[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 97 (Tuesday, June 26, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4610-S4627]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION SAFETY AND INNOVATION ACT OF 2012--
Continued
The PRESIDING OFFICER. For the information of the Senate, cloture
having been invoked on the motion to concur in the House amendment to
S. 3187 yesterday, the motion to refer fell, being inconsistent with
cloture.
Under the previous order, there will be 6 hours 15 minutes of debate,
with 2 hours controlled by the Senator from Iowa, Mr. Harkin; 4 hours
controlled by the Senator from North Carolina, Mr. Burr; and 15 minutes
controlled by the Senator from Kentucky, Mr. Paul.
The Senator from Iowa.
[[Page S4611]]
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, again, we are on the Food and Drug
Administration Safety and Innovation Act of 2012. As the chair just
said, we have 6 hours 15 minutes of debate time. I am hopeful we don't
utilize it all and that we can vote on this sometime later this
afternoon.
We just considered this bill in the Senate a few weeks ago and passed
it 96 to 1. Following the conference with the House, the House passed
the bill unanimously last week. Today I trust that we will finish the
job.
I am genuinely proud of this legislation. It will ensure that the FDA
has the resources to speed market access to drugs and devices while
continuing to ensure patient safety. For the first time, it will make
new resources available to allow the FDA to clear its backlog of
applications for generic drugs, which will help ensure that patients
have access to less expensive medications. It will make sure the FDA
has the funds to prevent there ever being a backlog in applications for
biosimilars. These resources are vital to FDA's ability to do its job,
to the medical products industry's ability to make these products and,
most importantly, to patients who need both access to drugs and
devices, and assurances that they are indeed safe.
This legislation has benefited from input from a diverse range of
interested parties, Senators on both sides of the aisle, our colleagues
in the House, industry stakeholders, consumer groups, and patient
groups.
Over 1 year ago the parties started bringing policy ideas to the
table. We worked together in bipartisan working groups to reach
consensus on these policy measures. Where we could not achieve
consensus, we didn't allow those differences to distract us from the
critically important goal of producing a bill that could be broadly
supported. As a result of this bipartisan process, we have a bill that
advances our shared goals of patient safety, patient access, a well-
functioning FDA, and strong and viable American businesses. We
streamlined the device approval process while also enhancing patient
protections. We modernized FDA's authority to ensure that drugs and
drug ingredients coming to the United States from overseas are safe and
to ensure that our domestic companies compete on a level field with
foreign ones. We addressed the critical problem of drug shortages. We
helped spur innovation and incentivized drug development for life-
threatening conditions. We reauthorized and improved the incentives for
studying drugs in children.
Finally, we increased accountability and transparency at FDA. So the
bill strikes a balance. It will help keep our regulatory system in pace
to adapt to technological and scientific advances. It will create the
conditions to foster innovative advances in medical technologies.
Again, it will do all of this without losing sight of the most
important function of the FDA--ensuring patient safety.
So it has been a long road leading up to this moment. We have been
working on this bill for well over 1 year and 3 or 4 months with the
help of Senators on and off the committee.
Again, I thank my colleague, the ranking member of the Health
Committee, Senator Enzi, for all of his diligent and hard work and that
of his staff for helping to bring all the different parties together
and making sure we had a consensus bill that responded to all of those
inputs.
So we have had a great collaboration. I think we have an excellent
bill. Again, I am hopeful we can have our comments and discussions this
afternoon, but I urge all my colleagues to vote today to pass the FDA
Safety and Innovation Act. It is critically important to the agency,
the industry, and to the patients we get this done. This will be the
final step.
As I said, the House passed it unanimously. If we pass it today, it
can go to the President for his signature as soon as we pass it this
afternoon.
Mr. President, I yield such time as he may consume to my good friend
and colleague and ranking member, Senator Enzi.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.
Mr. ENZI. Mr. President, I thank the chairman of the committee. I
thank him for his kind words, but I also thank him for his leadership
on this issue. We have had a great teamwork effort both between the
Senators and between the staff. This isn't something that just came
together a couple of weeks ago. This is something that has been worked
on for about 1\1/2\ years, with pretty constant meetings on Fridays of
all of the interested groups and then stakeholders. It takes a
tremendous amount of work to put something like this together and have
it be in a bipartisan way like this. It is largely because it came to
committee.
In committee we took a look at all of the amendments that were
suggested, we got the people together who had very similar amendments,
and they usually were able to work out something to satisfy everybody
in that instance, and we came up with a bill. As Senator Harkin
mentioned, it passed 96 to 1. Anytime we get something to pass, it is
kind of a landmark success. But when we get something that bipartisan,
it is even more landmark.
We have been trying to get this bill wrapped up before the Supreme
Court decision came out on health care. The reason we have been trying
to do that is, who knows what it is going to say or what kind of ideas
people will come up with when that happens. This is a group of 100 idea
generators, so we wanted this cleared up by that time. We are on a path
to get that done right now and a path that will keep the people
employed who are taking a look at new drugs and devices and generics
and biosimilars and continue to get those on the market so people will
have the latest innovations.
One of the things we included in the bill was some use of foreign
clinical trials if they were approved by the FDA, and that should even
speed up the process. Of course, when we went to conference there were
a lot of things people wanted to have that they brought up as
amendments. It is very critical in the bill, and we get some of them
and we don't get others.
I know Senator Alexander played a huge role; he had seven items in
the bill and we got six of them. Senator Burr had 12 items in the bill,
and we got 11 of them. I have to mention, of course, that the one we
did not get is a particularly important but particularly difficult
issue that is going to take more time to get worked out. It is one that
deals with drug distribution security, and that is something we cannot
avoid. We have to do it. But it is going to take longer to work that
out. It deserves some extra time and some more understanding on both
sides of the aisle on that one and in a number of different States. It
doesn't just involve the Senate; it doesn't just involve the drug
companies; it also involves the whole chain that these things have to
go through, including the local pharmacist whom we don't want to
overload with work, and the people who have to transport these drugs
whom we don't want to overload with work or make it extremely
complicated when they cross different State lines and have to do
different kinds of reporting.
Senator Isakson had four amendments, and we were able to get three of
them. Senator Paul had two, and we got one. Senator Hatch had six, and
he got all of them. Senator McCain had two, and we got one. Senator
Roberts had two, and we got both of those. Senator Murkowski had two,
and we got both of those. Senator Kirk had two, and we got one of
those. Senator Grassley had two, and we got one of those. Senator
Portman had two, and we got both of those. And Senator Coburn had two,
and we got one of those. Senator Corker had two, and we got both of
those.
So there are a lot of things we did on the Senate side that became
possible on the House side. There are a number of things they did on
the House side that we couldn't agree with on this side either. But we
did reach agreement--and we reached it in pretty much record time. We
now have a bill that can go ahead and be passed and go to the President
for signature to assure that the level of safety we have in our drugs
not only continues but improves, and drugs can get on the market faster
than they had before by streamlining the process and also making sure
there are better foreign inspections so the ingredients that go into
the drugs don't cause problems.
So this legislation reauthorizes the Food and Drug Administration's
user
[[Page S4612]]
fee program, and it ensures that Americans get better access to safe
innovative medicines and medical devices. It will make significant
changes. It will improve the FDA's review and approval of new drugs and
devices.
Unfortunately, FDA's current process for reviewing and approving
medical devices too often creates delay and unpredictability. This in
turn threatens patient access to the best possible treatments for their
conditions. In some cases, this has forced American patients to travel
overseas to obtain access to lifesaving new devices that FDA has not
approved in the United States.
The bill goes a long way toward solving these problems and makes the
most significant changes to the law of governing FDA's review of
devices in decades.
This bill will speed the approval of devices by reducing the redtape
associated with the ``least burdensome'' standard that FDA uses to
approve such devices. The bill will also make it easier for FDA to
approve devices for patients with rare diseases who might not otherwise
be able to have their conditions treated most effectively. It will also
enable FDA to expedite safety determinations, to resolve appeals, and
to improve their postapproval surveillance activities to detect
problems as they occur. It is not good enough to get them approved, we
also want them watched after they are approved, and this will do it.
The bill also contains important reforms to foster drug innovation
and patient access to new therapies. It modernizes the accelerated
approval pathway for drugs to reflect advances in science over the past
20 years. It formalizes a new process to expedite the development and
approval of breakthrough therapies. These changes are particularly
important for patients with rare diseases where there are no therapies
available, and it is not feasible or ethical to require large
conventional clinical trials.
Nobody wants to be the one who is a test case when there might be
something that would work for them, and there aren't the sizes of the
populations to do the conventional clinical trial anyway. The patient
community strongly supports these improvements because these will save
lives.
The bill also contains important reforms that will help mitigate the
problems associated with drug shortages. It will require better
coordination within FDA as well as the other Federal agencies such as
the DEA. It will also allow FDA to move faster, to take actions, and to
address shortages through expedited reviews and approvals.
The bill also makes important changes to how FDA uses Risk Evaluation
and Mitigation Strategies, REMS. REMS play a critical role in
protecting patients and public health and this bill includes a
provision that clarifies the process for modifying REMS--especially
with regard to minor modifications.
The provision in the bill being passed today does not change
Congress' expectation that a non-minor modification will generally be
based on the best available science including an assessment
demonstrating that the modification is necessary or appropriate. Nor
does the clarification indicate that a modification should be approved
if it would reduce the REMS' effectiveness in addressing the
drug's known risks.
The bill follows what I call the 80 percent rule. When we focus on 80
percent of the issues on which we can reach agreement rather than
focusing exclusively on the parts and the issues we can never resolve,
we can achieve amazing results. Over 1 year ago staff began to work on
identifying the 80 percent. A group of staff from Republican and
Democratic offices on the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
Committee began a series of standing meetings and proceeded to meet
every week for several months. They met with stakeholders and discussed
policy solutions that each member thought would solve the problem.
After much discussion of the benefits, costs, and possible unintended
consequences, members agreed on a list of policy concepts. If there was
not a consensus on a particular policy, it wasn't included. This is the
80 percent rural in action.
As this process has progressed, my staff also met with the Republican
staff on the Health Committee for at least 2 hours every week to keep
them informed and to seek their input. I also personally met with the
members of the committee before markup to ensure I understood their
priorities.
This bill reflects the work of every member of the Health, Education,
Labor, and Pensions Committee. All of them have at least one provision
included in this legislation. Many members of the committee worked with
us to find consensus measures that addressed their priorities as well.
As I mentioned, not everyone got everything they wanted. We did,
however, find the 80 percent of each solution that we could all agree
would help solve the problem, and the bill passed the committee by a
voice vote. This legislation could be a model for how the process can
and should work regardless of the political environment. We followed
this model as we transitioned from the committee process to the Senate
floor. We worked with members who filed amendments in committee to
address some of the concerns in the manager's amendment. We also worked
with Members who filed amendments on the Senate floor.
We did the same thing in our discussions with the House. You can see
that the results are very positive. We preserved and we improved
policies to foster drug innovation and patient access, and to promote
accountability and transparency at the FDA. We also made significant
improvements to the Senate's medical device reforms for startup and
emerging growth companies, and with respect to the 510(k) process.
We thank Senator Harkin for his tireless effort on this bill. I know
he spent countless hours and attended dozens of meetings, working with
Senators and stakeholders and advocates to address their concerns. This
bill would not have had such broad bipartisan support without all of
his work.
Senator Harkin's staff has also worked tirelessly on this bipartisan
bill. Their knowledge, professionalism, their graciousness were
instrumental in addressing all of the issues in this bill. They worked
many late evenings, they worked through weekends, they worked through
countless working group discussions to be able to get the bill where it
is today.
Specifically, I want to recognize Elizabeth Jungman, Bill McConagha,
Kathleen Laird, and Kate Wise for all their work. I thank Pam Smith,
Senator Harkin's staff director, for her leadership getting this bill
to the finish line. I especially want to recognize Jenelle
Krishnamoorthy, whose organization and diplomatic skills helped us
resolve the most difficult challenges and made sure that the priorities
of all the members of the committee are reflected in the bill.
I also wish to thank the staffs of the Legislative Counsel, the
Congressional Budget Office, and the Federal Drug Administration for
all of their technical assistance. Again, there are people in those
groups who had to work through the weekends when we were finishing up.
Finally I would thank my staff--Keith Flanagan, Melissa Pfaff, Grace
Stuntz, Katy Spangler, Rob Walton, and my health policy director, Chuck
Clapton.
I would be really remiss if I didn't thank my staff director Frank
Macchiarola for his work on this bill, especially as the bill
progressed through the HELP Committee, the Senate floor, and
discussions with the House. My staff has been working around the clock
for many days, for weeks, and for months. I sincerely appreciate their
dedication to getting this bill passed and for helping to work with the
80-percent rule.
I urge my colleagues to support this bipartisan bill that makes
important changes to the FDA and I ask them to support this process
that expedites getting the conference done. We will have a real and
meaningful impact on millions of American patients.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Carolina.
