[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 183 (Thursday, December 1, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H8002]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, before we adjourn for the year, there are a
number of important items that we must address. The most pressing is
the expiration of unemployment benefits at the end of December.
Should Congress fail to act, millions of Americans who rely on
emergency unemployment compensation will begin to see their payments
disappear starting in January. 2.1 million of our fellow Americans will
have lost their benefits by the middle of February, and over 6 million
by the end of 2012. However, we have the power to prevent that from
happening by extending those benefits.
These emergency benefits were put in place at the start of the
recession in December of '07; and with so many Americans still out of
work, now is certainly not the time to let them come to an end.
{time} 1010
The number one challenge we must address in the Congress remains job
creation. Americans out of work have been doing their part to find
jobs. Congress must do its part as well. Some Republicans have unfairly
and incorrectly blamed those who have been laid off for their continued
difficulty in finding jobs. However, there are over four people looking
for every one job that is available. At the same time, there are nearly
7 million fewer jobs today than there were in 2007.
Instead of blaming the victims, we ought to work together, Democrats
and Republicans, to find solutions. Congress has never allowed
emergency unemployment benefits to lapse with our jobless rate anywhere
close to where it is today. If it did, over 17,000 people in my State
of Maryland would see their lifeline cut off by February. In Ohio,
Speaker Boehner's State, 80,000 people are at risk.
Among African Americans, Latinos and other minorities, a
disproportionate number have been affected by long-term unemployment
and are especially vulnerable if these benefits were to end. Every
State would see more Americans who are out of work slip into poverty.
Local communities would be affected, too, with residual job losses. The
Economic Policy Institute has estimated that allowing these benefits to
expire would cost us another 500,000 jobs--a half a million.
I sincerely hope that Republicans will work with us to prevent so
many Americans from being left out in the cold as they continue to seek
jobs but can't find them. It's long past the time that they start
working with us to pass a real jobs plan to get Americans back to work
and grow our economy.
The President put a jobs bill on our desk in September. It is now
December. We've yet to see that bill or any other jobs bill put on this
House floor by the Republican leadership. Democrats have multiple jobs
plans on the table--the President's American Jobs Act and the House
Democrats' Make It in America plan. Both will help create jobs right
away and invest in long-term economic competitiveness.
If Republicans continue to be unwilling to work with us on a plan to
create jobs, I hope they will at least work with us to pass a measure
that will prevent further losses as a result of expiring unemployment
benefits. I strongly urge my Republican friends to help us stop the
looming and entirely preventable disaster of millions having no
support. It is the responsibility we have to our constituents and to
those looking to us for leadership during this challenging time.
Let us not go home. Let us not celebrate Christmas or other holidays
without ensuring the extension of unemployment benefits for those
Americans who cannot find jobs, notwithstanding the fact they are
looking for jobs. They're counting on us. Let's be sure that their
reliance was well placed.
____________________