[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 96 (Thursday, June 19, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3864-S3865]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS
By Mr. CARDIN (for himself, Mr. Boozman, Mr. Coons, Mr. Isakson,
and Mr. Kaine):
[[Page S3865]]
S. 2502. A bill to establish in the United States Agency for
International Development an entity to be known as the United States
Global Development Lab, and for other purposes; to the Committee on
Foreign Relations.
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I rise today to discuss the Global
Development Lab and the legislation I am introducing along with
Senators Boozman, Coons, and Isakson that codifies the Global
Development Lab and provides the U.S. Agency for International
Development, USAID, with the flexibility it needs to make the Lab the
gold standard in global development innovation.
This year, the Office of Science & Technology and the Office of
Innovation & Development Alliances at USAID were abolished to pave the
way for the Global Development Lab--a new approach to invest, test, and
bring to scale more effective solutions to the world's biggest
development challenges.
The Global Development Lab partners with entrepreneurs, experts,
nongovernmental organizations, NGOs, universities, and science and
research institutions to solve development challenges in a faster, more
cost-efficient, and more sustainable way. The lab utilizes a pay-for-
success model, which uses science, technology, and innovation-driven
competitions to expand the number and diversity of solutions to
development challenges. This means that instead of issuing grants or
contacts, USAID can give a competitor an award only after the
objectives of the competition have been achieved.
The lab already has an impressive 32 cornerstone partners. These
partners are businesses, NGOs, foundations, universities, and
governments--all of whom are committed to sharing information and
expertise and to bringing innovative development projects to scale. I
am pleased that two Maryland-based organizations, Johns Hopkins
University and Catholic Relief Services, are cornerstone partners of
the Global Development Lab. Catholic Relief Services intends to work
with the lab on food security, global health, climate change, energy,
and information and communications technology, and it is already using
geographic information systems in Haiti to map schools and education
programs across the country to better improve education interventions.
Johns Hopkins University plans to partner with the lab on improving
health care and access to clean and affordable water and energy.
The Global Development Lab makes sense: America has a proud history
of achieving unprecedented gains for humanity through science and
technology. Evidence has shown that when we harness American science,
innovation and entrepreneurship, we achieve the greatest leaps in
social and economic development.
For example, ninety percent of new HIV infection in children is a
result of mother-to-child transmission at birth. When newborns receive
antiretroviral drugs at a clinic or hospital within 24 hours of birth,
their chances of contracting HIV go from 45 percent to less than 5
percent. In regions where pregnant mothers do not have adequate access
to medical facilities, getting newborns antiretroviral treatment is
challenging. In response to this challenge, Dr. Robert Malkin and his
students at Duke's Pratt School of Engineering and Duke's Global Health
Institute--also Cornerstone Partners--designed the Pratt Pouch, a low-
cost foil pouch that preserves a premeasured dose of antiretroviral
medication for up to a year without requiring refrigeration. The pouch
ensures accurate pediatric dosing and can be given to mothers to take
home with them before birth. Mothers then simply tear open the pouch
and squeeze the medication directly into their newborn's mouth,
eliminating the need for a syringe and a health professional and
ultimately reducing the likelihood of mother-to-child transmission of
HIV at birth.
This type of innovation is exciting and is exactly what we hope to
see more of as we scale up the Global Development Lab and empower it to
be the world's most innovative incubator of global development
projects.
______
By Mr. FLAKE (for himself and Mr. McCain):
S. 2503. A bill to direct the Secretary of the Interior to enter into
the Big Sandy River-Planet Ranch Water Rights Settlement Agreement and
the Hualapai Tribe Bill Williams River Water Rights Settlement
Agreement, to provide for the lease of certain land located within
Planet Ranch on the Bill Williams River in the State of Arizona to
benefit the Lower Colorado River Multi-Species Conservation Program,
and to provide for the settlement of specific water rights claims in
the Bill Williams River watershed in the State of Arizona; to the
Committee on Indian Affairs.
Mr. FLAKE. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator McCain and myself I am
pleased to introduced S. 2503, the Bill Williams River Water Rights
Settlement Act of 2014.
This measure would confirm important water rights claims of the
Hualapai Tribe to water in the Bill Williams River watershed; provide
protections for the Tribe's culturally significant springs in that
area; secure a non-federal contribution toward a future settlement of
the Tribe's claims in other river basins; provide certainty for
continued water use by the Freeport Minerals Corporation, Freeport, at
the Bagdad Mine complex and townsite; and facilitate the transfer of a
portion of land known as Planet Ranch for use in the Lower Colorado
River Multi-Species Conservation Program or MSCP. It would do all of
this without any new spending authorizations.
Water users in Arizona have a long history of pro-actively addressing
complex water challenges. Among the State's many accomplishments is the
resolution, in whole or in part, of water rights claims asserted by 13
of the State's 22 federally recognized Indian tribes. This measure
would carry forward that strong tradition by recognizing reserved water
rights to a total of 694 acre-feet per year, afy, on three different
parcels along the Big Sandy River as well as the Tribe's claims to the
Cofer Hot Springs.
For non-Indian communities, this legislation would confirm Freeport's
right to withdraw 10,055 afy at the Wikieup Wellfield, which serves the
Bagdad Mine and townsite. Achieving this level of certainty with regard
to water supply would help to ensure continued economic benefits
throughout the State.
By enabling the transfer of a portion of Planet Ranch to the Lower
Colorado River MSCP, the settlement would help Arizona, California, and
Nevada meet their obligations to both water management and Endangered
Species Act compliance. However, in order to properly effectuate the
transfer, Congress must act before five-year window for abandonment and
forfeiture of Planet Ranch's water rights expires.
Finally, this bill would help to set the table for future
negotiations regarding the Tribe's claims to water in the lower
Colorado River and the Verde River by securing a non-federal
contribution toward those settlement efforts. As those negotiations
continue, I look forward to fully and fairly evaluating any subsequent
settlement on its own merits.
I am pleased to have the opportunity to work with the parties that
have negotiated this settlement, and I am committed to bringing it to
fruition through congressional enactment. The settlement resolves
significant legal claims, provides certainty for water users, and
enhances the MSCP without including any new spending. Therefore, I urge
my colleagues to support this legislation.
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