[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 87 (Tuesday, June 18, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4543-S4544]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO RAY LaHOOD
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, when President Obama was first elected
back in 2008, I can recall the transition period because his transition
office was literally next door to my office in the Federal building in
Chicago. I can't think of a more exciting time. Here was my colleague
in the Senate who had just been elected President of the United States.
The whole world was beating a path to his door. Security was at the
highest level, and I made a point of not interrupting him--which I
would have done regularly when he was my Senate colleague--during this
historic and important moment as he prepared to lead America with the
blessing and the mandate of the American people.
I didn't have a long list of requests--well, I did, but I didn't
exercise it--but I spoke to him once or twice about a couple of things
I thought might be helpful to the country and to him. I recommended to
him one person to appoint to his Cabinet--one person. I urged him to
appoint Ray LaHood as America's Secretary of Transportation. I was
confident that Ray LaHood would serve America with the same integrity
and energy he had shown while serving as a Member of Congress from our
State of Illinois. As Secretary Ray LaHood prepares to leave this
important Cabinet post, I am pleased but not a bit surprised to be able
to say to the President that I was right. He was an excellent choice--
in fact, one of the best ever when it comes to the Department of
Transportation.
Make no mistake, Ray LaHood is a proud Republican. I remember meeting
him first when he was a staffer for Bob Michel, who was the Republican
leader in the U.S. House of Representatives. Ray was a behind-the-
scenes worker for the Republican minority leader in the House, and I
knew he was from Peoria but little else about him. When Bob Michel
announced his retirement, Ray LaHood said he was going to run for that
position in Congress.
What surprised me was that some of my closest Democratic friends in
central Illinois said they were going to financially support and do
everything they could to elect Ray LaHood. And I thought, this is
really amazing. These partisan friends of mine think Ray LaHood, a
Republican, is a good person for this job.
So I started paying closer attention to this new Congressman. As it
turned out, we became close friends. We worked together. We had
adjoining congressional districts. Eventually, when I was elected to
the Senate, we worked all through central Illinois on common projects,
and I was happy to do it. Ray was not working with a great appetite for
publicity; he wanted to get the job done, and he didn't mind giving
credit to Democrats or Republicans if we could achieve our goals, the
local goals we shared.
When he became Secretary of Transportation I saw that same spirit of
cooperation and bipartisanship. Any time I spoke to President Obama or
Vice President Biden about Ray LaHood, their Secretary of
Transportation, they always said the same thing: He is the best and we
are sure glad he is part of our team.
The President could not find anyone better to carry out the
transportation agenda for America in his first term. I believe history
is going to record Ray LaHood as one of the very best in that position.
He put millions of Americans back to work with the $48 billion
transportation funding that was part of President Obama's Recovery Act.
He oversaw the creation of the Nation's first high-speed rail program,
a program that Illinois has participated in with great commitment and
excitement. He also helped to create the TIGER Program, a $2.7 billion
investment in America's future that has built some of our Nation's most
significant transportation projects. And he helped save lives by
focusing personally on our national aviation system.
He also had another safety campaign. He conducted what he called a
rampage against distracted driving, people who were texting or talking
on cell phones and trying to drive at the same time. He traveled more
widely and more frequently than many professional pilots did. As a
Washington Post reporter wrote a while back:
There are just two kinds of states: States where [Ray
LaHood has] been to spread his gospel of safety and to
inspect transportation systems and those States that he plans
to visit soon.
The people of Illinois are grateful to Ray LaHood not only for his 4
historic years as Transportation Secretary, but also for his many
decades of service as staffer to Bob Michel and then a member in his
own right in our Illinois delegation.
Ray was born and raised in Peoria, IL. He stayed true to his
Midwestern values throughout his career. He started his public service
as a teacher in a classroom. He cut his political teeth working for
another top Republican Congressman, Tom Railsback. As I mentioned, then
he went on to work for Bob Michel. In 1994 he was elected to Bob
Michel's congressional district, the 18th District. The district
stretches from Peoria, south to the State capital, my hometown of
Springfield.
There is a history of some pretty outstanding Congressmen from that
district. I mentioned Bob Michel, and I can include Everett McKinley
Dirksen as well. If you go far enough back in history you will find
there was a young Congressman from a part of that district by the name
of Abraham Lincoln.
Ray is a great student of history. He inspired a great effort to
create the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, and I was honored
to join him as a co-chair with Harold Holzer of New York. We observed
President Lincoln's 200th birthday in 2009 with suitable recognition
and celebration across America.
Ray's work helped students everywhere learn a little bit more about
President Lincoln and his role in America's history. Like his famous
predecessors, Ray LaHood has raised the standard for civility and
cooperation in the Congress. In the darkest hours of the House of
Representatives when people were at each other's throats, it was Ray
LaHood who reached across the aisle to a Democratic Congressman and
said: Why don't we get together on a bipartisan basis, with our
families, for a weekend. It seems so obvious and easy. Nobody had ever
thought about it before Ray.
Back in Illinois Ray used to convene bipartisan meetings with local
officials, State representatives, and his dedication to his district
and his service in the House earned him the reputation as one of the
best. When President Obama nominated Ray for Transportation Secretary,
all of us in Illinois knew the President had chosen the right person.
Ray's legacy in DC will be substantial, but it will be even greater
back in
[[Page S4544]]
Illinois. He has helped protect and build Illinois during his tenure at
the Department of Transportation. It was such a treat to be able to
call the Department of Transportation, to speak to the Secretary of
Transportation about an Illinois project and have him know instantly
what you were talking about.
The O'Hare Modernization Program is a good example. There is hardly a
more important economic engine in the northern part of our State than
the O'Hare Airport. The modernization of O'Hare had reached a period of
some difficulty and controversy. Ray LaHood stepped in, brought the
parties together, and put the Nation's largest airport expansion
project back on track.
Secretary LaHood, as I mentioned earlier, brought high-speed rail to
Illinois. Last year we rode the first 110-mile-an-hour train between
Chicago and St. Louis. He helped build a beautiful new terminal at the
Peoria International Airport.
Secretary LaHood's dedication to Illinois will be felt in every
corner of Illinois for generations to come. People will be able to
travel faster and more safely because of his work. He will bring new
businesses to the State by those transportation investments, creating
the jobs that we all want to see.
Ray LaHood is a leader with integrity and character. He is also such
a good friend. I am going to miss him as my partner in government when
he retires from the position of Secretary of Transportation. The
Washington Post article I mentioned earlier had a wonderful line. The
reporter wrote:
Perhaps the most telling tidbit in LaHood's life is that he resided
in Washington for 30 years without once getting a haircut here. A man
truly lives where he gets his haircut, and [for Ray LaHood] that is in
Peoria, [IL].
As Ray LaHood prepares to leave President Obama's Cabinet and spend
more time with his family, I wish the best to him. His wife Kathy--who
was often at his side traveling back and forth between Illinois and
Washington--will have more time with Ray and their four children: Amy,
Sara, Sam, and State Senator Darin LaHood and their wonderful families
too. I look forward to working with Secretary LaHood and his very able
successor, former Charlotte mayor Anthony Foxx, to maintain and improve
America's transportation systems and networks, the backbone of our
economy.
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