[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 103 (Tuesday, July 12, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H4856-H4857]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
H.R. 1861: INFRASTRUCTURE JOBS AND ENERGY INDEPENDENCE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Murphy) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MURPHY of Pennsylvania. Madam Speaker, while deliberations
continue on dealing with our $14.3 trillion debt and while
deliberations continue on raising the debt ceiling, Americans are very
concerned about where we're going.
June unemployment at 9.2 percent and a growth of only 18,000 jobs
translates into a meager 360 jobs per State. Now, when you look at how
many high school students graduated in June, that's 3.7 million.
Colleges graduated 1.7 million. Those 360 jobs barely equal the size of
a typical large American high school graduating class, and certainly
barely covers students at one typical college per State with a typical
major. No wonder Americans are worried about our economy when so many
youth are entering the job market only to find there are no jobs.
So while our leaders on both sides of the aisle are deliberating--
and, unfortunately, too much of this immediately becomes a battle of
words--let's keep in mind that one way to balance America's budget, one
very important way to deal with America's debt, is to grow jobs. For
each 1 percent decline in unemployment, it's $90 billion per year in
Federal revenue. That's a decrease in unemployment compensation. That's
an increase in Federal revenues. That's 1.5 million jobs for every 1
percent decline in unemployment.
Let me quote our colleague from across the building here, Senator
Rubio, who said: This is not about increasing taxes; it's about
increasing taxpayers. And this could do it.
Now, the cost per job in the failed stimulus bill was at least
$278,000 based upon $660 billion spent. Of course, that number per job
increases dramatically and rapidly if you include the interest paid on
that stimulus bill, which takes us over the $1 trillion mark. That sort
of approach is not going to work, and if we open our eyes, we can all
honestly admit that. Increasing unemployment is not going to decrease
the Federal debt or deficit. We have to grow our way out of this.
Now, a bill that I've introduced and that several colleagues in a
bipartisan way have signed onto as cosponsors--and I ask my colleagues
to join on as cosponsors--is H.R. 1861. This bill would allow us to
say, instead of sending $129 billion a year to OPEC for foreign aid, to
buy their oil, we drill for and we use our own. It would yield
somewhere between $2.2 trillion and $3.7 trillion over a 30-year period
in Federal revenues, not from raising taxes, but from using the
standard royalties and lease agreements that come from this. It starts
out as a crawl and increases to a walk and then into a run as this
money comes through.
What we do in this bill is about growth in America. It isn't just
talking about it. It's putting our money where our jobs are because it
leads to 1.2 million jobs annually based upon estimates of the American
Energy Alliance. That's jobs making steel, making steel pipes, wire,
software, technology. It's jobs for the roughnecks. It's the
steelworkers, the electricians and the laborers who work on these rigs.
It's jobs for those who take this oil and convert it into gasoline, and
it's jobs for those who have to put together all the infrastructure to
make that happen.
Beyond that, what we do is we dedicate these funds into the
infrastructure which America needs. According to the American Society
for Civil Engineers, we need over $2 trillion to deal with our current
infrastructure needs. Many
[[Page H4857]]
States find that 25 percent of their roads and bridges are structurally
deficient, which is unsafe; but for every $1 billion we spend on our
infrastructure, it yields 38,000 jobs. Those jobs are for operating
engineers and laborers and carpenters or electricians and engineers and
for those who make concrete and steel and all the things that go with
what we need for our roads, our highways, our bridges, our locks, our
dams, our water and sewer systems.
Let's grow our way back to prosperity. Let's stop saying we're going
to send money to OPEC and watch them grow. Let's stop just pointing
fingers and blaming and complaining about China. We have the tools here
in America to make this happen. So, while our leaders are over at the
White House, arguing about how to take care of the debt, let's not
forget that, overall, Americans are saying that one way to grow out of
this debt is to grow more jobs, to grow more taxpayers, not just to
find ways of taxing them. We can do this.
Again, I ask my colleagues to join me in supporting H.R. 1861, where
we can do this. Let's not talk about jobs, and let's not complain about
it. Americans know when the wool is being pulled over their eyes, and
Americans know when they're working. Let's truly help them out and get
jobs back on the table.
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