[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 58 (Tuesday, April 21, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H2320-H2321]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRANSPORTATION FUNDING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. President, please help us stop this madness. The
same way President Reagan demanded Gorbachev to tear down the Berlin
Wall, you have an opportunity to stop serial malpractice on the part of
Congress refusing to meet its obligation to
[[Page H2321]]
fully fund our transportation responsibility.
Twenty-three short-term extensions of the transportation program in
recent years is as embarrassing as it is destructive. No country became
great building its infrastructure 9 months at a time.
You can bring this charade to a halt. With all the major agenda items
on the table this spring for Congress, there is no way that we are
going to be able to do anything but extend the May 31st transportation
deadline, when the funding authorization expires. That is the most
recent time when Congress kicked the can down the road, what it
approved last fall all the way to this spring. I said at the time, When
spring comes, we will be right back in the same situation. And we are.
This does not mean that we need to write off the entire year and
beyond. It certainly does not mean that we need to throw this issue
into the middle of the next Presidential campaign, which unfortunately
has already started. You should give us a reasonable deadline: July
1st, August 1st, or even September 1st. Under no circumstances should
you let this bleed into the next Federal fiscal year, starting October
1st.
We lost an opportunity at the end of the last Congress to force
responsible action in the lame duck session after the 2014 election. We
were close, but it eluded us. Please don't let that happen again. Make
clear you will not sign any transportation extension beyond the end of
the Federal fiscal year.
Mr. President, you don't have to dictate a solution. You have already
indicated what you want in a robust 6-year bill; you have given an
outline of how you would have Congress fund this significant
reauthorization. Your Secretary of Transportation, Anthony Foxx, has
been traveling the country, advancing a vision for transportation for
decades to come; and he is clear about the need for bold action to
properly fund it.
You and your administration have also made it clear that you are
willing to sign any reasonable bipartisan legislation that meets the
standards that we need. It needs to be sustainable; it needs to be
dedicated; it needs to be big enough to get the job done. Let Congress
put up or shut up. Force it to act by not extending the deadline past
October 1st.
Recently, the historic solution driven by Speaker Boehner and Leader
Pelosi took a problem that long seemed intractable here on Capitol Hill
since 1998 on Medicare payments and the funding under the so-called
``doc fix,'' but yet enacted a permanent solution on a bipartisan
basis, overwhelmingly approved in this House and in the Senate. It
required leadership and for some people to relax somewhat their
partisan talking points--if not their core principles--but we all got
the job done under your leadership.
Let's do the same on transportation funding. Let's lay down an
absolute deadline. Let's refuse to let it slide past October 1, 2015.
Let's all work together, demanding Congress do its job. Several hundred
Members of Congress signed a letter recently circulated by Congressman
Ribble and Congressman Lipinski, my colleague from Illinois, saying
that that is what should happen. Well, let's actually do it.
Together, Congress can be forced to act. We can rebuild and renew
America, putting hundreds of thousands of people to work at family wage
jobs, making our communities more livable, our families safer,
healthier, and more economically secure. It is not going to get easier
if we stall. It is not going to be a smaller problem if it is going to
be done next year or the year beyond. Let's decide this summer we are
going to get the job done. Mr. President, you can help us by demanding
that it be done according to a strict timeline, no later than October
1st.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Members are reminded to address their
remarks to the Chair.
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