Mr. BURR. Mr. President, I wish to start off by thanking the chair
and the ranking member for the great work they have accomplished with
what has always been a very delicate piece of legislation. Their staffs
have been tireless on both sides, trying to work out differences, and
we would not be here today if it were not for their commitment to this
legislation.
[[Page S4613]]
Let me say to the chair and the ranking member, I plan to go on for
some time. If I were you, I would take the opportunity to leave for a
while because I will go for an hour or two or maybe three. And it is
not all going to pertain specifically to this legislation, but I have a
lot to say because I have heard some of the opening statements. I have
heard statements such as ``our goal is to finish before the Supreme
Court.'' I have a question: Why? Why a crucial piece of legislation
that affects so many Americans and so many patients around the world--
why did it have to be done before the Supreme Court? I am not sure
anybody can give an answer, but somebody started that as a goal and it
sort of was adopted.
I heard the legislation was accomplished at record speed. I don't see
that as something to herald. Speed is indicative of something that we
rushed our way through. I know on behalf of the chairman's staff and
the ranking member's staff, they have been working on this for a long
time. So has my staff. But from a standpoint of when we marked up the
legislation and came to the floor--how fast we went to the floor--we
did it because there was an understanding that we were going to try to
hold the Senate product together.
I don't want to take issue with the numbers. I had two amendments
that were dropped in conference so I am not sure how I had 12 and got
11 but, regardless, the question we are here to answer, the purpose of
this legislation, is that this is supposed to drive innovation in
America and bring lifesaving drugs, devices, and biologics to
patients--here in America first, but around the country, around the
world. That is the goal behind this legislation.
I have to take issue with my ranking member. I don't think the 80-
percent rule applies to health care. I can't look at a patient and say:
If we can get 80 percent of the right policy, I am going to feel good.
If I am in the 20 percent that is left out, I am going to be really
pissed off.
One of the reasons our health care costs are so high today is that we
have been able to innovate as a country to where we maintain disease
extremely well. But we are right on the cusp of being able to cure
things such as breast cancer and diabetes. It is not going to be cheap.
It is not going to be fast. You are not going to find it in the 80-
percent category. You are going to find it in the 20-percent category.
It is going to take a while. It is going to take people investing
capital and companies that are committed to their shareholders that
they are not going to have the returns because they are invested in
something important and that is the long-term future of our country and
our country's health.
That is what I see in a 5-year PDUFA bill. This is not a 1-year
reauthorization of something. Granted, this is not a piece of
legislation that this committee drafted from scratch. It is important
that everybody understands that for this legislation, in the
negotiations between drugs, devices, biologics, generics industry with
the Federal Drug Administration, there is not a Member of Congress and
no staff of Congress in the room as they negotiate what fees they are
going to pay to the FDA to actually process their applications. So the
focus of this committee was to look at what happened in the
negotiations and try to figure out how could we make this bill better--
how could we assure ourselves there was a level of transparency we
could understand, that the negotiations they had entered into in fact
benefited American patients.
If this doesn't benefit the health care costs and the health care of
Americans, then we have missed the mark. The whole objective is to put
America in a better position after the passage of this bill.
I will be boring because some of what I am going to talk about a lot
of people in this institution know. But I am not sure the American
people understand the background that is here. The Federal Drug
Administration is responsible for assuring the safety and efficacy and
the security of human and animal medical products. One element of FDA's
statutory mission is to promote the public health and the FDA
accomplishes this mission in part by timely--timely--approving
lifesaving, life-enhancing innovations that make medicine safer, more
effective and in many cases more affordable.
FDA's broad regulatory authority crosses a range of products and has
resulted in the agency overseeing products that amount to 25 cents of
every dollar of the U.S. economy. Let me say that again. The FDA
regulation extends to 25 cents of every dollar spent in the U.S.
economy. Therefore, the FDA's review and decision process not only
impacts our Nation's patients and innovators, their work has a
significant impact on many sectors of our Nation's economy. As
consumers and patients, the American people have serious interests in
assuring that the FDA is accountable, transparent, efficient, and
making sound decisions in as timely a fashion as possible.
You see, that is why I am on the floor today. If the goal is to have
transparent, efficient, sound decisions in a timely fashion, you don't
rush through it. You make sure that there is a matrix in place--not one
that was designed by the agency and not one that was designed by the
industry, but one that is designed by the body that is responsible to
do oversight over Federal agencies, the Congress of the United States,
the HELP Committee. It is our job. That is why concerns about
timeliness and predictability of FDA's regulatory process must be taken
seriously and they must be addressed.
Unfortunately, too often Congress is guilty of not paying close
enough attention to how well things are working or not working at the
FDA on behalf of the patients, the very people for whom the most is at
stake. Every 5 years, drug and device industries negotiate their user
fees that are then sent to Congress with the expectation that we will
quickly act upon them to ensure the continuity of the agency. Let me
assure you, this year is no exception. They dropped these agreements on
Congress's lap and said: Would you pass these as quickly as you can
with no changes? And to their credit, the chair and the ranking member
said: No, Congress has a role to play. And staff has had tremendous
input into what the final product was.
Unfortunately, rushing the bills through the House and the Senate has
resulted in bipartisan track-and-trace provisions not being included in
the bill we have before us today. As the ranking member said, I am very
disappointed that these important bipartisan provisions were sacrificed
as the expense to attain speed. I understand the difficulty of the
lift. I acknowledge that to my colleagues and to their staff. But I
also question how hard we tried, on an issue that we knew going in was
tough. There is no such thing as spending too much time when it comes
to getting something as important as drug distribution security right.
I assure all my colleagues that my friend from Colorado, Senator
Bennet, and I will continue to work together to get these important
provisions done. I might add, I have had the commitment from the chair
and the ranking member to work with us on other legislation to try to
address this.
But let me say today, it will not be any easier than it is right now.
It may be tougher then because this was a vehicle that had to go,
therefore people would have swallowed a lot more that is in this bill.
As my colleagues know, FDA and industry tell us not to make any
changes because it would ``open up the agreement.'' Think about that.
The industry and the FDA told Congress don't put anything else in here
because we would consider that as opening up our agreement.
When did Congress become so irrelevant that a Federal agency would
suggest that we not get involved? Yet it requires our passage for this
to go in statute.
I have explained before, Congress is told to tiptoe around the
agreements and we focus our efforts on the belt-and-suspenders policies
to complement the agreement. This does not make for the most consistent
and deliberative process in considering how Congress can work with FDA
and industry to strengthen and improve FDA's drug and device work on
behalf of our Nation's patients, but this is the process Members have
to work within, which is why it is so important to assure that the
right policy riders, including transparency and accountability, are
included in the final package.
One thing that has been made quite clear over the past few years is
the importance of FDA reporting on the right
[[Page S4614]]
matrix. I can predict with some confidence, since this is a 5-year
bill, we will be here 5 years from now and hopefully there will be at
least one Member of the Senate who steps up and says: How did the FDA
hold up against what they said they were going to do in the agreements?
That is at the heart of transparency and accountability. If we do not
have a matrix established that everyone understands here is where we
are and here is where we promised we would get to, then how in the
world 5 years from now do we measure this? How do you know then that if
you raise the user fees, that it is justified, that the beneficiary of
it is the American patient? I am going to say that is candidly obvious
to everybody listening. When drug companies, device companies, biologic
companies, generic companies pay more money to get their application
approved, who pays for it? The consumers. The people who buy the drugs,
use the devices, and buy the generics. This is the first time we have
ever had a user fee for generic pharmaceuticals. Generics were called
that because generics were created after the patent life expired so we
could bring low-cost products to the market.
What are we doing? We are creating generic user fees which will raise
the generic price for the American people. It may alter the fact
whether it is cheaper for a person to pay for their generic
prescription or whether it is cheaper to have their copayment do it on
their insurance card. That is the reality of what we are dealing with.
I am not suggesting it is bad, but why would we rush through it without
understanding what the impact is? That is where we are today.
Reporting only on the negotiated user fees performance goals agreed
to by the industry and the FDA has not provided a complete picture of
how well the FDA is working to fulfill its mission on behalf of
patients. The bottom line is what gets measured gets done. So it has to
be measured.
In the Wall Street Journal op-ed earlier this year, former FDA
Commissioner Andy von Eschenbach highlighted what is at stake if
Congress does not get the user fee reauthorization package right and
fix the underlying problems at the FDA. He writes:
The stakes couldn't be higher for our health. The U.S.
biomedical industry is one of the crown jewels of the
American economy. It employs about 1.2 million people
directly and over five million throughout its supply chain,
with a total output of $519 billion in 2009 . . . Many of the
firms are among the world's most innovative: From 2001 to
2010, the Milken Institute report shows, U.S.-based companies
produced nearly 60% of the world's new medicines, up from 42%
the previous decade.
But U.S. firms won't continue to lead unless the FDA
retains its role as the world's ``gold standard'' for
evaluating new medical products.
Many people establish the gold standard as being the hurdle they have
to pass in order to be approved. The gold standard is also how
difficult the process is that they have to go through, and will the
capital be there to finance the research and development so approval is
something they see as a light at the end of the tunnel. These all have
to be weighed in the policies they put in place, and I will say we have
come up somewhat short.
Last year the National Venture Capital Association released a report
that underscores America's risk of losing its standing as the world
leader in medical innovation. Their survey clearly showed that the
FDA's regulatory challenges, the lack of regulatory certainty, the day-
to-day unpredictability, and unnecessary delays are stifling investment
in the development of lifesaving drugs and devices. Instead of
deterring investment and innovation in lifesaving treatments such as
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cancer, we should accelerate it.
Instead of deterring that capital to come in, we should be finding
policies to accelerate that capital to chase cures in heart disease,
diabetes and cancer and work with America's innovators on behalf of
patients who are depending on the next breakthrough drug or device.
Our Nation's health care system is unsustainable. We all agree we
must lower health care costs in America. Predictable regulatory
pathways that facilitate innovative medical products that reach
patients in as timely a manner as possible is key for lowering our
health care costs. This survey is another serious call for the need to
restore regulatory certainty and predictability at the FDA.
As we comb through this bill, we see the two amendments that were
voted and accepted in the Senate markup of the bill were dropped and
discarded because somebody was too concerned with requiring too many
reports. There is a reason we get granular with what we put in
legislation and, more important, what we require an agency to produce.
Predictable regulatory pathways that facilitate innovative medical
products reaching patients in a timely manner will lower our health
care costs.
It is clear the FDA's global leadership in innovation is at risk. A
2011 report by the California Healthcare Institute and the Boston
Consulting Group highlighted this point. The report found that in
recent years the environment for medical innovation has deteriorated
and the most critical factor has been the FDA, the Food and Drug
Administration. Let me repeat that. The report found the environment
for medical innovation has deteriorated and the most critical factor
has been the Food and Drug Administration. The report states:
. . . for the Agency's policies and activities exemplify
President Obama's critique of a regulatory system whose
``rules have gotten out of balance, placing unreasonable
burdens on business--burdens that have stifled innovation and
have had a chilling effect on growth and jobs.''
Now, all of a sudden, we are talking about a piece of legislation we
have rushed through the process because we wanted to beat the Supreme
Court decision on Thursday. We did it at an accelerated pace, faster
than we have ever done through the Senate, and we realize this
legislation affects the economy and jobs. It is not just about health
care. It is not just about patients. It is about jobs.
Dr. David Gollaher, president and CEO of the California Healthcare
Institute, raises a clear alarm in his report we should all heed. He
concludes:
The result of uneven performance of the Agency has been to
increase the risk associated with regulation, dampening
investment in companies whose products face FDA regulation.
Meanwhile, as global competition in high-tech industries has
intensified, other nations have adapted their regulatory
systems to out-compete the FDA. The flight of medical
technology product launches to European Union countries
should be a serious cause of concern for policymakers and
patient advocates alike.
What does that mean in layman's terms? We are losing them here and
the EU is attracting them there. Why? Because their policies are easier
to understand. It is not that their threshold for safety and efficacy
is any lower, but they carry on an honest partnership with the
applicants, and most will say dealing with the FDA is akin to inviting
your worst relative to spend the week with you in your house.
Exporting lifesaving innovation overseas--and the jobs that come with
it--will not help patients or our economy here at home. It erodes our
Nation's standing as the global leader in medical innovation and
results in America's patients having to wait longer for lifesaving
therapies or jeopardizing their access to them at all.
I am not sure in America we ever thought we would go to another
country where they had approved a new therapy we couldn't get in the
United States, but I would be willing to bet that every family in
America knows somebody who has gone outside the country to get some
type of treatment or some type of dosage of something we haven't
approved here, and one might think they are not safe or effective. The
likelihood is that those products have never even applied for FDA
approval. Why? Because the process has become so unpredictable and so
expensive that a company has to justify the potential sales of a
product to meet the billion-dollar cost just to get through the FDA
application process.
Exporting lifesaving innovation overseas and the jobs that come with
it will not help our patients and will not help the economy. It erodes
the Nation's economy and results in America's patients having to wait
longer. I just said it.
