[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 133 (Wednesday, September 17, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5700-S5703]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS
By Mr. BOOKER:
S. 2850. A bill to amend the Small Business Act to create a program
to provide funding for organizations that support startup businesses in
formation and early growth stages by providing entrepreneurs with
resources and services to produce viable businesses, and for other
purposes; to the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship.
Mr. BOOKER. Mr. President, I rise today to introduce the Startup
Opportunity Accelerator Act or SOAR Act, which provides funding for
accelerator programs and organizations that support small business
startups.
The importance of small businesses to the economy and job creation is
well documented. In fact, data has shown the innovative, smallest
companies represent a significant majority of all new businesses,
reaffirming the importance of young, small firms to driving small
business and economic growth.
To be sure, we see the impact of these high growth startups daily in
the technology we rely on for communication and access to information.
Many of the startups developing these innovative technologies have
thrived in regions, such as Silicon Valley and Silicon Alley, where
there are high concentrations of other entrepreneurs and startups.
Specifically, these regions have benefited from the presence of growth
accelerators and other organizations that connect startups with the
resources necessary for growth. These resources can provide critical
opportunities for entrepreneurs to access the
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venture capital, mentorship, and industry networks vital to success.
That is why I am introducing the SOAR Act. The SOAR Act would
authorize the Small Business Administration's SBA, Growth Accelerator
Fund, which offers funding to growth accelerators and other
organizations supporting startups through a competitive prize program.
The SOAR Act would broaden the reach of these organizations to new
communities by specifically encouraging applicants that fill both
geographic and demographic gaps in the entrepreneurial ecosystem.
After launching in the spring of 2014, the SBA saw tremendous
interest in the Fund and received more than 800 applications from
organizations across the country. The SBA was able to grant awards to
50 organizations, including a New Jersey-based innovation center that
plans to develop a new growth accelerator focused on the food industry.
The SOAR Act will authorize the Growth Accelerator Fund for 5 years
and provide a needed funding boost to help meet high demand from small
businesses and entrepreneurs in the program.
I am proud to introduce this legislation that provides increased
resources to help startups succeed. This relatively small, targeted
investment would deliver big returns for communities across the
country, and I look forward to working with my colleagues to pass this
legislation.
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By Mr. WHITEHOUSE (for himself, Mr. Portman, Ms. Klobuchar, Ms.
Ayotte, and Mr. Leahy):
S. 2839. A bill to authorize the Attorney General to award grants to
address the national epidemics of prescription opioid abuse and heroin
use; to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I rise today to join my colleague from
Rhode Island to talk a little bit about a very important piece of
legislation we are introducing. It is called the Comprehensive
Addiction and Recovery Act of 2014. I think it is fair to say that
Senator Whitehouse from Rhode Island and I do not agree on everything
in this body that comes up--all the policy issues. But on this one we
agree that it is necessary to develop and implement a comprehensive
strategy to deal with this heroin epidemic that is sweeping across our
country.
He has been an unwavering ally in trying to find common ground on
this legislation. I appreciate him. Again, I think this is an area
where we can find common ground on both sides of the aisle and both
sides of the Capitol to move legislation forward that can help to deal
with this growing issue in our States.
I do not think we can afford to wait. Every day, unfortunately, the
number of people who die from heroin overdoses grows. Every day more
mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters, sons and daughters are lost
to this horrible scourge. By the time this year is out, I am told that
more than 19,000 Ohioans will have overdosed on heroin or other
opiates. The deaths from heroin overdoses this year will be the No. 1
cause of death in the State of Ohio, exceeding traffic accidents.
Elected officials around the country, medical professionals, and
grass roots volunteers are dealing with this issue. They are fighting
back. They are doing everything in their power to try to save lives and
to try to stem this epidemic. But they need help. The challenge we all
face is serious. To address it we need a comprehensive effort,
marshaling the resources of communities, grass roots organizations,
local, State, and, yes, the Federal Government. That is where we come
in here, in the Congress.
I think only together can we make progress here and prevent new
victims from falling into the grips of addiction. Only together can we
help those who are already struggling with heroin to rebuild their
lives. I think this bipartisan legislation we have introduced today is
the important first step in that. It lays out a broad spectrum response
to the epidemic of heroin and opiate addiction.
It starts with prevention and education. Why? Because we know that
approach can work. Obviously, it is the most effective way to deal with
this, to keep you from getting into the addiction in the first place.
Nearly 20 years ago I joined with leaders around southwest Ohio to form
what is called the Coalition for a Drug Free Greater Cincinnati. I was
here in the Congress on the House side. A constituent came to me and
said her son had just died from an overdose of smoking marijuana and
huffing gasoline. I was ready for her. I had all the statistics as to
what we were doing at the Federal level in terms of eradicating crops
in places like Colombia, interdicting drugs, prosecuting people, trying
to stop the flow of drugs into this country.
She kind of looked at me and said: How is that going to help me and
my community? How would that have helped my kid? How does that help me
deal with our church, where people are in denial and will not even talk
about it, or our school, where the principal said: It is not a problem
here.
