[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 19 (Wednesday, February 4, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H799-H802]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AMERICA'S NATIONAL CONVERSATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2015, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from Nebraska (Mr.
Fortenberry) for 30 minutes.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Mr. Speaker, first, if my friend, Congressman Green,
wouldn't mind staying a moment, I would like to offer a few comments on
what you said. Unfortunately, I missed the larger body of your talk,
but I would like to add a few things, if you don't mind.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. I welcome the opportunity to stand with you,
my dear friend. Thank you.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. I think it should be acknowledged that we were
elected at the same time.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. We are classmates.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. We are classmates. While we are on different sides
of the political aisle, nonetheless I hope that you consider me as much
of a friend as I consider you.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. I do. And if I may say, I rarely think of
sides of the aisle when you and I are talking. It doesn't become a
significant factor in our lives as we converse and we celebrate our
friendship.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. I would like to note a couple of things you pointed
out in your speech, and then you can move on with your evening. I don't
want you to stay through my other comments, but nonetheless, you said a
few things. You talked about the important progress that has been made
in this country, and I think that is notable. You talked about that
particularly difficult period in the 1960s, and you referred to Black
History Month as America's history month as well. I think those are all
notable comments, and I wanted to tell you that.
In that tough time, something happened to me that I would like to
share with you. I was not born in the State that I represent. Nebraska
is my home. It is where I have decided to raise my family. It has given
me a bounty of opportunity, and I am so privileged to be a
Representative from Nebraska. I was born in the Deep South in a State
where segregation and racial difficulties were particularly difficult.
When I was in third grade, it was time for my birthday, and we had a
birthday party and I invited all of my classmates. This was basically a
White, middle class stable school in a stable neighborhood, but there
was one African American family, either because of the beginning of
desegregation that was taking place at that time or because they lived
in proximity, they were at the school. One of the young boys was named
Philip Brown. He was not only my classmate, but my friend. So I invited
all of the boys, including Philip, to my birthday party. Philip didn't
come. And I saw him on the Monday afterward and I asked him, I said:
Philip, I didn't see you at my birthday party. Why didn't you come?
He said: I did. They wouldn't let me in.
Now this is an 8-year-old child.
I remember then thinking during the party, my father had come over to
me and whispered in my ear, in terms of the time, he said: Jeffrey, is
Philip a Black boy?
And I said: Yes, and I didn't think any more about it.
He had to go outside. My father had to go outside and talk to
Philip's father because the establishment there, unbeknownst to us, but
the establishment didn't let in African American children.
Now, I want to fast-forward, though. I told that story to my little
children. I have five daughters, and they are growing up now, but I
told this to them a few years ago. To your point about progress being
made, they were visibly upset. They said: Daddy, you have to go find
Philip. You have to go find him.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. What a wonderful thought.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Because they were deeply touched, wounded, if you
will, by this story. How could this happen to a little child?
But I think you rightfully acknowledge that those days are behind us.
And through all of the difficulties, toils and struggles that occurred,
thankfully they are behind us. And I think what you said is
appropriate, that Black History Month ought to also be called America's
History Month because these chapters are an important, essential part
of our national fabric and our national culture.
Again, I didn't intend to dialogue with you. But I was sitting there
thinking of this, and I have never shared that story publicly. But I
think the main part of the story is the painful look on my own little
children's faces when they heard that, and I think that means good
progress.
I yield to the gentleman.
[[Page H800]]
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. I appreciate you sharing that vignette with me
because it is very much heartfelt. It is good to have a person to tell
the actual story. If you have read it, you will know of what I speak;
if you haven't, I commend it to you--Dr. King's ``Letter from a
Birmingham Jail.''
Mr. FORTENBERRY. I am very familiar with it.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. It is one of the greatest pieces of literary
history, saving a few holy books, I would say. It is absolutely one of
the best stories of what that time was like. Dr. King talks about how
he had to explain to his children why they couldn't go to a certain
theme park, and how he could see the clouds over their heads as they
were saddened by their inability to go to the theme park because of who
they were.
