[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 89 (Thursday, June 20, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H3972-H3975]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1440
JUNETEENTH AND SNAP
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2013, the gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, it's not often that one is able to come
back to the podium as soon as I have, and I thank the gentleman for his
courtesy.
I started to speak about unfinished business, but first I want to
celebrate and acknowledge a day this week that many of us commemorate.
In fact, it is moving to become nationally recognized. It's something
that is called ``Juneteenth.''
Today is June 20. So yesterday, June 19, was Juneteenth. I didn't get
a chance to explain what Juneteenth meant on the floor of the House,
and I wanted to do so.
In 1865, the captain of a Union army arose and arrived on the shores
of Galveston, Texas, to let the then slaves who had not been notified,
who had not been freed in 1863, on January 1 when President Lincoln
signed the Emancipation Proclamation, finally the Union came to our
shores in Texas and let a whole swath of slaves who were still working
and toiling unpaid in conditions that were obviously unsatisfactory,
because no one should hold slaves. Finally, in 1865, on June 19, those
in Texas and places to the west were freed. So it is a day of freedom.
When I talk to children about Juneteenth, I say it is living freedom.
It is accepting the values of this great Nation that has turned, I
hope, forever against the idea of holding others as slaves. And it
moved this Nation forward, even in difficulty, with women not being
able to vote and African Americans moving from Reconstruction into Jim
Crowism and the terrible times of the 1900s and, as well, moving into
the time of second-class citizenship all the way through World War II
as President Truman integrated the United States military. But it moved
the country to a lust and a desire for freedom and opportunity.
So Juneteenth is a day of jubilation. It is a day when families
gather together. But it is a very important historic time. It is a
historic time, if you will, to be able to, in fact, acknowledge that
what has been wrong can be fixed. It wasn't a pleasant time to, in
essence, work as a slave, to be held as a slave, to be captured as a
slave some 18 months to almost 2 years after the Emancipation
Proclamation.
I say that because I wanted to explain further why something that had
traditionally been bipartisan--we love the farm life for those who have
experienced it, those who read about it. Often in my tenure here in the
United States Congress, urban Members and rural Members came together
to pass a bill that generated not only food for America but food for
the world. Let it be very clear that we took pride today to vote
``no,'' because sometimes you have to listen and understand that there
are things greater than your own interests.
I don't know what reason caused the implementation or the addition of
a $20 billion cut to the SNAP program. Who had to be satisfied to put
that gigantic, unsympathetic, cruel taking of food from the plates of
Americans on the floor? SNAP has no region, it has no racial identity,
it has no age identity. It is, frankly, Americans who are in need.
Let me share with you some numbers. Households with children receive
about 75 percent of all food stamp benefits. That immediately quashes
the stereotype that deadbeats get food stamps. Twenty-three percent of
households include a disabled person. Eighteen percent of households
include an elderly person. The food stamp program increases household
spending. The increase is greater than would occur with an equal
benefit in cash. These people are not asking for cash. They're asking
for you to allow them to be able to buy decent food so there is
nutrition and nourishment.
But again, what motivated a $20 billion cut that had never been
implemented in an agricultural bill that many of us voted on in a
bipartisan manner? Did anybody listen to the chairman of the Federal
Reserve? The
[[Page H3973]]
Chairman of the Federal Reserve said just yesterday that the economy is
percolating, that it's doing all that it needs to do, that they're not
going to reduce interest rates yet, and they're monitoring it because
jobs are being created--not enough--but the economy is finding ways to
restore itself.
It was good news for some of our college students, finding more jobs
than they found last year as a college graduate.
So the idea that we need to continue to punish the American people,
to wound ourselves because there is something out there called the
deficit, this imaginary ``continue to undermine the government''
standard bearer that everyone wants to use--there is a deficit, but it
has been steadily coming down because of the belt tightening.
Now we want to go beyond the belt tightening. We want to go beyond
the family of four that says, We are not going to go out as much. We
aren't going to have more cereal than we used to have. No, we are going
to tell the family of four, You're not going to have any cereal. Just
wake up in the morning and drink water. We're going to take everything
away, and maybe you'll have one meal a day.
This is absurd, and it is not the American way.
