[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 165 (Tuesday, November 1, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6980-S6981]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MORNING BUSINESS
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will be
in a period of morning business until 4:30 p.m., with Senators
permitted to speak therein for up to 10 minutes each.
The Senator from Missouri.
Passage of H.R. 2112
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, I wish to take a moment to thank Senator
Kohl. The comments the majority leader made about him were certainly
proven right in all of our relationships. I thank him for his guidance
and encouragement throughout this process. We have had open
communication and worked together to address the amendments brought
forward by our colleagues. While we didn't agree on every single thing
in the bill, we certainly agreed to be agreeable about that and see if
we couldn't produce a work product people have a right to expect of the
Senate. So the passage of these three bills is significant.
I certainly wish to thank Senator Kohl's staff--Galen Fountain,
Jessica Frederick, Dianne Nellor, and Bob Ross--for their
contributions, and I thank my staff: Stacy McBride, Mary Koskinen,
Brian Diffel, Zach Kinne, and Christina Weger.
Because this has been a process that has involved two other
subcommittees, I wish to express my thanks to my colleagues for their
hard work and cooperation on the other parts of this bill: Senators
Mikulski and Hutchison and their staffs on the Commerce, Justice,
Science Subcommittee and Senators Murray and Collins and their staffs
on the Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development.
The floor staff has worked hard over the course of the last several
days. Often, that work goes unnoticed. But managing this bill has not
been easy. It was a little different from many of the appropriations
bills that have been brought to the Senate floor, and certainly the
floor staff has been of tremendous help to me and to the committee
staff.
This has been a long process. A dozen amendments that affect the
agriculture division of this bill have been accepted over the course of
the debate. I am glad we have had an open debate and hope we can
swiftly move to conference with the House and send this work product on
to the President so that we can get these appropriations processes
started as close to the regular time as we possibly can, based on the
moment in which we find ourselves, and look forward to working with the
Appropriations Committee as we bring other bills to the floor.
Again, I close my remarks on this bill by expressing my personal
appreciation to Senator Kohl and his willingness to work with a new
Member of the Senate in putting this product together and bringing this
bill to the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I thank the distinguished Presiding
Officer, and I also compliment both Senators who just spoke, Senator
Kohl and Senator Blunt, for their excellent work.
Like everybody here, I have followed these votes and the negotiations
and did vote, and I am encouraged by the progress made on the
Transportation-HUD appropriations bill which the Senate has now
approved. It funds our Nation's ongoing transportation investments. It
also includes crucial emergency disaster funding for Vermont and the
other States struggling to recover from Hurricane/Tropical Storm Irene
and other natural disasters.
This bill is part of the response needed from Congress by thousands
of Vermonters and millions of other Americans. It is vital not only for
the economy of Vermont and other States whose roads and bridges were
decimated by the storm, but for the Nation's economy. I commend the
chair, Senator Murray, and the ranking member, Senator Collins, for
their hard work and dedication toward ensuring appropriate funding for
disaster relief, particularly in Irene's aftermath.
I have said many times on the Senate floor that Hurricane Irene was
devastating to our small State of Vermont. I was born in Vermont, as
were my parents, and I have never seen destruction of this magnitude.
The only thing that even compares are stories of floods in Vermont that
my grandparents used to tell me about when they were younger.
The flash floods caused by the storm destroyed homes and farms,
businesses, bridges, and roads. Roads and structures that have stood
for over a century were wiped out in a matter of minutes. I
helicoptered over Vermont with Governor Shumlin and General Dubie, the
head of our Vermont National Guard, the day after our storm, and none
of us could believe the things we were seeing. With the repair costs
estimated to be over $100 million, our little State has been stretched
to the limit.
As the rain stopped, Vermont moved immediately and we had crews
working to repair the damage. We didn't wait for anybody else; we just
started moving--neighbors helping neighbors, our State and local
governments, our National Guard, Red Cross, working together. However,
we do need the traditional helping hand of Federal disaster recovery
loans and grants to help those whose lives were upturned by Irene.
