[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 105 (Tuesday, July 8, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H5869-H5873]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH INVESTMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2013, the gentleman from California (Mr. Garamendi) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Mr. Speaker, we have just heard a very interesting 1
hour on an issue that is important, and
[[Page H5870]]
I would like to bring to this floor another issue that affects every
American family either directly or indirectly, but in a very profound,
and in most cases, a very sad, very sad way. One in five American
seniors are affected by this disease called Alzheimer's.
I know it has affected my family. My wife's mother at the age of 92
died of Alzheimer's. She spent the last 2 years of her life living with
my wife and me in our home, where we were able to provide care for her.
I think that that is just one story among the millions of American
families that are trying to find a way of dealing with this devastating
disease.
In the last years of her life, my mother-in-law always had what
seemed to be a bright outlook. She was never a complainer, and she
always seemed to recognize her grandchildren, particularly the very
young grandchildren. I will never forget a day where our youngest
grandchild--her youngest great-grandchild--was climbing into bed with
her, and my mother-in-law was, what I thought, was babbling. And that
young child who could just barely speak was translating in a very real
way what my mother-in-law was saying. It was my wife and I that were
unable to understand. Just one moment in a long period of time that my
mother-in-law lived with us in her final years.
This story is replicated time after time across America. One in five
seniors will have Alzheimer's and will die of it.
If we take a look at the well known diseases that affect Americans,
here is the death rate: cancer, clearly, clearly a problem. Heart
disease, cancer, and stroke. Over the last 10 years, we are seeing a
decline in the death rate for all of these well known and devastating
diseases. We have seen the progress of research and the application of
medical practices to these diseases, cancer, heart disease, and stroke,
all declining, stroke by some 23 percent. HIV/AIDS, another devastating
disease in this country, an incredible 42 percent decline in the death
rate between 2000 and 2010.
And here is Alzheimer's, the same period of time, a 68 percent
increase. My mother-in-law was one of the people that made up this
statistic.
Deaths from major diseases. This is a clear indication of what
happens when the public, acting through Congress, and governments,
State, local, and private organizations, put their shoulder to the
wheel and decide that it is time to do something about cancer, heart
disease, stroke, and HIV/AIDS.
What is happening here? What is happening with Alzheimer's? Well,
part of the answer is the aging population, the baby boomers. That is
part of the answer, but it is not the complete answer.
What does this mean to the American taxpayer and the American
families? It means it is a very, very expensive disease. In fact, it is
the most expensive disease in America. Medicare, the principal source
of health insurance for the elderly, 1 in 5 dollars in Medicare is
spent on Alzheimer's, well over $240 billion a year for Medicare and
Medicaid alone.
And where is this going? Well, here is where the costs are going. The
cost of Medicare and Medicaid, 2010, $122 billion; 2022, $195 billion;
2050, $880 billion. So what are we going to do here? Well, we are going
to spend an awful lot of money unless we get ahead of this devastating
disease.
Looking at it another way, a different graph, same story, the
skyrocketing cost of Alzheimer's care. This is not the peak, this is
just where we stop counting in 2050. Baby boomers coming on and then
this disease taking hold and literally bankrupting the Medicare and
Medicaid programs.
So what do we do? Well, here is what we are doing, a neat little
chart here, treatment shown here, this is the Medicare portion, this is
the Medicaid portion. We are looking at a huge expenditure, $150
billion. This is from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Oh, down here, this is the comparison for research. This year, $566
million of research. Extraordinary expense, a lot of research, but not
nearly enough to address the problem.
For example, back to that first graph that showed the decline in
cancer research, HIV, heart--I wonder why it happened? Look where we
are investing: cancer research, $5.481 billion; HIV/AIDS, $2.978
billion; cardiovascular, $2.15 billion; Alzheimer's, $566 million.
This is a very, very good graph. This is what happens when we invest
in research and treatment protocols. Let me remind you of what those
investments have meant. Cancer, decline in death rate; heart disease,
decline in death rate; stroke, decline in death rate; HIV, decline in
death rate. The major reason for it is the investment in research and
treatment protocols. Cancer, HIV/AIDS, cardiovascular, Alzheimer's.
So where are we going to go here? Are we going to stay with this and
see an increase in Alzheimer's disease and death over the next years?
