[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 27 (Tuesday, February 26, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H635]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNITION OF ANTHONY TIMBERLANDS AND ARKANSAS FORESTRY PRODUCERS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Arkansas (Mr. Cotton) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COTTON. Mr. Speaker, I rise today with good news from south
Arkansas.
According to recent news reports, Anthony Timberlands, a cornerstone
of the Arkansas timber and forestry products industry, is currently in
the process of adding a second shift to its sawmill in Bearden,
Arkansas. This second shift will result in the hiring of 65 new
employees in addition to creating numerous other support positions
within the company and in the surrounding area of south Arkansas.
I want to recognize Anthony Timberlands for this exciting
announcement and their longstanding commitment to the people and the
economy of south Arkansas. But as I reflect on Anthony Timberlands'
announcement, I can't help but think of how many more jobs could have
been added throughout Arkansas and the United States if it weren't for
the excessive regulation of the Obama administration.
For example, States have worked in conjunction with the Federal
Government for 40 years to manage forest roads and prevent pollution
with State-managed best practices. This partnership has proven
effective and provided regulatory certainty for many decades.
Unfortunately, President Obama's EPA wants to impose a nationwide
standard, giving them the complete regulatory authority over an
industry that supports nearly 3 million workers and contributes $115
billion to our economy each year.
Under this standard, the EPA will be able to shut down businesses
that don't comply with their arbitrary and misguided rules. States have
a 40-year track record of effectively regulating these roads, and we
should let them continue for at least another 40.
To take another example, the EPA's new boiler rule demonstrates this
administration's preference for ideology over sound economics and
business sense. With compliance costs in excess of $3 billion and
105,000 jobs threatened, this rule inflicts unnecessary costs on our
economy at a time when we can least afford it.
In addition, our timber producers have no guarantee that EPA won't
move the goalpost once again and reopen the regulations as they have in
the past. What timber and forestry product companies want--what all
businesses want, for that matter--is certainty, not more regulation.
They need to know that investment in a new factory or new equipment
today means they can keep using it once it's built instead of living in
fear of the government closing their doors tomorrow.
{time} 1040
These companies aren't asking for special preferences or another $800
billion in failed stimulus funds; they're simply asking for predictable
and fair rule of law, not arbitrary regulation.
Mr. Speaker, companies like Anthony Timberlands provide quality jobs
and lasting economic growth for places like south Arkansas and the rest
of America, despite the obstacles the Obama administration has put in
their place. I look forward to working with my colleagues to eliminate
burdensome regulations and red tape that slow growth, hurt communities
and diminish opportunity. We should celebrate companies that empower
hardworking Americans to do what they do best: create high quality
products that lead the world.
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