Every $5 in new food stamp benefits generates almost twice as much--
$9.20--in total community spending. The economics of SNAP and food
support programs benefit everyone by preventing new food deserts from
developing. The impact of SNAP funds coming into local and neighborhood
grocery stores is more profitable. We'll have areas of grocery stores
and supermarkets, more jobs for people. SNAP funds going into local
food economies also make the cost of food for everyone less expensive.
It is clear that the SNAP program is a valuable program. In fact,
SNAP is the largest domestic program in the American domestic hunger
safety net. The Food and Nutrition Service program supported by SNAP
works with State agencies, nutrition educators and neighborhoods, as
well as faith-based organizations, to assist those eligible for
nutrition assistance. Food and Nutrition Service programs also work
with State partners in the retail community to improve program
administration and work to ensure the program's integrity.
Let me tell you beyond the $20 billion what else occurred. Not only
did it involve the $20 billion in the underlying bill, but that wasn't
enough. They offered an amendment on the floor to make it an estimated
$31 billion in cuts. If that isn't outrageous, I don't know what is.
Literally, not only have they taken the food, but they've taken the
table, the utensils, and are leaving you with a good-looking floor, if
that's what you have, or rough floor, to simply go there and admire
food.
{time} 1450
This is an outrageous addition. Cutting off benefits of 2 million
Americans extra who struggle to find work, severing the tie between
LIHEAP and SNAP, which is the dollars that supplement those who are not
able to pay their energy bills in the cold of the winter, how could
you? Penalizing those who don't abide by an unnecessary, burdensome job
search if you have a disabled child, this is what was on the floor. Not
just taking food away, but literally dismantling the table.
Oh, that wasn't enough. Then they wanted to do this. This looks like
a great idea. As you well know, varying States have different economic
positions. Some States are thriving because of the industry they have.
A State like Texas has an energy-based, oil-based economy. Some States
have other kinds of economies, and those economies are coming back, but
there are still poor people and people without jobs. And this is what
the SNAP program is for. It is not for fraud, waste, and abuse. I don't
have any problem with oversight. But how dare you take food away from
children, cutting out school lunches, cutting out school breakfasts
that sometimes are the difference between a child learning and
surviving.
But that wasn't enough. Listen to another amendment that was offered
and passed on the floor of the House. It makes the SNAP policies, this
amendment, even worse than what I've just discussed. It would allow
States to pocket, put in their pocket, smack their lips, roll their
hands, the savings if they cut people off of the Supplemental Nutrition
program. That means the disabled, parents with young children who don't
have child care, those who are unable to find work in the area they're
in because there are no jobs available in that community. And there are
census data and census tracts where you cannot find jobs. This
amendment would find no funding for job search or job creation to help
recipients of the SNAP program find work, and it places no restrictions
on what States can use the bonus moneys that they put in their pocket
for.
Oh, they can throw it for all kinds of unnecessary extras, if you
will. Maybe they can do extra security for roaming elected officials.
And when I say that, my State is quarreling over whether it should pay
security costs for our Governor. Maybe it can throw a few extra
parties. Maybe it can build another bridge to nowhere. What will they
do when they take money--money--out of the mouths of babes into their
pocket?
Mr. SEAN PATRICK MALONEY of New York. Will the gentlelady yield?
Ms. JACKSON LEE. I am happy to yield to the gentleman.
Mr. SEAN PATRICK MALONEY of New York. I thank the gentlelady, because
it is with a full heart that I come to the well of the House and
address the Members to say that the gentlelady from Texas and I didn't
see eye to eye on every part of this bill, although we are in the same
party. And those of us who are new to this Congress, who came here to
work because we heard that the American people wanted us to work
together and solve problems, those of us on the Agriculture Committee
approached this bill with an open mind and with a willingness to
compromise, and we did so.
We worked together to include in this bill the best combination of
things that we thought would help the American people, and in my case,
the people of the Hudson Valley. And that meant that we also tolerated
things that we disagreed with very strongly, Mr. Speaker, but we moved
the process forward because we believed if we brought it to the floor
of the House, and if the House passed it and we sent it to conference
with the Senate, that we would be able to accept the compromise in good
faith that this body worked out.
