[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 57 (Wednesday, April 24, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H2252-H2253]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SEQUESTRATION'S EFFECTS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, 7 weeks on, Americans have already begun to
feel the effects of the Republican policy of sequestration.
Sequestration defies common sense and is irresponsible. It is
happening because the Tea Party faction of the Republican Party is
hell-bent on cutting spending, no matter what the consequences, no
matter how irrationally it is done, and no matter how adverse the
consequences of these cuts.
These arbitrary, across-the-board cuts to Federal programs without
regard to our priorities was never meant to be a solution, but rather,
a deterrent to Congress failing to reach one.
{time} 1010
Since coming into effect on March 1, Americans are seeing why
sequestration is not a policy we should follow or continue. This week,
the FAA began furloughs for 47,000 employees. I've talked to the
Secretary and I've talked to the Deputy Assistant Secretary. They do
not have an option under the policies that this Congress has adopted.
Thirteen thousand air traffic controllers are among those 47,000.
Already, delays of up to 2 hours at major airports are disrupting
travel, which impacts business and produces major headaches for
American families trying to get to where they need to go. Some flights
have been diverted because the air traffic control system is being
overwhelmed with limited personnel.
In addition to its effects on the FAA, sequestration is also placing
a heavy burden on small business. According to an article in Politico
on April 16--just a few days ago--small businesses are being hit the
hardest by sequestration's cuts. The Small Business Administration is
being forced to cut $16.7 million in loan subsidies; those are
guarantees. That means $16.7 million in loans--capital--not available
to small businesses. At the same time, the article goes on to report as
many as 956,000 small business jobs could be at risk from sequestration
as employers lay off their workers in anticipation of further cuts.
We ought to abandon this stupid policy.
Also at stake are critical research programs in medicine and science
research that fuel American innovation and advance lifesaving
treatments. They're at risk because of sequestration. Cuts to the
National Institutes of Health are already leading to a reduction in
research grants, including tens of millions of dollars that will halt
innovative genomics and cancer research at some of America's top
universities, including Harvard, Penn, and Johns Hopkins in my State.
And the National Science Foundation will have to award 1,000 fewer
grants this year to researchers who are helping keep America on top of
technology and innovation. How irrational.
This is a stupid, harmful, future-hurting, and America-undercutting
policy. It must be changed.
Sequestration is also reducing our military readiness and putting
civilian defense employees at risk of being furloughed and, more to the
point, putting at risk our own national security. Communities in my
district across Maryland and throughout the country whose economies
depend on a strong military are going to be hard hit.
But the good news is there is an alternative. Congress has the power
to end sequestration by reaching a big and balanced solution to
deficits that can replace these irrational cuts. But to do so,
Democrats and Republicans will have to work together in a bipartisan
way. We ought to go to conference on the budget, adopt a fiscally
responsible and balanced plan, and eliminate the sequester for this
year and the 8 years to come.
We offered an alternative to sequester four times in the last month,
and four times we were not given the opportunity to have it voted upon
on this floor. This was supposed to be open and transparent, and we
would consider alternatives. We did not. But I believe we can do it.
Our economy, our ability to create jobs, and the success of our country
in the decade ahead is dependent on our jettisoning these irrational
cuts we call sequestration.
Too many jobs, lives, and livelihoods are at stake for Congress to
engage in partisan games. As the weeks and months continue without
turning sequestration off, its effects will only get worse.
Let's act now. Let's act together. Let's act in a bipartisan way
before our people and our businesses feel the full effects of this
irrational and senseless sequestration policy. Let's work together to
achieve the big, balanced solution the American people deserve from
their Congress and that we owe to our country.
I will submit an article for the Record written by our colleague,
Representative David Price of North Carolina, entitled: ``Lawmakers'
sequestration double-talk.''
[From the Charlotte Observer, Apr. 23, 2013]
Lawmakers' Sequestration Double-Talk
(By U.S. Rep. David E. Price)
Double-talk is never in short supply in Washington. But as
the axe of ``sequestration''--the across-the-board spending
cuts triggered by Congress' failure to pass a long-term
budget plan--begins to fall, self-contradiction and hypocrisy
have reached heights unusual even for the Capitol.
Indeed, many of the same Congress members who welcomed
sequestration as a way to force the president to cut spending
are now protesting loudly when their pet programs feel the
pain. Members who voted for the package that Speaker John
Boehner said included ``90 percent'' of what Republicans
wanted now claim that sequestration does not need to hurt
very much and accuse the president of imposing cuts for
political effect.
The reality is that sequestration was designed to cut both
deeply and indiscriminately. Although it barely touches the
two main deficit drivers--tax expenditures and entitlement
spending--it was supposed to be sufficiently draconian and
unacceptable to
[[Page H2253]]
force action on those fronts, to compel agreement on a
comprehensive budget plan along the lines of the 2010 Bowles-
Simpson Commission proposal or the budget agreements that
produced four years of surpluses under President Bill
Clinton.
Congress failed to produce such a plan, however, because
Republicans refused to consider increasing revenues or
closing special-interest loopholes. Today's Republicans value
their anti-tax ideology far more than the defense cuts that
were supposed to drive them to the bargaining table. As
sequestration approached, more and more of them said, ``Bring
it on.''
Now that the cuts are coming, members are scrambling,
sometimes to apply Band-Aids, sometimes to insist that the
president spare programs they favor. One day there is an
outcry about reduced meat inspections, on another an
insistence that tuition benefits for military personnel be
restored, on another that air-traffic controllers be kept on
duty in little-used airports. The latest uproar started two
days ago. Federal Aviation Administration furloughs of air
traffic controllers at large airports kicked in, delaying
flights across the country--at Charlotte Douglas
International Airport 31.2 percent of flights were delayed.
My North Carolina colleague, Rep. Renee Ellmers, recently
introduced a bill to reverse Medicare cuts for cancer
treatment, calling the cuts an ``unintended consequence'' of
sequestration. In fact, the 2 percent cuts were an intended
and easily anticipated consequence of sequestration.
Congress has now passed appropriations bills for the
remainder of 2013, locking in place the sequestration
spending levels. Scattered provisions mitigate specific
sequestration impacts, but the result often is to shift the
cuts to equally important areas that aren't in the news at
the moment. Fort Bragg, adjacent to my district, now faces a
furlough of civilian employees and a 34 percent cut in its
operating budget. And sequestration comes on top of $1
trillion in cuts to domestic programs already adopted.
Together, these cuts have driven major disease research off a
cliff--fewer than 10 percent of proposals to fund heart
disease, cancer and diabetes research are being funded--and
slowed road and bridge construction to a snail's pace.
I want to mitigate the harm as much as any member of
Congress. But damage control is not a viable budget policy.
Sequestration is a self-inflicted wound, unworthy of those
who profess to govern. It is hypocritical and misleading,
having imposed indiscriminate cuts on the administration, to
pretend that the president can fix the problems with a flick
of the wrist.
The remedy lies in a comprehensive budget agreement that
puts revenues and all categories of spending on the table.
The president's budget reflects such an approach, going
beyond the comfort zone of many of his political allies. A
similar offer was spurned by Speaker Boehner and House
Republicans in December, and sequestration ensued. It is a
failure of historic proportions and it must be reversed.
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