The FDA is supported by both user fees and taxpayer dollars, so
Congress has a critical oversight role in ensuring that the FDA is
meeting its requirements under the law. Moreover, as elected
representatives of the American people, Congress institutionally has a
duty to ensure that the FDA is
[[Page S4615]]
broadly fulfilling its statutory mission and promoting the public
health through its review and regulation on a range of medical
products.
The reauthorization of the drug and device user fees agreement is an
important opportunity for Congress to ensure that the FDA is fulfilling
its mission. Why would we in any way water down the accountability and
transparency if, in fact, we are the ones to ensure the FDA is
fulfilling its mission? But closely examining these issues once every 5
years is not going to help address the underlying problems at the FDA
that we all know must be fixed. The only way that is going to happen is
with the FDA, Congress, patients, and innovators consistently working
together with the right data points. The bottom line is we don't know
what we don't measure. If we don't know it, how can we ensure that it
is right?
Another report by the California Healthcare Institute and the Boston
Consulting Group in 2012 underscores the importance of reliable data at
the FDA and how FDA performance is a function of management. The report
finds there would be great value in regularly gathering and analyzing
the best possible data and updating performance metrics during this
PDUFA cycle in order to track performance consistently and
longitudinally with the goal of the most accurate possible measures of
agency performance.
Do you sense a trend that every outside evaluation--not industry, not
FDA, not Congress--of the user fee agreement is basically saying: Hey,
Congress, don't miss this opportunity. If we want to track performance,
then we have to set up the metrics and collect the data. Why in the
world would we drop from the bill the transparency and accountability
provisions that get the granular data we need to make this assessment?
I guess we will never know.
Congressional oversight can help highlight the processes that are
working well at the FDA, as well as reveal areas where the FDA needs to
make improvements to ensure timely and predictable regulatory decisions
on behalf of America's patients. Recently, the GAO reports over the
past year have underscored these points and why the right metrics must
be reported on to paint a full and complete picture. Now all of a
sudden we have the General Accounting Office, the GAO, saying the same
thing that all these third parties have said. Why? Because they are the
ones we turn to when we want to ask them to do an evaluation of the
FDA, and they are telling Congress: Hey, don't miss this opportunity to
get this stuff in there. You actually can get the data we can't get
because it is not in the statute.
Every 5 years when we pass the final user fee package, FDA's
authority and responsibilities grow. Think about that. With more
employees and higher costs, it seems like things would be getting
better, but without the metrics, without the accountability, without
transparency, we don't know. This bill is no exception. The FDA is
going to get an unprecedented level of user fees and more new
authority, billions in user fee dollars. With this unprecedented level
of user fees, there must be unprecedented transparency, oversight, and
accountability. It does not exist.
Let me be clear. There are good provisions in this bill that should
help to improve transparency, accountability, and regulatory certainty.
However, throughout the committee's work on various issues, I
repeatedly raised the point that if we did not fix the underlying
issues at the FDA, the new responsibilities and expectations we are
going to create with this bill would not achieve the desired outcome.
Quite simply, that is why I am disappointed that some key transparency
and accountability provisions included in the Senate bill did not
survive the final bill. While key GAO reporting provisions may have
been removed from the final bill, I wish to take this opportunity to
inform my colleagues and the FDA that I personally intend to pursue
this oversight analysis outside of this bill. Just because it is not in
this bill does not mean I am going to go away.
What has happened is that speed has trumped policy--the attempt to
speed through this bill, the attempt to get it done before the Supreme
Court announces its decision on ObamaCare. I have yet to have anybody
explain to me why we are benefited by moving this before the Supreme
Court ruling. If somebody has a concern that there is something in the
bill that might be affected by what the Supreme Court ruling is, would
we not be smart to delay this until after the ruling to see if there is
some adverse reaction to what we have done? If I thought there was any
reason to do that, I would be on the Senate floor pleading with my
colleagues today. But the truth is that there is nothing that will come
out in the Supreme Court decision that will affect the user fee
relationship between drugs, devices, biologics, generics, and the Food
and Drug Administration. But somebody wanted to finish it, and they set
that as the goal that everybody could see.
(Mr. FRANKEN assumed the chair.)
Mr. BURR. Because of the hard work of my colleagues on both sides of
the aisle, the final bill includes new incentives intended to help spur
the next generation of lifesaving antibiotics. This is a good thing,
and my colleagues should be commended for their bipartisan work on this
important issue.
Unfortunately, the requirement for the FDA to submit a strategy and
implementation plan that would have helped to ensure greater regulatory
certainty and predictability regarding FDA's work with antibiotics was
not included in the final bill. Yet we have all watched stories on TV
about a young lady who was attacked by a virus that has eaten her hands
and her feet--an infection. What does she need? She needs a
breakthrough in antibiotic therapy.
This was a real opportunity for us to send a message out there that
not only are we committed to doing it, we are committed to setting up a
regulatory structure that allows it to happen.
Carefully drafted GAO reporting requirements intended to help FDA and
Congress identify progress against regulatory challenges in this space
have also fallen away. This had nothing to do with Richard Burr or
Michael Bennet, this was the General Accounting Office. Unfortunately,
the reporting requirement that remains is not nearly as robust as the
language passed by the Senate earlier this year. These requirements
were intended to help identify and root out the regulatory challenges
in this space to ensure that the incentives included in the final bill
are as meaningful as possible and ultimately do achieve the goal of the
next generation of novel antibiotics reaching patients. I cannot think
of anything more important than for us to make sure.
I know the Presiding Officer comes from a State where devices are a
key part of the economy.
Another reporting requirement that fell away is one my colleagues
have heard me talk about a lot over the past year. The medical device
user fee agreement includes reporting on the total time to decision in
calendar days, not FDA days. This sounds a little bit like Disney
World. What in the heck are FDA days? I know what calendar days are.
Tomorrow is going to be one number higher than today, and yesterday was
one number lower, and every 28 to 31 days, we switch and it becomes a
new month and we start counting again. Not at the FDA. That is why it
was important that calendar days be substituted for what we call FDA
days at the FDA. Patients do not care about FDA days; patients care
about how long it takes in calendar days for safe and effective
products to reach them.
My colleagues may recall that last year the final Agriculture
appropriations bill included a requirement for the FDA to report on
calendar days because knowing the average number of calendar days it is
taking FDA-approved therapies to reach patients is important for
ensuring that we see the full picture of how well the FDA is working in
a metric that the American people understand.
Last year, when the Senate considered the issue of counting calendar
days for medical products, Dr. Paul Howard, a senior fellow and the
director of the Manhattan Institute's Center for Medical Progress,
described the importance of counting calendar days. He wrote:
The PDUFA clock stops when the FDA requests more
information from the sponsor . . . so repeated requests for
information from the FDA can significantly draw out the time
before a product reaches the market, even if the agency
completes its review within the specified PDUFA timeframe. .
. .
[[Page S4616]]
knowing actual calendar days that elapse from between the
time that a sponsor submits an application to the time it is
approved should give Congress some sense of how efficient--
How efficient--
the review process is. If the FDA is repeatedly asking for
more information and lots of time is added to the approval
process, it has important implications for patients (who wait
longer for new therapies) and investors (who may perceive the
regulatory process as arbitrary and time consuming).
Here again, another independent analysis of what should be important
to the American health care system and an assessment that calendar days
are absolutely vital to Congress's ability to understand how long it
really takes at the FDA. And we are not even the person trying to
finance the breakthrough.
I appreciate that the final bill will now require more granular
reporting with respect to the prescription drug user fee agreement,
which is a good thing, but I am baffled that a reporting requirement
which Congress has supported in the past and which was included for
generic drugs was not included in the final bill.
Talking about calendar days, how in the world could calendar days be
important enough to put in the generic bill part and dropped from
everything else? Why? Because FDA did not want it. FDA has gotten used
to that little stopwatch they have. When they ask you for a little more
information, they reset it, so they get to start again.
My dear colleague Tom Coburn and I both are disappointed that a
provision offered by him, and which I supported, was removed from the
final bill.
I have talked about a number of things removed from the final bill. I
am not sure how the ranking member gave me a number at the beginning
that I had interest in 12 things and that I had 11 accepted. I cannot
count them as I am going through my presentation, but I think I am on
three or four that have been dropped.
The medical device user fee agreement includes the requirement for an
independent assessment of FDA's management of devices. Unfortunately,
the assessment included in the prescription drug user fee agreement and
final bill will look at only one-third of the FDA's work with drugs.
Let me say that again. The medical device user fee agreement includes
the requirement for an individual assessment of FDA's management of
devices. Unfortunately, the assessment included in the prescription
drug user fee agreement and final bill will look at only one-third of
the FDA's work with drugs. Calendar days apply in one section. Generic
drugs do not apply, and devices, drugs, biologics. Now, all of a
sudden, we have an independent assessment of FDA's management of the
devices industry where we are only applying that to one-third of the
area of drug evaluation and not to generics and not to biologics.
Senator Coburn's provision, which was first introduced in a bill
Senator Coburn and I introduced, the PATIENTS' FDA Act, would have
ensured an independent assessment of all of FDA's drug work. Upon
introduction of the PATIENTS' FDA Act, Dr. Paul Howard wrote that this
provision was ``perhaps the most important provision'' because ``the
outcome of that review may or may not be welcome by the FDA--but it
will force Congress to pay attention and highlight the FDA's importance
as the gateway for medical innovation not just in the U.S., but for the
world.'' Paul Howard is no relation to me. This is, again, an
independent doctor who makes a comment on a provision in an obscure
bill that was introduced in Congress, and he says ``perhaps the most
important provision.'' Yet it only applies now to one-third of the drug
area, and all we wanted to do was to apply it to the whole thing. Not
including this independent assessment is a missed opportunity for
Congress, consumers, and patients to have a complete, independent, and
objective look at FDA's management of its mission and resources with
respect to drugs.
I understand that some of my colleagues are concerned about
overreporting, but I would come back to the basic point that you do not
know what you do not measure. This is about how Congress and the FDA
prioritize, and, given what is at stake, not including targeted
reporting requirements that will help FDA to better achieve their
mission on behalf of patients is a huge, huge missed opportunity. Why?
Speed over policy.
I would also like to talk about a key provision in the Senate's
upstream supply chain provisions that is not included in the final
bill.
As many of my colleagues know, the globalization of the drug supply
chain presents unique challenges in ensuring the safety of the drugs
American patients receive. Quite a bit of time has understandably been
devoted to this issue. Unfortunately, while the bill includes many
bipartisan provisions that will help FDA better target inspections of
drug facilities based on risk, the final bill falls short in addressing
end-to-end supply chain security. That is sort of important. I think
the American people sort of take for granted that we have that in place
now.
In addition to not including bipartisan downstream provisions, the
final bill does not include the Senate's bipartisan provision to
accredit third-party auditors to conduct drug safety audits of drug
establishments. To be clear, these third-party drug safety audits would
not have replaced official FDA inspections, but they would have been an
important risk-based tool for the FDA to leverage in taking steps to
ensure a safer global prescription drug supply chain. I actually
believe that America thinks we have that in place right now. Who could
be opposed to such a commonsense solution? It was a bipartisan
initiative. Was it the House that kicked it out? Was it the FDA that
kicked it out? It really does not matter. This was smart to have in the
bill. The only conclusion I can come to is that speed trumps policy,
that our quest to get this done quickly meant we did not look closely
enough at the things we should have done and could have done and we did
not do.
Now, the ranking member talked about my disappointment and his
disappointment on the downstream drug distribution security. I want to
take a brief moment and comment on downstream. I thank Senator Bennet,
from the other side of the aisle. We worked together. And because of
his hard work and dedication to this issue, I think I can say that we
are both disappointed that the final bill does not include bipartisan
provisions that we have been working on together for the past few
months.
My colleagues all know why this is an important issue. It is
important for America's patients and consumers.
I remain committed to establishing a workable and reasonable
traceability system that strengthens the integrity of the
pharmaceutical distribution supply chain. It is critical that we
replace the current patchwork of inconsistent, inefficient, and costly
State laws with a predictable, workable, and appropriate Federal
standard. I am committed to getting this done.
As I said to the ranking member and the chair, it is not going to be
easy. We knew that when we took this on. You can't do it fast. I did
not know we had a stopwatch on how quickly we could get this bill
through the Senate and how quickly we could get through conference and
how quickly we could get it passed. I remind my colleagues that the
current user fee agreement does not expire until later this year. It
did not have to be done now, but it was. And for now 45 minutes I have
pointed out things we could have done, should have done, and did not
do, and it is embarrassing. This could have been done. This was the
right vehicle to put this in because it was a must-pass piece of
legislation.
Now let me, if I could, talk about some of the provisions Senator
Coburn and I introduced in the PATIENTS' FDA Act. I am pleased we were
able to find a bipartisan path forward on some of these provisions
which will put in place an unprecedented level of transparency and
accountability at the FDA.
While FDA should have already done many of the things that will now
be explicitly required of them, by ensuring that we hold FDA
accountable to measures and reports on specific requirements, there is
a greater chance that they are going to actually get done. There is no
certainty without congressional oversight. Greater transparency and
accountability provisions included in the package today will help to
ensure greater regulatory certainty and timely decisions on behalf of
America's patients, which is key to ensuring that America maintains its
role as a world leader in medical innovation and that
[[Page S4617]]
our patients have access to the most cutting-edge therapies in as
timely a fashion as possible.