But what happened today on the floor of the House of Representatives
was that the extremism of a small number of people has set back
progress for the rest of us. Once again, the insistence on something so
extreme has defeated good-faith efforts, like those of my colleagues,
particularly the new Members of Congress on the Agriculture Committee
who wanted to reach an honorable compromise, to make progress for our
farmers, to help our dairy farmers in particular, to help our
conservation efforts, to help our beginning farmers, to help folks with
flood mitigation, particularly in the black dirt region of Orange
County, New York, that I represent. We thought we could work together.
And what we saw today, what we learned today, was that extremism is
still alive and well on the floor of this House, and that there are
those who would rather destroy the fragile efforts of bipartisan
cooperation than work together on something that we can all move
forward together with that will help the American people and help our
farmers.
The Southerland amendment, which the gentlelady has properly
described, is so punitive, so mean spirited that it would deny basic
food assistance to women with small children, to people with
disabilities. It would require work where there is no work. It is not
designed to be reform. It was designed to kill this bill, and it
succeeded in that purpose today, by destroying the good-faith efforts
of those who worked together.
Once again, tea party extremism has destroyed the efforts of people
of good faith to make progress and get results. It is a sad day in the
House of Representatives, and it's a tough education for those of us
who have come here ready to work together across the aisle and who have
much proven that with our votes in a bipartisan fashion to move this
bill forward, despite the presence of things we didn't like.
I call on my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to bring this bill
back to floor because it matters. It matters for our farmers. It
matters for our communities in the Hudson Valley. We can
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work together to improve it, but we must stop these destructive efforts
to stop all progress.
I thank the gentlelady.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. I applaud the gentleman for his honesty and for his
work, because as I began this debate, we have always voted in a
bipartisan manner on the farm bill. For those of us in the urban areas
that touch a little rural area or live in States that have large
pockets of rural areas, we are well aware that we are the breadbasket
of the world. When we travel the world, we are always eager to see the
food products. That has been our nomenclature. That has been our name.
That's been what America is known for, not only its generosity and its
heart, but its willingness to feed the hungry.
As I indicated, who could craft an amendment that would deep-six this
bill, adding insult to the $20 billion that I know the gentleman
indicated we were looking to compromise on in the conference. But to
say to the gentleman, we all would hope the bill will come back. Maybe
it might even come back with the recognition that the $20 billion is
spiking too high. But certainly the Southerland amendment, and the one
previously that did not pass that wanted to cut even more from the $20
billion, if I might say, it's an oxymoron between the farm and those
who need to eat. We always work together, and we were able to produce
products and enough food to give those who were hungry and those who
could not find work.
I want to make mention of the fact, as the gentleman said, that
included in taking their food away from them, as the gentleman said,
was the disabled and the parents with young children.
And so I want to thank the gentleman for his words and, of course,
for his leadership for his area and also on this topic.
So that is two Members from two distinct places, Democrats, who would
have been able to come and find a reasoned way to address this bill.
Might I also say that I do thank the committee for acknowledging an
amendment to be able to reach out, my amendment, the Jackson Lee
amendment that was included; but I'm willing to sacrifice that
amendment that was to reach out and create opportunities for minority
businesses, women-owned businesses, family farmers, Black farmers who
have been discriminated against for eons under the Agriculture
Department. My amendment would have caused a specific outreach to these
individuals, and I'm glad for it.
I was able to support the McGovern amendment, which had an offset
that I believe was a proper offset that would have put the money, $20
billion, back in.
Again, I want to remind my colleagues, our deficit is going down. Our
economy is percolating. I didn't say it was perfect. I didn't say
everyone had a job. But what I did say is we're making progress. Why
are we continuing to do injury for those who cannot speak for
themselves? I do not know.
Again, I was eager to see in this bill, to be able to work with more
urban gardens, community gardens, what we call victory gardens.
{time} 1500
They've been successful in the city of Houston, in Acres Homes, in
fact, in Fifth Ward. I see them as progress, the growing of food, the
putting food on the tables, healthy food, of people who don't have the
means to get good vegetables and to be able to use those urban gardens
to teach children to help families come together and to be able to take
home good food.
