying to find a job where there are
no jobs to be found and need that extra help. So I really appreciate
your coming and joining us this evening.
One of the other things that the Congressional Black Caucus has been
advocating for is summer jobs for our young people. It's important for
us to have them meaningfully occupied and employed during that summer
vacation. It seems like we are going back to what we used to have to do
in the previous administration and keep begging and begging for summer
jobs for our young people. It's critically important.
I also don't understand why there is so much objection to our
building a green economy. If we don't, we will be left behind the rest
of the world in this important sector. Creating that economy would
build on the tens of thousands of jobs that were created with the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and moving to renewable energy
and the jobs that that will create is good for our environment. It will
slow climate change, it is good for our health, and it is good for our
economy.
It would build jobs, sustainable jobs, and help us to build a strong
and more sustainable economy for the future. It's good for profit, it's
good for the planet, and it's good for people.
I want to just talk a little bit about the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act.
Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Would the gentlewoman yield before she goes on
to the next issue?
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. I yield to the gentleman.
Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. It's so important that you have mentioned
summer jobs and opportunities they get to help get young people on the
right track and keep them on the right track, get them used to a
working environment and get them set for their future lives. But also,
with so many people unemployed today in the construction area and at a
time when we have trillions of dollars and needs in terms of roads and
bridges and tunnels and other infrastructure projects, this is a time
where we really ought to be investing in those for our future.
Those projects would be coming in, and the bids on those projects
would be at the lowest they have been historically so that, as you pay
for them over the course of time with bonds, you will be paying at a
much lower rate, and those needs are certainly there today. So we need
to make those investments in job creation in terms of roads and bridges
and other infrastructure. It's a great time to do it, and the people
need those jobs.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Thank you for adding that issue to the discussion
this evening.
Let me just go back to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act, because despite its immediate and projected successes, our friends
on the other side of the aisle continue their efforts to repeal and
underfund the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
Despite the rhetoric to the contrary, this new law lifts more than 30
million Americans out of the ranks of the uninsured, protects the
health care consumer from unjust practices that have occurred in our
health care system for far too many decades, and preserves and improves
the health care and thus the wellness of some of our Nation's most
vulnerable residents--our children and our seniors.
My colleagues and I have and will continue to highlight the
deleterious health consequences that would result if these attacks on
health care reform ever moved from a policy proposal to enactment, and
we will continue to oppose any attempt to undermine this important law.
It's also critically important to remember, though, that while
repealing health care reform will have very obvious, very negative
impacts on health and wellness, the repeal of any part of the law
created by the Affordable Care Act will also have an equally horrendous
impact on the economy and more directly on jobs.
The data is in; it's indisputable. There is no evidence that health
care reform hurts or eliminates jobs. In fact, since the health care
reform bill was passed in March of last year, there has been private
sector growth month after month after month, leading to the creation of
a total of 1.4 million new private sector jobs, and we are counting.
Further, of these 1.4 million new jobs that were created, both directly
and indirectly from health care reform, 243,000 of them, almost a
quarter of a million of them, are directly in the health care sector.
All of this job and growth job expansion has occurred in just 1 year.
While that's good news, there was even better news that came out of a
recent study out of Harvard University, which found that health care
reform, as enacted by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,
would create up to 4 million jobs over the next 10 years. Compare that
to 8 years of policies under the previous administration that literally
eliminated 673,000 private sector jobs while at the same time
exacerbating our Nation's plight with uninsurance, spiraling health
care costs, and worsening health disparities.
Once you make the comparison, ask yourself which policies are truly
better for American jobs, for the American economy, for the health and
wellness of Americans, and for the Nation as a whole. Is repealing
health care reform better when we know that the repeal not only would
increase medical spending, the repeal would increase medical spending
by $125 billion by the end of this decade and increase family insurance
premiums by nearly $2,000 every year? But it will also destroy as many
as 400,000 jobs every year over the next decade.
{time} 2000
The answer is simply no. We need to stay on this path, one with an
upward trajectory, because it is the path that not only includes a
reformed, transformed health care system, but it's also a path that
creates jobs, lowers the unemployment rate and saves employers, both
large and small, money that they can reinvest by creating additional
jobs for millions of Americans. It is a path that we have been hoping
to find; it is a path that we have struggled to get on; and now that
we're on
[[Page H3328]]
it, it is a path that is delivering on its promises.
I don't believe I have any further speakers, so at this time I just
want to reiterate that we've been here for almost 5 months. Nothing
that has come to this floor has created jobs. Communities like mine and
communities that most of my colleagues represent in this body still
have high unemployment. There are no jobs. We need to continue to
provide unemployment insurance. We need to work to begin to create the
jobs that the people of America need.
Ms. EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON of Texas. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to
discuss Democratic initiatives for creating jobs and rebuilding the
economy.
While Republicans were busy voting to end Medicare in order to give
more tax breaks to big oil, they forgot one important task--job
creation.
With the fragile economy just beginning to recover, Americans cannot
afford the Republicans' reckless ``So Be It'' attitude toward job
creation.
Their failure to propose a single jobs bill after more than four
months in the majority is alarming and is indicative of a general lack
of concern for the needs of our constituents.
Under the Obama administration, almost 2 million jobs have been
created over the last 15 months.
The 244,000 total jobs added last month is the largest in nearly a
year, with broad-based gains in retail trade, manufacturing, health
care, leisure and hospitality, and professional and business services.
While this is an impressive feat, we need to dig deeper in order to
replace the 8 million jobs that we lost during the Bush Administration.
The African American community continues to bear the brunt of the
unemployment crisis; close to 16 percent of African Americans are out
of work and still looking for jobs.
In some cities, African American unemployment rates have hit
Depression levels. This is unacceptable.
The American people have spoken and Democrats are listening; job
creation is the key to economic recovery and growth.
Democrats' ``Make It in America'' agenda is a powerful initiative
based on the conviction that when more products are made in America,
more families will be able to make it in America.
This comprehensive domestic manufacturing strategy is about investing
in innovation and clean energy, helping our small businesses and
workers compete, rebuilding America, and keeping jobs here at home.
For example, the Make It in America Block Grant Act establishes a
grant program at the Commerce Department to provide small to medium-
sized businesses, in communities hardest hit by unemployment, with the
resources and strategies they need to transition to the manufacturing
of clean energy, high technology, and advanced products.
Equally promising is the Job Opportunities Between Our Shores Act,
which establishes a Workforce Investment Act pilot program to provide
education and training programs in advanced manufacturing.
These bills, along with other Democratic initiatives, prove that
Democrats are listening to the American people as they continue to ask,
``Where are the jobs?''
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________