[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 97 (Tuesday, June 26, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4627-S4631]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SMALL BUSINESS JOBS AND TAX RELIEF ACT--MOTION TO PROCEED
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I now move to proceed to Calendar No. 341,
S. 2237.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the motion.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
Motion to proceed to Calendar No. 341, S. 2237, a bill to
provide a temporary income tax credit for increased payroll
and extend bonus depreciation for an additional year, and for
other purposes.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I made a commitment to proceed to a 5-year
flood insurance bill following the farm bill. We have done that. It is
the right thing to do. It is an extremely important piece of
legislation. So I have lived up to that commitment. I had hoped the
broad support we have for this extremely important bill would allow us
to reach an agreement and finish the bill in a relatively short period
of time.
As everyone knows, the senior Senator from Arkansas has had some
issues with the bill. I have suggested that he have a vote. From
talking to my Republican friends, they do not have a problem with that,
giving him a vote. Unfortunately, as happens around here more often
than I would like, we have not been able to reach agreement because a
small group of Republicans is stopping us from doing this.
So my options are really very limited at this stage. I can file
cloture and put at risk our ability to complete action on student loans
and the Transportation bill. That is what it would do because if I file
cloture, we will have to have a cloture vote on this on Thursday. And I
would have to file cloture twice because there is the bill and there is
the substitute, which everybody agreed was the right thing to do to
move forward on the substitute. That is two votes, so at least 60
hours. The flood bill is a very important piece of legislation. It is
not something we have to complete the day after tomorrow, but it is
something we have to complete a month from now. So do I file cloture
and put at risk these important pieces of legislation, meaning the
Transportation bill, the student loans--put everything at risk--or I
can give supporters of this bill time to try to come to an agreement on
limiting the number of amendments.
I really believe the right thing to do is to give the people who want
this bill passed, Democrats and Republicans, people who support this
extremely important piece of legislation, a day or two to figure out if
they can get something done. I hope they can. I honestly do. So I am
not filing cloture on this bill as I had really actually contemplated.
I hope my Republican friends will work with us to get this bill done.
This is a bill that deals with flood insurance. I have spoken to a
number of Republican Senators, including Senator Vitter, who is the
person who has spoken out on this more than anyone else, and he
acknowledges that there may be a few relevant amendments that we should
have on this bill. I do not care. That is fine with me. Let's set up a
list of amendments and finish this bill. So I hope we can get that
done. I really do. We should not get in a legislative morass on a bill
that is extremely important for the country no matter what part of the
country you live in. The dry deserts of Nevada, this is an important
piece of legislation; the wetlands of Florida and Louisiana, very
important piece of legislation. So I hope we can get this done.
Let me just say another word or two. I am very pleased to say that we
are close to an agreement to prevent student loan rates from doubling
for 7 million young men and women. That would happen at the end of the
week. So I appreciate the leadership of President Obama. He has pushed
forward on this for a long time. He has given many public statements in
this regard. He has been talking to students around the country. He was
in New Hampshire yesterday talking to students. They waited in the rain
to hear him talk. He has been working with leaders in Congress to
ensure that students will not pay the extra $1,000 to get a degree.
I would remind my colleagues, the Republicans, including the Speaker,
my friend, were willing to give up on this issue a few weeks ago. We
are not willing to give up on this issue. I am glad my Republican
colleagues have agreed we should not give up on this issue. We do not
want to let the rates double. Leader Cantor even said Republicans were
done legislating. Remember that? But with the President's leadership
and our persistence and the help of my valiant Republican friends, we
are going to be able, with a little bit of good luck, to protect 7
million students. I hope that is, in fact, the case.
I appreciate the diligent work of the chairman of our committee,
Senator Harkin. Senator Jack Reed has worked very hard on this, as have
other Senators. I am leaving a few out, but I am certainly not doing
that intentionally.
I hope everyone understands the legislative issues we have to work to
toward the end of this week. I hope we can get it done. I hope we do
not get trapped in one of these Senate procedural bogs where we are
going to have to be here Friday, Saturday. You know, I hope we do not
have to do that. There is no reason to. We can get all of our work
done, but we do need a little bit of cooperation.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, I congratulate Senators Harkin and
Enzi, their staffs, and all who worked for 15 months on this important
piece of legislation. I have watched the Senate for a long time--first
as a staff member and then as a Senator--and it has always been a
little messy and complicated. There are always disagreements. That is
the purpose of the Senate, to work out arguments. But over the last few
months, this Senate has done a much better job of operating in the way
the American people expect us to operate. We are all here to try to get
results after we state our positions. This bill especially affects the
health and safety of millions of Americans. Almost every American
family buys the prescription drugs and medical devices we are talking
about in this legislation. I am glad to see this happen for two
reasons--one, because of the result, and two, because of the way the
Senate has worked. It is a fine example of what I hope to see happen
more often.