FDA will be required to develop a regulatory science strategy and
implementation plan with clear priorities and report on the progress
made in achieving these priorities in fiscal year 2014 and fiscal year
2016. The current FDA Commissioner has acknowledged that the FDA is
relying on 20th-century regulatory science to evaluate 21st-century
medical products.
Let me read that again. The current FDA Commissioner has acknowledged
that the FDA is relying on 20th-century regulatory science to evaluate
21st-century medical products. Let's stop. Let's get this right. Even
the Commissioner of the FDA is saying: You know what. We are not even
in the same century in how we do what we are trying to accomplish. In
other words, the products the FDA is required to regulate are advancing
faster than the agency's ability to regulate them. I will be honest.
That is a big problem.
Former FDA Commissioner von Eschenbach was right when he said that
the FDA must be capable of ensuring that its reviewers know just as
much about advances in emerging sciences as the creators of the
products they regulate.
Listen, I will be the first to say that at the Food and Drug
Administration we have some of the best and the brightest. They are
some of the most dedicated Federal workers. They are some of the
smartest folks I have ever seen. But they process approvals. They are
not on a bench doing research and development. They do not understand
how medicine and science have changed since they themselves left the
bench. There is every reason to believe that people should be required
to go back and be innovators and not necessarily make a lifetime of
work as a reviewer at the FDA.
There has been much talk about regulatory science, but it is hard to
tell if these efforts are targeted and achieving the desired results of
helping the FDA to apply the most cutting-edge scientific tools in
their research and their review of medical products. The agency must
have clearly defined goals and metrics against which their progress
will be tracked. This is the only way to ensure that the advances in
regulatory science are being applied and that FDA is prepared to
regulate the most novel and cutting-edge medical products ever created.
GAO has well documented FDA's management challenges. The user fee
agreement included in the final bill will further increase these
challenges by adding more than 1,200 new FDA FTEs, or employees, and
further growing the scope of the agency's mission and regulatory
responsibilities.
Many of the concerns about the lack of predictability and uncertainty
at the FDA are symptoms of unaddressed, systemic management issues.
This is the agency that regulates 25 cents of every dollar of our
economy.
A February 2010 GAO report found that FDA does not fully use
established practices for effective strategic planning and management.
FDA agreed with the GAO recommendation to take several actions to
improve FDA's strategic planning and management, such as the
development of a strategic management plan and working to make FDA's
performance measures more results-oriented. I cannot think of a
business in America that does not do that today. However, 2\1/2\ years
later, FDA has failed to adopt many of the key recommendations.
To address this concern, the final bill requires the FDA to submit to
Congress a strategic integrated management plan with specific
accountability metrics as recommended by the GAO. Even though the FDA
admitted to the GAO, based on their recommendations, that they needed
to do this and that they would do it, 2\1/2\ years later we are now
putting it in statute in the user fee bill.
GAO has well documented FDA's challenges to sufficiently and
successfully utilize its information technology process. GAO has also
noted how these challenges undermine FDA's ability to use accurate and
timely information to augment its regulatory mission. GAO reports in
2009 and 2012 found that the FDA has made mixed progress in
establishing the IT management capabilities essential to supporting the
FDA's mission. That is the information technology. So an agency that is
on the cutting edge of medical approval in this country in 2009 and
2012 was found to have made mixed progress in establishing the
management capabilities essential through technology to complete its
mission.
A comprehensive IT strategy plan is vital for guiding and helping to
coordinate the FDA's IT activities. A comprehensive IT strategy plan,
including results-oriented goals and performance measures, is vital for
guiding and helping to coordinate the FDA's IT activities, especially
since the user fee agreement includes specific IT goals. The final bill
requires the FDA to report on their progress in developing and
implementing the comprehensive IT package called for by the GAO. To
ensure further congressional oversight, GAO will report on the progress
FDA makes on meeting the results-oriented goals and performance
measures set out in the IT plan they submit to Congress.
Enhanced reporting requirements with respect to biosimilars and
generic drugs include key reporting on clearing the backlog of generic
applications and will also provide important transparency in the FDA's
work and serve as an early-warning indicator if the agreements are not
being fulfilled.
I am also pleased we were able to find a path forward on important
pro-patient provisions from the PATIENTS' FDA Act and provisions that
will also reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens for innovators. I wish
to thank my colleagues, Senators Mikulski, Alexander, and Hagan, for
working with us to ensure that the unnecessary redtape does not get in
the way of meeting patients' unique medical device needs.
The custom device provision in the bill provides an important path
forward to ensure that doctors are able to meet patients' most unique
medical device needs in as timely a manner as possible. The risk-
benefit framework included in the user fee agreement and codified by
the final bill will facilitate the balanced consideration of benefits
and the risks of FDA's drug decisionmaking.
As innovators have increasingly turned to global markets and
opportunities overseas, FDA's work with its global peer regulators has
taken on an even greater significance. FDA's work with its global
regulatory counterparts to encourage uniform clinical trials standards
will optimize global clinical trials to ensure that the need to conduct
duplicative clinical trials is minimized while FDA maintains the gold
standard for approval.
I wish to thank Senator Paul. I thank Senator Paul for working with
me to ensure that we have optimized global clinical trial work and that
FDA works with global peer regulators as much as possible to reduce
unnecessary regulatory hurdles.
Senator Paul was a champion in the committee to say: Why don't we
accept the data we get from trials in Europe for applications that are
under review for approval in the United States? And the answer I gave
him was that in 1997, when we wrote the food and drug cosmetic
modernization bill, we gave FDA the authority to do that. And now some
15 years later it has never, ever, ever been used. As a matter of fact,
the FDA will not even consult with a company that says: Tell us how we
need to design our trial in Europe so you will accept our data. That
has not happened. But you know what. It has to happen in the future if
we want drugs to be cost-effective so people can afford them, if we
want innovation to happen here as well as over there. If innovation and
the place where it is ultimately approved is determined by whether you
can recover the costs of your investment, I will assure you we are all
going to shop somewhere else for our drugs, our devices, our biologics,
and even our generics. It will not be here unless we learn how to share
that data from continent to continent.
I wish to highlight some specific medical device regulatory
improvements. There may be any number of reasons a sponsor wants to
conduct certain clinical studies that are not directly to the
classification or approval of medical devices by the FDA. However, some
sponsors have noted the tendency of the FDA to effectively prejudge the
approval of a medical device by basing its decision related to a
request to conduct clinical investigations of a device on whether the
FDA
[[Page S4618]]
believes the clinical study will be adequate to support the ultimate
classification or approval of a device. If the FDA approves the
investigational use of a device only using the more narrow regulatory
standard of device approval or classification, clinical research in the
United States could be unduly restricted. The final bill would return
the investigational device exemption approval process to the standard
authorized by the statute, which is a good thing for both patients and
for innovators.
The final bill will also improve regulatory certainty, transparency,
and accountability with respect to medical devices by requiring FDA to
provide a substantive summary of the scientific or regulatory rationale
for significant decisions.
As many of my colleagues know, section 510(k) of the Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act requires device manufacturers to notify FDA of their
intent to market a medical device at least 90 days in advance.
Medical device manufacturers are required to submit a pre-market
notification if they intend to introduce a device into commercial
distribution for the first time or reintroduce a device that will be
significantly changed or modified to the extent that its safety or
effectiveness could be affected. Such change or modification could
relate to the design, material, chemical composition, energy source, or
manufacturing process. There are legitimate concerns about recent
guidance issued by FDA that could significantly increase the regulatory
burden related to 510(k) modifications without clear benefit to
patients. The final bill will go a long way in restoring regulatory
certainty and balance with respect to the 510(k) modification process
by making it clear that the 1997 guidance remains the standard until
FDA issues new guidance, with appropriate input from stakeholders, on
this subject.
While I wish that we could have gone further to strengthen and
improve the device third-party review and inspection programs, the
final bill does reauthorize these programs and includes a provision
from the PATIENTS' FDA Act to set forth a process for reaccreditation
and reauthorization of third-party reviews. This is a first and
important step in enhancing the third-party review program.
Another thing we placed in the 1997 act is the hope that we would see
academia in America actually be approved as third party evaluators--not
for heart stints or that class of device, but how about things such as
Band-Aids? How about those things on which we should not waste an FDA
reviewer's time? Couldn't the company contract with an academic
institution to reapprove and recredit? FDA chose to do that in-house.
This is the first important step to enhance the third party review
program.
Next is affirming the ``least burdensome'' requirements.
Also, the final bill underscores the importance of the ``least
burdensome'' requirements we put into the 1997 law to streamline the
regulatory process and reduce burdens to improve patient access to
medical devices.
A central purpose of the FDA Modernization Act of 1997, or FDAMA as I
like to call it, was to ensure the timely availability of safe and
effective new products that will benefit the public and that our nation
continues to lead the world in new product innovation and development.
The goal was to streamline the regulatory process and reduce burden to
improve patient access to breakthrough technologies. This law required
FDA to eliminate unnecessary burdens that may delay the marketing of
beneficial new products, but the statutory requirements for clearance
and approval remained the same. The sections of the statute that
capture these provisions are commonly referred to as the ``least
burdensome'' provisions.
For years, FDA included ``least burdensome'' language in guidance
documents and letters. Yet, toward the end of 2009 the ``least
burdensome'' language disappeared only to reappear after Congress
expressed significant concern regarding FDA's failure to consistently
apply these requirements in its work with medical devices.
The lack of consistent application of the ``least burdensome''
requirements has added to regulatory uncertainty and unnecessary
regulatory burden in a manner completely inconsistent with the law. It
is sad that Congress needs to reaffirm a provision that has been the
law since 1997, but I thank Senators Klobuchar and Bennet for working
with me to underscore the importance of affirming the ``least
burdensome'' requirements in the final bill.
The final bill restores a more appropriate balance to FDA's conflicts
of interest rules. This is an issue on which many patient groups have
weighed and many members have worked because of its importance to
patients and, ultimately, overall confidence in FDA's Advisory
Committees. Ensuring that the FDA has access to the most qualified
experts is vital to ensuring FDA's scientific capabilities and
confidence in its regulatory decisions. It is critical that patients
have the benefit of the very best expertise when weighing decisions
that impact patient access to lifesaving products. Unfortunately, since
2007, increasingly complex and restrictive conflicts of interest rules
have often resulted in the Agency being unable to consult with leading
experts and difficulty in filling key advisory committee positions.
These challenges are compromising the quality and timeliness of FDA's
decision-making. The final bill should help to address these concerns
and ensure FDA can draw upon the most knowledgeable experts.
Lastly, I'd like to highlight the Advancing Breakthrough Therapies
for Patients Act, bipartisan legislation I was pleased to join Senators
Bennet and Hatch in supporting because it will ensure patients have
access to targeted, life-saving therapies as efficiently as possible.
As former FDA Commissioner Von Eschenbach has rightly stated,
``breakthrough technologies deserve a breakthrough in the way the FDA
evaluates them.'' This legislation is supported by Friends of Cancer
Research and the National Venture Capital Association.
Earlier this year, an op-ed penned by former FDA Commissioner, Dr.
Mark McClellan, and Ellen Sigal of Friends of Cancer Research, noted
how the sequencing of the human genome has helped to unlock an even
greater understanding of disease at the molecular level, helping to
make personalized medicine become a reality. They note two main goals
of the breakthrough legislation: First, to reduce the total development
time and cost of the most promising ``breakthrough'' treatments; and
second, to minimize the number of patients that would be given a
``control'' regimen or a currently available treatment that doesn't
work well. They are right to underscore that in order to fulfill the
promise of ``breakthrough'' therapies and this legislation, the
regulators at FDA must be fully engaged, working with sponsors early on
in the development and review process once a product has received the
breakthrough designation.
More than 45 organizations representing patients, advocates,
physicians, caregivers, consumers and researchers have weighed in with
Congress urging the Advancing Breakthrough Therapies for Patients Act
to be included in the final user fee package because they recognize
that employing such an ``all hands on deck'' approach at FDA for these
therapies will ultimately result in the most efficient development
program and help to ensure that the most promising new treatments reach
patients as safely and efficiently as possible.
Many would argue that the modernization of the accelerated approval
and fast track pathways have been a long time coming since Congress has
not significantly updated either pathway since 1997. Earlier this year,
Dr. Paul Howard in writing about the breakthrough legislation noted
that, ``the most important section of the legislation may be the clause
that requires the Secretary of HHS to commission an independent entity
to assess the 'quality, efficiency, and predictability' of how FDA has
applied the directives in the legislation no later than four years
after the bill passes.'' He goes on to say ``that may be the best way
to ensure that we won't have to wait another 15 to 20 years to
understand how well the FDA is utilizing the authority granted to it by
Congress.'' Unfortunately, this independent assessment did not make it
into the final bill. Speed trumps policy.
