[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 30, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H7050]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ADDRESS OUR TRANSPORTATION NEEDS NOW
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, yesterday afternoon, I stood at the back
of the Senate Chamber and watched a critical debate. Under the
leadership of Chairman Ron Wyden of the Senate Finance Committee, his
partner, Ranking Member Hatch; Chairwoman Barbara Boxer from
California, Chris Murphy from Connecticut, Bob Corker from Tennessee,
and Senator Tom Carper from Delaware held forth on critical legislation
to be able to help America deal with our infrastructure crisis.
America--it is no secret--is falling apart and is falling behind. It
is well overdue for us to have a robust, important 6-year
reauthorization to deal with our transportation needs.
We can't do that unless we resolve the funding conundrum. We have
been limping along. We can't even get through the current 27-month
extension without a summer slowdown, cutting back on critical Federal
funding for contracts around the country.
What the Senate did was tackle this issue head on. They had a funding
proposal that was fairly debated, where they were able to provide
enough funding to get us through the end of the year, but not so much
that it allows this Congress off the hook to slide into the next
Congress, and probably the Congress after that, but instead, face up to
our responsibilities now.
Mr. Speaker, the presentation of Senator Corker from Tennessee urging
us to be grownups and move forward, and Senator Boxer talking about the
critical needs and not to be waylaid by this fantasy that somehow the
Federal Government should abandon its commitment to a National
Transportation Highway System that we initiated under President
Eisenhower, that somehow that is a thing of the past, turn our back on
it, slash transportation funding, and just kind of wait and see what
happens around the country--she was eloquent and forceful. Again, we
have watched Senator Murphy and Senator Carper be focused on that which
we need to do.
Mr. Speaker, we need to address and embrace the bipartisan Senate
vote yesterday: 79 bipartisan votes to be able to do our job, avoid the
summer shutdown, and do so in a way with a funding approach that is
much more sustainable and reasonable, not the so-called pension
smoothing that is ill-advised on so many levels.
Two weeks ago, Democrats in the House of Representatives were united:
99 percent supported what is, essentially, the Senate outcome. That
didn't prevail on the floor of the House in a motion to recommit that I
offered. But Democrats didn't pick up our marbles and quit. We actually
provided the votes necessary to keep the issue alive and send the
suboptimal Republican approach across to the other body. There weren't
enough Republican votes to pass it, but we kept it alive hoping that we
could see what happens on the Senate side, that we might have a
stronger more reasonable proposal.
That optimism and cooperation on the part of the Democrats in the
House was rewarded because we have this bipartisan proposal, which is,
in fact, better, supported by 79 Senators.
Mr. Speaker, it is time for the House to be able to address this
bipartisan approach from the Senate. Allow us to vote on it. It ought
to be the first step in our being able to avoid the summer shutdown and
be able to get on with the 6-year bill.
Rarely have we seen the stakeholders so united. The American Trucking
Association, the road builders, the U.S. Chamber, building and
construction trades, the bicyclists, and the engineers. We watch across
the country the people who build, who maintain, and depend on our
infrastructure united, supportive of the approach that has emerged from
the United States Senate. Even as we speak, they are contacting
congressional offices, urging Members support the bipartisan Senate
approach.
I respectfully urge the Republican leadership to allow those voices
to be heard, to heed the stakeholders, heed the American people, give
them a bill worthy of voting on. It will pass overwhelmingly, and we
will be doing our job.
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