[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 18 (Tuesday, February 3, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H709-H710]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FIFTY YEARS FROM SELMA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
South Carolina (Mr. Clyburn) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CLYBURN. Mr. Speaker, in one of his great books, Martin Luther
King, Jr., asked the question: Where do we go from here--chaos or
community?
Mr. Speaker, today, 50 years after Selma, that question is still in
need of an answer.
One area in need of aggressive action is persistent poverty, and I
want to thank President Obama for sending us a budget that equalizes
the Tax Code and that, if substantially enacted, will move us closer to
what Dr. King often referred to as the ``beloved community.''
Statistics show that there are nearly 500 counties and thousands of
communities in the United States that are classified by the Census
Bureau as ``persistent-poverty areas.'' They are certified because 20
percent of their populations have lived below the poverty line for the
last 30 or more years. They are diverse communities, including
Caucasian communities in States like West Virginia, Kentucky, and
Tennessee; Native American communities in States like South Dakota,
Alaska, and Oklahoma; Latino communities in States like Arizona, New
Mexico, and Texas; and African American communities in States like
South Carolina, Alabama, and Mississippi. They are urban communities in
States like New York and heartland communities in States like Missouri.
There are 139 of these counties that are represented in this House by
Democrats, 331 by Republicans, and 18 are split between the two
parties. Combating persistent poverty should matter to all of us
regardless of party, geography, or race.
In early 2009, as we were putting together the Recovery Act, I
proposed language to require at least 10 percent of funds in three
rural development accounts to be directed to efforts in these
persistent-poverty counties. This requirement was enacted into law. In
light of the definition of ``persistent-poverty counties'' as having at
least 20 percent poverty rates over 30 years, this provision became
known as the ``10-20-30 initiative.''
In using the 10-20-30 formula, the Recovery Act funded a total of
4,655 projects in persistent-poverty counties, totaling nearly $1.7
billion. I saw firsthand the positive effects of these projects in my
district. We were able to undertake projects and create jobs that would
have otherwise languished. Among these investments were a $5.8 million
grant and a $2 million loan to
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construct 51 miles of water lines in the rural community of Brittons
Neck in Marion County, South Carolina.
There are many other success stories. In Lowndes County, Mississippi,
$17.5 million was spent to install a water line, elevator tank, and two
wastewater pump stations, providing potable water to rural
Mississippians and creating badly needed construction jobs.
In 2011, I joined with our former Republican colleague,
Representative Jo Ann Emerson of Missouri, to introduce an amendment to
the continuing resolution that would have continued 10-20-30 for rural
development and would have expanded it to 11 additional accounts
throughout the Federal budget to enhance economic development,
education, job training, health, justice, the environment, and much
more.
I want to make one thing clear about the 10-20-30 approach. It does
not add one dime to the deficit. It simply targets resources from funds
already authorized or appropriated.
Over the past 30 years, the national economy has risen and fallen
multiple times. During these economic downturns, we have been rightly
focused on getting our economy, as a whole, on track. We have not given
adequate attention to these communities that are suffering from chronic
distress and Depression-era levels of joblessness.
Mr. Speaker, I would hope that, as we undertake this budget, we will
find ways to work together to move our Nation closer to Dr. King's
dream of a beloved community.
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