[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 122 (Thursday, July 30, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6149-S6161]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HIRE MORE HEROES ACT OF 2015
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will
resume consideration of H.R. 22, which the clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
A bill (H.R. 22) to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986
to exempt employees with health coverage under TRICARE or the
Veterans Administration from being taken into account for
purposes of determining the employers to which the employer
mandate applies under the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the time until 12
p.m. will be equally divided in the usual form.
The Senator from Utah.
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, soon we will vote on final passage of a
bill that will provide a long-term solution to the shortfalls of the
highway trust fund. If enacted, this bill will provide the longest
paid-for authorization of highway and transportation spending in nearly
a decade.
This bill is the result of an incredible amount of work by a number
of Senators, including our distinguished majority leader as well as the
chairman and ranking member of the Environment and Public Works
Committee. I commend them for setting aside partisan differences to
find a solution despite the cynicism and naysaying from some of our
colleagues and others here in Washington.
I am also pleased to have been able to play a part in these efforts,
working with Leader McConnell to identify suitable offsets to pay for
the reauthorization of the highway and transit programs. While the
Finance Committee, which I chair, has jurisdiction over the funding
stream for the highway trust fund, we had to cull together offsets from
other areas and other committees in order to pay for this multiyear
highway bill. This required the cooperation of multiple chairmen and
committees, all working together toward a common goal.
One of the most remarkable things about this bill is that it provides
3 full years of highway funding without raising taxes or adding to the
deficit. We have heard time and again that a long-term highway bill
would only be possible if we included a big tax increase. With the
upcoming final vote on this
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bill, the Senate is about to prove otherwise, and it will do so with
bipartisan support. This is how the Senate should operate, particularly
when we are dealing with something as big and important as highway
funding.
As I said last week, this bill represents a victory for good
government and is yet another bipartisan win for the Senate under the
current leadership. Like many of my colleagues, my hope is that
eventually the House of Representatives will follow suit and work
toward passage of a similar long-term highway bill so that we can come
together, reconcile differences, and finish the job. While I know there
are some divisions on the other side of the Capitol about the Senate's
overall strategy and maybe even some of the particulars in our bill, I
think we have shown that a long-term bill is a realistic goal and a
preferable option to yet another short-term highway patch.
Once again, I am well aware of the desire of some in Congress and in
the administration to marry long-term highway funding to some kind of
tax reform. As the chairman of the Senate's tax-writing committee and
its most outspoken supporter of tax reform, I think that idea has a lot
of merit. I commend those who are thinking in those terms. Fortunately,
this bill will provide just that opportunity while giving added
certainty to our States as they plan their highway projects and to our
builders and job creators looking to expand and hire more workers.
Put simply, the Senate's highway approach is a win for everyone. The
House should consider our approach, and I hope they will.
Long story short, today is a good day. Today the Senate will
accomplish something few thought possible. While the process has been a
bit more difficult and divisive than many of us would have liked, I
personally am very pleased to see the Senate function properly and
govern responsibly.
There are a lot of things we can fight over here in Congress, but I
think we can--or at least should--all agree on the need to come
together to pay for our Nation's infrastructure. I am pleased to join
with my colleagues--Senators from both parties--in taking a major step
toward that goal today.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
Ms. MIKULSKI. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I be
allowed to speak as in morning business for no more than 10 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Ms. MIKULSKI. I thank the Presiding Officer.
50th Anniversary of Medicare
Mr. President, I rise today to commemorate the 50th anniversary of
Medicare. Fifty years ago, on July 30, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson
signed into law the legislation to create Medicare. I say thank God for
Medicare. It was a great idea 50 years ago, 50 months ago, 50 weeks
ago, and 50 minutes ago.
I stand on the Senate floor to say that we must keep Medicare as
Medicare and keep the integrity and solvency of Medicare. We cannot
turn Medicare into a voucher; we cannot dilute it, phase it out, or
eliminate it. And until my last vote is cast in the Senate, I will
defend Medicare.
I saw what it meant. In the summer of 1965, I had just graduated from
the University of Maryland School of Social Work. Change was in the
air. The civil rights movement was making its progress toward history
and moving forward. There were beginning doubts about the Vietnam war,
and the Nation was recovering from the assassination of President
Kennedy. President Johnson wanted to lead in a bold way, having had a
landslide victory, and he said he wanted to create a great society. He
knew that a great society meant that we had to have a great heart.