So we came up with this notion of these community coalitions. There
were a few around the country, and they seemed to be working. Ours in
greater Cincinnati has worked well. It is still working well. By
working together with grass roots organizations across the spectrum--
teachers and parents, law enforcement, religious leaders, the media,
business--we pulled together a group. That coalition led to this
greater effort that we started in the House, and there is legislation
that I authored called the Drug-Free Communities Act, which has now
provided funding, by the way, and therefore helped to create thousands
of other community coalitions. It has provided funding to over 2,000
community coalitions around the country. There are now about 5,000, I
think, around the country. Those have worked. But they are not adequate
to deal with this heroin epidemic.
But we start there. We start with this notion that there is a way,
through a grass roots program, for more focus on prevention and
education to be able to help stem this growing problem; that is,
stopping addiction before it even starts. That, of course, again, is
the most effective way. It saves money, saves lives. We also, though,
have to do more to incentivize new innovative treatment programs for
those who have become addicted to try to break the cycle and break the
addiction.
We do that in this legislation by encouraging diversion programs like
drug courts that provide treatment alternatives to incarceration. We do
it by funding evidence-based heroin treatment pilot programs. There are
some exciting new medications out there that we think are worth a try,
including some new medications that actually block the urge, the
craving. We are funding evidence-based treatment programs, but at the
same time encouraging the use of emergency medications to stop
overdoses.
This is something we have seen in all of our States. It expands the
availability of Naloxone, which is an overdose inhibitor that the law
enforcement agencies and other first responders have access to in order
to be able to keep people not from overdosing--which is happening--but
from dying from that overdose.
We know that there have been many lives saved, even over the last
couple of years through the use of that medication. We offer more
resources to promptly identify and treat incarcerated individuals
suffering from addiction disorders by collaborating with criminal
justice stakeholders and, again, providing evidence-based treatment.
This revolving door in the criminal justice system of people who are
drug users getting into prison, getting out again--and within 2 or 3
years over two-thirds of them are back in the system--we are all paying
for that. The communities are paying for it with increased crime. The
families are paying for it. The taxpayers are also paying for it--
$25,000, $30,000 a year for incarcerating individuals, who, if you can
get them into a drug treatment program, in part through these drug
courts, in part through other programs that are proven to work, they
can then not just get over their addiction and not be committing crimes
but become productive citizens and taxpayers themselves.
We have seen this lap around the country. We have to be encouraging
that and supporting that at the Federal level. I saw a model of this
kind of approach when I visited the CompDrug treatment center recently
in Columbus, OH. I met with several nurses and
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counselors who are there on the front lines in the battle against
addiction. They used medication-assisted treatment, but they also use a
lot of counseling to help men and women get on this path to recovery.
So it is not just the medication, but it has to be a more comprehensive
plan. They do this in both a public health capacity but also in
connection with a prisoner reentry program.
So, again, it is people coming out of the criminal justice system who
have a history of addiction and to get them into this program so they
can get not just the treatment they need to get over their addiction
but the job training they also need to be able to get back into the
workforce to become productive citizens.
We do not stop here in this legislation. If there is one thing I have
learned over the last couple of decades working in this area, it is
that the best solutions on this are not going to come from Washington.
They are going to be developed at the grass roots, on the ground.
What we can do is support those efforts on the ground and provide
States with more flexibility to be able to use these resources that are
already coming from Washington, so our legislation does that as well.
Our bill offers States that are proactive at enacting proven policies
the ability to benefit from support under State incentive grants. These
grants will reward States such as Ohio that are improving access to
drug-abuse services for specific at-risk individuals and that are
working to reach 100-percent compliance with programs such as the
prescription drug monitoring program that tracks prescription drugs.
Some States such as Ohio--where we have a big prescription drug
problem--there is also southern Ohio with adjoining States West
Virginia and Kentucky that have this issue and without a sufficient
monitoring program. Some people are getting prescription drugs filled
in Ohio and then going across the river to Kentucky and getting them
filled. There is no way to monitor that without an effective program.
We want to encourage all States to adopt this kind of a program so we
know who is getting prescription drugs, who needs them and who is
abusing the process.
We also talk about this issue in the abstract. I have done that today
talking about numbers--19,000 overdoses. But what does that mean? It is
a shockingly high number. We sometimes forget that every one of those
overdoses represents a person, a family member, someone who has hopes
and dreams, someone who at some point made a mistake, and now that
mistake threatens those dreams and often devastates their family, as I
have seen and I am sure you have seen. Sometimes it can even result in
that person's death. As we talk about overdoses this year, it will be
the No. 1 cause of death in my State of Ohio.
I want to share a couple stories briefly before I close, people I
have met in Ohio, people in communities in my State who are struggling
with the weight of addiction.
I recently met a guy about my age. His name is Paul. Paul came to a
roundtable discussion and has been engaged in this issue because his
son died of a heroin overdose. He was 19 years old. He died of an
overdose 2 days after getting out of rehab. Sadly, that is not an
uncommon story. People go into rehab to turn their lives around and
many are successful, but many aren't. For some of them when they get
out, the temptation is too great and unfortunately their body no longer
has the tolerance for the drug it once did and sometimes they overdose.
