[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 15 (Thursday, January 29, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S614-S615]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY FUNDING
Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, I urge my colleagues to bring a clean
fiscal year 2015 bill for the Department of Homeland Security to the
Senate floor as soon as possible.
Earlier this month the world watched in horror as terrorists
massacred journalists and other innocent civilians in and around Paris.
In December we were stunned as computers at a major corporation, Sony
Entertainment, were attacked by North Korea. Over the past year, as
recently as last week, in fact, we witnessed brutal executions at the
hands of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
These events illustrate all too well that the threats faced today by
America and by our allies are real. As a former chairman and now
ranking member of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Committee, I know this to be the case.
Nearly 12 years ago, in the wake of the terrorist attacks of 9/11,
Congress created the Department of Homeland Security--we call it DHS--
to help secure our Nation and to help ensure that our Nation is
protected against these continuing and evolving threats.
Given the origins of the Department, the work the men and women do
there every day to keep us safe, and the grave nature of the threats
our country faces, it is shocking to me and disappointing to me that we
are here today having this debate.
We are now discussing ways we can make the Department and its
employees more effective. We are not discussing how we can enable them
to work better. Senator Coburn and those with whom we served in the
last Congress did that throughout the year.
Senator Johnson and I did that just yesterday with our first hearing
on the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee this year.
Unbelievably, as we focused on cyber security attacks, we are debating
whether to give this key national security agency funding for the
remainder of the fiscal year.
In order for that Department to efficiently and effectively carry out
its critical role, it needs adequate and reliable funding. They need
it. Another short-term budget--or even worse, another shutdown--would
be bad for the Department and bad for employee morale--very bad. More
importantly, though, it would pose a grave threat to our security.
Instead of sending us a straightforward clean funding bill for the
Department, the House has unfortunately sent us a bill that includes a
number of amendments aimed at undermining the President's immigration
policies.
Many of our colleagues on both sides have significant concerns with
these amendments, and the President has indicated that he would veto
the funding bill if the amendments stay attached to it. Thus, these
amendments jeopardize passage of the bill, and they threaten to prolong
the crippling budget uncertainty the Department of Homeland Security
has operated under.
The Department of Homeland Security already has a lot to say grace
over. We do them no favor by playing games with their budget.
I understand why some of our colleagues are upset about the
President's immigration policies, and we should have a debate about
those concerns. But first we should be doing what we have been asked to
do by giving the Department of Homeland Security the resources that it
needs to keep Americans safe in an ever more dangerous world.
Two of our colleagues, Senator Jeanne Shaheen and Barbara Mikulski,
have introduced a clean appropriations bill that mirrors funding
provisions of the House bill. Overall, funding provisions in their
bill, S. 272--which I understand both Democrats and Republicans on the
Appropriations Committee agreed to last year, last December--in fact,
provides for $39.6 billion in discretionary funding for the Department
of Homeland Security. That is an increase of $400 million above last
year's funding, but this measure is more than just a funding bill.
To my colleagues who want to do what we can now to protect our
country from the kinds of attacks we have been seeing around the world
of late, I say: Support a clean DHS funding bill.
To our colleagues who want reforms at the U.S. Secret Service, I say:
Support a clean DHS funding bill. A clean bill would provide the
resources the Secret Service needs to carry out much-needed reforms in
the wake of the most recent White House fence-jumper incident and other
security lapses.
To my colleagues whose States need to recover from this week's
blizzards or to prepare for the next storm, let me just say: Support a
clean DHS funding bill.
We need to ensure that FEMA and our States have access to nearly $2.6
billion in grants to respond to future disasters--both natural and
manmade.
To my colleagues who want stronger border security and immigration
enforcement, a clean DHS funding bill is what we ought to be rallying
around. The clean bill put forward by Senator Shaheen and Mikulski
would take additional measures to secure our border and enforce our
immigration laws, something I know is a priority to me and, I think, to
all of our colleagues. In fact, most of the funding increase in the
Shaheen-Mikulski bill would go to border security and immigration
enforcement.
The bill our colleagues have put forward contains a little more than
$10 billion for Customs and Border Protection, an increase of
approximately $118 million above last year's enacted level. This
funding level would support the largest operational force level for the
Agency in its history--maintaining over 21,000 Border Patrol agents and
supporting the new funding level for nearly 24,000 officers.
The Shaheen-Mikulski bill would also enable Customs and Border
Protection to fly more patrols along our maritime and land borders and
to continue purchasing new force-multiplying gear and equipment. It
would also increase funding for critical surveillance technologies
along our border, especially along areas such as the Rio Grande Valley,
by some $20 million.
As our colleagues will recall, last year our Nation saw tens of
thousands of unaccompanied minors and families from Central America
come to our southern border. This clean full-year funding bill would
provide Immigration and Customs Enforcement $689 million more than last
year's funding to help address the additional needs associated with
that surge. Specifically, it includes $3.4 billion for immigration
detention and funds 34,000 adult detention beds.
