[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 174 (Tuesday, November 15, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H7582-H7583]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INCOME INEQUALITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Rhode Island (Mr. Cicilline) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CICILLINE. Mr. Speaker, last month the Congressional Budget
Office released a report that examined household income distribution
between 1979 and 2007. The most disturbing figure to me in this report
is that the top 1 percent of income earners have seen their average
real after-tax household income grow by 275 percent. Middle-income
Americans saw an increase of 40 percent over the same period of time.
This report illuminates a sad fact: Income inequality in our country
is growing at a staggering pace. The report is pointing out what many
of my constituents tell me as I travel around my district from
Cumberland to Pawtucket to Newport, from community dinners and talking
to business owners: This economy is not working for the majority of
middle class families. In fact, the hardworking middle class of our
country is being hollowed out, a middle class made up of people that
are just trying to provide a good life for themselves and their
families. My real fear is that if we let that happen, we'll never get
it back.
Those here in Washington need to remember that our job is to help
people and to strengthen the middle class of this country. The way back
to prosperity is not to ignore the problem; it's through investing in
workforce retraining, infrastructure, housing, and education for
tomorrow. We can't wait any longer. Now is the time to act. We need to
work together in a bipartisan way to get our economy and our country
moving again.
I have introduced legislation, the Make It in America Block Grant,
designed to help small to medium-sized manufacturers retool, retrofit
their facilities, and train employees so they can sustain their current
workforce, create jobs, and better compete in the 21st century economy.
We need to develop new efficient and effective ways to fund much needed
investments in our Nation's crumbling infrastructure, including
legislation to create a national infrastructure bank which will attract
private investment in vital infrastructure projects.
American families will not feel or share an economic recovery until
we stabilize our distressed housing market. We not only need to
mitigate our foreclosure crisis but undertake bold actions to prevent
the next wave of foreclosures from occurring. Congress needs to pass
critical housing legislation, like the Preserving Homes and Communities
Act, introduced by Senator Jack Reed and Representative Elijah
Cummings, which would improve home loan modification programs,
including creating an appeals process for homeowners denied a loan
modification, limit foreclosure-related fees, and respond to
robosigning misconduct by forcing mortgage servicers to prove they
actually have the legal right to foreclose on a property.
I believe that each and every American must be guaranteed access to
an affordable higher education, including vocational education,
regardless of their economic status. We need to protect the funding of
Pell Grants, named for my home State Senator, the late Claiborne Pell,
which are one of our
[[Page H7583]]
Nation's most significant college financial aid programs. We must also
guarantee that our education system is preparing young people for
career readiness, which I have worked on to ensure that we're offering
more training options to young adults, moving them along on career
pathways, and strengthening public-private partnerships so that
business and government are working together to build and improve our
workforce.
I recommend to my colleagues that they all read this report, if they
haven't already. I also ask that they join me in renewing our
commitment to keep fighting for middle class families as we work to
help our country every day here in the Congress of the United States.
It's time to get America back to work and to strengthen and support the
hardworking middle class of this country, the hardworking middle class
that's built this country.
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