[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 41 (Tuesday, March 13, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1589-S1590]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION ACT
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I thought I could give Senators and those
who may be following this very elongated debate on the highway bill an
update as to where we are. We have a managers' package we are hoping to
approve momentarily. It is a bipartisan package. We continue to work
across the aisle. Under the consent, we want to move forward with that.
We had, I believe, a holdup yesterday. We are working to find out why.
But we are very hopeful that will move forward. Then we have a series
of votes on amendments, beginning at about noon. So at 11:30 or so, we
will be back on the bill.
I want to say to my friends on the other side of the aisle and to my
friends on this side of the aisle that we are making great progress.
This is a jobs bill. This is a major jobs bill. This is the biggest
jobs bill.
They passed an IPO bill over there in the House. Eric Cantor is
saying it is a jobs bill. I do not know how many jobs it will create.
It is an investor bill. It is good; I am for it. But it does not come
anywhere close to the bill we are working on today. Because on March
31, if we do not act on this transportation bill, everything will come
to a screeching halt, if I might use that analogy. Because there will
not be a gas tax anymore going into the Federal highway trust fund,
there will not be any funds going from the Federal Government to the
various planning organizations in all of our States and communities.
All of us know that since the days of President Eisenhower we have
had a national system for roads, bridges, highways, and so on. So we
have a lot of work to do here. I want to say, we are very close to the
day when everything will stop. So I think we are making great progress.
I know the majority leader and the minority leader talked about
finishing this bill today. That means a lot of cooperation because we
have to get through about 20 amendments plus a managers' package. I
think we can do it. I know we can do it.
Then, frankly, we can actually go home and tell our people we voted
on a huge jobs bill. How huge? We are going to protect 1.8 million
jobs, and a lot of construction jobs. I have often told people that the
unemployment rate among construction workers is way higher than the
general population. Our unemployment rate is about 8.3 percent. We have
a 15-, 16-, 17-percent unemployment rate among construction workers.
And God bless this President. He has worked so hard on making sure we
have set the table for job growth. We have had terrific job growth, but
even with those 200,000-plus jobs created last month, construction jobs
actually went down.
So we are looking at an industry that is in a great deal of trouble.
It is because of the housing market. It is still not stabilized. Until
we solve our housing crisis--and, again, the administration and the
Congress are trying to do everything to allow people to stay in their
homes so we don't keep having defaults, houses on the market, short
sales, and all the rest. Once that is behind us, we will see a whole
new day for construction. But that day isn't here.
It would be a dereliction of our duty if we fail to pass this bill
because we will save 1.8 million jobs. That is how many people are
working as a result of our ongoing transportation action. We have to
save that. Then because of some very good work done in my home State,
particularly in Los Angeles, we have come up with a new way to create
an additional 1 million jobs by leveraging a program called the TIFIA
Program, transportation infrastructure financing. It means as our State
and our local areas pass, say, a sales tax to build transit or roads or
highways, we, the Federal Government, can front that money at virtually
zero risk and leverage these funds threefold.
In this bill we would be protecting 1.8 million jobs and creating up
to 1 million new jobs because of the TIFIA Program. I want to say this
bill is a bipartisan effort--hugely bipartisan.
I just talked to Senator Inhofe late last evening. We talked about
the fact that we don't want to have it held up anymore. We want to move
it through, and we are going to move it through. We are very pleased.
Anyone who follows politics knows Senator Inhofe is one of the most
conservative Members of the Senate, and I am one of the most liberal
Members of
[[Page S1590]]
the Senate. We are both very proud of who we are and comfortable with
who we are. We know when it comes to some things we don't see eye to
eye. There will be many more opportunities to see how we disagree on
issues, such as clean air, clean water, safe drinking water, superfund,
climate change, and all that. But we are on the highway bill. We hope
this will become a template for us in the Senate and the House to find
a sweet spot where we can work together. We are right there. A little
bit more work and we know we have done our jobs. It could come today--I
hope it will come today--but it will come late today because there are
many amendments to get through.
I want to make my last comment about what is happening in the House.
The House passed an IPO bill, initial public offering. I support that
approach. I think it would be a great way to get more capital into the
hands of businesses and enable them to hire people. It is a good bill.
We are going to work on it. But the House has done nothing about the
Transportation bill. Speaker Boehner has tried. He has had many efforts
to bring people to the table. But the trouble is he has only brought to
the table one political party. We have to work together. Senator Inhofe
and I could never have gotten this bill to where it is if we stood in
our corners and concentrated on the areas where we had disagreement.
There were plenty of those, but we set those aside.
I say to the Members of the House, there is a secret to success,
which is taking your hand and reaching it across the aisle and finding
common ground with your colleagues. If you lose a bunch of Republicans
and Democrats, you still have enough to get a bill through.
Our bill, though not perfect, does what we have to do. We protect 1.8
million jobs, mostly in construction. We create up to 1 million jobs.
We took a bill that had 90 different programs and brought it down to 30
programs. We have a managers' package of very bipartisan issues that we
have resolved.
I will probably be back on the floor within an hour to debate the two
amendments that will be pending, the Bingaman amendment and the DeMint
amendment. I will speak out on those amendments.
I thank the occupant of the chair for his support. He has been a real
good friend and has helped us move this bill forward. I know this bill
is important to his home State of Delaware, as it is important to
Tennessee and to California. I have a list of jobs by State that we
would lose if we fail to act. That is the bad news. The good news is we
are going to act. I will be back in short order.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Tennessee is
recognized.
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, is it appropriate for me to speak as in
morning business for a few minutes?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is recognized.
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