[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 124 (Thursday, September 19, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H5657]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CLIMATE CHANGE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, as the House Republicans prepare to shut
down the government and threaten the global economy with debt ceiling
blackmail, it's ironic that they refuse to allow their Members to vote
on their own spending bills. They even refused to allow a conference
committee with the Senate to resolve the budget impasse. I suppose it
should be no surprise that their denial extends to climate change and
the future of the planet, but Americans don't have that luxury.
Between this summer's wildfires in the West, last year's drought,
Superstorm Sandy, and the recent horrific flooding in Colorado,
Americans are seeing the impact of climate change. Tuesday, Matt
Russell, a fifth-generation Iowa farmer, gave a quick history of what
climate change looks like in Iowa.
In 2008, they suffered a 500-year flood. In 2010, there was another
series of 100-year floods. The next year, the Missouri River wiped out
thousands of acres of farm land, some of which will never be farmed
again. In 2012 was the catastrophic drought. In half a decade, Iowa saw
the worst flooding and the worst drought in over a century of record-
keeping.
This is what climate change will look like, and it will get worse and
more extreme, which is exactly what's happening this year. On May 4,
there was a foot of heavy wet snow, the most snow ever recorded in Iowa
in May. Then it began raining, the most rain ever recorded in the month
of May in Iowa. Then it was drought. Last month was the driest August
on record, even drier than last year's epic drought. And in between,
July was one of the coldest, on record with temperatures in the
thirties. Now they're experiencing one of the hottest Septembers on
record. The hottest days in 2013 came after Labor Day, multiple days of
over 100-degree temperatures. This is what climate change means: the
wrong weather at the wrong time.
Their joke is that February came in May, along with all the rain for
the summer; and September came in July and July came in September, and
now they wonder what month is going to show up in October. But it's not
a joke for the people who are trying to farm. It's not a joke for the
taxpayers who are picking up the cost of crop insurance, which totaled
almost $2 billion last year.
Farmers in Iowa and elsewhere are working to be part of the solution,
but what they can't afford is for Congress to continue wasting time
with debate, ignoring science, and spending billions of dollars on
disaster relief. They want us to spend money upfront, not just to save
money in the long run, but the lives and, indeed, the environment for
all of our families to enjoy.
Listening to America's farmers or just looking out of the window and
paying close attention to the news tells Americans all they need to
know. The science is real, and the time for action is now. Farmers,
small business, utilities, insurance companies, universities, colleges,
we all should insist that Congress stop playing games with the budget,
threatening the global economy with debt ceiling blackmail and the
future of the planet.
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