Federal disaster recovery aid has always been available to other States
after disasters such as this. We need it now in Vermont. This bill is
an essential part of the work that Congress should be doing in response
to major events such as Irene, pulling together as a Nation to heal
these wounds.
The Senate, as the Presiding Officer will recall, reconvened after
Labor Day. Those of us on the Appropriations Committee worked on this
bill and other disaster relief legislation, which have been top
priorities for Vermont and for many other States. Many other committees
were involved in this important work. The Vermont delegation worked
together on this bill and other Senators came together to help make
[[Page S6981]]
progress week by week. One by one, we have overcome a series of
legislative obstacles and have been able to turn the lights from red to
green.
Our legislative process this year has been unduly cumbersome and
unresponsive; different than I have ever seen in the years I have spent
here in the Senate. However, the progress we have achieved here in the
Senate is a testament to the determination of many in this body who
have been willing to set aside ideological imperatives and partisan
differences to work together as Republicans and Democrats to accomplish
the work that the American people and our constituents expect from
their government.
Now, in Vermont and the other New England States, winter is not just
on the horizon, it is on our doorstep. In our State last weekend, we
had more than 1 foot of snow in some parts. I mention this because if
you are going to repair roads and bridges, time is a significant
factor, and time is slipping away.
We all know that roads and bridges are the circulatory system for
commerce in the daily lives of living, breathing communities and their
citizens--where people have to go to work, school or be together with
their families. With many of the Federal aid disaster programs
underfunded, I am especially pleased that this bill contains the $1.9
billion that I and others worked to include to replenish the Federal
Highway Disaster Relief Fund. This fund will help rebuild Vermont's
vital roadways. These roadways are critical to rebuild our economy,
distribute aid, and bring people to hospitals and to schools. It is of
the utmost importance that this Federal aid reaches Vermont sooner
rather than later, as our winters can be extremely harsh. I look at
Washington, DC, which will close down with 3 inches of snow. We call
that a dusting in our State. Many times we have a foot of snow
overnight. Schools will still be open, commerce still goes on, but we
can't rebuild roads with a foot of snow on them. We have to be working
to rebuild now and we have to be prepared to work immediately when the
snow stops.
I have talked with Senator Sanders, Congressman Welch, and Governor
Shumlin, who has spent every single day working on this. My wife
Marcelle and I have driven around the State. We have talked to
community leaders, to those who have worked on disaster relief, and
others. It is very clear, given the mammoth, unprecedented destruction
of this storm, certain waivers are needed to allow States to access
funds for repair work they need without going through all kinds of
burdens for repairs.
I mention these waivers because if we are going to ensure that
Vermont and other States can promptly design and begin emergency and
permanent repairs, we have to do it now. We put the waivers into this
bill, and I hope the other body will understand we need them preserved.
This bill, an investment in America's crumbling and damaged roads and
bridges, is a crucial step. It will help restore the economic vitality
of our country.
I am also pleased the legislation includes emergency community
development block grant funding. Right now, HUD has no funding
available. They cannot address the housing needs of Vermonters affected
both by Hurricane Irene and the flooding of this past spring. These
disaster recovery programs are woefully underfunded.
I cannot think of the number of hours that I and other members of the
Appropriations Committee have worked on this, the evenings, the phone
calls, the weekends, touching base, but it is all worth it. If this
bill will now be accepted by the other body, we can go forward and we
can start doing the rebuilding we need.
Vermont is a very special place, not just because it is my home but
because of the spirit of its people. This is a State that has always
supported help for other States and Americans all over the country
facing similar disasters. We need that help now, and this bill is a
major step forward for that help. I thank everybody involved with it.
Now all we have to do is get it through the other body, get it on the
President's desk, and continue the recovery work we are doing both in
Vermont and other States damaged by Irene.
As we talk about the money, I will not resist the temptation to
repeat what a Vermonter told me. I have said it before on the Senate
floor. We spend unlimited sums to rebuild buildings and roads and
bridges in Iraq and Afghanistan and somebody else comes along and blows
them up. We build them in America for Americans by Americans and we
Americans will keep them safe.
I yield the floor.
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