[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 132 (Thursday, September 8, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S5446]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TEXAS WILDFIRES
Mrs. HUTCHISON. Mr. President, I rise in morning business to talk
about a situation in Texas, the wildfires and the drought.
Since we were mostly home during the August recess, I saw the floods
in the Midwest and on the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. I saw the
hurricane that hit New York and all along the East Coast. At the same
time, with all the extra water in the East, we have had as much as 60
days in parts of Texas with no rain whatsoever. The drought is killing
livestock. It is killing land. It is a sad situation. What has
happened, of course, is, from that, the wildfires have been able to go
farther than we have ever seen in Texas before.
Just in the past 7 days, the Texas Forest Service has responded to
176 fires, destroying nearly 130,000 acres. This year alone, over 2,000
fires have burned more than 2 million acres in Texas. We have high
winds and drought conditions, which are a terrible combination in this
instance.
Yesterday, the Texas Forest Service responded to 20 new fires, which
consumed nearly 1,500 more acres. One of the hardest hit areas is
Bastrop County, which is near Austin. I was talking to some of my
constituents in Houston, which is not near Austin, and they were
talking about seeing and smelling the smoke in Houston from these fires
in Bastrop.
An assessment has been completed as of now that says 785 homes were
completely destroyed, 238 homes have been reported lost as a result of
other fires over the past 3 days, and the fires are so big that they
are being photographed from space.
Senator Cornyn and I have asked the President to add the recent
wildfires from just this last week to his previous disaster declaration
from this spring, which did include wildfires. I want the people of
Texas to know that Senator Cornyn and I are working together to get all
the Federal help they need. I have been in contact with the State
representatives from the area, the mayors, and the county judges to get
the reports. So far they feel they have gotten the help they have
needed. But now, in the aftermath, we will need to be part of any kind
of disaster bill that goes through this Senate or is declared by the
President.
It is my hope we can work through that next week and make sure we
include these most recent fires along with the flood disaster relief
that supposedly will come to the floor next week. So we are going to
work on it and try to help these people. We can't replace the
graduation pictures and the wedding pictures and the children's
pictures that are lost. This is the human loss you see in this type of
a situation. But we can certainly help these people rebuild, and that
is what we want to do.
We are going to be on the job trying to help in every way we can,
knowing there will not be a 100-percent replacement because the
photographs and the personal items and grandmother's wedding ring may
not be recovered, but we are going to do what we can, as Americans
always do.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
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