[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 24 (Thursday, February 12, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H1019]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRESSIONAL PROGRESSIVE CAUCUS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2015, the gentlewoman from New Jersey (Mrs. Watson Coleman)
is recognized for the remainder of the hour as the designee of the
minority leader.
Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. Mr. Speaker, first of all, let me thank my
colleague, Mr. Pocan, for yielding back and giving me this opportunity
to address the people of the United States of America.
I am new around here, and so I like to generally listen and evaluate
before I speak, and I only try to speak when I might have something to
add of value.
If you drive through my district, which is the 12th Congressional
District of the State of New Jersey and includes a lot of highways,
byways, and bridges, you will see this iconic sign in the capital of
New Jersey that says, ``Trenton Makes, The World Takes.''
It is a sign that points out the legendary industrial past of our
community. However, this industrial revolution, it has passed us by,
and it is a reminder of the employment that the city used to have.
Yes, the city of Trenton was once the place that you found
employment. The Trenton Iron Company produced the wrought iron beams
for the dome on this U.S. Capitol Building where we stand today.
Trenton's John Roebling's Sons Company produced wire rope that was used
to build the Brooklyn Bridge, the now-famous George Washington Bridge,
and the Golden Gate suspension bridge in California.
Trenton was also known for its potterymaking, and even today, Trenton
pottery can be found on display in museums around the world because of
its artistry and superior craftsmanship.
Trenton's booming industry is responsible for the invention of even
the oyster crackers, pork roll, Bayer aspirin, and felt-tipped markers.
Yet, today, Trenton, New Jersey, has a 15 percent unemployment rate.
The city of Trenton's legendary industrial past does little for the
thousands of unemployed workers searching for work today. The city has
had a turn for the worse since the manufacturing sector has left and
took with it great-paying jobs.
We are not alone in that problem and this crisis. The same can be
said for Cleveland, Ohio, or Detroit, Michigan, or Gary, Indiana, or
Philadelphia--to name just a few--towns which were once thriving
centers of commerce where jobs were plentiful and unemployment was
rare. Today, these same towns face an unemployment crisis where
securing work that enables a mother or a father to support a family is
an elusive proposition.
At the same time we experience this employment crisis, we also have a
crisis in our infrastructure. New Jersey has 39,213 total miles of
road. We are small, but we have a lot of concrete, but 35 percent of
the major roads are in deprived condition.
New Jersey has 6,566 bridges, but 36 percent of which are
underfunded, considered structurally deficient, or functionally
obsolete. Over 200 million trips are taken daily across deficient
bridges in the Nation, but in total, one in nine of the Nation's
bridges are rated as structurally deficient.
You may recall, in 2007, the I-35W Mississippi River bridge in
Minneapolis--which had been categorized as structurally deficient--
collapsed, killing 13 and injuring 145 people.
Mr. Speaker, our bridges are crumbling, and we need to invest in
building and fixing them. The Nation's estimated 100,000 miles of
levees can be found in all 50 States and the District of Columbia. The
reliability of these levees is unknown in many cases, and the country
has yet to establish a national levee safety program.
In 2005, New Orleans' levees failed to hold back the floodwaters of
Hurricane Katrina, claiming the lives of more than 1,800 people and
causing at least $125 billion in economic damage. Public safety remains
at risk from these aging structures, and the cost to repair or
rehabilitate these levees is roughly estimated to be $100 billion by
the National Committee on Levee Safety.
Mr. Speaker, these numbers are reflective of what America has become.
I take a look at our communities today, and I see the vestiges of our
past.
I ask that we, as Congress, stop playing games, that we get to work
for real this time, that we recognize that here we will have the
opportunity to not only create safe infrastructure, not only to create
safe bridges, not only to protect communities that are subject to
flooding from levees, but we will also be able to create jobs.
There is no more meaningful social action program than a good job,
and we know that government has a history for creating those jobs in
times of need that help not only to build the strong infrastructure of
this great Nation, but to put families back to work, to make sure that
they are earning a wage for which they can take care of their children,
help provide opportunities for their families, take care of their
elderly, ensure that their children have access to quality education,
and ensure that our future is strong and stable, based upon the fact
that they have had good, predictable, dependable, decent-paying jobs
with decent wages.
I look to our Congress, as many people do in this country, and I know
who we really are, and I know that if we put our foot to the pedal,
that if we decide that we are going to put this country back on a
strong footing--metaphorically, as well as literally--I know that if we
are understanding that if we build out and support that middle-income
layer, those people, the working people of this Nation, that we will
create an economy that will grow and prosper everyone from the very,
very top to the very, very bottom.
That is what we need to do right now in this country, from a
bipartisan perspective, is to introduce, to advocate for, to debate,
discuss, design, and develop an infrastructure bill with bipartisan
support that signals to the working families and all families in this
country that, A, we want to make sure that you are safe as you travel
our highways and cross our bridges, that you are safe when you live
near waterways and need to be protected with levees, and that you are
given the opportunity to give back to your country, to build it, make
it the strong country that it should be and, at the same time, create
the kind of jobs that we need in order to grow our economy for
everybody.
Mr. Speaker, I thank you for this opportunity to speak to the
American people today, and I yield back the balance of my time.
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