Or are we going to go with something that can solve the problem? And
that is investment, investment by the people of America and around the
world in addressing this devastating illness for which today there is
no cure, there is no way to slow down the progress, and we don't know
when it is coming on until it is with us.
And so families across this Nation find themselves in a devastating
situation. I would like to recount just one devastating situation. It
was on National Public Radio in the Sacramento region. A gentleman from
the State park system retired at the age of 65, thinking that he and
his wife would be able to spend their next years traveling, enjoying
themselves and the benefit of the years of work they had put in.
{time} 2030
His wife was 1 year younger. No sooner had he retired, his wife came
down with early onset of Alzheimer's. The result is a devastation in
their family, obviously, to the lady. She doesn't even know today that
she is married to her husband of 42 years, but he cares for her, day in
and day out, every day, 24/7.
There are many pieces of legislation that are here in the Congress
that deal with this caregiving situation. There is also legislation
that would ramp up the research necessary to get at the disease to
fully understand what it is all about and how we might treat it and
prevent it. These pieces of legislation deserve our attention.
Joining me tonight is a colleague from California who is carrying one
of those pieces of legislation, a woman who has spent her entire
career--public and private--in Congress and in the California
legislature, addressing the problems of health care, the problems of
the underinsured and the underserved, an incredible woman who has her
own story to tell.
Let me introduce to you Maxine Waters, my colleague from California.
Ms. WATERS. I would first like to thank my colleague from California,
Congressman John Garamendi, for this time, and I congratulate him for
organizing this evening's Special Order on Alzheimer's disease.
John, I would like to tell you that those charts that you just
presented tell the story very clearly. It identifies the extent of this
disease, and it also lays out that we need to do more with research.
We need to invest more in research, but you also showed, for those
diseases where we have invested in, that they have reduced the death
rates dramatically. I think your presentation needs to be seen by
everybody because it does paint the picture of what is going on with
this disease.
As the cochair of the Congressional Task Force on Alzheimer's
Disease, I know how devastating this disease can be on patients,
families, and caregivers. The task force works on a bipartisan basis to
increase awareness of Alzheimer's, strengthen the Federal commitment to
improving the lives of those affected by the disease, and assist the
caregivers who provide their needed support.
I am pleased that the gentleman from California (Mr. Garamendi) has
decided to take an active role in the work of the task force, and what
a great job he has done.
Alzheimer's disease has touched millions of American families.
However, most of us are probably unaware of the statistics behind the
disease and the significant public health threat it poses to our
Nation.
In the United States, someone develops Alzheimer's every 67 seconds.
According to recent data, women have a one in six estimated lifetime
risk of developing the disease at age 65, while the risk for men is
nearly one in 11.
[[Page H5871]]
The Alzheimer's Association estimates as many as 16 million Americans
over age 65 could suffer from Alzheimer's by 2050. It is now the fifth
leading cause of death in California.
Right now, nearly 15 million people--mostly family members--provide
unpaid care for individuals with Alzheimer's or dementia, a market
value of more than $220.2 billion.
In California alone, approximately 1.5 million unpaid caregivers
grapple with the tremendous challenges of Alzheimer's disease or
dementia every day. Caregivers include spouses, children, even
grandchildren.
Caregivers face a variety of challenges, ranging from assisting
patients with feeding, bathing, and dressing, to helping them take care
of their medications, manage finances, and make legal decisions.
I want you to know that I have friends who are taking care of both
their father and their mother who have Alzheimer's. Caregiving is
something that we have to pay attention to.
We have to give support to these families because not only is it a
tremendous responsibility that so many people are taking on--as
compared to caregivers for other diseases, Alzheimer's caregivers
disproportionately report being forced to miss work, reduce work hours,
quit their jobs, and change jobs due to caregiving demands. They are
more likely to experience financial hardship, report health
difficulties, experience emotional stress, and suffer from sleep
disturbance.
These are just some of the reasons why I introduced the Alzheimer's
Caregivers Support Act, H.R. 2975, last year. This bill authorizes
grants to public and nonprofit organizations to expand training and
support services for families and caregivers of Alzheimer's patients.
With the majority of Alzheimer's patients living at home under the
care of family and friends, it is important that we ensure these
caregivers have access to the training and resources needed to provide
proper care.