The Shaheen-Mikulski bill would also fully fund the employment
eligibility verification system, known as E-Verify, which helps
businesses to ensure they are hiring legal employees.
Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson recently said--and I fully
agree with him--that to deny his Department full-year funding would
actually hurt our border security.
We cannot continue to default to short-term continuing resolutions
and force the Department to cut corners and scramble to fund its
highest priorities. As we have learned over these years, stopgap crisis
budgeting is an egregious waste of money. Let me say that again--an
egregious waste of money. By shutting down the Department or keeping it
on a continuing resolution, we will waste tens of millions of taxpayer
dollars, including the cost of renegotiating contracts, lost employee
and contractor productivity, and lost training. For example, it would
delay the award of a $600 million contract to build a national security
cutter that the Coast Guard needs.
But there is more than just a financial impact. The dramatic
consequences of failing to provide full-year funding for the Department
will be felt throughout our country. While most of the Department's
workforce will continue to perform essential functions in the event of
a shutdown, the bulk of its management and administrative support
activities would cease and frontline personnel would not receive the
support they need. It would be like trying to fight a war without
planners,
[[Page S615]]
without logistics, and without supplies. It would be like us here in
the Senate working without our staffs. We might be able to find a way
to get our work done, but we wouldn't be as effective. And those at DHS
who are required to come to work if a shutdown were to occur would not
be paid until Congress restores funding. Essentially, a large part of
our Federal homeland security efforts would be operating under an IOU.
A stopgap budget or a shutdown would also further degrade employee
morale at the Department of Homeland Security. As many of us know, the
Department continues to rank dead last--dead last--among all other
large Federal agencies when it comes to workforce morale.
While Secretary Johnson, Deputy Secretary Mayorkas, and their team
are taking important steps to make the agency a better place to work--
and we are helping them--the Department still lacks a strong sense of
cohesion and a sense of team. But Congress too has a responsibility.
Providing this large and complex agency the funding it needs would be a
terrific next step.
If my colleagues and I expect the Department of Homeland Security and
other Federal agencies to show improved outcomes, we cannot continue to
play games with their budgets and expect them to not feel the negative
consequences. No business owner or manager could be expected to be
effective and efficient under these conditions. The leadership of the
Department of Homeland Security is no exception.
A clean Homeland Security funding bill for the rest of the fiscal
year is the fiscally responsible step to take. If we deny them that
funding, we will not be punishing the President. In a sense, we will be
punishing a number of the employees. But most of all we will be
punishing taxpayers because we are wasting their money and we are
diminishing and reducing the kind of security they need in this country
today.
Let me just say, don't take my word for this. Our good friend Tom
Ridge, the first Secretary of Homeland Security and a former Republican
Governor, with whom I served, said:
I would be very, very disappointed if I were Secretary, and
the Democrats did it to me . . . It's pretty difficult to
plan long term when you don't know exactly how much you're
going to have available and what strings might be attached to
it. Give them the funding they need.
And I would say to our Republican colleagues, give them the funding
they need.
For these reasons, I urge our colleagues in the Senate to join me in
doing the right thing in supporting passage of a clean full-year
appropriations bill for the Department of Homeland Security and
rejecting the amendments approved by the House. It would be
irresponsible for us to continue kicking the can down the road when it
comes to national security, and we certainly cannot afford to let this
vital agency's funding run out.
I ask my colleagues to think about what we are trying to accomplish
by failing to provide the Department of Homeland Security with the
funds they need to operate. The American voters sent Congress a clear
message on election day. This is what they said: They want us to work
together. They want us to get things done. And they especially want us
to enhance our economic recovery. Given recent events around the world,
they also want us to do all we can to keep them and their families
safe. We need to show Americans through our actions here in Washington
that we have heard them.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Perdue). The Senator from Maryland.
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, let me first thank Senator Carper for his
comments on the need for us to pass a homeland security appropriations
bill.
I think our constituents would be surprised to learn that we have not
passed an appropriations bill that funds for this fiscal year the
Department of Homeland Security, a critically important agency that
keeps us safe.
We know the challenges around the world. We know the challenges to
our homeland. Yet we haven't passed a full-year Homeland Security bill.
Instead, we have legislation that has come over from the House that is
more interested in picking political fights on immigration policy--when
we should be together on immigration policy--and holding up the funding
for Homeland Security.
I thank Senator Carper, who is the ranking Democrat on that
committee, for bringing to our attention that the best thing for us to
do is to take up the Shaheen-Mikulski bill, which is a clean
reauthorization of the appropriations for this year, so we can get
through this year, and then we can debate immigration on an immigration
bill, debate next year's budget on a budget bill, and not have the
politics of the House interfere with the funding for Homeland Security.
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