I ask people to please read that letter because it really parallels
what you are saying tonight here on the floor of the House of
Representatives. You are right--we have come a long way from those
times. These times are difficult in a different way, however. There is
still great work to be done, and you and I can work together to get
some of this additional great work done.
But notwithstanding all that I have said tonight, I conclude with
this: On a bad day, it is still good to live in the USA.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Amen.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. On a bad day when your spouse wants to leave
you, or on a bad day when your puppy wants to bite you, let your puppy
bite you and let your spouse leave you, in the United States of
America, on a bad day, it is still good to live in the USA.
{time} 1800
Mr. FORTENBERRY. I thank you for listening to me and your commentary
tonight. Let's continue our robust friendship and our collegiality as
we work through differences and difficulties, which are inevitable in a
body like this where there are indeed philosophical divides.
There ought to be certain principles that unite us, and I have myself
quoted from Dr. King's letter in the Birmingham jail in other speeches.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. Thank you very much.
Mr. POE of Texas. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. FORTENBERRY. I yield to the gentleman from Texas.
Mr. POE of Texas. I thank you for yielding. I won't take all of your
time.
You and I, our careers have mirrored. We both became lawyers the same
year, and we both started at the courthouse in Houston I think the same
year--'73, '74, right in there.
Of course, you were on one side, the defendant side, and I was on the
prosecution side. We worked before the same judges. You and I both
became judges about the same time and then we left the bench at the
same time and ran for Congress and joined Mr. Fortenberry in the
infamous class of 2004 or '5.
I do want to make this comment that things at the courthouse during
all that time changed a great deal as to who was at the courthouse in
the courtroom representing either the State of Texas or the citizen
accused, as you referred to him.
Were you the first African American to practice in the courtroom? Or
was it Ned Wade or Ron Mock? Which one of you was it?
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. I was not and probably someone prior to Ned
Wade. There were other lawyers who were there long before us.
Mr. POE of Texas. It has changed a great deal. In fact, the judge who
took my place is an African American judge at the courthouse in
Houston. It is hard looking back on history to realize things were not
always that way at the courthouse and the legal profession as they were
in many other professions.
I think your accomplishments as an attorney and as a jurist are
admirable. They have served the State of Texas quite well, but you
fought a lot of battles during that time as well, and I want to thank
you for fighting those battles.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. Well, thank you.
I know that your time is of the essence, and you have been very
generous with me, Mr. Fortenberry.
Will the gentleman allow one additional comment? The Honorable Ted
Poe and I have had a friendship for many, many years. He is imminently
correct. We were on different sides of the table, literally, in the
courtroom, but we never allowed many of the political maneuvers of the
time, the political issues of the time, to prevent us from being
friends, and we brought that friendship to the Congress of the United
States of America.
While there is still great work to be done--even in the courts, there
is still great work to be done. There is great work to be done in the
area of litigation that still is matriculating through the courts, but
we still have to acknowledge that it is a better time to do it now than
to do it then.
We have greater friendships and greater opportunities. On a bad day,
it is still good to live in the USA.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. A great expression. Thank you.
Thank you, Judge Poe.
Mr. Speaker, may I inquire as to how much time is remaining?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman from Nebraska has 20 minutes
remaining.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Before I deviated, I had some other thoughts that I wanted to convey
tonight. Mr. Speaker, let me start out with this thought.
It is a high goal, a principle, that I think across this body we all
share, and it is this: Americans deserve a smart and effective
government. I don't think nor do I think many of us believe that
Washington should be mired in mediocrity, nor should we be divided by
class or income, but I do think we have to acknowledge several
difficult truths.
I think our national conversation should also start here. The reality
is we have a tale of two very different economic recoveries. One
recovery was working pretty well for transnational corporations, many
of which are subsidized indirectly by the state, but the other recovery
is not working quite as well for everyone else.
Too many families are facing downward mobility, stagnant wages, and
an increased cost of living, and many feel abandoned by a Washington
and Wall Street axis. There is an incomplete picture being given, I
think, in the dynamics of the statistics that are now being promulgated
about the current economy.
