[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 86 (Wednesday, June 15, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3795-S3796]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FEMA
Ms. LANDRIEU. Madam President, I rise to bring to the Senate's and
the Congress's attention a great challenge that we have before us
relative to the budget of the Department of Homeland Security and,
frankly, it is a challenge facing the entire budget of the United
States. That challenge is to make sure we have enough funding in the
disaster emergency account to cover the multitude of disasters that
have taken place this year since January, as well as those we are still
recovering from in the past.
I will put up a chart to show, in dramatic fashion, that this is an
unprecedented situation we are facing. Since January of this year, 36
States have had disasters declared. This may be the largest number of
States in the shortest period of time, at least in recent memory, and
potentially in history. This is a challenge to the budget because, as
you know, under our law the Federal Government is by law--it attempts
to be every day--a reliable and trustworthy partner for cities, towns,
and States that have been devastated by tornadoes, wildfires,
hurricanes, et cetera.
Most recently, our minds, our eyes, and our hearts have been focused
on Missouri, with the terrible devastation to several of their cities--
most notably Joplin. But we remember a few weeks ago the tornadoes that
ripped through the southern part of the United States--in Alabama
particularly, in Georgia, and in some parts of Arkansas; and there was
flooding in other parts of the country as well.
This is what Mother Nature has brought to us. We cannot control that.
But what we can control is how we respond to it. That is what I want to
speak to today. I want to begin with a quote from David Maxwell from
the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management. He said this in the
Washington Post on April 30:
Anything that we've asked for, they've gotten us.
He was referring to FEMA.
Gregg Flynn, a spokesman with the Mississippi Emergency Management
Agency, said Fugate and FEMA ``are unbelievably proactive towards the
states. They don't wait for things to happen. By the time the storm is
out of the way, they want to know what we need.''
This is very good testimony, because many of us, including the
occupant of the chair, have worked hard to make a better, stronger,
more proactive FEMA. In large measure, we have accomplished that,
although there are still challenges for that agency. The biggest
challenge right now is that unless the Senate, the House, and the
President do something differently, we are not going to have the money
we need to take care of these disasters.
So for people on the ground, like David Maxwell in Arkansas, and
Gregg Flynn in Mississippi, and whether it is Paul Rainwater, a CEO
from my State who is still struggling in the aftermath of Katrina and
Rita 6 years ago, we are going to literally run out of money in the
disaster emergency relief fund in January of this year.
Let me put up a chart to show the challenge that is before us. The
President requested $1.8 billion, which is a reasonable request based
on past averages of disasters, which we are prepared to budget in the
base budget of Homeland Security. Unfortunately, the estimate of the
low end of these disasters--again, there were 36 since January 1, and
disasters happen in all 50 States--the estimate is that we need $3.8
billion at the low end, and at the high end it is $6.6 billion. So
between $3.5 billion and $6.5 billion is required. But we have budgeted
only $1.8 billion in the base of Homeland Security.
As chair of this committee, I can tell you that our committee cannot
absorb in its base the entire weight and cost of these disasters. The
Homeland Security budget has never in its history absorbed 100 percent.
We do a rough and good-faith estimate of what it might be, but these
are exceeding even our expectations of what the disasters would be. Of
course, no one is in a position to be able to foretell the future. Our
Secretary of Homeland Security brought a great deal of skill and
expertise as a former Governor, an excellent manager, and all the
prerequisite academic credentials, but she didn't show up on this job
with a magic wand and a fortune teller's globe. She doesn't have those
tools available to her to be able to see into the future every disaster
and what kinds of disasters are going to happen to the country. All we
can come forward with is a good-faith estimate, which we did, at $1.8
billion.
The reason I come here today is to say there is a gap that must be
filled. I am strongly recommending that this Congress fund this off
budget in an emergency line item, which is what we have done 95 percent
of the time in the last 40 years. Since 1992, $110 billion of the $130
billion appropriated to the DRF has been emergency spending. These
events are unpredictable. You cannot plan for it. We must respond by
law. If we don't, then projects all over this country will shut down.
