[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 141 (Thursday, October 10, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6457]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VERY REAL AND DANGEROUS CONSEQUENCES OF A GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from West
Virginia (Mr. Rahall) for 5 minutes.
Mr. RAHALL. Mr. Speaker, some of my colleagues would have us believe
that our current Federal shutdown has no real consequences. I have
heard some even suggest that this period of suspended government should
be thought of merely as a slowdown or a slimdown. There is talk that
the shutdown is causing no real pain. The most extreme anti-government
politicians even express the hope that such a cutback in government
programs and services should be made permanent, and too many others are
content to hang back and let those with extreme views have their way
for the time being.
But I stand here today to remind my colleagues and the public that
cuts in government funding and government programs have consequences,
sometimes deadly. It is a lesson we learned in 2006 when annual coal
mining deaths soared to 45, a 10-year high, reversing an 80-year trend
of steadily falling fatalities, a trend attributed in part to years of
underfunding the Mine Safety and Health Administration.
It is a lesson we should heed now. This year, as of September 4, 14
coal miners had died on the job in our country; and this past weekend
alone, three coal miners lost their lives at work over 3 consecutive
days, including one miner in West Virginia. Think about that. In the
first 9 months of the year, 14 coal miners perished on the job. In the
first 9 days of the government shutdown, three coal miners have
perished.
Mr. Speaker, even one death is one too many. Now, no one has linked
these recent deaths directly to the government shutdown, but the
inability of this Congress to pass a simple bill to fund all the
operations of our government has resulted in cutbacks of routine
inspections that are essential to the complex system of safety
oversight of this complex industry.
Miners and operators know that MSHA's multi-layered inspection and
enforcement system has been hampered. Assistant Secretary Joe Main has
said:
Three miners killed on 3 consecutive days is extremely
troubling. The fact that this occurred over a weekend when
there may have been a greater expectation that an MSHA
inspector would not be present is a red flag.
I hope that everyone in the coal industry, from the CEOs to the
office staff, to security guards, to the coal miners themselves, will
redouble their vigilance and take every possible step to ensure health
and safety; and I urge my colleagues in this body to abandon this
ridiculous political showdown that is undercutting the safety in our
mines, our industrial facilities, our food chain, and so much more.
This is not a slowdown. It is not a slimdown. This is a politically
driven shutdown, and it has real and dangerous consequences for the
people who put their faith in us to provide them with basic services to
ensure their well-being, to protect their lives, and to simply do the
job that we have been elected to do: to lead.
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