[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 30, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7051-H7052]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ABLE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Florida (Mr. Crenshaw) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CRENSHAW. Mr. Speaker, this morning, I want to bring attention to
proposed legislation known as the ABLE Act, or Achieving a Better Life
Experience. It is something that is important to me and to a lot of
Members of the House.
I first filed this legislation 7 years ago. Since then, we have come
a long way. Today, 377 Members of the House and 74 United States
Senators are cosponsors of this legislation. There is no piece of
legislation in the Congress today that enjoys more bipartisan,
bicameral support than the ABLE Act. Tomorrow, the Ways and Means
Committee in the House will take up this legislation, and I hope that
they will pass it with a favorable vote.
Just what is the ABLE Act? It is a piece of legislation that attempts
to help those individuals with disabilities achieve their full
potential. How does it do that? Well, it allows individuals with
disabilities to set up a tax-free savings account. They take that
account, it grows tax free, and they can use the proceeds, as long as
they meet qualified expenses.
Those individuals face challenges that you and I can sometimes hardly
imagine. They might be medical, transportation, education, or housing
needs. We already allow other individuals to use tax-exempt savings
accounts to help them.
If you want to save for retirement, you can set up a tax-free savings
account called a 401(k). If you want to set
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up a tax-free savings account to help you go to college, you can do
that through what is called a 529. If you want to help with your health
care, you can set up a health savings account. It seems only fair that
we level the playing field and allow those individuals the same
opportunity.
Let me introduce you to someone by the name of Sydney Leach. She
lives in Jacksonville, Florida. Today, she is a fifth-grader at Crown
Point Elementary School. She has Down syndrome. When she was born, her
proud mom and dad, Stacy and Jeff Leach, made a commitment to make sure
that she would not only have a happy life, but that she would be able
to realize her hopes and her dreams and her full potential.
Soon they realized that when you raise a child with Down syndrome,
you face challenges that a lot of people can't imagine. Unlike her
classmates, she had to have special behavioral counseling. She had to
have special medical care. She needed individual counseling. So it was
difficult.
Her parents then found out that if you have Medicaid, you are limited
to $2,000 for the amount of assets that you can have in your name. If
her parents or loved ones wanted to give her a gift, they jeopardized
the care that she needed.
So the ABLE Act seeks to correct those inequities. It says that you
can, number one, set up a tax-free savings account and let those
proceeds grow. Number two, it won't count against your $2,000
limitation on assets.
This is America, home of the American Dream. Individuals with
disabilities ought to be able to live the American Dream, just like you
and I. They ought to be able to have an education and work on their
own, if they can. They ought to be able to save for the future. The
ABLE Act allows them to do just that.
We live in a great, prosperous country. Sometimes, we are called upon
to speak out for the people that can't speak out, to stand up and seek
justice for those that can't seek justice on their own.
The ABLE Act will have a positive impact on millions of people with
disabilities all across this land. That is worth fighting for. I hope
soon the ABLE Act will become the law of the land.
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