The families and communities facing Alzheimer's also must deal with
the difficult problem of wandering. According to the Alzheimer's
Association, more than 60 percent of Alzheimer's patients are likely to
wander away from home. In addition to being distracting for law
enforcement, wanderers are vulnerable to dehydration, weather
conditions, traffic hazards, and people who prey on vulnerable seniors.
In fact, the Alzheimer's Association estimates that up to 50 percent
of wandering Alzheimer's patients will become seriously injured or die
if they are not found within 24 hours of their departure from home.
To combat this, I have introduced H.R. 2976, a bill to reauthorize
and improve the Missing Alzheimer's Disease Patient Alert Program, a
small but effective Department of Justice program that helps local
communities and law enforcement agencies quickly identify persons with
Alzheimer's disease who wander or are missing and reunite them with
their families.
The program is a valuable resource for first responders, and it
enables law enforcement officers to focus their attention on other
security concerns in our communities.
Of course, nothing can be more valuable for Alzheimer's patients,
their families, caregivers, and communities than a cure for this
terrible disease.
To that end, we must significantly expand the government's
insufficient investment in Alzheimer's research. It is essential that
Congress appropriate robust funding for cutting-edge research at the
National Institutes of Health.
The private sector also has a role to play in funding Alzheimer's
research, as do donations from concerned individuals. A simple way for
Congress to encourage the public to contribute is to require the U.S.
Postal Service to issue and sell a semipostal stamp, with the proceeds
helping to fund Alzheimer's research at NIH.
This would be similar to the popular and successful breast cancer
research semipostal stamp. A bill to do this, H.R. 1508, was introduced
by now-Senator Ed Markey prior to his election to the Senate, and I am
working very hard to pass it.
So as we continue to search for a cure, our Nation is at a critical
crossroads that requires decisive action to ensure the safety and
welfare of the millions of Americans with Alzheimer's disease and
dementia.
Together, let us commit to take every possible action to improve
treatment for Alzheimer's patients, support caregivers, and invest in
research to find a cure for this disease.
Once again, I want to thank my colleague, John Garamendi from
California, for organizing tonight's Special Order. It is important
that we do as much as we can to educate the public, to gain widespread
support, to make sure that we have the support that is necessary to get
more funding for research.
You are doing a fine job of getting us focused. I appreciate that.
Mr. GARAMENDI. I thank Congresswoman Waters. A couple of things come
to mind as we were talking about the research effort.
We will very soon appropriate well over $80 billion--$80 billion--for
ongoing military actions in Afghanistan. We make choices here, and it
seems to me that we need to understand the import and the importance of
the choices we make.
Now, that does not include the CIA and the State Department and the
USAID--those are additional expenses over and above that the military
will be using--at a time when, presumably, we are pulling out of
Afghanistan. What would $1 billion of that $80 billion mean to the
Alzheimer's research programs here in the United States?
Well, first of all, we shouldn't appropriate $1 billion because you
can't ramp up that fast; but if we spread that over 2, 3, 4 years and
go from $566 million to $1.5 billion, what could be accomplished?
I know that, in my own district in the Sacramento Valley, the
University of California, Davis, has a very robust and breakthrough
opportunity on brain research. I know in your own area of Los Angeles,
the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of
Southern California are, together, operating major research programs on
the mind, on the human brain, and how it is harmed, what is it that
sets off Alzheimer's.
We can do this, but these are choices that your Representatives, the
American people, your Representatives are making choices here in this
House about how to spend your money. When one in five seniors comes
down with Alzheimer's and we make a choice to spend $80 billion in
Afghanistan, you should be questioning this. As to our rationality, are
we making the right choice? I think not.
Let me just comment on your legislation, Congresswoman Waters. Your
Alzheimer's Caregiver Support Act, H.R. 2975, I am thinking what it
would have meant to Patty and I as we took upon the task of caring for
her mother.
We really didn't know much about Alzheimer's and really didn't know
much about the kind of care and the kind of reaction and different
things we might do and she might do.
It would have been so helpful to us to have had that kind of
information available, that kind of support. Now, we got through it
very well. We had a lot of ability to search out information, and we
are not unique, but I think the general public who is facing this
personal crisis of a husband or a wife--and as you said, two out of
three are going to be women--as they face that crisis, if they had the
support that your bill would give to them, here is what you should
expect, here is what you can do, here is where you can get help.
