[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 93 (Tuesday, June 19, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H3737-H3738]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1020
HELPING OUR CHILDREN ACROSS THIS NATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, I've had the pleasure of
chairing the Congressional Children's Caucus for a number of years,
having founded it almost a decade ago.
I'm delighted to have, as part of our agenda, a number of issues
dealing with mentoring, nutrition, obesity, issues dealing with now a
phenomena that is raging across our Nation, bullying, and introduced
legislation just 6 months ago and now revised legislation that deals
with renewing the Juvenile Accountability Block Grant, as well as
providing intervention on these issues.
I'm looking forward to bipartisan support because, as we've seen
statistics across America, children as young as pre-K and kindergarten
now can interpret actions as bullying. We need to give help and relief
to school districts and parents and families, and most of all, a public
statement that that action is intolerable and that we want our children
to go to schools and playgrounds and places that they will find comfort
and enjoyment as a child.
That brings me also to my commitment to science, technology,
engineering, and math. I was very pleased to be involved in a program
that provided opportunity for sixth and seventh grade boys at risk. It
gave them math and science in the morning with what we called the SMART
board, and then in the afternoon they played with college football
players and learned the skills of football with various sports leagues.
Of course, we had the corporate support.
So I raised the question to my good friend, the company Halliburton,
and asked for their CEO, who was supportive of this program last
summer, to recognize the value of science, technology, engineering, and
math, and respond to the needs of these inner-city boys in Houston, the
place where the company is located with so many employees. I'm reminded
of going to give comfort to many of their employees when KBR was owned
by Halliburton and they had tragically lost employees in Iraq. It was
my chance to go and respond to that crisis and to give my sympathy.
That's the way we are as neighbors, but they are not acting neighborly
now. And there are a number of boys, the same kind of children that I
see that come here to Washington all the time. Of course, these at-risk
boys have probably never been out of the city of Houston, but they are
in school districts across the city. Isn't it a shame that we can't get
a response, with all the great employees that I know care about the
city, to be able to support these children? I ask for the CEO to
respond to these at-risk boys. I'll certainly be looking forward to
engaging and making sure that that happens. It's very important.
I understand that there has been some question about an executive
order that deals with helping children again across this Nation,
children who have come to the United States not of their own accord,
who were brought by their parents and have been here since the age of
16 and have attempted, like
[[Page H3738]]
many children that I see, to do the right thing, to get a high school
diploma, to be in the United States service, to get a GED that happened
to have come and they're unstatused.
This issue has been before the Congress for 11 years. In fact, there
was an effort passed by the House that moved to the Senate, as was
instructed, and the Senate refused to move forward on something called
the DREAM Act. If you look at all of our cases and our caseload in our
respective districts, particularly those of us in the Southwest, there
are tons of cases that have come in that will bring tears to your eyes,
children being deported away from their families or families being
separated.
Let me disabuse you of the notion that this is not done under the
law. There is a regulatory scheme under the Homeland Security
Department that allows discretionary determination about deportation or
whether or not someone should go into deportation. These are children.
The President did the right thing by having an executive order that
utilized the powers by the Secretary of Homeland Security under the
Code of Federal Regulations to be able to use that discretion. It's the
right thing to do.
Congress, it's not too late, my colleagues, Republicans and
Democrats, to come forward and support the DREAM Act that has been
introduced over and over again, that had bipartisan support. In fact,
it's not too late to help the farmers, to help the high-tech industry,
and pass comprehensive immigration reform. Who are we, other than
Americans, who are humanitarians, who are empathetic, who love the
values of this Nation and believe in opportunity?
I don't want people to be equating the loss of jobs with allowing a
few children to be able to be saved from deportation, whether they come
from South and Central America, they come from Ireland, they come from
Italy, they come from the continent of Africa, the Caribbean. It is
time to be the Nation that we know we are, which is lifting up people,
giving opportunity. This is the greatest country in the world, and I
look forward to corporations responding to at-risk boys, Mr. Speaker,
and, as well, that we recognize the importance of helping children
wherever they are.
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