What we knew then, as we know today, is that people feared financial
bankruptcy because of health care costs. They were terrified that a
heart attack that resulted in hospitalization would bankrupt the
family. They delayed the idea of getting cataract surgery, which then
needed to be done in the hospital, not because they were afraid of the
surgery but because they were afraid of the cost of surgery. If you
were a small, independent business person over 65, you often had no
health insurance. It didn't matter whether you were in agriculture or
an urban small business.
Medicare changed all of that. Medicare protected people from two
things. No. 1, it protected them so that they could go to a doctor when
they needed to and have health care when they needed it. No. 2, it
protected them from financial disaster.
Today, 55 million Americans--nearly every senior--have access to
Medicare, including 1 million seniors.
What was so significant about that bill is that it provided universal
access to doctors.
No. 2, it had no barriers because of preexisting conditions.
No. 3, it was portable because it was national. Whether a person was
in Maryland or Utah or whatever State, Medicare was the national
program, and it was viewed as an earned benefit.
America at that time had many things going for it. One was that we
had a sense of self-confidence that we could really solve problems and
meet the compelling needs of our country, and the other was that we had
compassion.
One of my guiding principles, which I believed then as well, and that
guided the Nation at that time was the guiding principle of honor thy
father and mother. We knew that it was not only a great commandment to
live by, but it was a good policy to live by. Therefore, we ensured
that all Americans had access to health care, regardless of their
income.
As I said, in the 1960s--1965 was the year that I actually graduated
from the school of social work. I worked for a program called
``responding to the elderly's abilities and sicknesses otherwise
neglected.'' It was called Operation Reason. Our job--a social worker
and a nurse, one of my oldest friends from school--was to help elderly
people know about the program and sign up for the program and help them
use the program. It was the joy--the sheer joy--people experienced when
they heard about this program, knowing that simply because they were
American citizens, their needs would be taken care of, with a modest
premium.
Part A was hospitalization--a safety net. In those days, care for
significant illnesses had to be done in the hospital. The advances of
medicine and medical technology has allowed us now to do less in the
hospital, such as cataract surgery and other surgeries being done on an
outpatient basis. Those advances weren't there in the 1960s. So people
no longer had to fear the cost of hospitalization.
Then there was this program called Part B. That meant seniors had
access to see a doctor, to see if they had diabetes, to see if they had
high blood pressure, to see why they couldn't see those grandchildren
or do their work on the family farm, the small business or in the
factories that we had in those days. What they needed was maybe better
eyesight--that cataract surgery. Maybe they were feeling old and slow
not because of age but because they had diabetes or other issues. Then,
of course, there was the cost of the dreaded ``c'' word--cancer.
My colleague and I worked in the neighborhoods to make sure we took
care of how people could get to the facilities, know about those
services, and know about those barriers. In those days, Baltimore
seniors were struggling. When they retired, it was often the end of
health insurance. It meant nearly half of the seniors were uninsured.
They went to clinics, standing in very long lines, often shuttled back
and forth from one clinic to another. They got their blood work here,
they looked at their kidneys there, and they looked at their eyes here.
Their concept of primary care was fragmented.
Before Medicare, millions of seniors, as I have said, were just one
heart attack away from bankruptcy or one cancer diagnosis away from
destitution. That was before Medicare.
Many were skeptical about Medicare. Once again, the other party
fought it. They were wondering what it would mean. People were
skeptical. Was this a big government move or was it a big opportunity?
My job was to show them that this program was not about big government,
but about government with a big heart.
After four months of operation, we had enrolled hundreds of people
into this much needed program. And what
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has it meant? Before Medicare, 48 percent of seniors had no health
insurance. Today, only 2 percent are uninsured. Out-of-pocket costs
have decreased. Before Medicare, seniors paid 56 percent of health care
costs out of their pocket. Imagine what that meant if you were
hospitalized in those days. Life expectancy is now 5 years longer.
Death from heart disease has dropped. Our elderly poverty rate has
declined. Seniors have access to more affordable drugs.
This isn't about numbers, and it isn't about statistics. It is about
people. It is about the compelling needs of human beings. It is about
government that says: I am on your side and at your side, and we are
going to use our national resources, our national brain power, our
national know-how to be able to create a program that you can
participate in and that at the end of the day, your life will be better
and our society will be improved.
I am really proud of what the Congress and the President did 50 years
ago. I hope we have that same attitude again. It is not about big
government; it is about government with a big heart.