I also thank the majority leader, Senator Reid, and the minority
leader, Senator McConnell, for creating an environment in which we
could have a large number of amendments, debate, and discussion. I
think we all appreciate that very much and want to create an
environment in which they can provide that kind of leadership.
I ask unanimous consent to speak as in morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Land Grant Universities
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, on Monday, at the Library of Congress,
was the 150th anniversary celebration of the creation of land-grant
universities and the National Academy of Sciences. The assemblage also
took a moment to throw a bouquet to Andrew Carnegie for founding so
many free public libraries.
I am on the floor to ask this question: What was in the water in
Washington, DC, 150 years ago, in 1862 and 1863? During the 2 years
after the telegraph dispatched the Pony Express in 1861, Congress and
President Lincoln enacted the Morrill Act creating land-grant colleges,
authorized the Transcontinental Railroad--reducing the time for getting
from New York to San Francisco from 6 months to 6 days--as well as the
National Academy of Sciences, and enacted the Homestead Act. They also
agreed on a conscription law with teeth, a National Banking Act,
establishing a national currency, a new internal revenue law, and
created the Department of Agriculture. To top it off, on December 2,
1863 the last section of the Statute of Freedom was put in place on top
of the Capitol dome, with a great celebration.
Mr. President, if I were the Republican national chairman, I might
suggest that this transforming burst of governing was simply a matter
of turning the government completely over to
[[Page S4628]]
Republicans and sending home half of the Democrats. By the end of the
37th Congress in 1863, southern Democratic U.S. Senators could not
obstruct any of these laws because their States had seceded from the
Union and they could not to vote. According to the Senate Historian,
that left 48 Senators voting at the end of that session--27
Republicans, 12 Democrats, and 9 Unionists, oppositionists, or Senators
who called themselves the ``know nothings.''
Perhaps this burst of governing came from the energy of a new
political party or the brilliance of the new President, Abraham
Lincoln, or maybe a Congress that was simply more efficient in those
days. The Morrill Act that created land-grant colleges passed both the
Senate and House in the same week, in June 1862. The President signed
the bill into law 2 weeks later. The National Academy of Sciences was
introduced on February 20, 1863. It passed the Senate and the House and
was signed by the President all on the same day, March 3. Back in those
days, the President would obligingly travel down Pennsylvania Avenue
and sit in an office in the Capitol waiting for bills to be brought to
him for signature.
Maybe it was a result of the state of the American condition at the
time--the absence of a 24-hour media, special interest groups, and
instant communication on the Internet. Or maybe it was that Members of
Congress had more time to think great thoughts while traveling to the
sessions. It would take Senator Sam Houston 6 weeks to travel from his
home in Texas to occupy his Senate desk in Washington, DC.
There is no doubt it helped that there was a crisis, the Civil War.
Americans have always risen to our best in the midst of a crisis.
Making the crisis worse, many thought the new President was
incompetent. In January 1863, former Supreme Court Justice Benjamin R.
Curtis ``reported general agreement on the utter incompetence of the
President. He is shattered, dazed and utterly foolish.'' This is from
David Herbert Donald's book ``Lincoln.'' The editor of the Cincinnati
Commercial was more explicit when he wrote that President Lincoln was
``an awful, woeful ass. If Lincoln was not a damn fool, we could get
along yet.'' The President, in turn, considered many of his generals
incompetent. And he and Mrs. Lincoln were suffering a personal crisis
at the time, grieving the death of their son, Willie. The war crisis
clearly helped to enact transforming legislation in 1862 and 1863. One
impetus for passage of the law creating land-grant colleges was to
provide military training.
Among the first assignments of the National Academy of Sciences was
to find some way to protect the iron hulls of the Union Navy warships
from corrosion.
GEN Grenville Dodge told President Lincoln that the Transcontinental
Railroad was a ``military necessity,'' even though Representative
Justin Morrill, a visionary in other matters, said he saw no need for
the railroad to go further than the silver mines in Nevada because it
would only be traveling through uninhabited territories.