It is a good bill. We ought to pass it. We ought to pass this bill.
So, Congresswoman Waters, thank you for doing that. If you want to
comment back on how you came to put this bill in, what was your
motivation? How did you come to see it, from your own experiences? I
know you have friends and, perhaps, even family that faced this
situation.
Ms. WATERS. Absolutely. I have been watching for some time what
caregivers go through in an attempt to provide the care that is needed
by Alzheimer's patients, and you hit it on the head when you said: If
only these individuals had had a little help in understanding the
disease--what is it like? What is likely to happen? What can you
anticipate? How should you react, and what can you do to get some help?
If that information simply was available, it would be of tremendous
help to caregivers, but in addition to that, many of the caregivers put
their own well-being at risk in so many ways.
[[Page H5872]]
Not only do they oftentimes have to lose time from work--which causes
difficulties--but many times, the caregivers themselves have health
problems that they are addressing that are exacerbated by the fact that
they have additional responsibilities in giving care to their
Alzheimer's relatives.
Yes, I have seen a lot of this, and I know the pain that families go
through. As I saw my own mother age--and they said: Ms. Waters, what
you are seeing now is dementia.
I watched this very vibrant, energetic woman, who lived to be 97
years old, eventually go into a state of being that certainly was not
the woman that I had known that had reared me, had been so energetic
all of her life.
The lapses in memory and finally, toward the end, the inability to
recognize her family was a very traumatic and heartbreaking thing to
see.
{time} 2045
So I want for every family the ability to deal with this. I want
their government to be of help to them. As you have said, we have got
to get our priorities in order. That $80 billion that you mention is a
tremendous amount of American taxpayer money that is going toward an
effort that most of us don't even understand. There is no reason that
we should be in this situation.
I am looking at this chart, ``Investments in Health Research.'' That
is shameful what I am looking at, only $566 million as compared to what
we are putting into other diseases. We don't mind the money that is
being put into other diseases. We see how it has reduced debt. We just
want attention also to Alzheimer's. I think you have made it very clear
this evening with the information that you have presented.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Well, this chart clearly shows--clearly shows--what
happens when you make an investment: cancer, HIV, cardiovascular. I
remember, 20 years ago, nobody thought you could solve HIV. It was
there and it was going to devastate the entire planet, but research--
research--paid off. While this disease is not under control and is
still all too prevalent, there is an ability to stem the impact of it
and to be able to live with that disease. We can make progress here.
I am just thinking again about your piece of legislation, about the
kind of help that people need and, really, education beyond just what
you have talked about in your bill. Every family goes through this in
either their own family or a neighboring family in the early onset,
early in the progress of the disease. The change in the way in which a
person functions and works and interacts with the family is profoundly
disturbing to the family, even more so if the family doesn't understand
and doesn't know what is happening.
So the ability to diagnose Alzheimer's early becomes very, very
important to the well-being of the family, as you said. If that family
understands what is happening, they are better able to cope with a
very, very difficult situation. If they have no idea and Mama or Dad
just suddenly seems to be off in some strange and unimaginable
direction, the family can be torn apart. I know we have seen this many,
many places across the people that I have known over the years. But
your bill ought to be law, and we ought to be funding those kinds of
nonprofit and social organizations that can address and help an
individual understand what is going on in the Alzheimer's situation.
Another one, your second bill dealing with the Patient Alert Program,
I remember very well a situation that occurred years ago where a
neighbor simply wandered off and it created a community crisis: Where
did he go? Where is he? After a couple of days, it turned out to not be
a devastating situation. Your bill would provide assistance in tracking
and keeping track of and finding those men and women that will and have
wandered off. This is very much a part of this illness. So thank you
for introducing these pieces of legislation.
My plea to my colleagues here is let's focus on this. There are many,
many things we focus on here. All too often it is just political one-
upmanship. This is not a Democratic issue; it is not an Republican
issue. This is an American issue affecting nearly every American
family. I like your legislation. I would hope the President would have
this on his desk tomorrow morning, would sign this and get the help
that people need.
