[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 31 (Tuesday, February 28, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1072-S1073]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION REAUTHORIZATION
Mr. CARDIN. First, let me express my disappointment that we are not
here debating the surface transportation reauthorization bill. We had a
bill that came out of the Environment and Public Works Committee and
came out of several other of our committees by unanimous vote, so it is
a bipartisan bill. It is a bill that will save jobs and create jobs
here in America. It will reinvest in our own infrastructure to make
America more competitive. And, as I said, it has been done in a
bipartisan manner thanks to the hard work of many people.
I see Senator Boxer on the floor. Thanks to her incredible
leadership, we have an agreed path forward from the point of view of
the relevant amendments. So what is holding up the process? It is these
amendments that have absolutely nothing to do with the transportation
programs of this country. We are talking about policy in Egypt, which
has nothing to do with our transportation needs. I would start by
saying how disappointed I am that we haven't yet started the real
debate on our transportation reauthorization bill which will create
jobs, save jobs, modernize America, and make us more competitive.
Let me yield for a moment, if I could, to my colleague from
California, Senator Boxer.
Mrs. BOXER. If my friend would yield for a question and keep the
floor--and I ask unanimous consent that the time for this colloquy not
be taken off his time, or does he have unlimited time?
Mr. CARDIN. It is 10 minutes.
Mrs. BOXER. Well, let me say thank you to my friend. I know he is
here to talk about judges, which is a critical issue. I am very happy
he is going to do that. The lack of action on these qualified nominees
is hurting our people.
But I wanted to thank him for his comments. The Senator from
Maryland, Mr. Cardin, is a senior member of the Environment and Public
Works Committee and has worked so hard, along with our invaluable
staff, and provided an invaluable contribution to the Transportation
bill. I guess the question I will get to is this one: With 2.8 million
jobs on the line--that is 1.8 million jobs we have currently attached
to a highway bill and then an additional 1 million jobs which will be
created because of some of the work we did on TIFIA to leverage the
jobs--does not my friend believe this is the time to move a jobs bill,
when we are in the process of seeing this economy finally turn around?
The turnaround is not as fast as we want, but does my friend believe
the timing of this couldn't be better; and that if we pass this bill,
which is so bipartisan, it will kick this economic recovery into higher
gear?
Mr. CARDIN. The Senator is absolutely correct. We need more jobs in
America. I congratulate the Obama administration for turning our
economy around. We have had 23 consecutive months of private sector job
growth, but we don't have enough jobs yet. We have to create more jobs.
Now is the time to be bold on looking for responsible programs that can
move this country forward and creating more jobs, not only initially in
road construction, in bridge construction and transit construction, but
making us more competitive for the future and creating permanent
job growth for America, jobs that cannot be exported.
[[Page S1073]]
That is what we should be doing, and that is why the surface
transportation bill is so important for us to bring up and debate and
pass.
And, quite frankly, the Senator from California had performed
something unprecedented--well, not unprecedented but unusual here--in
that she got bipartisan support from three committees, and we are
working on the fourth now. Senator Boxer has gotten all the committees
together, and so it is time to move this bill forward for jobs
throughout America.
Mrs. BOXER. My very last question. I hope my friend is aware that
right now the leadership is working very hard to take this very
unwieldy list of amendments and get it down to some responsible number
so we can begin, finally, in earnest. I have to point out that I don't
understand how my Republican friends think it is appropriate to add to
a highway bill the issue of birth control. I don't know how my friends
on the other side think it is appropriate to repeal environmental laws
on this highway bill. I don't understand, as my friend from Maryland
pointed out, how they can say they can see a connection between a
highway bill and what is happening in Egypt.
We care about all these issues, and the Senate will address these
issues, but this is a jobs bill, a bipartisan jobs bill. So I want to
end by thanking my friend for yielding to me, and I look forward to his
remarks on judges, and I look forward to getting back to our
transportation bill, which I am hopeful will happen at some point
today.
Mr. CARDIN. I thank Senator Boxer.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak for up to 10 minutes.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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