His son was one of those.
This man has been in a lot of pain, I could tell. He is still in a
lot of pain. But where he has channeled his grief and his pain is
helping others to overcome addiction and to bring this discussion out
of the dark, to talk about it.
It is not a comfortable topic for a lot of people to talk about, but
he has been willing to do it, to talk about his family situation and
talk about the fact that every family around the kitchen table ought to
be talking about this subject. We ought to be talking about it in the
classrooms. We ought to be sure that people understand the incredible
risk and danger our young people face today.
Earlier this year I met a young woman named Sarah. Sarah has been
struggling to overcome her own addiction. She has been successful, and
I applaud her. She told me: Addiction starts in treatment, Rob, but it
also happens in the community. You have to have a surrounding that
supports you and encourages you.
She is fighting her own battle, but she is also doing something
interesting at Ohio State University. She has started a student-led
recovery program, kind of a support network among students.
Again, often this is in the shadows. She has been the one to step
forward and say: Hey, I have an issue. I am a recovering addict, and I
want other recovering addicts to come and join me and feel support so
they don't do what Paul's son did.
Then there is Bill. Bill is in recovery from a heroin addiction that
he told me used to cost him $2,000 a week at its height. It cost him
his freedom too. He ended up in prison. When he got out of prison, he
was able to take advantage of some of these programs we talked about
today, some of these prisoner re-entry programs and treatment options.
Bill turned his life around. Interestingly, he now works at the very
corrections facility where he once served.
As he joked with me, he said: I used to be behind bars. Now I hold
the keys to the cells and I am spreading a message.
I imagine he is a very credible spokesperson for that message. He is
working with inmates to help build relationships and re-entry programs,
not just in the prison behind the walls, but also in his community in
Canton, OH.
He encourages employers to give people a second chance, to give them
a shot. His quote to me was: Don't give them the keys to the safe on
the first day, but give them a shot. It worked for me. It can work for
others.
This battle against addiction will not be an easy one, we know that,
but we also know it is well worth the fight. We have to take the fight.
When we see the number of overdoses drop, and we see statistics
showing that fewer kids are using drugs and more people are breaking
free of the addiction that once held them, we will know it paid off. It
is not only about dollars and cents. Yes, we can save taxpayer money,
we can be sure that more people are productively employed, and that our
society is more efficient and communities are safer, but ultimately
this is about our young people and what kind of future they are going
to have.
It is about our children and our grandchildren. Will they have a
better shot at their dream, a better shot at getting through school,
getting an education, a better shot at getting a decent job and being
able to hold it, and a better shot at being able to take care of their
own families and having the dignity and self-respect that comes with
that? That is ultimately what this legislation is about.
I thank Senator Whitehouse for joining with me to craft this
legislation. I also thank Senator Leahy, who I understand has recently
agreed to become an original cosponsor of this bill.
I encourage other Members to take a look at it. It is a good way for
us to come together as Republicans and Democrats to focus on an issue
that is affecting every single State represented in this body.
Sometimes people are in denial about this subject, but the reality is
it affects all of us as Americans.
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By Mr. KAINE:
S.J. Res. 44. A joint resolution to authorize the use of United
States Armed Forces against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant;
to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Mr. KAINE. Mr. President, I am introducing a resolution to provide
President Obama with authority in the multinational mission to defeat
the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, ISIL, which is meant to
reinforce the President's strategy, as well as set key limitations that
I hope will be included in final authorizing language for broader
Congressional consideration.
President Obama laid out a strong case for the need to defeat ISIL,
and asked for Congressional support for this effort. Now is the time
for Congress to act to support the President and reestablish balance
between the Executive and Legislature on whether or not to engage in
significant military action.
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I was heartened when Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Menendez
answered the President's call by saying the committee would soon craft
authorizing language for the U.S. military mission. It is my hope that
the proposal I am introducing today will help move the process forward
on what a specific and narrow authorization for limited military action
against ISIL should look like.
This authorization is specific to ISIL and supports President Obama's
key pillars: a multinational effort to degrade and destroy ISIL, the
use of necessary and appropriate force in a campaign of air strikes
against ISIL in Iraq and Syria and the provision of military equipment
to appropriately vetted forces in Iraq and Syria, including the Iraqi
security forces, Kurdish fighters, and other legitimate, appropriately
vetted, non-terrorist opposition groups in Syria. It also includes four
key limitations: no U.S. ground troops; repeal of the 2002 Iraq
Authorization for Use of Military Force; sunset after 1 year; and
narrow definition of associated forces. I have also included reporting
requirements that require the President to update Congress on progress
of the mission.
I believe this authorization is needed for two reasons. First, we
need to comply with constitutional war powers provisions--Congress
declares war and the President, as Commander-in-Chief, executes the
mission. Second, and perhaps more importantly, Congressional buy-in
represents a core value of our Nation--that the political leadership is
willing to do the hard work to reach consensus in support of our
servicemembers. If Congress is not willing to do the hard work to
debate and vote on an authorization, we should not be asking our
servicemembers to go into harm's way.
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