[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 150 (Wednesday, December 10, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6537-S6538]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO MILDRED OTERO
Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President. As a boy growing up in rural Cumming, IA,
population 150, I could never have imagined that I would one day serve
in Congress. My father had a sixth-grade education. He spent most of
his life working in coal mines, and all he had to show for it was a
case of black lung disease. My mother was an immigrant, raising six
kids in our little two-bedroom house. My parents did not talk politics.
We did not know politicians. But we knew this: When my family hit rock
bottom in the late years of the Depression, with my father out of work
and with no way to provide for his family, the government gave us a
hand up. Dad got a postcard in the mail, notifying him to report for
employment with the Work Projects Administration, the WPA. Dad always
said that Franklin Roosevelt gave him a job. That opportunity gave my
father dignity, and enough money to put food on the table. Maybe most
important of all, it gave him hope.
As a proud Midwestern progressive, my career has been guided by a
desire to give hope to those who truly need it and deserve it, to
provide a ladder of opportunity to working families seeking affordable
health care and child care, family farmers struggling to stay on the
land, and seniors seeking financial security in their retirement years.
There is no rung on the ladder of opportunity more important than
education, from rich early learning experiences, to college, and
beyond.
As I have endeavored to give people hope and to provide them with a
ladder of opportunity, I have not done it alone. I have been blessed to
have one of the most capable staffs on Capitol Hill. I rise today to
extend a personal thanks to one of the best, my chief
[[Page S6538]]
education counsel, Mildred Otero, who has stood stalwartly alongside me
in my efforts to secure for every American a quality education from
cradle to career.
Mildred came to Washington in 2003 as a Congressional Hispanic Caucus
Institute Public Policy Fellow, working for then-Senator Hillary
Clinton. Over the years, she has also worked at the Children's Defense
Fund, for Senator Jack Reed, and at the Department of State. Before
joining the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, Mildred
served as Senior Policy Officer at the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation, helping to lead its Federal advocacy efforts for U.S.
programs.
When she arrived at the HELP Committee, she brought with her sterling
credentials, unmatched knowledge of education policy, and a reputation
as a tough but fair negotiator. Most importantly, she brought with her
a commitment to children and a determination to confront the savage
inequalities in America's public education system, and these priorities
have been the foundation of all the work that she does. For Mildred,
``leave no child behind'' is not a slogan, it is an imperative, an
obligation that motivates her every day to strive to do what is best
for the children of our country, especially those who are born into
disadvantage.
Mildred's commitment to our children and her determination to extend
a hand up to the disadvantaged have borne fruit in significant
accomplishments since she joined the HELP Committee.
Foremost among these accomplishments was passage last summer of the
Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, a bill to update and
strengthen our Nation's job training programs. Frankly, to call
enactment of this bill an accomplishment is a huge understatement. This
is a bill that had been stalled for years due to one disagreement after
another, each seemingly as intractable as the next. But for Mildred,
what others see as an intractable disagreement is just another
challenge to work through with creativity and diplomacy. Work through
them she did, one after another, until all that was left was final
passage of the bill. It is testament to Mildred's determination,
creativity, and skill that the final bill passed by a vote of 95-3. As
a result of her work on this bill, millions of Americans will be able
to upgrade their skills, obtain better jobs, and ultimately, better
their lives and the economic security of their families.
Mildred and her team also successfully guided into the law
improvements to the Child Care and Development Block Grant, which
allocates more than $5 billion annually and supports more than 1.5
million children across the country. The last reauthorization of this
program took place 18 years ago, at a time when child care was
principally seen as a work-support activity and only incidentally as
something that could have a positive impact on the development of
children. Today, backed up by impressive scientific research, we know
that this program can and should be much more. In addition to providing
vital work support for parents, it should be a rich early-learning
opportunity for children. These are exactly the kinds of improvements
that Mildred shepherded into law. Among other things, the bill requires
States to improve education and training requirements, strengthens
licensing requirements, and stipulates that States must demonstrate how
they are meeting the needs of the most vulnerable children, especially
children with disabilities.
I would be remiss if I did not also mention Mildred's effort in the
K-12 and higher education spaces. Last summer, the HELP Committee,
under Mildred's guidance, passed the Strengthening America's Schools
Act of 2013. This bill, an update to the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act, provided a framework to ensure that all children
graduate from high school with the knowledge and skills needed to
succeed in college and their careers. With Mildred's guidance, the
Strengthening America's Schools Act focused greater attention on early
childhood, encouraged equity through fair distribution of resources,
and maintained a laser focus on helping all children, but especially
disadvantaged children, to succeed in school.
Mildred brought similar energy to her efforts this year on the
reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, efforts that culminated
with the introduction of the Higher Education Affordability Act. For
generations, a college education has been the pathway to the middle
class, but new challenges are threatening that promise for many
families in Iowa and across the country. College affordability,
skyrocketing student debt, transparency--these are high stakes issues
for students and families. The Higher Education Affordability Act seeks
changes to our system of higher education in order to make college more
affordable and accessible, and to restore and strengthen the ladder of
opportunity--a ladder that has been growing weaker and that is in need
of repair.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., said that ``life's most urgent and
persistent question is: what are you doing for others?'' During her
tenure as a senior counselor on the HELP Committee, Mildred has
answered that question in powerful ways, and in particular through her
tireless efforts to bring greater equity to public education at all
levels. We respect her expertise, and we admire the strong moral voice
that she has brought to the Committee. I am deeply grateful to Mildred
for her superb leadership of the Committee's Education Office, and I
wish her the very best in her future endeavors.
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