The war caused the bickering Republicans, who remained in Congress,
to pull together. The editor of the Chicago Tribune explained:
[If we fail], then all is lost. Union, party cause, freedom
and abolition of slavery . . . let us first get the ship out
of the breakers, then court martial the officers if they
deserve it.
Mr. President, it helped to have a crisis.
Unfortunately, the formula for the passage of transforming
legislation 150 years ago is not neatly explained as a crisis, plus a
brilliant President, plus a high-minded Congress efficiently enacting
big ideas developed in Washington, DC. The real story is much more
American than that. As has usually been the case, these big American
ideas came from outside Washington, they took a long time in coming,
and enacting them into law was a long and messy process.
Jonathan Baldwin Turner's address before the Illinois Teachers
Institute in 1850 proposed the creation of an ``industrial university''
12 years before enactment of the Morrill Act. Representative Morrill
first introduced the idea in 1857. After much struggle, it passed in
1959, but President Buchanan vetoed it. Two years later, Morrill
succeeded. And even though the obstructionist Southerners were gone,
eastern and western Republicans argued vigorously over land grants, as
well as where the new Transcontinental Railroad should go.
The roots of the National Academy of Sciences can be traced to a
group of Cambridge scientists meeting in the 1850s or to earlier
philosophical organizations before that or even all the way back to
Benjamin Franklin. California entrepreneurs and speculators and
politicians--some of them were all three--were the ones who persisted
in the 1850s until, in 1862, the Pacific Railroad Act became law.
So the formula for success for these transforming laws 150 years ago
was typically American: big ideas bubbling up from around the country,
plus entrepreneurial persistence, plus a crisis equals transforming
results.
How does that formula apply today to improving the American
condition? Well, to begin with, we have a handy crisis. Washington is
borrowing 40 cents of every dollar it spends. By this rate, by 2025,
every penny of tax revenue will go for Medicare, Medicaid, Social
Security, and interest on the national debt, leaving nothing left--
unless we borrow more--for national defense, national laboratories,
national parks, research, or education. A second crisis, many fear, is
that our country will be unable to compete in the future with the
emerging Asian economies. So what transforming steps should the United
States take to meet these new challenges?
My own view is that rather than creating new institutions, as America
did in the 1850s and 1860s, it would be wiser for us to spend our time
making the institutions we already have work.
Let me discuss just two examples--first, our basic governmental
institutions. The new Foreign Minister of Australia, Bob Carr, a great
friend of the United States, expressed recently in Washington, DC, that
the United States is one budget deal away from reasserting its
preeminence in the world. He means, of course, that the world is
watching, actually hoping, that at the end of the year the United
States will demonstrate that we actually can govern ourselves by
resolving the fiscal mess we have in a way that reforms taxes, controls
spending, and reduces debt. We do not need a new government to do this.
We need for our newly elected President, whether his name be Romney or
Obama, to lead.
President Lyndon B. Johnson's Press Secretary, George Reedy, once
defined Presidential leadership as seeing an urgent need, developing a
strategy to meet that need, and persuading at least half the people
that you are right.
We don't need to change the rules of the United States Senate; we
simply need a change in behavior--one that focuses less on playing
games and more on getting results. The new Congress, next year's
Congress, whether it be Republican or Democratic, must make its goal to
dispute, amend, debate, vote upon the President's proposed agenda, and
then help the President succeed, because if he succeeds our country
succeeds.
We might well remember the words of that Chicago Tribune editorial
writer in 1862 who said:
Let us first get the ship out of the breakers . . . then
court martial the officers if they deserve it.
The second institutions we should refurbish and make work are our
colleges and universities--all 6,000 of them, not just the land-grant
universities that we celebrate this week. Again, we do not need new
institutions; we need to reassert the greatness of the ones we have.
Our universities, along with our national labs, are our secret weapons
for innovation, and innovation is our secret weapon for producing 25
percent of all the money in the world for just 5 percent of the world's
population. The list of what it would take to strengthen our colleges
and universities is short and mostly agreed upon. First, stop sending
home every year 17,000 of the 50,000 international students who
graduate from U.S. universities with advanced degrees in science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics. Give them a green card and
let them stay here to create jobs in the United States.
Next, double funding for advanced research, as the America COMPETES
Act, which passed with huge bipartisan
[[Page S4629]]
support in the Senate, has already authorized.
Third, repeal the Federal Medicaid mandates that force States to
spend money on Medicaid that otherwise would go to higher education.
This has resulted in dramatic decreases in State support and increases
in tuition to try to maintain quality.
