[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 173 (Wednesday, January 2, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H7567-H7568]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HURRICANE SANDY RELIEF
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 3 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, it was to my profound disappointment that I
learned last night that the House would adjourn the 112th Congress
without providing assistance to the victims of Superstorm Sandy.
I am joined today, Mr. Speaker, by many of my colleagues from the
jurisdictions whose people received the most damaging blow. Though my
district did not sustain the extreme damage that those in New York, New
Jersey and Connecticut did, the President declared several Maryland
counties eligible for Federal assistance from this storm, but it was
minor, and my citizens are not in dire circumstances; but the citizens
of some from whom we will hear today are in that condition.
Those counties joined hundreds in the 1,000-mile diameter of this
storm--the largest geographically in the history of the Atlantic
hurricanes. Now, at best, the Speaker has said that Sandy's victims
will need to wait until the next Congress to receive assistance--Wait,
they say, to millions who are in pain and in distress. We should not be
waiting. We should be voting this very morning, which I tell you, Mr.
Speaker, I expect to happen from my discussions with the majority
leader.
As I said last night, I went with Congressman Greg Meeks to Breezy
Point and the Rockaways in New York, and what I saw there in Sandy's
aftermath defied description and demanded action. To those who say that
FEMA has not yet disbursed all the funds it has to assist families and
businesses, I would tell them that they deeply underestimate the damage
in these areas and the wide range of assistance required to alleviate
the pain and suffering. At Jacob Riis Park, I saw the mountains of
debris that the Corps of Engineers had begun to remove from
neighborhoods. That debris represents people's lives, homes, and
businesses.
With this legislation, we would have provided up to $1.6 billion to
the Corps to continue removing debris so that families could begin
rebuilding. Would we have had to borrow that money? Yes. Just as if the
furnace went out and the temperature were at zero, you would
immediately replace the furnace to keep the families safe and borrow
the money to do so; and, yes, we would have had to repay it, and we
would.
This bill would have allocated $6 million in emergency aid for food
banks to make sure that people in the richest country on the face of
the Earth have some sustenance for them and their children. I saw an
area of Breezy Point where more than 100 homes were devastated by fire
when an electric transformer malfunctioned. The many firefighters who
lived in that neighborhood could not get additional help from
surrounding boroughs due to the severe flooding. They battled mightily
and they saved many lives, but there is little left--indeed, none--of
their homes.
I saw local businesses, Mr. Speaker, which had been there for years,
completely destroyed, waiting for the $620 million in SBA assistance
this bill would have provided. We talked a lot about not imposing
burdens on small business by additional taxes. These small businesses
are out of business without our help. We walk away today from nearly $4
billion in assistance to help reconstruct Rockaway Beach and other
places, which is critical to the area's economic recovery and important
to prevent further storm damage.
Finally, there is also the toll on transit and infrastructure,
including inundated subway and traffic tunnels that were referred to
last night. This bill would have provided up to $10.9 billion for
transit and $2.2 billion for highways to help make sure that the area
is not just cleared of water but repaired. If small businesses are
going to be able to operate, it will be because consumers and customers
can get to them and get to the schools and get to the hospitals and get
to their families.
Waiting to act until later this month when Members were here and
ready to vote last night is not the right choice. No Member of this
House could travel to the Northeast, see the damage, and tell anyone in
those areas to wait--wait for us to act, wait for us to help, wait for
us to come to your aid. We cannot and we should not wait. We must not
walk away.
[[Page H7568]]
Mr. Speaker, I urge the Speaker of this House to reconsider and to
act immediately. Now is the time to act.
Mr. RUNYAN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in disbelief that a Hurricane
Sandy disaster relief bill has failed to come to the floor in the
current Congress.
It has been over two months since Super Storm Sandy devastated my
home state of New Jersey, and Congress has failed to act. After
Hurricane Katrina Congress acted and passed a supplemental spending
bill within 10 days.
My district was ground zero for Sandy and suffered horrific damage.
I can personally attest to the devastation as I toured many of the
coastal towns in the days after the storm, and I can honestly say that
some areas look like they had just been bombed.
Governor Christie, after careful examination, estimates the damage to
New Jersey alone to be $36.9 billion.
I fully support the Governor's request. New Jersey will need every
last dime in order to rebuild successfully.
My constituents and I are extremely disappointed that in our time of
need this Congress has failed to act.
Mrs. McCARTHY of New York. Mr, Speaker, I rise today to express my
absolute shock that the House Republican leadership has adjourned the
112th Congress without addressing the needs of the victims of
Superstorm Sandy.
Like most Members whose constituents were affected by Sandy, we
expected, and were all but assured, that there would be consideration
of a supplemental appropriations bill before this House adjourned. It
is utterly unacceptable to leave millions of Americans across the most
densely populated part of the nation, including my Long Island
district, on the hook for the unexpected costs of a natural disaster.
The House Republican leadership had plenty of time to act--let's
review the timeline. In November, Governors from affected states acted
to give preliminary assessments of the damage caused to their cities
and towns. In early December, the President submitted to Speaker
Boehner a detailed supplemental package. By the end of December, the
Senate passed a bipartisan supplemental providing sixty billion dollars
in federal resources to Sandy victims. And yesterday, House Republican
leadership chose to give Members an extra day of vacation rather than
take up the Senate-passed bill or, at the very least, even attempt to
address the needs of millions because of this natural disaster. All the
House leadership did was tell storm victims to wait until the next
Congress. Excuse me for being cynical, but I don't have much faith that
this House leadership can keep its word and deliver for the people in a
timely manner. Midnight hour deals on fiscal cliffs, pending
dysfunction with the debt ceiling situation in two months--I just don't
believe it.
Ladies and gentlemen, this represents an unprecedented action in the
Congress. Never before has the United States Congress turned its back
on its citizens after a natural disaster. Members of this Congress
whose constituents were affected by Sandy have time and time again
supported supplemental appropriations bills for other areas of the
country affected by natural disaster. We were there with funding after
Katrina, and we were there after the floods in the Midwest. Nowwe need
to be there for millions in the Northeast. How come when it is our
constituents' unfortunate circumstance to be in need of similar funding
we are told to wait?
It's shameful.
I am pleased that both my Republican and Democratic colleagues have
expressed their shock and disappointment in House leadership for not
allowing a vote on a Sandy aid package. I will not rest until I can
deliver this funding to my constituents on Long Island and to the
millions who live throughout the Northeast. The Senate passed a good
bill, a bipartisan bill, a bill that includes much needed mitigation
funding as well. Nine weeks is already far too long for folks to wait
to be helped by our federal government after a disaster of this
magnitude. FEMA alone cannot provide all the necessary funding until
this House acts. The Small Business Administration, the Army Corps of
Engineers, other vital federal agencies and our state and local
governments NEED the additional resources to help stem the hurt Sandy
caused.
I am ashamed of the actions of this House Republican leadership and I
remain committed to getting Long Islanders and those across the
Northeast the federal assistance they deserve.
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