I will say this: There are those who continue to talk about ending
Medicare. Most recently, a Presidential candidate who I think has
incredible ability--Jeb Bush--said he wanted to phase out Medicare. I
don't get it. How do we phase out Medicare? Do we start first with age?
Do we phase out 90-year-olds, and then the next year we phase out 80-
year-olds? How do we phase it out? Do we phase it out by disease? OK,
this year, no more diabetics; OK, this year, no more cancer patients--
they really cost a lot of money. What does it mean to phase it out, and
what are we phasing it out to?
Medicare cannot be privatized. We must continue it as a guaranteed
benefit. Do we need to reform it, take a look at it, refresh it? The
answer is yes. We have done that, such as when we added Part B. But I
will say this: No matter what, thank God for Medicare.
When we go around this country, no matter how they feel about
government or about Congress, people love Social Security and they love
Medicare. We have to defend it. We have to make sure it is there as we
need it.
So on this 50th anniversary of Medicare, let's come together to make
sure we continue to be focused not on big government but on a sense of
self-confidence and a belief in our country to solve big problems and
that we continue to act like a country with a big heart. We can do it
because we have done it in the past.
I will conclude by saying: Thank God for Medicare, and I thank God
for the ability to be here on the floor of the Senate to defend it.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
Unanimous Consent Request--Executive Calendar
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I have a unanimous consent request, but I
am waiting for Senator Grassley from Iowa, the chairman of the
Judiciary Committee, to propound it, so I will speak first and then do
the request.
I rise today to address the growing crisis of judicial vacancies in
our Federal and district courts.
There are no values more American than the speedy application of
justice and the right to petition the government for a redress of
grievances. Frankly, neither of those can be achieved without justices
and judges on the bench.
It is the job of the Senate to responsibly keep up with the need to
confirm judges. Yet we have a 10-percent vacancy in judicial positions
throughout the United States. We have 28 districts that are considered
``judicial emergencies.'' In my home State of New York, in the Western
District, there is not a single active district judge--zero. The
Western District has one of the busiest caseloads in the country. It
handles more criminal cases than Washington, DC, or Boston or
Cleveland. The delays for civil trials are by far the worst in the
country. Yet they don't have a single active Federal district judge. If
not for the efforts of two judges on senior status who are volunteering
to hear cases in their retirement, the Western District would be at a
full judicial standstill.
How have we gotten to this point? My friends on the other side of the
aisle slowed the pace of confirmations when the Senate was under
Democratic leadership, creating these backlogs, but we still pushed as
many through as we could. Now, under the new Republican Senate, more
than half the year into this new Congress, the Republican leadership
has scheduled votes on only five Federal judges. It is July. They have
scheduled votes on five Federal judges. That is a disgrace.
For context, in the seventh year of President Bush's Presidency, the
Democratic Senate--we were in charge then--approved 25, compared to 5
here. That is a direct one-to-one comparison, apples to apples. At this
point in President Bush's term, Democrats had confirmed five times the
amount of judges that this Republican Congress--this Republican
Senate--has confirmed. That is unacceptable.
Right now, there are 14 noncontroversial judges on the Executive
Calendar, including 3 highly qualified judges for New York. I know
these nominees. They are brilliant legal minds, experienced jurists
and, above all, they are moderate.
Larry Vilardo and Ann Donnelly are two whom I have recommended, and
LaShann DeArcy Hall was recommended by my good friend, the junior
Senator from New York, Kirsten Gillibrand. They should all be
confirmed, but we don't know if they will ever come up for a vote.
I wish to spend a moment telling my colleagues about these qualified
judges.
Mr. Vilardo is a true Buffalonian and will be a credit to the bench
in his hometown. He went to Canisius College, Harvard Law School, and
was a clerk on the Fifth Circuit. He is fundamentally and classically a
Buffalonian--salt of the Earth, honest, and grounded. Buffalo is in his
bones; it is part of who he is. As with so many other people from the
region, the city has made him tough, levelheaded, fair, and decent. As
the first in his family to graduate from college, he adds an important
element of socioeconomic diversity to the court. The people of the
Western District of New York will be incredibly lucky to have him on
the bench.
As perfect as Larry Vilardo is for the bench in Buffalo, so are Ann
Donnelly and LaShann DeArcy Hall perfect for the bench in Brooklyn.
Judge Donnelly has dedicated her life to public service. She spent a
quarter decade as a prosecutor in the prestigious Office of the
District Attorney of New York County under DA Morganthal. I could tick
off more of her accomplishments. The list would be long. She is more
than a brilliant resume. She is at her core a kind, thoughtful, and
compassionate person.