Next, while Congress is repealing the Medicaid mandates, it should
literally cut in half the stack of regulations that hampers
institutional autonomy and wastes dollars that should be spent on
students and research.
Finally, the institutions themselves should look for ways to save
money, such as full utilization of facilities during the summer, 3-year
degrees for some students, and reforms to teacher tenure.
In the 1960s, Mitt Romney's father, George Romney, offered this
advice to the big three Detroit automobile manufacturers:
Nothing is more vulnerable than entrenched success.
The big three did not pay attention to that advice, and we see what
happened. It is good advice for universities today.
In conclusion, I wish to say a word about the Carnegie libraries. My
experience is that most ideas fail for lack of the idea; or to put it
positively, that a great idea eventually carries itself into reality.
Andrew Carnegie's great idea was building public libraries. All of us
know of their importance.
I remember when the New York Times wrote an article about me. They
said, Mr. Alexander grew up in a lower middle-class family at the edge
of the Tennessee mountains. When I called home later that week to talk
with my mother, she was reading Thessalonians to gather strength for
what she considered to be a slur on the family. She said to me: Son, we
never thought of ourselves that way. You had a library card from the
day you were 3 and a music lesson from the day you were 4. You had
everything you needed that was important.
Andrew Carnegie's gift and the Federal laws 150 years ago creating
land grant universities and the National Academy of Sciences and the
transcontinental railroad and the Homestead Act all have this in
common. They were not command-and-control Federal Government actions
from Washington, DC. They were big ideas that, when implemented,
empowered Americans to do things for themselves--to travel, to own a
home, to educate themselves, and to learn by using a library.
For example, my empowered mother took me to the A. K. Harper Memorial
Library in Maryville, TN, when I was 3 years old in order to get my
library card. ``Mrs. Alexander,'' the librarian said to her, ``we don't
give library cards to 3-year-olds.'' ``Well, you should,'' she said to
them. And they did.
So on this anniversary for the congressional enactment of
transforming and empowering ideas, there should be more hope than
despair. We still have most of the world's great universities. They
still attract most of the brightest students from everywhere,
insourcing brainpower and creating wealth.
According to a recent Harvard School of Business survey of 10,000 of
its alumni on U.S. competitiveness, if you are in business in this
country, it is still hard to beat America's entrepreneurial
environment, proximity to customers, low levels of corruption, access
to skilled labor, safety for people and property, and protection of
intellectual property.
We have a remarkable system of government created by geniuses that
many countries struggle to emulate. So why not celebrate this
anniversary by taking steps to ensure that 25 or 50 or 100 years from
now we have even more of the greatest universities in the world?
Let me read exactly what Australia's Foreign Minister, Bob Carr, a
friend of the United States, said in his speech in April:
America could be one budget deal away, in the context of economic
recovery, one budget deal away from banishing the notion of American
declinism. Think about that, one budget deal, an exercise of
statesmanship up the road, in the context of an economic bounce-back
and all of a sudden, with energy independence crystallizing, with
technological innovation, resurgence of American manufacturing, people
who spoke about American decline could be revising their thesis.
So as we celebrate the transforming legislation of 150 years ago, why
not take the advice of our friend from Australia? Why not take
advantage of our opportunity at the end of this year to enact a budget
that will reassert Americans' preeminence in the world?
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arkansas.
Honoring Our Armed Forces
Army Master Sergeant Gregory Childs
Mr. BOOZMAN. Mr. President, as the son of a master sergeant in the
Air Force, I grew up in a family that had values rooted in military
tradition and patriotism. But you certainly don't have to be from a
military family to love our country. We are encouraged to have a sense
of American pride in our daily lives.
I remember reciting the Pledge of Allegiance and singing patriotic
songs that reflect the love of our country. Students continue to do
this and to learn these values passed down from generations of
Americans before them. We have special days that recognize the people
and symbols important to our country.
Two weeks ago, we celebrated Flag Day and next week we celebrate
Independence Day. The 3 weeks between these patriotic holidays is known
as Honor America Days. You most likely won't find these on your
calendar, but Congress established these days and adopted it into the
U.S. Code to encourage gatherings and activities that celebrate and
honor our country.
While these days are not widely recognized, one of the ways Americans
demonstrate our devotion to our country is by supporting our men and
women in uniform. These troops have made enormous sacrifices to defend
our country and our interests across the globe. These heroes are
shining examples of the spirit, commitment, and bravery of our Nation.