FDA faces unprecedented challenges today--challenges we could not
have
[[Page S4619]]
envisioned a generation ago. Yet FDA still regulates a decade ago,
based on the commission. The agreements and many of the provisions in
the final bill are intended to help address these challenges.
Unfortunately, the final bill does not bring to bear all of the tools
that could have been included to ensure the greatest certainty,
transparency, and accountability for patients and taxpayers. This is a
missed opportunity.
I ask my colleagues where we will be if the provisions enacted as
part of this bill--like the breakthrough therapy provision--do not
achieve their stated purposes? Where will we be if Congress does not do
our part to ensure accountability on the part of the Agency by carrying
out consistent Congressional oversight?. Where will America's patients
be in five years? Will FDA's regulatory standard still be the global
gold standard?
Will America still lead the world in innovation? Will the world's
leading drug and device innovators choose to innovate in America, or
continue the disturbing trend of exporting great innovation and good
jobs overseas in the continued face of regulatory uncertainty?
There are good provisions in this final bill, but more work remains
to be done. America's patients and innovators are counting on Congress
to conduct the proper oversight in the months and years ahead to ensure
that these user fee agreements, authorities, and new responsibilities
are implemented and fulfilled consistent with the law. They are also
counting on Congress to complete the unfinished business of doing all
that we can to ensure that FDA fulfills its mission on behalf of
America's patients and our Nation's global leadership in medical
innovation is restored. I commit to my colleagues, constituents, and
the FDA that I intend to complete the unfinished business before us
here today.
Mr. President, you have been patient. At this time, I will yield to
my colleague Senator Paul. When he concludes, I will continue with the
2\1/2\ additional hours I have reserved.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Kentucky.
Foreign Aid
Mr. PAUL. Mr. President, I am not a big fan of foreign aid. We have a
lot of problems in our country. I don't see how we can send billions of
dollars overseas when we have bridges falling down in our country. Two
bridges in my State were impassable. One was hit by a boat and has been
impassable for 6 months. We have another bridge that is over 50 years
old that was shut down for emergency repairs, and traffic stacked up
for miles. Yet we send billions of dollars overseas when we don't have
enough to fix our own bridges. It doesn't make any sense. We borrow $1
trillion a year from China to turn around and send it to some other
country. It makes no sense.
I am not a big fan of sending our money overseas. But I am even less
of a fan of sending our money to countries that don't seem to be our
friends. Pakistan has worked with us on the war on terror. But recently
Pakistan has chosen not to let any of our supplies--food and military
supplies--traverse Pakistan. Recently, Pakistan has said we owe them $3
billion. We are giving them $2 billion a year, and they say we owe them
$3 billion that is not included in that. Recently, Pakistan also said
they want to charge us $5,000 per container of food that goes across
their land.
For years bin Laden lived contentedly right in the middle of Pakistan
underneath their noses. What is up with that? We are giving them $2
billion a year and bin Laden was twiddling his thumbs there and they
are not letting our supplies go across and they are demanding a past
payment of $3 billion for who knows what and we continue to pay them.
Recently, it has gotten even worse. Dr. Shakil Afridi is a doctor who
helped us get bin Laden. Somehow his name was leaked. I don't know who
leaked the name or if they were trying to puff themselves up and make
themselves look as if they were strongly fighting terrorism, but by
leaking Dr. Afridi's name, he is now in prison in Pakistan for 33
years.
Dr. Shakil Afridi is a Pakistani and they have put him in prison for
33 years. His life has been threatened. If he is released--which I hope
he will be--his life has been threatened because his name is public.
How did it become public? Somebody leaked his name. This is
inexcusable. If this came from within our government, whoever leaked
his name or this information should be held accountable. I mean put in
prison in our country for leaking state secrets.
Dr. Afridi's name is now known in public, and he is being threatened,
and his family is being threatened. Not only that, anybody around the
world who wants to help us stop terrorism, who is willing to stand and
help America, is now threatened. Do you think people are going to want
to help us if they know their names will be printed in the New York
Times? We have to have things that we don't divulge about people who
are helping us. But Dr. Afridi is in prison for 33 years, and I am
going to do what I can to free him.
We should not send Pakistan any more money. I say stop immediately. I
am not saying take a small amount out next year; I say don't send them
one more penny this year or next year. Don't send any of the $3 billion
they want. We don't even have it to send to them. We have to borrow it
from China. I would give them one chance. If they release Dr. Afridi, I
would stand down.
My bill was blocked. I tried to have a vote on it last week, and the
leadership said: No, you won't have that vote. But we have a process
where if you get enough signatures from Senators, you can ask for a
vote and get it. That is where we are now. I have enough signatures to
have the vote.
I am going to be meeting with the Pakistani Ambassador, and meeting
with President Obama's State Department, and what I will tell them is
what I am telling you. This is not a secret. If Dr. Afridi is not
successful with his appeal, which is coming up in the next 3 weeks, if
he is not released and provided safe passage out of Pakistan, if he
wishes, then I will have this vote. And I defy anyone in this body to
stand here and vote to send U.S. taxpayer dollars to Pakistan when they
are treating us this way. So we will have a vote in this body on ending
all aid to Pakistan immediately if we don't get some results.
This doesn't mean I don't want to have diplomacy with Pakistan.
Pakistan has been a friend over many years, and I see no reason to end
that. Pakistan has many elements that are pro-Western and that want to
engage in the world. I am all for that. But we shouldn't have to buy
our friends. We shouldn't have to pay a ransom. We shouldn't have to
lavish them with taxpayer dollars.
In fact, I think it encourages a disrespect when you give people so
much money. Let's let them earn our respect. Let's work with them.
Let's be friends with Pakistan. Let's have diplomatic ties to Pakistan.
Let's try to help each other. Terrorism doesn't help Pakistan. They are
threatened equally by it. I can list four Pakistani leaders who have
been assassinated in the past 15 years. Why were they assassinated?
Because of radical elements in their own country. So they should be
with us in trying to stop extremism, on trying to stop this radicalism.
My words for the Senate today and for the American people are that I
am watching out for your money. I realize we have needs here at home
that must come first, but also that I will force a vote on this. I am
not going to send any more of your money or try not to let the Senate
send any more of your money to Pakistan unless they are willing to
cooperate, unless they are willing to be friends with America, unless
they are willing to release the man who helped us get bin Laden.
I will ask for a vote, it will come in the next few weeks, and I will
keep everyone in America up to date on this.
I thank the Senate for allowing me this time, and I suggest the
absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BURR. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BURR. Mr. President, I thank Senator Paul for relinquishing the
microphone, and just for the purposes of Members who are planning, I
think
[[Page S4620]]
we will be about another hour. We will know shortly, and I will put
that word out, if in fact that is going to be the case, but I intend to
make sure everybody is able to make a 5 o'clock briefing.
I have spent the first hour talking about the FDA user fee agreement
bill, the history of it, what this bill did, and a lot about how this
bill came up short. I would like to jog in a few different directions
over the next period of time.
Of great interest to me, and great interest to a lot of Members, is
the commitment we owe to our Nation's military heroes. Over four
decades ago, at one of the two Marine Corps bases in America--Camp
Lejeune in Jacksonville, NC--they experienced serious contamination of
their water. That contamination is likely the worst environmental
exposure incident on a domestic military installation in the history of
the country, both in the magnitude of the population potentially
exposed to volatile organic solvents and the duration of the
contamination--estimated to be 30 years or longer, with hundreds of
thousands of veterans, their families, along with civilian workers
having cycled through Camp Lejeune from the busy years of World War II
through the Vietnam conflict and into the mid 1980s as we rebuilt our
modern military.
During these decades, unbeknownst to the base residents, the wells
feeding the water supply on the base were drawing water from an aquifer
contaminated with industrial chemicals that were dumped on the base,
such as the degreasing solvent TCE, a known human carcinogen; and
another carcinogen, benzene, from leaking underground fuel storage
tanks; along with the dry cleaning solvent PCE; and a third human
carcinogen, vinyl chloride. The Navy and Marine Corps began to test
some of the base wells in the 1980s to comply with Federal regulations
and, apparently, to also locate the source of various contaminations,
yet it would take several more years and numerous warning signs before
the Navy finally decided it should shut the wells down in 1985 through
1987.
As we know now, the Navy and Marine Corps had specific regulations of
their own to maintain safe drinking water and test for contaminants.
Had they adhered to their regulations, the many years of problems at
Camp Lejeune might have been avoided. It is also important to note the
source of those contaminations should never have been in question,
since Lejeune's drinking water was then and is now solely derived from
the wells located within the perimeters of Camp Lejeune, NC.
In 1989, the EPA designated Camp Lejeune a Superfund site, and in
1991 the CDC, via its Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry--or ATSDR--began a statutorily mandated study of the
contamination. Those studies continue to this day, in large part
because the Navy's records of the contamination were not completely
turned over to the ATSDR until 2009 and 2010. Scientists at the ATSDR
and others involved in the review of the Navy's records have stated the
levels of certain contaminants recorded in well samples taken by the
Navy were at such high levels they have never been seen before, and in
many cases they far exceed what we now consider to be safe levels for
drinking water.
The Veterans Administration is awarding disability benefits to
Lejeune veterans on a case-by-case basis today, but that is a slow and
unpredictable process, while many are suffering without adequate health
care. It is my hope in the coming weeks we will finally pass critical
legislation in this Congress to require the VA to take care of these
veterans and their family members. Many of them are ill from exposure-
related conditions and have no other means of getting health care. They
are rightly looking to the VA and to the Congress for help. If we can
get this legislation passed, it will be a starting point on the road to
doing the right thing for those who have sacrificed so much for our
Nation.
I think it is absolutely a crime that some 40 years later we haven't
even completed the studies to understand the severity of the problems
we have. I might add that some of the servicemembers and some of the
family members who served at Camp Lejeune during this time are no
longer with us. It may be hard to reconstruct exactly why, but I can
assure you, when some estimate there are 10 times the number of male
breast cancer cases from people who lived on that base during that
time, one might conclude it was a hotspot based upon its drinking
water.
My hope is this Congress will move forward with a very small initial
step, but also make a commitment to these family members and
servicemembers to not quit until we do the right thing.
This week the Supreme Court is going to rule on the President's
health care law. One would have to live under a rock not to realize it
is going to happen Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. We have waited
patiently every time the Supreme Court has rolled out their
announcement for the last 3 weeks of cases they have decided as the
Court comes to the end of their session this summer.
Two years ago, then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi told Americans, ``We have to
pass the bill so that you can find out what's in it.'' Let me repeat
that: ``We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what's in
it.'' It seems fitting that we stop and take stock of what the American
people have learned about the President's health care law over the past
2 years.
The American people have found they can't afford the President's
health care law. The Medicare Chief Actuary, in his final estimate of
the health care law, projected it will increase health care spending
across the economy by $311 billion. That is a 10-year number, but
understand the President promised the health care law would reduce
cost. It wasn't a goal. He promised it would reduce cost.
Unfortunately, it has made things worse by increasing health care
costs. And I think the estimate given by Medicare's Chief Actuary is
probably a very conservative estimate--an increase of $311 billion.
Growth in U.S. health care spending will almost double by 2014 due to
the President's new law. This is at a time when we already are in a
situation where we are on a financially unsustainable path. The
predictions the President's health care law would increase insurance
premiums are already being felt by the American people. Depending upon
where you live, who you are an employee of, and whether you buy your
own insurance depends on how hard you have been hit, but there is
nobody in America who has not seen their premium go up since Congress
passed this health care bill that was supposed to reduce the cost of
health care.
The Congressional Budget Office estimated the new law will increase
health insurance premiums by 10 to 13 percent. This means a family
purchasing coverage on their own will have to pay $2,100 a year more
because of the President's health care law. And by the way, 10 to 13
percent is what many Americans have felt as an increase on an annual
basis.
New taxes. New taxes on lifesaving drugs, devices, and health plans.
Think about that, with the hour I just finished. I talked about the
fact Congress needs to be focused on the efficiencies of government,
and how we bring innovative products, devices, pharmaceuticals,
biologics, and generics to the marketplace. Yet embedded into ObamaCare
are new taxes on drugs, devices, and health plans.
The American people haven't felt this yet. At a time we are supposed
to be passing legislation to bring down health care costs, not only
does the Congressional Budget Office say this is going to increase
premium cost, not only does the President's Chief Actuary--CMS is under
the executive side of government, not under Congress's authority--say
health care spending across the economy, based upon the health care
law, is going to be $311 billion, we have yet to kick in the new taxes
on lifesaving drugs, devices, and health plans, which will drive up
consumer cost and additionally drive up premium cost.
Just after passage of the new law in May 2010, the Director of the
Congressional Budget Office said:
Rising health costs will put tremendous pressure on the
Federal budget. In CBO's judgment, the health legislation
enacted earlier this year does not substantially diminish
that pressure.
The question is what were we thinking? And now we have the Supreme
Court that will decide whether this is constitutional. CBO's latest
long-term fiscal outlook notes that spending on
[[Page S4621]]
health care has been growing faster than the economy for many years,
posing challenges for Medicare, Medicaid, State and local government,
and the private sector.
