[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 173 (Wednesday, January 2, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H7577-H7578]
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 New
Jersey (Mr. Smith) for 5 minutes.
Mr. SMITH of New Jersey. Mr. Speaker, the two-tiered amendment
disaster relief bill that we had hoped to bring to the floor to get us
to the $60 billion that is desperately needed to assist families,
businesses, and municipalities devastated by Superstorm Sandy. Our
appeal--and it's a bipartisan appeal--is that there is still time to
bring this vital legislation to the floor for a vote back to the Senate
and then down to the President for signature.
Numerous towns in my district, Mr. Speaker, as well as well as our
friends in New York and further north, are still coping with and
recovering from the most destructive storm ever in our region--and
perhaps the second or third most costly in all of American history.
Today, families lack housing. Businesses are in shambles, and
municipalities have been decimated.
In New Jersey, some 346,000 housing units were damaged or destroyed,
with 22,000 units rendered absolutely uninhabitable.
{time} 1130
An estimated 11,000 housing choice vouchers will be needed to ensure
that residents at least have a roof over their heads this winter.
Approximately 100,000 new storm-related unemployment claims have been
filed in New Jersey, 100,000, attributable to the storm.
Over 235,000 people in New Jersey have already registered with FEMA
for individual assistance.
Seventy-five percent of New Jersey's small businesses were adversely
affected, 10 percent of which, or nearly 19,000 businesses, sustained
damage of $250,000 or more, far in excess of the loss to businesses
from Katrina. Total business losses are estimated to be a whopping $8.3
billion.
Furthermore, an estimated 10,000 structures statewide will need to be
demolished, and 1,000 sites across New Jersey will require remediation
after hazardous materials discharge.
Fifty-one schools sustained serious damage, including six that will
not reopen this school year.
Transit, roads, and bridges have been damaged to the tune of $2.9
billion, which includes 294 damaged railcars and 75 damaged
locomotives.
One of the main roads that runs through my district, Route 35, will
require an estimated $120 million to repair.
Power and gas lines are expected to cost roughly $1 billion,
understandably, given that, at the peak, power outages left 2.4 million
people in the dark.
Waste and water and sewer will require about $3 billion to repair and
to protect.
Hospitals, assisted living, and other health facilities will have
seen over $150 million worth of storm damage. These facts--and there
are many more--underscore the devastation unleashed by Sandy, and it is
without precedent.
I would say to my colleagues that no recovery is ever accomplished in
a single year, but it's about predictability and the certainty of funds
to rebuild and to restore that ensures that the work proceeds
immediately, comprehensively, efficaciously, and without interruption.
Mr. Speaker, for days and weeks, like many of my colleagues, after
that horrible storm hit, I met with hundreds, even thousands of
tenacious women and men who, despite crippling losses, were determined
to rebuild.
I'll never forget one resident in Belmar who came up to me the day
after Superstorm Sandy, and said, I've lost everything, but at least
I'm alive.
We need to now backstop these individuals. We need to ensure that the
monies are there, that they flow quickly but prudently to ensure that
they can rebuild, and their homes and businesses and community.
You know, Congress assisted those pummeled by Hurricane Katrina in
2005 with $62 billion in a mere 2 weeks. We are now past 2 months. And
we need to be clear: The President didn't send to Sandy Relief package
to Congress December 7. There was a loss of several weeks, but we do
have a proposal. It's about 25 percent less than what the affected
States have said they needed.
[[Page H7578]]
New Jersey, New York and the other estimates about $80 billion. It's
down at approximately $60 billion, so it is less.
And I've seen and gone through the numbers that my State has sent to
Congress as well as to the President. They are very well vetted.
Governor Chris Christie used to be a U.S. attorney. Many of the
people around him are former prosecutors. Their tough and disciplined.
They hate waste, fraud, and abuse, and they're trying to ensure that
the money is there in the amounts needed to make a difference in the
lives of your constituents.
Finally, let me just say, Mr. Speaker, we need to act now. As my
colleague before me said a moment ago, New Jersey especially as well as
New York, are contributing States not takers. We get back far less from
the Federal Government than we pay in every year. That's a good thing.
We have very, very good businesses that really provide employment for
our people.
But we've been devastated, and I would hope and urge the Speaker to
bring the Sandy Relief bill to the floor as quickly as possible,
hopefully today, tomorrow, but as quickly as possible, because the
people who have suffered, the victims, deserve no less.
____________________