[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 171 (Monday, December 31, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H7473-H7474]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
A TIME OF PERSONAL REFLECTION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Missouri (Mr. Carnahan) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CARNAHAN. On this last day of the year and on one of the last
days of this 112th Congress, we are awaiting a fiscal deal that will
strengthen the fiscal health of this country. I want to take a few
moments to reflect on my service here in the House of Representatives
and to personally thank many who helped me get here and to do the work
of the people whom I represent and love in the State of Missouri.
First, Mr. Speaker, Debra Carnahan, my wife but also an accomplished
attorney, a former State and Federal prosecutor. She's really been the
rock of our family and has been with me through the great highs and
tough lows of this job. So I want to thank her.
Also, our two great sons--Austin and Andrew--who have shared me with
thousands of constituents for several years. They have grown into
amazing young men, young men who I think will, in their own rights,
make a difference as they work their way through their lives.
Mr. Speaker, I want to also thank some of my amazing staff who are
too numerous to name--dozens over many years--but there are four in
particular who worked with me through the entire 8 years that I served
in this Congress: Jeremy Haldeman, who has
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staffed the Foreign Affairs Committee for me and the Oversight
Subcommittee, and who has also been my chief of staff in the Washington
office; Jim McHugh, who has been my district director and longtime
friend and colleague in St. Louis; Suzanne Archer, who has been my
deputy director; and Kathy Waltz from Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, a
former mayor there but an invaluable part of our constituent outreach
team. There are many other staff members, but I thank those in
particular for their long and loyal service and for the difference they
make in so many people's lives.
To the Missourians whom I've had the great honor to represent, I am
gratified and humbled beyond belief to have been able to represent them
in this U.S. House of Representatives for 8 years and to also have
represented many in the State house of representatives for 4 years
prior to that. In working with them and for them we've been able to get
some great things done on big national issues but also on important
local issues back home.
From ribbon cuttings and orange cones and construction signs all
across the St. Louis region to investments in our infrastructure, which
have created real jobs at home and have helped rebuild our region's
roads, bridges, ports, lochs, dams, levees, flood walls, airports,
high-speed rail, light rail, and our bus systems, those have made a
real difference in people's lives. It was the reason I got on the
Transportation Committee in the first place. We had two of the most
deadly roads in America in Jefferson County, Missouri, and we got
special funding to help rebuild those roads--to not only help their
economy but to save lives. Recently, our firefighters were able to
obtain a Federal grant for special patrol boats-rescue boats on the
Mississippi River, which will serve the region for years to come.
These kinds of investments are important, and I want to urge this new
Congress that will be taking over in just a few days to pass a major
transportation bill. It's one of the best investments we can make in
this country in order to continue to grow this economy.
We've seen after growing out of this Great Recession over the last
few years the Recovery Act passed, the auto industry saved, major Wall
Street reforms passed, health care reform passed, and stem cell
research measures adopted in unprecedented bipartisan ways. I'll never
forget the mothers with their young children who were sitting in my
office the day that the health care bill was approved. There was not a
dry eye in the room because all of their kids had preexisting
conditions. Because of the new health care law, that cannot be the case
anymore. I was also proud to serve on our House Foreign Affairs
Committee and to chair the international organization's committee, so I
just want to urge this Congress to take on the needed reforms to make
this Congress work better for the American people.
In closing, we recently greeted World War II veterans here at the
monument built in their honor. They said that this Congress needed to
take on the spirit they had in World War II--to put the country first
and to put our differences aside--and that we could achieve great
things.
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