[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 113 (Thursday, August 1, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H5265-H5266]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SENATOR PAUL SIMON WATER FOR THE WORLD ACT OF 2013 (H.R. 2901)
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, 5 years ago, if someone asked what a bow
tie-wearing progressive Democrat from Oregon and my colleague Ted Poe,
a cowboy, boot-wearing conservative Republican from Texas, could agree
on, you would have said, Not much.
Today, we are partners on an issue, however, that makes sense
regardless of your politics: ensuring sustainable, equitable access to
clean water for nearly 800 million women, children, and men who don't
have it and the 2.5 billion without even the most basic sanitation
services. Ted Poe and I think that politics should stop with water.
That's why, today, we are introducing the Paul Simon Water for the
World Act of 2013 (H.R. 2901).
Since Congress passed the Paul Simon Water for the Poor Act in 2005,
the United States has become a global leader in efforts to increase
access to clean water and sanitation, developing and implementing some
of the most innovative approaches to help those in greatest need. We
must not only maintain this progress but work to further refine and
focus the efforts at USAID and at the Department of State by enacting
the World Act.
We are committed because dirty water and a lack of sanitation affects
all areas of development assistance. This is especially the case when
it comes to women and children. More children are killed by waterborne
disease than any other. Increasing access to clean water and sanitation
has a significant multiplier effect on other areas of development,
enabling us to do more with less--critical in a time of constrained
budget resources.
Every day, the world has more people but fewer freshwater resources.
Our bipartisan legislation will give the United States the capacity to
avoid unnecessary loss of life and conflict in the future. It would
ensure that water, sanitation, and hygiene programs are reflected in
other development assistance; prioritize long-lasting impacts of United
States foreign aid dollars; and increase the focusing on monitoring,
evaluation, transparency, and capacity building.
Children cannot attend school if they're sick from dirty water. Half
the world's hospital beds today are filled with people suffering from
waterborne disease needlessly. Hours spent getting water are hours not
working or in school.
A lack of clean drinking water has a disproportionate effect on
women, who, in developing countries, walk an average of 3.7 miles a day
to get water. The estimates are that 40 billion working hours are lost
each year in Africa alone--200 million hours today.
Having water means girls can go to school and build a better future.
It also reduces the risk of violence and sexual assault. A study by
Doctors without Borders found that 82 percent of the women and girls
treated for rape in West and South Darfur were attacked while they were
gathering water or firewood.
The challenge is not getting easier, because 97 percent of the water
on Earth is salty and unfit to drink. Of the 2\1/2\ percent, roughly,
of the Earth's water that is fresh, two-thirds of that is frozen--
locked away in the ice caps and glaciers. Although it's rapidly melting
because of climate change, that's not going to help us, because it will
be largely salty as well. We've got less than 1 percent of global
freshwater available for human use; and because of the demands for
growing food, energy and industry, only about one-tenth of a percent is
available for people to drink. This tiny fraction is further diminished
by deficient or nonexistent water infrastructure. Even in the United
States, we waste 6 billion gallons of freshwater every day through
leaky pipes. We are entering an era of severe water scarcity that the
Department of Defense warns could lead to global insecurity.
In short, Mr. Speaker, there is nothing more fundamental to families
and global health than clean water and sanitation. More needs to be
done, and it needs to be done well. Taxpayers, understandably, demand
better results and greater transparency from foreign aid. This bill
provides the tools and incentives to do just that.
[[Page H5266]]
We urge our colleagues to adopt our motto--``politics stops at
water''--and support this effort. This magnitude will take a team
working together, united in the goal of saving lives and improving
communities around the world. Please join us in this critical
legislation, the Paul Simon Water for the World Act (H.R. 2901).
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