[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 87 (Tuesday, June 18, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H3695]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE IMPENDING STUDENT LOAN INTEREST RATE HIKE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Reed) for 5 minutes.
Mr. REED. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to talk about an issue I deeply
care about, and that issue is the affordability and ability of students
across America to get a college degree.
Mr. Speaker, as we face this impending student interest loan cliff on
July 1, I want to share with you and with the American public a
personal story.
I'm the youngest of 12. I have eight older sisters, three older
brothers, and my mother and father made a commitment to each other that
each and every one of us would get some sort of college degree or
advanced degree.
My father passed when I was 2, and there were six of us left in our
household that my mother had to raise on her own. I went to college,
went to law school, and I watched in her eyes the fulfillment of that
promise that she and my dad made to each and every one of us.
{time} 1040
Now, not all of my siblings went to law school. One got a vocational
degree cutting hair, who now works in Arizona. I have the law degree,
and there's a whole mix in between.
As we deal with the issue of student loan interest, we need to make
sure that we stand for the students and that we stand for the next
generation, because a college degree and a higher educational pursuit
will arm those young men and women for generations and empower them to
control their own destiny in their own hands.
So I come today on my side of the aisle and say to my colleagues,
thank you for joining us in passing a bill in the House that would
avert the interest rate spike that will be coming up on July 1. I ask
my colleagues to join me and to demand that the Senate take action.
As you see, Mr. Speaker, the Senate has failed to pass a piece of
legislation in the Senate to avert this fiscal cliff to our students
across America. To me, Mr. Speaker, that's just not right. That's just
not fair. We need to do better. And what we need to do is to pass a
reform out of this body and out of this Congress that takes the student
out of this political theater that has become the student loan interest
spike every year that we have to deal with.
The proposal in the House, to me, makes sense. It's a commonsense,
market-based approach that will lower interest rates on 70 percent of
the loans that students receive in going to college and advanced
degrees.
I ask the Senate and I ask my colleagues to continue to join us to
put pressure on the Senate to say enough is enough. We care about
students. Let's address this issue so that they don't see that interest
rate spike that is coming over the horizon and say to the White House,
Sign this legislation once and for all that removes the students from
the political debate that this issue has become.
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