[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 147 (Tuesday, October 4, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H6515-H6516]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
POVERTY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. LEE of California. Mr. Speaker, as one of the founding members of
the congressional Out of Poverty Caucus, I rise today in my ongoing
effort to sound the alarm on poverty.
As you may know, the census released data showing that 46.2 million
Americans lived in poverty in 2010. The data also revealed that the
poverty rate for whites was 9.9 percent in 2010. Worse, the poverty
rate for African Americans was 27.4 percent. For Latinos, the poverty
rate was 26.6 percent. For Asian Pacific Americans, the poverty rate
was 12.1 percent.
These statistics come on the somber anniversary of the 10 years of
the war in Afghanistan, which was a blank check that should not have
been written and that, of course, I could not support. In many ways,
this war has significantly contributed to these staggering statistics,
which we know are not just numbers but are human lives. We must create
jobs. We have to create a way to maintain our social safety net.
So today I am here to ask my colleagues to join 47 Members of
Congress and me in a letter to the Joint Select Committee on Deficit
Reduction, asking them to protect vital programs that comprise our
social safety net, including but not limited to Medicaid, Medicare, and
Social Security, as well as the programs that provide the economic
security and opportunity to millions of Americans.
{time} 1030
None of us envy the work of those members on this Joint Select
Committee on Deficit Reduction, as they will have to make tough choices
that affect the lives of millions of Americans.
However, we should all recognize that for the last 25 years, when we
have come to deficit reduction agreements, these agreements have, for
the most part, protected low-income programs. We absolutely cannot
balance the budget on the backs of the most vulnerable, those people
facing or living in poverty. This is really a moral obligation that we
cannot ignore.
These programs assist the over-46 million Americans living in poverty
in 2010--men, women, children, young and old alike from all
backgrounds--in obtaining or maintaining their access to basic, mind
you, and I am just talking about basic human needs, including food,
shelter and health care. These vital safety net programs both support
and create consumers, which results in increased demand and job
creation. This, of course, reduces our deficit by enabling people to
participate in this economy.
And not only that, many of these programs do provide pathways out of
poverty and opportunities for all. More and more Americans are
struggling to find work and struggling to make ends meet. And until we
create jobs, and we have a way, a pathway where people clearly can be
provided these opportunities, we have a real moral obligation to
protect these programs. Anything short of this is really un-American.
In times like these, it's unconscionable to consider cutting programs
that help those most in need like our Nation's seniors and our Nation's
children. Asking the Joint Select Committee for Deficit Reduction to
protect these vital human programs is, though, not enough. We have to
do more. The most effective anti-poverty program is an effective jobs
program.
So while I ask my colleagues to join me on the letter to the Joint
Select Committee, I am also here to ask Speaker Boehner to move the
American Jobs Act as soon as possible to
[[Page H6516]]
begin to create jobs and put Americans to work. Americans want to work
and they need to work; and yet the House leadership is really focused,
as an example, on the dismantling of environmental regulations. This is
not a jobs program that puts Americans to work. It's a cynical,
opportunistic move in order to attack the environment.
So we have to have as our priority efforts to create jobs that give
Americans economic security and that grow our economy. Our economy will
not recover quickly from this Great Recession and, of course, Great
Depression in many communities of color, including the African American
community and for those living in poverty, unless we really do provide
a pathway out of poverty.
We need to target these programs in areas that need it the most. Many
of these areas are communities of color, where the poverty rates are
three times higher than the poverty rate for whites. The unemployment
rates are also higher in communities of color: 16.7 percent of African
Americans are unemployed, 11.3 percent of Latinos. And these are just
the reported statistics. It's clear that we must address these
disparities as we work to create jobs and opportunities for all.
So I am asking Members to join us in this deficit reduction letter
and urge the Speaker and leadership of this House to move the American
Jobs Act as the first step in jump-starting this economy and putting
Americans back to work.
Hon. Patty Murray,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Max Baucus,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Hon. John Kerry,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Hon. James Clyburn,
U.S. House of Representatives,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Xavier Becerra,
U.S. House of Representatives,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Chris Van Hollen,
U.S. House of Representatives,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Jeb Hensarling,
U.S. House of Representatives,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Dave Camp,
U.S. House of Representatives,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Fred Upton,
U.S. House of Representatives,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Jon Kyl,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Pat Toomey,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Rob Portman,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Dear Members of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit
Reduction:We are writing to request that you protect vital
programs that comprise our social safety net, including but
not limited to Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security, as
well as the programs that provide economic security and
opportunity to millions of Americans.
Vital safety net services and programs support those people
hit the hardest by the Great Recession. These services help
people and families maintain housing or find shelter, keep
food on the table, assist in access to health care, and
support those looking for employment, including the long-term
unemployed. Examples of federal programs that provide such
services include programs which assist disabled veterans to
find an accessible home, ensure seniors receive food to eat,
help people access our health care system, connect people
seeking jobs with employment, give shelter to homeless
families, and ensure that children get meals in school.
It is imperative that we protect vital safety net programs
and programs that provide economic security and opportunity
to millions of Americans, including those facing or living in
poverty. The Census Bureau released data on September 13,
2011, revealing that 15 percent of Americans--46.2 million
people across this country--lived in poverty in 2010. This is
the largest number of Americans living in poverty since the
Census started collecting this data 52 years ago. For our
nation's children under 18, 22 percent lived in poverty in
2010. That is 16.4 million children who do not know where
their next meal is coming from, where they might be sleeping
that night, and who are anxious overall about their well
being and that of their parents.
According to the recent Census data release on poverty, the
poverty numbers would have been worse had it not been for key
federal programs like unemployment insurance, food stamps.
and Medicaid (Census Bureau slide 25 located at http://
www.census.gov/newsroom/releases/pdf/2010_Report.pdf).
For the last 25 years when we have come to deficit
reduction agreements, these agreements have protected low-
income programs. Beyond that, we have a moral and an economic
obligation to care for our nation's most vulnerable, those
facing or living in poverty. We respectfully implore that as
you work through ways that our nation can reduce the deficit
that you sustain our nation's safety net programs that assist
people in obtaining or maintaining their access to basic
human needs including food, shelter, and health care, and
that provide ladders to opportunity for struggling families.
These programs both support and create consumers, which
result in increased demand and job creation. In the end, this
reduces our deficit by enabling people to participate in our
economy.
Again, we respectfully implore that as you work through
ways that our nation can reduce the deficit that you sustain
the vital human needs programs found across the federal
government and accomplish deficit-reduction in a way that
does not exacerbate poverty or inequality.
____________________