There are several other pieces of legislation that are also
introduced. I would like to introduce my colleague, who is carrying a
piece of legislation on this matter, and yield to him for his
exposition. So if you would care to join us, we will hear from,
actually, the other side of the aisle. It is a bipartisan 1-hour, so
please.
Mr. ROSKAM. Thank you very much. I want to thank you for yielding and
thank the gentlewoman for yielding.
To your point, Alzheimer's is a devastating illness, and it is
absolutely ravaging our Nation. Five million Americans are suffering
from it, and the cost of Alzheimer's is in the billions and billions
and billions of dollars. In fact, there are some estimates that suggest
it will be in the trillions of dollars between 2010 and 2050.
There is some good news and there is some hopeful news that we are on
the verge of some new treatments, but we need effective coordination to
ensure that the money is spent on research that is being utilized
effectively. The devastating cost of this disease is proof in the
numbers.
Nearly 1 in 5 Medicare dollars is spent on a person with Alzheimer's
and other dementias. This year, the total cost of Alzheimer's will be
$214 billion, including $150 billion on Medicare and Medicaid
expenditures, and this will skyrocket in the years ahead.
This is not just a dollars-and-cents issue. Yes, it is very
important, and, yes, we discuss dollars and cents in this Chamber and
we all bring strong feelings and strong opinions, but setting aside,
for a moment, the dollars-and-cents issue, this is inextricably linked
to the health of our families, to the health of our communities, and
the burden that goes not just on the person who is struck with
Alzheimer's, but the burden on the caregiver and the family that has to
come along. It is an overwhelming thing. Frankly, it is too
overwhelming to bear alone.
So we all have stories of either family members or people that we are
close to or people that we knew. I think fondly of a schoolteacher and
a Sunday school teacher of mine growing up who was struck down by this
disease. To watch her just atrophy over the years was an incredible
heartache, and to watch her family come around and love her and care
for her and do everything they could to lift that burden and to bear
that burden alongside from her.
Now we have an opportunity. We have an opportunity in this Chamber to
do something that is transformational, that brings us all together,
that brings a sense of hope and optimism and possibility about trying
to wrestle this disease to the ground. What an incredible time to see
the science come together in ways that transcend normal partisan
politics, and we can put those things aside and really cling to this
notion of giving hope to people.
I want to thank the gentleman for his leadership. I want to thank him
for his attention in driving this issue and to bringing all of us
together around it. I definitely, on behalf of myself and my
constituents in Illinois' Sixth Congressional District, want to be part
of the solution moving forward.
Mr. GARAMENDI. I thank you so very, very much.
One of the challenges that I find in the House, there are 435 of us,
and I never had the opportunity to work with you directly on
committees. We just are not on the same committees, so I hardly know
you, but I already like where you are headed. I like the way in which
you speak to this issue and the way in which you show your compassion.
I really look forward to working with you. These are bipartisan issues.
If you just hang on a few seconds, there are about seven bills that
have been introduced thus far. Representative Markey, who is now a
Senator, introduced H.R. 1507, which I think one of our colleagues has
picked up here. That deals with the Social Security Act and makes this
illness, a comprehensive Alzheimer's disease diagnosis, part of the
Medicare program.
There is a bill introduced by a Republican, Mr. Guthrie. It is the
Alzheimer's Accountability Act. This one basically says, okay, there is
a plan. How are we doing with the plan? What is the plan to deal with
Alzheimer's research, the support necessary? And it would require that
a report be prepared
[[Page H5873]]
every year so that we can keep track of progress or lack thereof. I
like that bill because I think accountability is really important for
us. Ultimately, these will be our decisions.
You can jump in on any one of these you may be involved in.
Mr. ROSKAM. I am a cosponsor of both of those pieces of legislation,
one authored by a Republican, one authored by a Democrat.
I think the point is there has got to be a sense of clarity. We have
limited resources here. There is an incredible upside in the outyears
in particular if we wrestle this disease to the ground and that notion
of a holistic approach, because that is really what you are talking
about. You are talking about not taking a rifle shot, not saying, well,
let's do this, that, or the other thing, but, instead, take a step
back, look at it in its entirety; let's use the full weight and
influence of research dollars and health care dollars on the Federal
side and leverage this to the best of our ability.