During my time in Congress, I have had the opportunity to travel and
meet with our troops across the globe and thank them personally for
their sacrifices to make our world a better place. These men and women
are always in my thoughts and prayers. I thank our military personnel
and our veterans for their valued service and offer my sympathy to
those families whose loved ones have given their all in defense of our
Nation.
This includes the family of Arkansas soldier Army MSG Gregory Childs.
Master Sergeant Childs died on May 4, 2012, while serving in
Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. His family and
the community of Warren, AR, paid their respects to Master Sergeant
Childs, a father, a son, a brother and a friend, in a very moving
ceremony.
Master Sergeant Childs graduated from Warren High School in 1992. He
considered it an honor to serve his country in the military. For 20
years he served his country in locations around the globe, from Bosnia,
Germany, Colombia, and two tours in Afghanistan. He excelled through
the ranks of the Non-Commissioned Officer Corps and earned one of the
highest ranks he could attain.
I ask my colleagues to keep his family--especially his young daughter
Kourtlan--and his friends in their thoughts and prayers during these
difficult times. I humbly offer my appreciation and gratitude to this
patriot for his selfless sacrifice.
As the home to literally thousands of active-duty military personnel
and even more veterans, Arkansas has experienced more than its share of
grief and sacrifice for loved ones who serve our country. Our State has
a rich history of service to our Nation. Troops stationed in Arkansas
have served our country honorably even before it was admitted to the
Union. Our men and women have always been willing to do their part to
serve and to protect. Our troops stationed in Arkansas and our military
facilities at the Little Rock Air Force Base and the 188th Fighter Wing
are some of the best assets in our military. Arkansans' active-duty
personnel and National Guardsmen have time and again proven their
dedication, perseverance, and commitment to excellence in defending
this country.
As we plan our Independence Day celebrations, let us remember the
service men and women who embody the
[[Page S4630]]
ideals that make our country great. I know my fellow Arkansans share my
gratitude and appreciation for our military personnel and their
families who sacrifice at home while their loved ones are away.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
Synthetic Drug and PDMP Amendments
Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I rise to talk about a couple of
amendments that were included in the legislation we voted on here this
afternoon in the Senate. I am speaking of the Food and Drug
Administration legislation. That legislation included two very
important amendments that deal with combating legal drug abuse here in
this country.
I want to start by thanking my colleagues, Senators Schumer,
Klobuchar, Grassley, and Enzi, for helping to develop and promote this
legislation over many months. The legislation addresses what is called
synthetic drugs. I also want to thank them for helping see it through
to passage as an amendment today.
Senator Grassley actually shared with me a story a few weeks ago of a
young man from Iowa, David Mitchell Rozga, an 18-year-old, who sadly
took his life after using this synthetic drug known as K2, or spice. It
is synthetic marijuana. He had purchased it legally at a local shopping
mall.
In recent weeks, we have seen lots of news accounts of some of the
savage acts committed by people high on these synthetic drugs, such as
the widely reported cannibalism in Miami, FL. I saw today another
horrible story about another man in Waco, TX. We have seen lots of
deaths reported in my home State of Ohio due to synthetic drugs. Very
recently we had a report of the Columbus, OH, police having to shoot
two men who were high on what are called bath salts. One was shot
fatally. There is synthetic marijuana out there, but also synthetic
stimulants and synthetic hallucinogens. Unfortunately, people don't
know they are dangerous because they are not illegal. So we need to act
and act now, and we are doing so through this legislation today.
As I said, one of the drugs is called spice. It sounds like an
ingredient you would find in a kitchen, something benign you would find
on a shelf somewhere. The same with bath salts. Unfortunately, they are
not benign at all. They are not what you think they are. They are
dangerous compounds that can cause tremendous devastation, and we need
to be sure we get the word out.
Users are led to believe they are getting a legal version of
something that mimics marijuana, cocaine, LSD, or any other illegal
street drug that is under what is called Schedule I of the Federal Food
and Drug Administration. This means they are illegal drugs. But because
these synthetic drugs are legal, again, users think they are safe. But
they produce adverse reactions that are truly unexpected and sometimes
bizarre. And like the street versions that are on Schedule I at the
Federal level, the Drug Enforcement Agency and the FDA have both
concluded none of these drugs has any currently accepted medical use in
treatment in the United States.
It seems to me it is appropriate for us to list them under Schedule
I. And again, that is what the Senate did today, following the House of
Representatives. Because they are legal, they are accessible,
particularly on the Internet. I have Googled a number of them,
including K2, and it is alarming to see how easy it is to purchase them
and how they are advertised. It is time to put them on Schedule I, just
like street drugs, and by doing so we give the DEA the ability to
prevent these drugs from being distributed or imported into the United
States, and also allows them to pursue the manufacturers of these
drugs.