Yes, we have some good news. Energy prices have significantly fallen,
and that is taking a lot of pressure off a lot of sectors and a lot of
individuals. Some recovery is happening.
But as the head of the Gallup organization points out, the recent
reports that the unemployment rate has dropped to 5.6 percent are
really quite misleading. The Department of Labor doesn't count those
who are trapped in unemployment and who have stopped looking.
In fact, the further you unpack these statistics and you look at what
is causing the causal relationship here is, unfortunately, we are
entering into a period of what I am calling an entrepreneurial winter,
where there are more small businesses dying than there are being born;
in other words, the net outcome of small business creation is in a
negative range for the first time in the history of our country.
The reason this is significant is this is where most jobs come from.
Most people in America are working hard and are looking for their
opportunity in small business. We are not talking about larger
entities, which have an important role in not only economic recovery
and in creating employment for many, but small businesses are where the
majority of jobs are created.
It is also where this dynamic of an interdependent economy, a healthy
economy, is really born, an opportunity economy, where the benign
forces of competition create a certain interdependency between the one
who is making a good with their own two hands or their intellect and
selling it to another who needs that good and, in turn, reinforcing a
social dynamic that is essential to personal well-being and a healthy
economy.
Well, how did we get into this position? I think we have to analyze
this as well.
Mr. Speaker, I received a phone call last spring, and the gentleman
was very, very eager to talk to me, so I called him back. In fact, he
was so eager to talk to me that he was actually sitting at the Nebraska
spring football game where the white team versus the red team, they
play it out.
[[Page H801]]
This is a big deal in Nebraska. Tens of thousands of people actually
go to this game. He was sitting in the stands, and he took his time out
from watching the Nebraska spring game to talk to me which is a high
honor.
He wanted to point out that he was a small business person. He owned
and started a heating and air-conditioning business and, until very
recently, had five employees. Because he could see what was coming--
particularly in health care--he got rid of all of his jobs, and it is
just him now.
If you ask the question--and analytics are showing this--as to why
small businesses are not taking proper risk going out into the
marketplace to create new products and hire people, there are two
simple--this is a bit simplistic--but two answers are what come
forward. The first is health care, and the second is regulation.
You see, in the name of trying to create an orderly and just and fair
economy when Washington overreaches and creates an environment that is
setting up the guardrails for proper economic function, if it is too
heavyhanded and it is penalizing those who don't have an army of
lawyers and accountants and regulatory personnel, that means that the
playing field suddenly shifts toward much bigger entities that, in many
ways, can become impersonal.
The more Washington imposes regulatory burdens that are affecting the
outlook and expectation of small business people, the more they are
hesitating to hire.
The second factor is health care. Now, I think we have to have this
hard conversation. We have a broken health care law. The Affordable
Care Act, as it is called, could be called now the ``Unaffordable Care
Act.''
The law was designed to fix some real cracks in our system that were
very evident. People with preexisting conditions or people being priced
out of the market were having a very difficult time finding health
insurance, and that needs to be addressed, and it needs to be addressed
through Washington policy.
But we need a health care system that is focused on decreasing cost
and improving health care outcomes while also helping vulnerable
persons. What we have gotten now is higher escalating cost, fewer
choices, and a dampening effect on the entrepreneurial small business
economy--again, where most jobs come from. It is not me saying this.
This is what the statistics are bearing out and the research is bearing
out; and it is a hard, hard reality.
Instead of just saying ``no'' to the Affordable Care Act, those of us
who have said ``no'' many times also have a responsibility to find a
responsible replacement in public policy for us--again, one that is
going to increase competition, improve health care outcomes, give
additional choice, while also decreasing cost, and protecting
vulnerable persons.
Mr. Speaker, I think Americans deserve the best possible health care
outcomes in the world. The question is how do we get there?
Well, from my perspective, a new framework, a new architecture of
approach is needed, but it basically expands a policy that we already
have.
A long time ago, I had a very significant headache. I was in my
twenties. I carried my own health care policy, and it was very
expensive, so I had a very high deductible.
Because the headache was particularly severe, I decided: Well, I
assume the family physician will probably just send me on to a
specialist.
