[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 23 (Wednesday, February 11, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H925-H926]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
END THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY IMPASSE NOW
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Hawaii (Mr. Takai) for 5 minutes.
Mr. TAKAI. Aloha, Mr. Speaker.
On February 27, the Department of Homeland Security will run out of
money--17 more days. If this is not resolved, at best case,
approximately 200,000 workers will stay on the job without pay or be
furloughed or, at worst, not work.
Mr. Speaker, I was elected to Congress and came here promising my
constituents no more government shutdowns, no more Federal furloughs,
and no more sequestration; yet here we are, on the verge of letting
funding for Homeland Security run out and partially shutting down
government. This impasse needs to end, and it needs to end now.
I say the bottom line--to paraphrase DHS Secretary Johnson's point--
is security for our Nation is not free. Our homeland security cannot be
hijacked by political games. We must get past this political stalemate
and work out a clean bill for funding Homeland Security.
If we don't, significant portions of the Department of Homeland
Security could be crippled, and hundreds of thousands of critical
Federal personnel--our constituents--could be affected.
Let's remember that we are talking about some of the most critical
security personnel who are working to keep
[[Page H926]]
Americans safe--shuttering the DHS Domestic Nuclear Detection Office,
which would no longer alert and coordinate with local law enforcement
agencies, and withholding the Securing the Cities grants that pay for
critical nuclear detection capacities in cities across the country;
halting research and development work on countermeasures to devastating
biological threats, on nuclear detection equipment, and on cargo and
passenger screening technologies; crippling FEMA's preparations for
future disasters, furloughing nearly 22 percent of FEMA personnel; and
ending FEMA's training activities with local law enforcement for
weapons of mass destruction events.
Although some DHS employees would continue to work in the event of a
shutdown, they would be forced to work without pay, creating a
significant distraction and dealing a direct blow to morale.
Among those who would be affected and expected to protect Americans
without getting paid would be more than 40,000 Border Patrol agents and
Customs and Border Protection agents; more than 50,000 TSA aviation
security screeners; more than 13,000 Immigration and Customs
Enforcement law enforcement agents and officers; more than 40,000
Active-Duty Coast Guard military members; and more than 4,000 Secret
Service law enforcement agents and officers.
Holding hostage funding of DHS for the purpose of overturning the
President's executive actions on immigration is wrong. President Obama
was forced to take action because of the inaction of this House to
consider a bipartisan, comprehensive immigration reform bill that the
Senate passed last year. Here we are again, yet with more inaction.
We cannot waste any more time here with political bickering, and it
is not fair to try to hijack Homeland Security funding with an anti-
immigration agenda. The security of our Nation and our people hang in
the balance.
Again, no more government shutdowns, no more Federal furloughs, no
more sequestration--let's get to work, come together, answer the call
of our constituents, and just pass a clean bill for DHS funding.
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