[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 129 (Thursday, September 26, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6932-S6933]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HELIUM STEWARDSHIP ACT OF 2013
Mr. REID. Madam President, I ask the Chair to lay before the Senate a
message from the House with respect to H.R. 527.
The Presiding Officer laid before the Senate the following message
from the House of Representatives:
Resolved, That the House agreed to the amendment of the Senate to the
bill (H.R. 527) entitled ``An Act to amend the Helium Act to complete
the privatization of the Federal helium reserve in a competitive market
fashion that ensures stability in the helium markets while protecting
the interests of American taxpayers, and for other purposes,'' with an
amendment.
Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent the Senate concur in the House
amendment to the Senate amendment; and the motion to reconsider be laid
upon the table, with no intervening action or debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, we know that in Washington, DC, it is
almost as if there is an inexhaustible capacity to manufacture false
crises. I am pleased to say that with today's vote Congress avoided a
real crisis for scores of American manufacturing and technology
companies employing millions of American workers. That is because
without the legislation that the Senate just passed, those workers and
companies would no longer have been able to get access to helium, which
is a critical industrial gas without which these companies cannot
operate.
In addition to avoiding an immediate crisis for these businesses and
workers, the bipartisan legislation that passed the House of
Representatives yesterday and the Senate today can be something of a
model for how the Congress can act on must pass bills. Senator
Murkowski and I have worked for many months on this legislation in the
Energy and Natural Resources Committee to achieve a number of goals
that members on both sides of the aisle support.
First, our bipartisan legislation gets the Federal Government out of
the helium business permanently--something that should have been done
long ago. This bill also addresses the need to ensure helium supplies
in the short term.
It does this by requiring the Federal Government to shift from
selling helium at a government-set price to selling helium at a market-
based priced. The bill does this over a 5-year period so that there is
no panic, no sudden changes in supply, and American businesses can stop
worrying about whether the helium supply truck is going to show up next
month. The bill phases out commercial sales over the next 7 or 8 years
and then gets the Federal Government out of the helium business
entirely within 8 years by selling off the helium reserve. With prices
for helium now reflecting their real value in the market place, the
private sector will have the incentives it needs to invest in new
helium supplies to replace the Federal reserve.
Second, our bipartisan bill ends the Federal helium program in a way
that is not only fully paid for but would actually lower the deficit by
$90 million. I particularly want to point out the contributions of two
of the members of our committee, Senators Risch and Flake who were
instrumental in ensuring that while the helium program gets phased out
some of the savings for taxpayers should go to contribute to deficit
reduction. So I wanted to point out the Senators' role in shaping the
legislation to ensure a significant contribution to deficit reduction.
Contributing to deficit reduction, getting a better deal for
taxpayers by transitioning helium sales to market rates and completely
ending a Federal program that has gone far longer than it should have
are priorities that all senators can support. And today's vote reflects
that.
But the benefits of this legislation are not limited to helium users
and taxpayers. Our bipartisan legislation also provides one-year of
funding for the Secure Rural School program that expired earlier this
year. This program provides funding for schools, roads and law
enforcement in hundreds of rural counties in 41 States where there are
national forests.
The expiration of the Secure Rural Schools Program left rural America
out in the cold. The program needed to be extended for a year while the
Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee works on a longer term
approach to meet the needs of forest dependent communities around the
country.
This is a more than 100-year-old commitment that the Federal
Government made to these counties when the national forests were
created and will have to be met one way or another. Our bill pays for a
short-term extension of this program without raising taxes or
increasing the debt.
The bill before the Senate also includes a public-private program to
help address the needs of one of our national treasures--America's
National Parks. The bill creates a matching fund to leverage a $50
million federal investment that must be matched dollar for dollar with
non-Federal funding.
The Energy and Natural Resources Committee held a hearing earlier
this year on the multi-billion funding backlog that our national parks
are facing.
[[Page S6933]]
Senator Coburn in particular has been a leader in pointing out the need
to address this funding shortfall. The legislation that the Senate
passed today makes a down payment toward reducing that backlog and does
it in a way that brings private resources to the table.
With legislation that passed today, the Senate and House have shown
how they can act to accomplish a number of important goals on a
bipartisan basis. The bill completely ends a Federal Government program
that has outlived its useful life; it ensures a fair return for
taxpayer and meets the needs of helium users; it contributes $90
million to the Treasury for debt reduction; and it fulfills the Federal
government's obligations to rural America all without raising taxes or
increasing the debt.
I also want to recognize the important contributions of the House
Natural Resources Committee and Chairman Doc Hastings in shaping the
legislation. The final bill was truly a bipartisan and bicameral
effort. That is the way the legislative process is supposed to work.
I am pleased that the Senate and House have been able to find a way
to achieve all these important goals in one bipartisan, bicameral bill
and I hope as the Congress considers other must-pass bills to keep the
government open and to raise the debt ceiling, members can work
together in the same type of cooperative bipartisan way, that Senator
Murkowski and I and the other members of the Energy and Natural
Resources Committee have done in passing the helium legislation.
Mr. REID. This is a very important piece of legislation. I wish we
could do a lot more like this. This is the Helium Stewardship Act of
2013. It is something we have had in effect since World War II. It is
so very, very important.
Today around America 750,000 people will have MRIs conducted to find
out how sick they are or if they are hurt or sick. Without this bill
passing, the big magnets they have in these machines, which are cooled
only by one thing--helium--and the people who depend on this, the high-
tech industry would have to go out on the spot market and buy this
stuff, which would increase the price of health care delivery, and the
making computer chips and lots of other things.
It is a shame it was held up for such a long time for no good reason.
Now we have passed it, and I am very happy that everybody allowed this
to happen.
____________________