So I called the ear, nose, and throat specialist directly and went
and got an appointment. She did an x ray and said: I can't really tell
from the x ray, so I am going to have to do a CAT scan.
I said: Doctor, is that really necessary? You know, I understand the
problem of liability and the need to push the boundaries on testing. Is
it really necessary?
She asked me directly, almost kind of indignant, she said: Why are
you talking to me about this? I said: Because I am paying for this. My
deductible is very, very high. I am actually paying the cost of this
test. I just want to know if this is absolutely necessary. Help me to
make that decision.
She said: Oh, yes, of course, it is necessary. But now that you said
that, I am just looking at your sinuses, so why don't we call places in
town that have the machine and see if they will widen the cross section
and give you a discount? I said: Great.
In 3 minutes, she had her assistant call. We found a place in town
that was about $75 cheaper than normal. The doctor got the test that
she needed. Perhaps most importantly, in the aggregate, the resource
was more properly allocated, all because I had the incentive to ask a
simple question because I was actually paying for the test.
Now, we have a policy that encourages health savings accounts. Some
Americans have them; some Americans don't. They are not appropriate for
every American, particularly Americans who are getting older and at the
ending point of their professional careers, because health savings
accounts coupled with catastrophic insurance are a very, very proper
way, I think, to manage health care when you are younger and in middle
life. We ought to be expanding this.
The second point is: How do we get there? Guaranteed access to
affordable, quality catastrophic health insurance with health savings
accounts.
What you get for that is you are protected. If something really goes
wrong, if you are in the hospital in the emergency, you shouldn't be
put in the position of asking: Who is the chief anesthesiologist around
here? I need to compare prices.
No, in those scenarios, you are protected. But in ordinary health
care decisions, in partnership with your doctor--health care provider--
making prudential decisions about what is really necessary and what is
not, I think this is a mechanism by which we can again significantly
empower families to save money, control their first health care dollar
cost, and be protected at the same time.
The health savings account is a tax-preferred vehicle whereby money
is set aside on a tax-preferred basis and accumulates over time. Now,
most people in their lifetimes don't get significantly sick, so there
is the opportunity here again for young people to begin to set aside
money in this tax-deferred account that actually helps them pay for
when ordinary medical expenses arise. Then again, if something really
goes wrong, you have catastrophic insurance.
Over time, these accounts would become larger and larger and help
supplement retirement, help supplement the Medicare system,
strengthening those important retirement security programs.
{time} 1815
I think this is a key to reworking our current health care model, not
for everyone, but an expansion of this opportunity, I think, is the
right architecture in moving forward for the next generation,
particularly, so that we guarantee access to affordable, quality health
care.
I think we carry forward some important provisions in that no one
with a preexisting condition can be denied. I think the provision
whereby children can stay on their parents' health care longer, now
until age 26--I actually supported that before the new health care
law--is smart policy. We remove caps on insurance, but that doesn't
save any money. It just penalizes those who get really sick. We carry
those provisions forward, again, to protect persons in a vulnerable
circumstance, but we give everyone the access to affordable, quality
health insurance.
There is a lot of detail that would go into how you would make that
happen--whether or not you would spread that cost over the entire
market through regulation or whether you would subsidize it like the
government does in other insurance markets, like flood insurance and
crop insurance. Nonetheless, I think that is the right framework and
architecture for a robust, competitive health insurance marketplace
that is going to improve health outcomes, reduce costs, and protect
vulnerable persons.
What will we get if we do this? What will we get if we are courageous
enough as a body to step forward and say, ``Do you know what? We can do
better. Americans deserve better than the current arrangement''?
We will get peace of mind for ourselves and for our doctors. I think
this would go a long way toward helping resolve the underlying problem
here of stagnation in the economy, particularly among those who want to
be entrepreneurs--small business persons
[[Page H802]]
who are creating jobs, those who have a gift or an idea and who want to
take a little risk but who now aren't empowered to do so because of the
environment that has been created that has dampened their ability to
seize this opportunity. This would be the key to unlocking a healthy
economy, one that is focused on opportunity for all.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________