[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 25 (Wednesday, February 15, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S697-S698]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING FRANK MARTIN CUSHING
Ms. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, it is with great sadness that I come to
the floor concerning the passing of Frank Cushing, one of the true
public servants that the Congress has known. Frank served as a
legislative aide to Senator Jim McClure of Idaho prior to joining the
Appropriations Committee staff as director of the Subcommittee on
Interior and Related Agencies in 1981. In 1984 he became the staff
director of the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, a post he
held until 1991. Although he left briefly for the private sector,
public service remained an integral part of his commitment to the
Congress and this Nation. His expertise, command of the appropriations,
authorizing, and budget processes, and his exceptional talent and
ability to work with others was missed, and he returned to the Congress
as staff director of the House Appropriations Committee under
Congressman Lewis.
It takes exceptional abilities to be a good staff director,
especially with the strong personalities that come with the experts who
serve on the staff of our committees. Frank had the ability to work
across the aisle and with other committees as few have ever done. His
knowledge of the appropriations process and budgeting provided a unique
depth to the consideration of authorizing legislation. He was able to
challenge the staff, improve the work product, and set a high standard
for quality and substance that we still strive to maintain. Much of the
work of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee is bipartisan and
often nonpartisan, reflecting regional interests and concerns, and
Frank understood how those interests and concerns could fit within the
overall policies that we tried to set for our energy, public lands, and
resource goals.
During his tenure on the committee, Frank in many ways was
responsible for the close working relationship between Senator McClure
and Senator Johnston as they switched from their roles as chairman and
ranking member. Frank was extraordinarily helpful when Senator McClure
was chairman in resolving the budgetary issues that threatened to hold
up the Compacts of Free Association that, when finally enacted, led to
the termination of the Trusteeship of the Pacific Islands the last of
the U.N. Trusteeships. When Senator Johnston announced at the beginning
of one Congress that he thought the committee should consider and
report legislation dealing with Puerto Rico as well as national energy
policy, Frank was in large measure responsible for negotiating and
constructing the framework and process that enabled the committee to
successfully report both measures with bipartisan support, although I
should mention that there were also bipartisan concerns as well.
Those are details, however, and do not convey what a warm and
generous person Frank was. They do not convey the respect and
admiration that those who worked with him had for his ability to
negotiate without rancor and without being disagreeable. They do not
tell of his concern for his staff and their problems or his interest in
their
[[Page S698]]
welfare and future or how the friendships that developed during his
tenure continued and grew and deepened over the years since he left.
There is one other aspect of Frank's service to the Senate as staff
director of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee that should be
mentioned. If Frank always put public service and the willingness to
respond to calls to return to public service above the lures of the
private sector, there was one passion that surmounted everything else
and that was his love for his family. Frank met his wife Amy while he
served on the Energy Committee, and anyone who ever met Frank
understood that Amy and his children, from his first marriage and with
Amy, were the center of his life.
Our hearts and thoughts in these times go out to Amy and Frank's
children and to all their family and to those who were close to him.
His presence remains with the institutions he served; and his humor,
compassion, and commitment will continue to be a marker for not just
our committee, but for public service generally. His family and
multitude of friends lost a good and faithful man, but they all remain
the richer for having known him for the many years, both in and out of
government, that they shared with him.
____________________