Sometimes this is missed by Members of Congress and our constituents.
There is a tremendous cost that we shift to States and local
governments depending upon how they share in the Medicaid State
obligations for cost sharing. States are picking up a tremendous amount
of additional cost because of the passage of the President's health
care plan because we are doubling, through legislation, the amount of
people who are on Medicaid.
So now you are going to get hit by the increase in your insurance
premium; you are going to get hit by the increase in overall health
care costs; you are going to get hit by the new taxes on lifesaving
drugs, devices, and health care plans; and, oh, by the way, you are
going to get hit in your State taxes because of the increased burden of
Medicaid beneficiaries who are in part funded by the State and are
going to now require States to find new ways to raise revenue, which is
typically through our State taxes.
CBO was right to conclude that such rates of growth cannot continue
indefinitely because total spending on health care would eventually
account for all the country's economic output, which CBO concludes ``is
an impossible outcome.''
We need real reform that actually lowers costs, not increases costs.
We need real policy that institutes better outcomes, not rationing of
care. The American people need to look at what the President promised
when he created this legislation. He promised: If you like your plan,
you get to keep it.
Unfortunately, the administration has estimated that up to 69 percent
of all businesses could lose the ability to keep what they have as a
result of the administration's grandfather health plan regulation. The
former Director of CBO, Doug Holtz-Eakin, warned that the law
``provides strong incentive for employers and their employees to drop
employer-sponsored health insurance for as many as 35 million
Americans.''
Well, if employers drop their health care coverage, how can employees
cash in on the President's promise to keep what they have?
Millions of seniors will lose access to their Medicare Advantage
Plan. I am not quite there, but some of my colleagues have reached that
magic number.
Do seniors not deserve choice? Is that what it is? Do we just want to
give them one thing and no choice? The truth is we allowed--we didn't
create it; the private sector created it, but we allowed the private
sector to create Medicare choice years ago, and for many seniors they
chose to take the private sector product. Why? Because it provided more
coverage to them. It provided preventive care. They actually got
covered physicals every year. In many cases they didn't have
copayments. In many cases their prescriptions were covered long before
we created Part D Medicare.
So what does the President's health care plan do? It tightens the
requirements on Medicare Advantage to the point that some seniors who
are on it today will lose it because it is no longer an option in the
markets they live in. How in the world can someone do that and make the
promise: If you like it, you get to keep it?
Health plans offered by religious-affiliated organizations will be
compelled to offer products that violate the tenets of their faith--a
new mandate that jeopardizes an employee's existing coverage and
infringes on religious liberty. That is going into ground we have never
entered, and I think there is a reason we have allowed people to hold
to their moral standards they believe are important.
Then-Speaker of the House Pelosi said the health care law will create
4 million jobs--400,000 jobs almost immediately. Yet the Director of
the Congressional Budget Office testified that the new law will reduce
employment over the next decade by 800,000 jobs.
Think about that. Then-Speaker Pelosi said 4 million jobs--400,000
almost immediately--and the CBO Director testified we are going to lose
800,000. That is a difference of 4.8 million jobs in America.
The President said he was not going to touch Medicare. We heard that
over and over. He said to seniors: I am not going to touch Medicare. He
had already taken Medicare Advantage away as a choice, but he wasn't
going to touch Medicare. The law took more than $500 billion out of
Medicare, a health care plan that today is not financially sustainable,
and the President, in his health care legislation, shifted $500 billion
out of Medicare--not to put Medicare on a sustainable path but to fund
new government programs the American people cannot afford.
Arbitrary cuts to providers that jeopardize access to care will not
put Medicare on a sustainable path for current and future retirees.
What does that mean? Doctor cuts. We cut the reimbursements to doctors,
we cut the reimbursements to hospitals. We now have doctors who will
not see Medicare beneficiaries. If you are 65 and you move to Raleigh,
NC, the likelihood is you are not going to find a primary care doctor
that is going to take you if you are on Medicare. To that person, to
that senior, that is rationing. I don't care how you say it. And the
reality is this bill caused that.
The President promised no family making less than $250,000 a year
will see any form of tax increase. I just covered a second ago that the
new health care law is riddled with new taxes and penalties that
directly fall on the middle class and will harm small businesses. New
taxes on lifesaving drugs, devices, and health plans are all going to
be passed on to consumers. It is disingenuous to say everybody in the
system is not going to feel the effects of taxes. They might not be
directly on us, but they are on the products that constitute our health
care system. We should be advancing policies that help small business
to thrive in America, not policies that increase health care costs. We
should not be advancing policies that encourage innovators to export
innovation and good-paying jobs overseas. We should be advancing
policies that focus on helping to get our economy back on track.
Unfortunately, the President's health care law does just the
opposite. According to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Survey on Small
Business, 74 percent of small businesses said the health care spending
law makes it harder for their firms to hire new workers. Thirty percent
said they are not hiring due to the law.
There is only one issue in America: How do we get the American people
back to work right now? How do we turn this economy around right now?
We can have all the cuts we want to have from the standpoint of
spending. But unless we are willing to put Americans back to work and
get them productive and participating in the revenue collection of this
country, we are not going to get on a pathway to financial
sustainability.
This country wasn't created because people came here and said: Let's
create a place called America where everything is free. It was created
as an area of unlimited opportunity. That is why millions a year come
here, for unlimited opportunity, not for unlimited handouts.
When de Tocqueville left the United States, he talked about ``the
greatest country in the world,'' and he defined it this way: the
capacity of the American people to give of their time and their
resources for people who are in need. He never mentioned State or
Federal Government.
He talked about a responsibility of the American people to help
somebody that was down on their luck, hungry, homeless. Do you know
what. For those of us who are adults, it is our responsibility to set
the example for the next generation to come and assume the same
individual responsibility. But now it seems as though all we talk about
is legislation that inserts the Federal Government or the State
government or the local government in the place of what historically
made this country great, which was our willingness to assume the
responsibility ourselves.
Let me assure you, we shouldn't be surprised by the results of the
assessment that the government running health care means job loss and
increased costs. We have to make sure we provide more choice, not less
choice. We have to get the American people engaged in negotiating their
health care costs, not letting the Federal Government negotiate their
health care costs.
[[Page S4622]]
I came here for the first time 18\1/2\ years ago. I worked for a
company of 50 employees. I came to the U.S. House of Representatives
and chose the same plan I had with that small employer in Winston-
Salem, NC. The only difference was that when I got here, the Federal
Government paid 75 percent where my employer had paid 75 percent. I
paid 25 percent here; I paid 25 percent there. I got exactly the same
plan and the same coverage. Everything was identical.
When I left Winston-Salem to become a Member of the U.S. House of
Representatives, my cost of that health care plan was $105. When the
Federal Government got through negotiating my same health care plan, it
went up to $160. I knew on day one I did not want the Federal
Government negotiating my health care because it meant higher prices
and no change in coverage.
I think many Americans have realized that about ObamaCare. My hope
and my plea and my prayers are that Thursday the Supreme Court
nullifies this bill and this Congress is challenged with going back and
step by step or in a comprehensive fashion write a health care bill
that includes the participation of the American people and puts
responsibility on everybody. Everybody in America should have the
responsibility to pay something when they go in to access it. It
doesn't matter whether it is private insurance, it doesn't matter
whether it is Medicare, it doesn't matter whether it is Medicaid.
If we want to solve the financial hole we are in in this country,
then we have to income-test everything that comes out of the Federal
Government. It means people who have more pay more. It means people who
have less pay something. But we have to be a country of unlimited
opportunity and not of unlimited handouts.
A February 2012 Gallup survey found that 48 percent of small
businesses are not hiring because of the potential cost of health care.
Studies indicate that the law's innovative tax killing on medical
devices could cost an additional 43,000 jobs in America. The
President's health care bill is the wrong prescription for America.
Regardless of the Supreme Court's decision this week, it is clear: We
must advance commonsense sustainable reforms that actually fulfill the
promise to lower health care costs. Without that America should be
outraged and, I believe, will be outraged.
Also in the news in the last several weeks is an issue that is
somewhat personal to me as a member of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, as a former member of the House Intelligence Committee, as
one who has dealt with the work of the Intelligence Committee since the
year 2000, and as one who lived up close and personal with everything
that has happened since 9/11. We have seen an incredible spree of
security leaks--leaks of classified and sensitive information.
When I go home on the weekends and there is a news report on
something, my wife will look at me and say: Why is this reported? There
is no reason for the American people or for anybody in the world to
know about that.
I can tell you it was not that long ago that even if the press found
out, they would never print it. Today, routinely there are leaks of
classified and sensitive information. Recently there has been a series
of articles published that have described, in some cases in extreme
detail, highly classified unilateral and joint intelligence operations.
I am not talking about suggesting that it might be there without
detail, I am talking about specifics of what happened. To describe
these leaks as troubling and frustrating is an understatement. They are
inexcusable by whomever. Our intelligence professionals, our allies,
and, most importantly, the American people, deserve better than what
they have seen over the last several weeks. I am personally sick and
tired of reading articles about sensitive operations based on ``current
and former U.S. officials--individuals who were briefed on the
discussions--officials speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss
the clandestine programs--a senior American officer who received
classified intelligence reports--according to participants in the
program--according to officials in the room--and individuals none of
whom would allow their names to be used because the evidence remains
highly classified and parts of it continue today.''
That is the basis on which these front-page stories run. I am not
confirming or denying that anything in it is accurate or inaccurate
because as a member of the committee I sign an obligation that says no
covert action will I even comment on. Any person who holds a secret
compartmentalized clearance has an obligation to never acknowledge the
existence of a program.
I asked, not long ago, was the drone program still a classified
program? The answer I got is yes. But the White House Press Secretary
for the last 3 weeks stood at the podium and talked about drone
attacks--on a program that I technically cannot go out and acknowledge
either exists or does not.
Our freedom, with understanding that politics trumps security, has
reached a new level. It has to stop and it has to stop now. The
unauthorized disclosure of classified intelligence at best violates
trust and potentially damages vital liaison relationships and at worst
it gets people killed. Clandestine operations are often, as I wrote
with Senators Coats and Rubio in the Washington Post, ``highly
perishable and they depend on hundreds of hours of painstaking work and
the ability to get foreigners to trust our Government. I strongly
believe that these leakers are also violating the trust of the most
important constituency of all--the American people.''
Even more troubling is that there appears to be a pattern to these
stories and leaks, that they may be designed to make the administration
look good on national security. It used to be that the good stuff was
buried by the media and the worst was run. Not anymore. Truth be told,
rarely have I seen a story that paints this administration in a bad
light. Then, when we are about to, the administration invokes executive
privilege. They can do that. That is OK. But there is a big difference
between invoking executive privilege on not producing documents for
Fast and Furious, and releasing classified information that puts at
risk individuals who are embedded in terrorist organizations, who are
doing their job to keep America safe.
This has crossed the line. I wish this administration was as
concerned about preventing leaks of classified information as it is
about keeping a lid on the information Congress is asking for. As a
member of the Senate Intelligence Committee I understand firsthand the
grave importance of keeping information secure. The unauthorized and
reckless disclosure of classified information undermines the hard work
of our intelligence officers and puts lives at risk, and it jeopardizes
our relationship with overseas partners. Congress's intelligence
oversight committees will not tolerate it, nor should the American
people.
Simply, I come to the floor today to deliver a message to those
individuals who were briefed on the discussions, who were part of the
program, who were in the room, who are speaking on condition of
anonymity: Stop talking. Whatever agenda you have, I can assure you it
is not worth the damage you are causing and the lives you are putting
at risk. We cannot continue to tolerate leaks at any level or branch of
government.
My colleagues and I are considering every available legislative
option to ensure the security of the intelligence community operations
and the people who support them. If you have access to classified
information and are tempted to leak that information for whatever
reason, I ask you to remind yourself what you may be hurting and what
trust you are violating and, more importantly, keep your mouth shut.
The Intelligence Committees on both sides of the Hill I think will
take action in their authorization bill to try to address a structure
that brings a new level of oversight and hopefully prosecution to those
who choose to leak secrets. In the interim, I am still considering the
fact that for any person who openly talks about a program that is
secret or compartmentalized, the day they say one word about that
program they lose their top secret clearance. I would love to see them
lose their pension but I understand how problematic that is. But at
least we can stop the bleeding by taking away their access to the
conversations or the meetings they happen to be a participant in or the
information they happen
[[Page S4623]]
to be entrusted with in a fashion that allows them to go out and
publicly talk about that and jeopardize the lives of Americans, the
lives of our partners and, more importantly, the security of the
American people.
On August 5, 2011, Standard & Poor's downgraded the credit rating of
the United States for the first time in our history and they cited out-
of-control debt and lack of a serious plan to address it as its main
reason. Nearly a year later the administration has done nothing to
remedy this problem. As a matter of fact, sometime at the end of this
year we are going to run out of our ability to borrow money. It is
called the debt ceiling. I cannot tell you today, because we are not
told, whether that is going to happen in October, November, December,
January--but it doesn't go much past the end of the first of the year.