I want to pay tribute to the Houston Food Bank in my congressional
district that has brought so many people together. But I can tell you
that they're not lacking in business, and the $20 billion of this SNAP
program going down, meaning, being taken away, one of the largest food
banks in America, would have been impacted negatively by the idea of
the lack of the supplemental nutrition program.
I wanted to also make sure that we had an assessment of helping the
older Americans have accessible and affordable nutrition, one of my
amendments that did not get in. But when we see older Americans, we can
tell sometimes that they're making choices between food and, obviously,
their medicine, their prescriptions.
I wanted to make sure that we had had a special commitment to helping
them build up their access to nutritious food, along with those who
suffer with disabilities. I wish that had gotten in.
And then I wanted to make sure that we did not turn our backs on
obesity and juvenile obesity. Just this week the medical community has
joined and named obesity as a disease; and my amendment would have had
a sense of Congress that encourages food items being provided pursuant
to the Federal school breakfast and school lunch program, and that the
kind of nutritious items should be selected, and so we can bring down
the incidence of juvenile obesity and maximize nutritional value and
take away the possibility of our children not having the right kind of
nutrition.
So I am eager to get back to the drawing board. But I walked through
neighborhoods that suffer from the lack of access to food, and, as
well, I'm aware of something called food deserts, where the only place
that you can buy is the local gasoline, gas station location.
And maybe you can find an apple or a banana, but mostly what you're
going to find is a lot of, if you will, the other kind of food. Some
have called it junk food. Pretty tasty. Make sure there's a market for
it. It's always good to have fun, but it's not what you have to raise
children, to provide for those who are ill, disabled, parents who
cannot work. That's not where they should be shopping.
Food deserts exist in rural and urban areas and are spreading, as a
result, fewer farms, as well as fewer places to access fresh fruit,
vegetables, proteins and other foods, and that's why this bill is
important, to help our small farmers, but also to help those get
assistance.
And by the way, the supplemental nutrition program is not welfare,
because there are many people who are working who are on food stamps,
but their income is such that they cannot provide the nutritious food
for their children.
But the main insult is the loss of these dollars for our breakfast
and lunch program, that no matter whether you're living in rural
America or urban America, your child has the ability to have a good,
warm, hot meal for lunch and for breakfast to get them started and
ready to learn.
And, therefore, it avoids the metabolic function that comes from
malnutrition that causes the breakdown in tissue. For example, the lack
of protein in the diet leads to disease and decay of teeth and bones.
Another example of health disparities in food deserts are the
presence of fast-food establishments. Again, it's good to have fun; but
if that is all that you eat, then you know that that is not going to
make for a healthy young person, child, in the growing years, the
maturing years, the years that their cognitive skills are growing, the
years that they're strengthening their physical being in order to grow
into an adult that will be healthy.
And so many of us took the SNAP challenge, the supplemental nutrition
challenge, to live on $4.50. And I went to the grocery store, and I was
so scared about going over. I bought one apple, one banana, two
apricots. I bought an avocado and a tomato and two potatoes, and I was
calculating in my mind, because this was $4.50 for the day.
And I went to the meat area and looked at, of all things, chopped
meat, hamburger meat. I couldn't find anything that would even fit.
They were all $5, $4.
I kept looking, cheese, too expensive. And I found something in a
package called smoked chicken. And in this store, they had it for 58
cents, processed smoked chicken. And I said that I can use for protein.
And so the meal, in my mind, was going to be an apricot, and a banana
for breakfast; lunch, you boil a potato with sliced tomatoes, which you
would save for your big meal, your dinner.
But every day, a family has to look at $4.50 to have their meals. And
so for anyone that thinks that this is a bunch of folk who enjoy
getting these food stamps to have a jolly good time, I'm glad that I
experienced that purchase and what you get for $4.50.
And yet on the floor of the House today, there were those who were
willing to put up a bill that would take $20
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billion and, literally, as I started to say, and have said, dismantle
the kitchen, dismantle the table, take the utensils and just say, plop
down on the floor.
And as we came to the end of the bill, that was not enough. The
Southerland amendment came forward and said, not only are we going to
insult you and take all the utensils and table away, but we're going to
make it a boondoggle.
We're going to give incentives. We're going to make it a gambling
opportunity for our States. We're going to let them throw the dice. How
many can you get off of SNAP? And if you get them off, you'll be able
to pocket the money.