Let me say a word about LaShann DeArcy Hall. I can't take credit for
her nomination to the Eastern District of New York. That goes to
Senator Gillibrand. But I am proud to offer my strong support. She too
has accumulated extensive and impressive legal experience as a partner
in the international law firm of Morrison & Foerster. She is a veteran,
having proudly served in the Air Force. She is a graduate of Howard
University School of Law, and she is member of the board of visitors
there.
Now, all of these nominees meet and even exceed my standard for
judicial nominations in his or her own way. My standards are three:
excellence--legally excellent, no political hacks; moderation--not too
far right but not too far left; and diversity. Whenever we can get
diversity on the bench, we should.
But they are not the only outstanding nominees we have on the floor.
We have judges pending--candidates--for Missouri, California,
represented by Republican Senators as much as by Democrats who are
experiencing the same judicial emergencies and heavy backlog caseloads.
Yet we have no indication they will ever be moved off the calendar.
This is about governing. In January, the distinguished and newly
minted majority leader came before this body and said it was time to
govern. We would do the budget by regular order. Things would return to
normal in the Senate. We wouldn't fill the tree. Yet here we are, 7
months later, and we have approved five judges. That is it--five. Ten
percent of the Federal and district judgeships across the country are
vacant.
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Confirming judges is part of the business of government, and right
now the majority party is failing that responsibility to the American
people. It has real consequences. In the Western District of New York,
Judge Skretny, on senior status, has admitted that he is encouraging
all cases to settle in pretrial mediation to lower caseloads. Criminal
trials are prioritized while civil trials languish. The two retired
judges in western New York are the only ones reading cases at the
moment and spending far less time on each individual case than they
would under normal circumstances. And defendants may be inclined to
settle, admit guilt, and take plea deals rather than wait out a lengthy
trial process. The same story line is playing out throughout the
country. That is not how our justice system is supposed to work. As
many of my colleagues have said so eloquently, the harsh truth of the
matter is that for these petitioners, companies, and communities,
justice is being delayed and thus denied.
In the Senate, we often invoke the principles upon which our country
was founded: principles of individual liberty, justice, and equality in
the eyes of the law. These words have to mean something. There
shouldn't be political games standing in their way. The equal and fair
application of justice is necessarily tarnished by a courtroom without
a judge. It is as simple as that.
In conclusion, Democrats will not stand to watch our judicial system
brought to its knees by the death of a thousand cuts. We have one week
of legislative session before a month-long recess. I submit that we
should not--cannot leave town having confirmed only five judges in what
would be 8 months of this Congress.
Today I rise to request we move to New York's pending judicial
nominations, but I also hope we will move the other Justices before and
after New York's on the calendar. I would like to make this request,
but I know my colleague from Iowa would like to answer it.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to
executive session to consider the following nominations: Calendar Nos.
139, 140, and 141; that the Senate proceed to vote without intervening
action or debate on the nominations in the order listed; that the
motions to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table with
no intervening action or debate; that no further motions be in order to
the nominations; that any related statements be printed in the Record;
that the President be immediately notified of the Senate's action, and
the Senate then resume legislative session.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, reserving the right to object----
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Before I speak about reserving the right to object, I
would like to have the floor immediately after the Senator from New
York gives up the floor, if I could. Is there any objection to that?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. GRASSLEY. OK. I want to reserve the right to object, and I will
object.
I would like to make a few comments on the pace of judicial
nominations. First of all, during President Obama's Presidency thus far
the Senate has confirmed 313 judicial nominees. In contrast to that,
there were 283 judicial nominees that the Senate had confirmed at this
very same point of the previous Presidency. That is 30 more judicial
nominees confirmed at this point than in the year 2007.
Concerning this year's pace, the Senate is simply following the
standard that my colleagues on the other side established in that year,
2007. By this point in 2007, the committee had held six hearings for a
total of 20 judicial nominees. So far we have held 7 hearings for a
total of 21 nominees, 5 executive nominees, and 16 judicial nominees,
including hearings on both the Attorney General and the Deputy Attorney
General.
I would like to remind my colleagues that the Attorney General and
Deputy Attorney General nominees took significantly more time to
process on both staff and Members. So we are doing a little bit better
than the pace that was set on the other side during the last 2 years of
the previous Presidency. And I am trying to compare to the last 2 years
of that Presidency to this Presidency.