A lot of families have suffered from synthetic drugs, and sometimes
those families come to me. I have done a lot of work over the years in
prevention and education of substance abuse. I started a coalition back
home that continues to do great work in the greater Cincinnati area. I
have been involved in encouraging community coalitions around the
country, and I am hearing more and more about these synthetic drugs.
Families come to me because they are hoping something positive will
come out of the tragedies they have experienced; that the word will get
out through these tragedies and other young people and adults won't
lose their lives.
I heard one such story in the Senate about the family of Caleb Tanner
Hixson in Riceville, TN.
Tanner was a student at Lee University in Cleveland, TN, majoring in
exercise and health science. After graduating, he wanted to study for
an advanced degree in physical therapy. Besides studying in that field,
he was an avid athlete and outdoorsman. He had played competitive
baseball his whole life, and he was also into hiking and canoeing. But
all that promise was cut off on March 8 of this year when Tanner died
as a result of a cardiac arrest after ingesting alcohol and a synthetic
drug at a party in Chattanooga, TN. He was 22 years old. That drug is
easily purchased on the Internet. In fact, it is identified on the
Internet as being a ``research chemical.''
His cousin, Brandi White, was the one who told me about this incident
on the Senate floor. Brandi actually works in the leadership office. I
appreciated her sharing this story with me, and my heart goes out to
her family. She said she called Tanner's mom to tell her about the
legislation when we got it onto the bill, and she called her again
today to tell her the legislation had passed. Although it is little
comfort when you have lost a son, it is some comfort. I appreciate the
fact that her family was willing to share that story so that other
young people will not make that same mistake.
This legislation puts these dangerous drugs on what is called
schedule I. We don't want one more young person to make one more bad
decision and to die or have a serious health problem as a result of
thinking these synthetic drugs are safe because Washington hasn't put
them on the list to tell people they are unsafe.
If we want to do right by the safety and health of our children as
well as our communities, closing this loophole, of course, was just
something commonsense--and, by the way, something bipartisan, along the
lines of what my colleague said earlier about how we ought to be
operating in the Senate.
I am also proud to see bipartisan support for passage of another
amendment today. This is legislation that I introduced with Senator
Whitehouse along with Congressman Hal Rogers from Kentucky. This deals
with the prescription drug problem we have. There is a prescription
drug abuse problem throughout the country, but in Ohio we have been hit
hard. One of the issues I found in going to a townhall in southern Ohio
was the fact that the State prescription drug monitoring programs
couldn't communicate and operate across State lines.
I did a townhall where Director Gil Kerlikowse of the Office of
National Drug Policy kindly came to Portsmouth, OH, about 1 year ago in
July 2011, which is in southern Ohio on the banks of the Ohio River, an
area that has been in the center of prescription drug abuse and
interstate drug trafficking. It is also right across the river from
Kentucky and right near West Virginia, so it is an interstate area.
Prescription drug abuse has devastated the county in which Portsmouth
sits, Scioto County, as well as other counties in the area. But because
of the hard work of family members, community leaders, and Federal,
State, and local law enforcement, there has been some momentum and we
are beginning to turn things around. Pill shops are being closed. One
critical tool they told me they needed was prescription drug monitoring
programs that could work across State lines. This is a database that a
lot of States use to monitor prescription drug abuse so when someone
goes to ask for a prescription, the person responsible for implementing
the program or someone at a pharmacy or a doctor knows what
prescriptions this person has already received. These are very
effective programs.
Forty-eight States have them, one territory has it, and they work
well within the State but they don't communicate well within the
States, between each other. Again, in a place such as Scioto County,
where we have interstate traffic, this legislation will now protect our
community and ensure that if someone gets a prescription in Ohio and
then goes across to Kentucky to fill it once they have reached their
[[Page S4631]]
limit in Ohio, that there will be a monitoring program and a database
available. So it succeeds by getting States' different programs to work
together securely, reliably, and efficiently.
I would also like to thank the Alliance of States with Prescription
Monitoring Programs, which has played a pivotal role in promoting
national interoperability standards.
These are examples where the Senate acted to try to make our
communities safer and to help ensure that young people can achieve
their God-given potential. Working together, we have been able today to
help ensure the health and well-being of our communities.
Mr. President, I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a
quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Bennet). The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the order for the
quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________