[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 5 (Thursday, January 9, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H76]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE BENEFITS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, 48 hours, a million-plus Americans
received letters in their mailboxes. They weren't overdue tax letters.
They were not letters suggesting that you are at fault. It was not a
notice to say that you are no longer an American citizen. It was not a
letter to say you are now relieved of any responsibility to pay any
bills or to provide for your family.
It was a letter denying, or extinguishing, taking away the
unemployment insurance that most Americans have come to understand
that, as working Americans, having worked in their life, that they
would be the recipient of these benefits during a brief lapse or an
extended lapse of not being able to find work. The chronically
unemployed percentage is the highest that it has been in decades, and
therefore, this is not the time to delay.
I hold in my hand as well a resume of a competent worker, a college
graduate who has the responsibility to support his family and who has
been looking for work for 2 years, earnestly, energetically, and
intensely, and cannot find work.
The clock is ticking on the 30 hours in the United States Senate, but
the real concern is my friends in this body. Recognizing that these
letters deal with people's lives, and to make a representation that all
is well, unemployment generally is 7 percent. However, it was lower
than that when President Bush signed the unemployment insurance
benefits in 2008. These guys, these distinguished Americans, misfits,
why can't they find work? Twenty thousand-plus are veterans looking for
work, men and women who served in the United States military, or, as we
met in the White House on Tuesday, a mother of two distinguished men
who are serving in Afghanistan.
So the 1.3 million languish while we are trying to make a
determination that may not be able to be made. Frankly, I would ask
that we all be reasonable. I would simply make the point that it is an
emergency.
I want to pause for a moment and thank the Houston Apartment
Association that has worked with me and has sent a letter to all of
their members asking for those 12,000, some of whom are residents of
apartments in Harris County, to be sensitive and tolerant of those
individuals who can document that they were the beneficiaries or the
recipients of unemployment insurance that was cut off on December 28. I
want to applaud them for their sensitivity in dealing with those
particular individuals. I ask mortgage companies and utility companies
and city water bill companies to be tolerant as well, to be working
with families who are basically without a lifeline.
{time} 1015
But the issue before us is the fact that these letters have gone to
people such as this woman, who has looked for work every day. She liked
her job and was laid off for no fault of her own.
Right now, we have the opportunity to pass a 3-month emergency
relief--some of us have introduced bills for 1 year--and then
contemplate, discuss, and work with what might be the appropriate way
of funding the continuation.
No person unemployed, chronically or not, is happy with an
unemployment benefit check. What they are happy with, Mr. Speaker, is
the ability to work and to provide for their family.
So I would make the argument that as we discuss privacy issues on the
Affordable Care Act, which are already taken care of by CMS, today and
tomorrow on the floor we should be passing unemployment insurance. I
ask my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to join me, recognizing
that Americans want to work. Let's help them transition with a bridge
of unemployment insurance.
____________________