If you begin to think that way about some of these problems and we
begin to think about, well, what is it that brings us together, there
is real optimism here. Unfortunately, people look at Congress and say
why can't you people get along and so forth, yet they don't see maybe
some of this type of work where we are able to come together and we are
able to represent constituents who are struggling mightily under this.
I think both of those bills that you referenced, I am honored to
cosponsor them and to support the Members that are playing a leadership
role. One of the things that you and I can do as Members of Congress is
to bring attention to things and to talk to our colleagues and to lead
our districts and to persuade people and try and bring people together.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Well, we are doing some of that tonight.
There is another one. This issue is not an American issue. This issue
is a worldwide issue. Every society, every ethnic group in the world
faces Alzheimer's, some more severely than others. There is another
piece of legislation introduced by Chris Smith, who is the cochair of
the Alzheimer's Caucus here in Congress. This one is H. Res. 489, the
Global Alzheimer's resolution by Mr. Smith. It says it is the policy of
the U.S. Government to encourage and facilitate the following efforts
concerning Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia. This goes
to the World Health Organization and other nations that are involved in
research, the sharing of knowledge and research.
We can, as you just said, leverage, leverage what we are doing with
what is going on in other countries--certainly the European countries;
we know China is doing a lot of research on this--together the whole
world facing a common issue, and perhaps we can find a much better and
a faster solution.
Mr. ROSKAM. Can you imagine what it would be like if, instead of
waiting for this disease to wake up with a slow awakening or a
realization that either you have been struck with Alzheimer's yourself
or you are observing this in a loved one, if, instead, there is a day
that would come in the future where there was a cure for this and you
are able to anticipate it and say: Look, you don't have to walk this
journey. You don't have to walk that difficulty and that turmoil and
bear that burden. There is something that, based on the work that
people did in 2014 and the predecessor years and all the incredible
progress that has been made, that there is some day in the future. That
was sort of pie-in-the-sky talk a few years ago. That is not pie in the
sky anymore. That is a possibility.
If we are advancing this legislation that you referenced earlier, the
legislation on a global basis that brings in worldwide partners that
Congressman Smith is advocating, the cumulative effect of all of those
things can lead to, really, a transformational moment.
Mr. GARAMENDI. No doubt about it. There is research going on all
around the world. Major drug companies are involved. Countries are
doing their own research. It is all possible.
One other bill that I would like to bring up, this one is introduced
again by Chris Smith, and this is called the PACE Pilot Act. This is a
program for all-inclusive care for the elderly, which currently helps
those over 55, to provide a continuity of care and comprehensive care
for them. It is more than just Alzheimer's. We know that nursing home
care is extraordinarily expensive. This is an effort to try and keep
people in their home with appropriate care and support.
So this is another piece of the puzzle, together with the two bills
that our colleague Maxine Waters had introduced, giving us a package of
legislation that we ought to work on.
The other piece of legislation which is not among these bills is the
annual appropriation bill. Last year, we increased Alzheimer's research
by $100 million, a very, very good thing.
{time} 2100
But, again, we could do much more. And if we were to do that, I am
convinced we would be able to advance the knowledge, the early
detection, and, as you said a moment ago, a cure for this devastating
illness. It is there. The only thing we need is to focus our attention
and the world's attention on this, put the money into research, and
then we can see a solution.
If you would care to wrap up, I have had my say on this.
Mr. ROSKAM. I want to compliment you and say thank you to the
gentleman from California for your leadership on this issue, your
leadership on the Alzheimer's Task Force, and your bringing people
together on both sides of the aisle and trying to leverage resources,
be wise in how we do this, but recognizing the responsibility that you
and I and our colleagues have--and that responsibility is to do
everything that we can to try and alleviate this burden and ultimately
drive towards a cure.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Representative Roskam, it is a pleasure working with
you this evening. We will call this a beginning, working across the
aisle on a program that affects everyone and every family in this
Nation.
We can deal with Alzheimer's. We just need to put our shoulder to the
wheel and push forward with the programs that we know are successful,
many of them introduced by our colleagues here. I, too, am happy to be
a cosponsor of all of these pieces of legislation.
So much for this night on this very, very important piece of
legislation. We will come back to it in a few weeks and see what
progress has been made in perhaps the appropriations process or in the
passage of these pieces of legislation.
In the meantime, Mr. Speaker, we have had our discussion this evening
on this important illness, and I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________