I sort of pity the next President, whoever that is. They are probably
going to get inaugurated one day and the next day they are going to
have to come to Congress and ask for a $3 trillion increase in the
national debt.
As difficult as it is for me to say, we are going to have to do it.
The country has to have the capacity, the capabilities to borrow money
to function. But you would think with this all known we would take the
opportunity now to begin to change the grotesque spending habits, to
begin to prioritize the investments we make, that we would attempt to
reform the programs that cost us the most and lead to an unsustainable
financial future for the United States--a country that will soon be
$17.8 trillion in debt, a debt I will not be here to pay back but my
children and my grandchildren will.
You have to ask yourself as a parent: Is that fair? The answer is it
is not. Instead of doing anything, last year the debt ceiling needed to
be increased by $2.1 trillion. We are about to blow through it. Why?
Because we spend $1 trillion more on an annual basis than what we
collect. There is no business, no family, no institution in the world
that could spend $1 trillion more than they collect and be in
business--nor can this country. The time is running out.
By the way, it is hard to put a calculation on $1 trillion. What is
$1 trillion? It is 100 percent of the Federal investment in K-12
education, 100 percent of the Federal investment in higher education,
it is 30 percent of the VA budget, it is 100 percent of the National
Institutes of Health; it is 100 percent of the cost of the National
Science Foundation, it is 100 percent of the Federal partnership with
States and localities for infrastructure--bridges, roads, sidewalks. It
is 100 percent of our national defense, it is all branches of the
military, active and reserve, all bases of the military, domestic and
foreign. It comes up to about $942 billion. If you want to balance this
year's budget you have to cut everything I just talked about and find
$60 billion more, just to balance this year's budget.
The take-away from this is we are not going to delete our national
security. We are not going to decrease our investment in the National
Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation. We are going to be a
partner in K-12 and higher education. There are a lot of places we can
cut and should prioritize and we can do it, but the take-away is we
can't get there unless we are willing to reform entitlements, unless we
are willing to look at where the majority of the money is spent. We
cannot get there.
We have to do something. I tell you it starts with addressing the
imbalance we have in spending and collection right now--not next year.
Consistent with this is the Senate still has not passed a budget. In
fact, the President's own budget did not receive a single vote in
Congress when we voted on it. I should not laugh. We are on track for
another year with a $1 trillion deficit. How could anyone run their
company on an annual basis without a budget, without a financial
roadmap as to what they do? But now, for over 1,000 days the U.S.
Senate has not passed a budget. And the law says we have to do it. That
is incredible. It is absolutely incredible. Over the last 3\1/2\ years
we have added $5 trillion to the national debt, more than in the
previous 8 years combined, and current estimates by the CBO put Federal
debt at 70 percent of our gross domestic product by the end of this
year.
We are reaching irreversible levels of debt, as it relates to the
size of our economy. It is unsustainable and it is dangerous for the
fiscal health of our country. The status quo needs to change. Congress
needs to address the impending fiscal cliff or risk another downgrade
in the coming months.
We can accomplish this by passing a budget that moves us toward
balance. We can accomplish this by reforming entitlements and not
putting Band-Aids on issues for another time. Our debt will begin to
decrease when we put the American people back to work and we get
policies in place that encourage the investment of capital.
How about something novel? Why don't we reform our Tax Code? Give me
the ability to go to a small business in North Carolina and tell them
they are going to pay exactly the same thing GE pays. It is hard for me
to explain how they pay 36 percent and GE paid nothing. I am not
faulting GE, don't get me wrong. That is exactly what the Tax Code
currently says. That doesn't make it right. It doesn't mean we have an
obligation to leave it like that in the future. I look at it as an
opportunity for us to bring equity. But as we bring equity, why don't
we bring everybody's obligation--their rates--down. It is time for us
to reform individual corporate taxes in America, to do away with
loopholes and deductions, to flatten the rates for everybody, to
broaden the participation by more Americans. Guess what. If we do that,
we will be like a magnet for global capital. What does it take to
create jobs in the United States? It takes an investment. Reform the
Tax Code, flatten the rates, broaden the base, and we will attract
capital that will flee to America and create jobs like we have never
seen. At a time where the world continues to try to figure out how to
get out of a hole, we have an option to do it.
I yield to the Senator from Iowa.
Mr. HARKIN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that Senator
Burr have the time until 4:40 p.m.; that I be recognized for up to 5
minutes, following the remarks of Senator Burr; further, that after my
remarks, all remaining time be yielded back, the motion to concur with
an amendment be withdrawn, and the Senate proceed to vote on adoption
of the motion to concur in the House amendment to 3187.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Shaheen). Is there objection? Without
objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. HARKIN. I thank the Senator from North Carolina.
Mr. BURR. I thank the Senator from Iowa. So I just gave us a recipe
for solving our economic crisis in America. Some might say it will not
work. I don't know. I think it will. I can say this. What we are doing
is not working. We are not putting anybody back to work. We are still
losing. My State of North Carolina has 9.4 percent unemployment. How
long does it have to continue before we look at it and say this might
be a systemic problem? Can we recover from this?
How many law school graduates can we look at this year where 60
percent of the class of graduates from the first of May to the end of
June doesn't have a job? As a parent, I always thought the toughest job
was to make sure my kids got in school and that they graduated in 4
years. Now the greatest burden on a parent is to make sure when they
get out, they get a job that has a paycheck and maybe that check puts
them in a situation where they are self-sustainable. That is not the
promise we made to our kids and that ought to be the driving force
behind every adult in this country demanding a change.
Most of our kids did exactly what we asked them to do--stay in
school, make good grades, go to college, get a major. If they do that,
they will be guaranteed a job and an unlimited future. Now the seniors
who graduate from college who are not finding a job, their experience
is being questioned by their little brother or sister at home who is
struggling to get through high school and wondering why they want to do
6 more years of education if their older sibling can't find a job.
It doesn't have to be like this. All we have to do is muster up the
backbone we need to pass legislation that creates the atmosphere for
capital to be invested in job creation.
I am not rich, but I am getting tired of us dividing America in as
many
[[Page S4624]]
pieces as we can divide it. We already divide it based on political
boundaries. Now we are trying to divide it on everything we can find.
Yet for every politician when they give that big speech on TV, they
boil it down to this is about America. But when we look at the campaign
rhetoric out there, they slice it and dice it and try to divide it in
many ways. Let me assure everyone, we are not going to solve this if
America doesn't solve it. It is not going to be solved in the Halls of
Congress unless the American people demand it. It is not just one
segment of America; it is all segments of America.
I talked about de Tocqueville's definition of the greatness of
America earlier. He didn't point out some Americans who did it good or
did it right. He looked at America as one.
As a matter of fact, when we look historically at this country--and I
realize I only have a couple minutes left; I will be brief. When the
Capitol dome was torn off and the new construction started, it was
because of the wing we are currently in, the Senate, and the identical
wing that was built on the House side. When those wings were added,
architecturally, the dome that was on top of the Capitol was out of
proportion, and that dome was called a Bulfinch dome. In about 1851 or
1852, they started building the dome we see today, made of 9 million
pounds of cast iron. As that dome was about one-third of the way
finished, Abraham Lincoln was President, and they could actually watch
the Civil War battles across the Potomac on the other side of the
river.
Then came the end of the war and Lincoln was President and had every
right to be punitive to the South because they lost. I challenge
everybody to go back and read Lincoln's speeches after the Civil War.
Remember, the first action was to let every southerner go and keep
their gun because he knew they needed to eat. In every speech President
Lincoln gave after the end of that conflict where he could have in his
remarks been punitive to the South, President Lincoln talked about one
Nation, one people. As the leader of the United States, he understood
his single job was to bring this country back together. Even though he
probably had the greatest reason to draw division in America, he
refrained from that temptation and spent all his time redefining what
makes America great; that is, a united country of people.
In the temptation to win elections and the temptation to show the
highlights or successes of one party over the other, I will conclude
with this: As leaders in the country, we have a real opportunity to set
by example how we go forward. Let's quit the political divisions. Let's
start it with the two Presidential candidates. Don't slice and dice
America to where it is that group against this group and that group.
Let's realize if we want to change the direction of this country,
somebody has to stand and bring America together. My belief is we need
to do it now or there may not be another opportunity.
I can look at my good friend Senator Harkin and myself and we are at
an age where we are not going to drastically change the future. We made
the bed we are going to sleep in. But for our children and our
grandchildren, the impact of what we do can drastically change the
opportunities they have for a lifetime.
I would love to leave this institution believing we have had an
impact that extends prosperity and opportunity for generations to come.
But for a majority of the 2\1/2\-plus hours I have taken today, if we
don't have the backbone to take it on, it is not going to happen. If we
don't do it, nobody else will. Let's demand that the leadership we put
in place is willing to show the leadership needed to bring this country
back together for a common purpose. That purpose is to be a country of
unlimited opportunities, where everybody is being treated fairly.
I thank the Presiding Officer for her attention.
I yield the floor.
New Antibiotics
Mr. MENENDEZ. Madam President, I ask to be recognized to engage in a
colloquy with my good friend from Iowa, the Chairman of the HELP
Committee, Senator Harkin.
I want to thank the Chairman for his leadership on this bill, the
Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act. This is a
critically important piece of legislation and I am proud to support it.
I wanted to ask the Senator to clarify something for me regarding
language in the bill dealing with the development of new antibiotics.
This bill contains language to incentivize the development of
antibiotics, both for newly-discovered infections where antibiotics do
not yet exist as well as for those resistant infections where currently
available antibiotic treatments may no longer work. These incentives
are available for qualified infectious disease products, that is,
products intended to treat serious or life-threatening infections,
including those caused by resistant gram positive pathogens and multi-
drug resistant gram negative bacteria. It is my understanding that
products intended to treat serious or life-threatening infections
caused by gram negative anaerobic bacteria are also considered
qualified infectious disease products, and therefore eligible for the
incentives contained in this provision. Is that the case?
Mr. HARKIN. I thank my friend from New Jersey for the opportunity to
clarify this point. The Senator is correct that this provision aims to
provide incentives in the form of extended market exclusivity for
certain antibacterial and antifungal drugs that treat serious or life-
threatening infections. He is also correct that the list of qualified
pathogens in the legislation is illustrative, and not exhaustive.
Products intended to treat serious or life threatening infections
caused by gram negative anaerobic bacteria would be qualified
infectious disease products and would therefore be eligible for the 5
years of extended market exclusivity.
Mr. MENENDEZ. I appreciate the Senator clarifying that point. As he
knows, infections caused by gram negative anaerobic bacteria such as
Bacteroides and Garnerella have a disproportionate impact on women of
color and cause an increased risk of HIV infection and complications of
pre-term labor. I am pleased that this bill takes the steps necessary
to ensure treatments for these infections can come to market and help
those in need. Again, I thank the Senator for his leadership on this
bill and for clarifying this point today.
Ms. MIKULSKI. Madam President, I come to the floor to talk about
antibiotic resistance, a public health threat to Americans across the
country. I have heard first hand from hospitals, health care providers,
public health officials, scientists, and life sciences companies in
Maryland that we need new antibiotics in our arsenal. Bacteria, like
viruses, are crafty and constantly evolving to thwart existing
treatments. Everyday, Americans are infected by multi-drug resistant
microbes.
In most instances, antibiotics, much like vaccines, are not meant to
be used everyday to treat a condition for months, years, or a lifetime.
You use antibiotics sparingly, so you do not build up resistance. Yet,
drug development for these infectious pathogens can take just as long
as developing any other drug whether it is for HIV, heart disease, or
cancer. Because antibiotics are used for a short period of time, they
are not really profitable to the companies investing the time and money
to develop the product. There are not many small start-up companies or
big pharma companies that want to take the risk. Research and
development costs hundreds of millions of dollars, so these companies
are reluctant to invest in a safe and effective drug that doctors are
told to use sparingly. Bottom line, developing a next generation Viagra
pill is far more profitable for shareholders.
So, House and Senate Republicans and Democrats came together and
worked on a bipartisan bicameral solution to incent development of
drugs to treat serious or life-threatening bacterial infections. We
need to get more antibiotics in the drug development pipeline. We are
running out of antibiotics to treat MRSA, tuberculosis, acute pelvic
infections, complicated urinary tract infections, or complicated intra-
abdominal infections. There are many anaerobic gram negative and
anaerobic gram positive bacteria that are fatal, cause lifelong
injuries, increase the transmission of HIV and other sexually
transmitted diseases, or affect the reproductive and gastrointestinal
tracts.
[[Page S4625]]
Title VIII of our bill, provides incentives for the development of
antibiotics to treat serious or life-threatening infections, including
infections where tolerance and resistance to existing antibiotics make
them ineffective. We need to clear up infections that can cause poor
outcomes for patients or negatively impact the public's health.
This bill will increase exclusivity for manufacturers that invest the
time as well as the research and development dollars to bring new
antibiotics to the market that knock out infections that cause pre-term
labor or target bacterial infections in patients with unmet needs.