We don't want to control what you do with it. We're not going to
suggest that you put it in education, or maybe give back to the schools
so they can get a different kind of meal for the child that's lost the
breakfast program. No, we don't care.
You're just going to pocket the money and run off into the hills.
States have many burdens. I'm a champion of our States. I love my
State. But I've seen the tough debates that my State legislators have
had, fighting to get a few parcels for food, for education dollars, for
infrastructure dollars.
So I know it's tough; but as I said, some States are a little bit
more better off than others. It's all about priorities.
And I can only say, Mr. Speaker, that today we didn't commend
ourselves well. I want to go back. I want to be able to, if you will, I
want to be able to put the table, the utensils back, the table cloth.
I want to be able to have a poor family have a nutritious meal. I
want to be able to have a child have a lunch or breakfast. I want a
disabled person to be able to have the right kind of food to help them
in their illness. I want an elderly person to be able to have their
prescription drugs and, as well, to be able to have food that will
nourish them.
I close, Mr. Speaker, by saying that I spoke about unfinished
business. And as we go forward, I join my colleague from New York, call
upon the good people of this House, who represent the good Americans of
this Nation, to come back together and find a way that passes a farm
bill that does not put on the sacrificial table of destruction poor
people who, through no fault of their own, are unemployed or disabled,
or have children, or are only able to support the children and provide
for them in this way because they live in an area where there are no
jobs.
They hope there'll be jobs. They want there to be jobs but, at this
point, it hasn't come.
{time} 1510
I conclude my remarks by saying in a list of things that we must do
as unfinished business, I look forward, as well, to our being able to
join some mothers that stood with me earlier this week, mothers that
demand action, and they ask me about the idea of protecting their
children with sensible gun legislation that would prevent gun violence.
I hope, among other initiatives, a universal background check will also
look to laws that will require the storage of one's guns, none of which
impact or take away from the Second Amendment.
Then I hope in unfinished business that we will continue to find, in
a bipartisan way, a pathway forward for helping those individuals who
came to this country, through no fault of their own, who come to this
country and are working and don't want to do us harm, but simply want
to find a way to stay in a country that they love, and, as well, to say
to the American people that we take no shortness in your need and
commitment for border security.
I don't see why we can't do it all. That is not unheard of. It is not
impossible. It frankly is something that we can go do.
I want to close by saying that I am a person that loves the
Constitution, believes in the Bill of Rights, the First Amendment, the
freedom of press, speech, the Fourth Amendment that protects you
against unreasonable search and seizure, the Griswold v. Connecticut
Supreme Court case along with the Ninth Amendment on the question of
privacy. So I'm going to make a commitment to my colleagues that we
work together on the issue of ensuring the American people's civil
liberties while we ensure our national security. We can do both.
I have introduced legislation that would ask for a study of all of
the outside contractors that are in the intelligence business and to
present that study to the United States Congress and ensure that all
those who have top-secret clearance are doing it in the name of this
Nation, otherwise to present a plan to reduce that usage by 25 percent
by 2014. That is only the fair way because certainly we must have
oversight to who has access to your private information and is it
access in order to secure this Nation. I stand with them if that is the
case.
But I ask the question, why are persons far-flung and unsupervised
with top-secret credentials such as the individual who has decided to
leak information that is now being assessed? We have to ask the
question, are credentials, do they meet the test? Are private
contractors making a review of these individuals and assessing them and
giving them clearance or if not, not supervising them? I have to ask
that question.
And then I would say that it is important that where you can be
presented opinions that deal with something we call the FISA court,
which is the court that we go into to protect your rights and to be
able to go into and make determinations about whether or not there is
surveillance, I would say to you that opinions that will not impact on
national security or classified information can be shown to the
American people. There's nothing wrong with that.
So I am looking forward to working in a bipartisan way on unfinished
business. And I can only say, Mr. Speaker, in my final entreat to this
body, the one thing that we should not do is to take the little hand of
a child and to push it back from the table or from food. And what we
did today was just that.
I want a farm bill, but today I was proud to stand with the children
of America who are better off because they've been able to stamp out
hunger through a program called SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program, and will continue to do so until we get it right.
Our children are our precious resource.
With that, Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________