I remind everyone that they are projects that create jobs--not only
do they restore hope and rebuild communities, but the projects create
jobs. To list a few of them, there are the repairs for two very
important roads in Hawaii, which could potentially be stopped; sewer
line repairs at a pump station replacement in Gary, IN; the townhall in
the village of Gulfport, which hasn't been rebuilt since the storm, for
6 years, which is under construction--that could be halted. That is a
dozen or more jobs in that small town of Gulfport. Those are not big
numbers nationally, but that is important to that city. There is an
elementary safe room being built in Kansas now. That is a few jobs
there, but it is important to the couple of hundred schoolchildren who
were terrorized by tornadoes sweeping through that area. I can go on
and on. In Missouri, the Polk County bridge collapsed, which is very
inconvenient for people having to cross that every day. I am not
personally familiar with it, but I can imagine
[[Page S3796]]
the difficulty families are going through who were used to having
access to the river.
I can list hundreds of projects that literally stop in their tracks
if we don't figure this out. My strong recommendation is that we do
what we have always done, which is appropriate and fund real
emergencies. It is not appropriate to do off budget things you should
have budgeted for but failed to do it. That is not an emergency; that
is bad planning.
I think I am a pretty good chairman of this committee. I know
Secretary Napolitano is an excellent Administrator of Homeland
Security. There is nothing we can give her to make it humanly possible
to predict disasters and the magnitude of their destruction. That is
impossible. Again, we have to figure out a way to budget for this that
is responsible and, I say, put a good-faith effort, or average in your
budget, and then anything that occurs, do it in addition to that off
budget, in an emergency.
Another reasonable suggestion that has met with resistance--and I can
understand why--would be to take a percentage decrease against all the
budgets of the Federal Government and say we wanted to spend this money
but we had these disasters and we absorb it governmentwide.
I can promise you that the last and worst thing--and one that can
happen because I will oppose it vigorously, and so will many others--is
taking the entire amount of the DRF, the disaster relief fund, out of
the Homeland Security budget, because then you put the country in a
position where you are underfunding planning for the future, lowering
your defenses against real terrorist attacks that could potentially
happen to the country, because you are funding for disaster levels that
we were unable to plan for--for obvious reasons.
We cannot undermine the security of our Nation or weaken the entire
Homeland Security Department budget because of an unusual natural
occurrence over which we have no control and no foreknowledge of. There
may be other solutions that I haven't thought of.
Another would be very helpful if the President himself, knowing these
numbers--they come from his own executive agencies, which are
tabulating these numbers--were to send us an emergency supplemental. I
have sent him several letters requesting that he send to the Congress
an emergency supplemental to cover this gap. If he doesn't do that,
Congress has the power to act, and I will be making a recommendation in
the Appropriations Committee to fill this gap.
What is not acceptable is to try to absorb this entire gap in the
Homeland Security budget, which will leave our country in a very
weakened position in terms of preparing for future disasters and
potential terrorist attacks.
Might I remind everyone that hurricane season just started on June 1.
It is now June 15. We are 15 days into the hurricane season. We don't
know what the season will bring.
There may be other alternatives to closing this gap, but it is very,
very important. I am going to start work on this vigorously with my
ranking member, Senator Coats, to see what we can recommend,
potentially jointly, I would hope.
Again, I would like to put up this chart because this reflects just
about every Senator's State, from Washington to Texas, to Nebraska, to
North Carolina, to Florida, to Georgia, Arizona. Montana will be green
shortly, and so will Vermont because there are disasters underway. So
put your thinking caps on. We need to come up with a way to fund these
disasters, and it is going to be a big challenge as we start our
appropriations process.
I am going to submit more technical information for the Record, but,
again, we don't have magic wands and crystal balls in the Department of
Homeland Security. We have a lot of tools there to protect our country
and to build after disasters, but magic wands and crystal balls are not
available. So we have to come up with a way to close this gap that
makes sense. I trust that over the next couple of weeks and months we
will be able to do that.
Mr. President, I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a
quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cardin). The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois is recognized.
Mr. DURBIN. I ask that the order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the Senator is recognized.
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