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, I am pleased that Congress will finally
send to the President the bipartisan Food and Drug Administration
Safety and Innovation Act, FDASIA. This legislation previously received
overwhelming support in the Senate and was passed by the House of
Representatives by a voice vote just last week. This final action by
the Senate will reauthorize the prescription drug user fee program and
medical device user fee which are set to expire on October 1, 2012. It
will also authorize two new provisions to allow the FDA to review and
approve generic drugs and biosimilar drugs in a timely manner.
Importantly, this bill includes several provisions that I have
supported to prevent access to dangerous drugs.
Passage of the FDASIA will help stop drug shortages that affect
thousands of Americans. I have heard from a number of Vermonters
concerned about the uncertainty of availability of lifesaving drugs and
devices. While the FDASIA will not stop all drug shortages, I hope it
will give Vermonters who depend on these medications relief knowing
more steps are being taken to ensure these shortages don't happen.
This legislation also includes an important provision I have been
proud to author to address the problem of counterfeit drugs. In March,
the Senate passed by unanimous consent bipartisan legislation that I
introduced with Senator Grassley to deter the sale of counterfeit
drugs. The Counterfeit Drug Penalty Enhancement Act, S. 1886, has the
support of groups such as the Alliance for Safe Online Pharmacies, the
Easter Seals, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The legislation is
consistent with recommendations from the Intellectual Property
Enforcement Coordinator and the administration's Counterfeit
Pharmaceutical Interagency Working Group. I am pleased that a
compromise version of this legislation will become law as part of S.
3187.
I am also glad that the final bill includes important provisions
addressing the issue of synthetic drugs. These provisions correspond to
three bills that the Senate Judiciary Committee passed last year--the
Combating Dangerous Synthetic Stimulants Act, S. 409; the Combating
Designer Drugs Act, S. 839; and the Dangerous Synthetic Drug Control
Act, S. 605. I was glad to move these bills through the committee last
year and to work to try to pass them in the full Senate. They address
substances commonly known as ``bath salts'' and other synthetic drugs
that have no legitimate use and can too easily be obtained under
current law. Bath salts have resulted in a number of reports of
individuals acting violently in the United States, including in
Vermont, and have led to injuries to those using them and to others.
I thank Senators Klobuchar, Grassley, Portman, and Schumer for their
leadership on this issue. I was glad to be able to work with them and
with Senator Harkin to support including these important provisions in
the FDA bill and keeping them there in negotiations with the House. It
is good that we are able to make real progress in this area.
I am also glad that we are moving forward on this issue in a
responsible way after appropriate consideration. Adding chemicals to
schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act has serious consequences
and is not a step that we should undertake without careful
consideration. We will continue to study this issue and consult with
the DEA, FDA, and others going forward.
I note also that Senator Paul has expressed serious concerns about
the mandatory minimum sentences contained in the Controlled Substances
Act, mandatory sentences that are expanded every time we schedule new
substances. I appreciate those concerns. As more and more of our
criminal justice budget goes to housing more and more people in prison
for ever longer periods of time, rather than supporting prevention
programs and law enforcement which can more efficiently and effectively
reduce crime, we have to rethink our reliance on mandatory minimum
sentences, particularly for nonviolent drug offenses. In the future, I
intend to work with Senator Paul and others on this vital issue.
Finally, I am pleased that the final FDASIA includes language to
protect the public's ability to access information under the Freedom of
Information Act, FOIA. This bill will allow the Food and Drug
Administration, FDA, to obtain important information about drug
inspections and drug investigations undertaken by foreign governments,
while at the same time ensuring that the American public has access to
information about potential health and safety dangers. This provision
carefully balances the need for the government to keep some information
confidential, with the need to ensure free flow of information in our
democratic society. A number of Senators, including Senator Harkin and
Senator Enzi, and a number of open government and consumer groups,
including OpenTheGovernment.org and Public Citizen, worked with me to
protect the public's access to FDA information in this bill.
Sending this legislation to the President's desk will save lives. The
Senate's action will also mitigate the uncertainty facing the FDA
should these user fees expire. I am pleased to support this legislation
and urge other Senators to do so as well.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Mr. HARKIN. Madam President, we are about to move to a vote on the
FDA reauthorization bill, a bill which I have said earlier we spent
more than 1 year working on in committee. It has had a lot of input
from Senators on all sides, including industry stakeholders and
consumer groups. This is the result of a wide collaboration on all
these issues.
I wish to respond to a couple things my friend from North Carolina--
and he is my friend--said earlier about the amendment he was concerned
about on the track-and-trace amendment. The Senator from North Carolina
talked about speed. He said we were rushing this through. The vote in
the Senate was 96 to 1. The House vote was unanimous. That doesn't
happen if a bill is being rushed through. Anybody who tries to rush a
bill is not going to get 96 votes in the Senate or a unanimous vote in
the House.
Again, my friend questioned how hard we tried to get the track-and-
trace provision included in the conference report. I might turn the
question around and question how hard the Senator from North Carolina
and the Senator from Colorado worked to get this included. We have been
working on this bill for over 1 year. My friend, a good member of the
committee, and his staff has been very much involved in many aspects of
this bill. So I wonder why the amendment was dropped on our staff 1 day
before filing the bill at the midnight hour. I might also point out
that on September 14, 2011, our committee had a hearing on the supply
chain issue. The record will show that I, the chairman, was the only
one to raise the issue of track and trace at that hearing.
Two weeks before markup, Senator Burr and Senator Coburn introduced
an FDA bill. Senator Enzi's staff and my staff worked for 2 weeks to
incorporate elements of this bill into the reauthorization. These are
elements of the bill that were introduced 2 weeks before by the Senator
from North Carolina, Mr. Burr, and Senator Coburn. So our staff spent 2
weeks trying to incorporate elements into the bill, and they did. We
did incorporate a lot of elements. I would point out there was nothing
that mentioned track or trace that was in that bill that was introduced
2 weeks before.
Again, I just say, if this was so important, why wasn't it in their
bill? If it was so important, why did they wait until Sunday evening at
6:20 p.m., the day before filing, to get the language? Again, who is
trying to rush what? We did not try to rush anything, but when we get
something dropped in our lap at
[[Page S4626]]
6:20 p.m. the night before the filing, it is hard to build a consensus,
and that is what this bill is. We did go to conference on this, but
this issue involves a lot of different players, and we could not get
that consensus.
So I say to my friend from North Carolina, we are still working on
this. We will work on it in good faith, but we have the State of
California, we have the pharmaceutical manufacturers, we have
drugstores, we have consumers, we have a lot of people out there who
have something to say about this, and we have to build that coalition
in order to get a good track-and-trace bill through.
We are now about to vote on the critical FDA bill reauthorizing user
fees, modernizing FDA's authority in several meaningful and targeted
ways, addressing the drug shortage problem, streamlining the device
approval process, enhancing our global drug supply chain authority and
all the while maintaining and improving patient safety. Because this
bill will directly benefit patients and the U.S. biomedical industry,
it is critically important to the agency, industry, and most important
to patients that we get this done.
I urge my colleagues to vote for final passage and pass this bill. It
is the same bill the House passed unanimously. Once it is done here, we
can send it to the President and get it signed and move ahead with a
good reauthorization of the Federal Food and Drug Administration.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the motion to concur
with amendment No. 2461 is withdrawn.
The question is on agreeing to the motion to concur in the House
amendment to S. 3187.
Mr. HARKIN. I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There appears to be a sufficient second.
The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from Colorado (Mr. Udall) is
necessarily absent.
Mr. KYL. The following Senators are necessarily absent: the Senator
from Utah (Mr. Hatch), the Senator from Illinois (Mr. Kirk), and the
Senator from Arizona (Mr. McCain).
Further, if present and voting, the Senator from Utah (Mr. Hatch)
would have voted ``yea.''
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber
desiring to vote?
The result was announced--yeas 92, nays 4, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 168 Leg.]
YEAS--92
Akaka
Alexander
Ayotte
Barrasso
Baucus
Begich
Bennet
Bingaman
Blumenthal
Blunt
Boozman
Boxer
Brown (MA)
Brown (OH)
Cantwell
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Chambliss
Coats
Cochran
Collins
Conrad
Coons
Corker
Cornyn
Crapo
DeMint
Durbin
Enzi
Feinstein
Franken
Gillibrand
Graham
Grassley
Hagan
Harkin
Heller
Hoeven
Hutchison
Inhofe
Inouye
Isakson
Johanns
Johnson (SD)
Johnson (WI)
Kerry
Klobuchar
Kohl
Kyl
Landrieu
Lautenberg
Leahy
Lee
Levin
Lieberman
Lugar
Manchin
McCaskill
McConnell
Menendez
Merkley
Mikulski
Moran
Murkowski
Murray
Nelson (NE)
Nelson (FL)
Portman
Pryor
Reed
Reid
Risch
Roberts
Rockefeller
Rubio
Schumer
Sessions
Shaheen
Shelby
Snowe
Stabenow
Tester
Thune
Toomey
Udall (NM)
Vitter
Warner
Webb
Whitehouse
Wicker
Wyden
NAYS--4
Burr
Coburn
Paul
Sanders
NOT VOTING--4
Hatch
Kirk
McCain
Udall (CO)
The motion was agreed to.
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, today, with final passage of the FDA
Safety and Innovation Act and the reauthorization of the FDA user fee
agreements, we have helped both the FDA and the biomedical industry
ensure that they can get needed medical products to patients quickly.
This legislation, now headed to the President for his signature, will
ensure that the FDA can swiftly approve drugs and medical devices, save
biomedical industry jobs, protect patient access to new therapies, and
preserve America's global leadership in biomedical innovation. It will
keep patients safer by modernizing the FDA's inspection process for
foreign manufacturing facilities, while also improving access to new
and innovative medicines and devices. It will reduce drug costs for
consumers by speeding the approval of lower cost generic drugs and help
prevent and mitigate drug shortages.
Finally, by improving the way FDA does business, increasing
accountability and transparency, U.S. companies will be better able to
innovate and compete in the global marketplace.
With the FDA Safety and Innovation Act ready to be signed into law,
we have taken an important step to improve American families' access to
lifesaving drugs and medical devices.
As I have said throughout this debate, the bipartisan process that
produced this excellent bill has been a shining example of what can be
achieved when we all work together in good faith. I worked very closely
with my colleagues on both sides of the aisle, as well as industry
stakeholders, patient groups, and consumer groups, to solicit ideas and
improvements on the critical provisions in this bill. We have a better
product thanks to everyone's input.
My colleague, Ranking Member Enzi, deserves special recognition, and
I extend my sincerest gratitude to him. Without his strong leadership
and cooperation in this open bipartisan process, we would not have the
exceptional consensus measure we have today. So I thank Senator Enzi
for his partnership and collaboration throughout the past almost year
and a half.
I wish to specifically thank the staff of Ranking Member Enzi, as
they have devoted countless hours to working with my staff and others
throughout this process to build consensus for this legislation.
I thank Frank Macchiarola, Chuck Clapton, Keith Flanagan, Melissa
Pfaff, Grace Stuntz, Katy Spangler, and Roley Swinehart. I sincerely
thank them for their tireless efforts and loyal commitment to this
cause.
I also thank all of the HELP Committee members as well as other
Senate Members and their staffs who were thoroughly engaged with this
process from the beginning as part of the bipartisan working groups.
Each of you has contributed significantly to this legislation, and I am
sincerely grateful for your contribution.
I also recognize Chairman Upton and Representative Waxman, as well as
their staffs, who worked tirelessly to reconcile the differences
between the Senate and House legislation.
Of course, I thank my own staff on the HELP Committee, who have spent
many a night and weekend with Senator Enzi's staff, other Members'
offices, and our colleagues in the House working to come to consensus
on the critical policy issues in this legislation.
First of all, I thank our staff director Pam Smith, and I especially
want to note the tremendous work done by Jenelle Krishnamoorthy through
this last almost 15 months or more, for pulling people together and
working on weekends. I don't know how she does it, and she still has
time for the twins. It is remarkable, but she does it, and it is done
remarkably well, and I thank Jenelle especially for her great
leadership.
I also thank Elizabeth Jungman, Bill McConagha, Kathleen Laird, Dan
Goldberg, Justine Sessions, Kate Frischmann, Elizabeth Donovan, Frank
Zhang, and Evan Griffis.
I also thank our former staff director Dan Smith, who left the
committee as staff director a couple of months ago, but he was very
much involved in this until the time of his departure.
I also thank the Congressional Budget Office for their knowledgeable
and capable team that was willing to work around the clock sometimes to
estimate the budgetary effect of the legislation.
We also owe our gratitude to the staff members in the Legislative
Counsel's Office--specifically Stacy Kern-Scheerer and Kim Tambor. This
bill is a result of tremendous effort by their team to draft and
redraft provisions in this measure, as well as address technical issues
well into the nights and over weekends. I thank them profusely for
their dedication.
[[Page S4627]]
This bill's final passage is a victory for millions of Americans who
need medicines or medical devices, a victory that would not have been
possible without the dedicated work of our Senate family.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader is recognized.
____________________