I would also note that the nominees from New York are below other
Article III judges on the Executive Calendar. As I understand it, our
side has agreed to vote on the next judge on the calendar when we
return.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, would my colleague yield for a brief
question?
Mr. GRASSLEY. I will yield. Of course, I will yield.
Mr. SCHUMER. I very much appreciate his courtesy.
I understand my colleague has talked about what has been done in the
Judiciary Committee which he chairs. Does my colleague deny the fact
that confirmed on the floor of the Senate in the year 2007, which he
referred to, there were 25 at this time and only 5 have been confirmed
by this Senate? Does my colleague deny that fact?
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I would agree to that, and I will speak
to that point right now. It is very appropriate that my colleague would
know exactly what I was going to say to answer his question.
Mr. SCHUMER. Great minds think alike.
Mr. GRASSLEY. With respect to the judges on the Executive Calendar,
everybody knows at the end of last year the Senate rammed through 11
judges, which under regular order--and regular order is very important
in the U.S. Senate--should have been considered at the beginning of
this Congress. That is what happened in 2006 when 13 nominations were
returned to the President instead of being returned to the U.S. Senate
in the next Congress. The end of 2006 is comparable to what was done at
the end of 2014. Had we not confirmed those 11 judicial nominees during
the lame duck last year, we would be roughly at the same pace for
judicial confirmations this year compared to 2007. So put that in your
pipe and smoke it, Senator Schumer.
We are moving at a reasonable pace. Therefore, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Mr. SCHUMER. Without smoking, Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Governing in the Senate
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, the Senator from New York gave very good
words that I want to follow up on. He said that we were promised when
Republicans took over we said things would be different in governing.
They are different. I would just like to show the Senator from New York
that promises made are promises kept. I think the best example of
promises made was a January 2014 speech by the leadership of the
Republicans where a speech was given that if there were Republican
control of the United States Senate, then we would govern.
I think the best way to show that Republicans are governing is this:
there were 370 House bills that died in the U.S. Senate under the
leadership of the Democrat majority. We had 15 amendments with rollcall
votes. So far this year, we have had over 160 rollcall votes on
amendments.
We have passed over 40 bipartisan bills, reported over 160 bills out
of committee, had 29 bills signed into law, and balanced the first
budget for over a decade. Under Republican leadership, we had a budget
agreement for the first time in 6 years, whereas under the Democratic
majority we had one budget in 6 years. The law requires that we adopt a
budget every year, and we have done that.
We made a promise that the Senate was going to function as a
deliberative body, unlike the way it was run under the Democratic
majority for the 6 years of this Presidency. From that standpoint, we
have done that with the statistics that I just gave you.
The Senator from New York says we were promised a Senate that would
govern, but the only metric he is using is whether judges are moving at
the same pace as they did when they took over the U.S. Senate in 2007.
And that is an inadequate way to measure how well the Senate is
governing. We must look at all the work the Senate is doing. And the
Senate is doing the good work we promised we'd do before the election.
We have delivered.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nevada.
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Mr. HELLER. Mr. President, thank you.
We have had some interesting back-and-forth here this morning. We had
a great message from our good Senator from Maryland, and we had the
colloquy we just saw here on judicial nominees. I want to move in a
little different direction to something I think is important.
As the previous speaker talked about, the current majority is getting
things done. I want to talk about for the first time in 10 years what
is going to happen on this floor today, and that is for the first time
in 10 years we are going to pass a multiyear transportation bill
without raising taxes.
Keep in mind, we have done short-term transportation efforts 33 times
before we finally got to the next multi-year bill that will be passed
on this floor today. I believe one of the core constitutional functions
of the Federal government is to create the infrastructure necessary to
conduct commerce, trade, and allow general transportation. I sit on
three of the four Senate committees tasked with developing this highway
bill that we will vote on today--the Finance Committee, the Commerce,
Science, and Transportation Committee, and the Banking, Housing, and
Urban Affairs Committee. Because of this, infrastructure development is
one of my top priorities while here in this Congress.
It has been a pleasure to work with Chairman Inhofe, to work with
Chairmen Thune, Shelby, and Hatch over the past several months on this
highway bill. I am very appreciative of our leadership team,
particularly that of Leader McConnell and Senator Cornyn for working to
advance it before the authorities expire and the Congress adjourns for
the August recess.
Moving forward with a highway bill that invests in our Nation's
crumbling infrastructure, reduces congestion, and increases safety
without adding to the national debt will create short-term jobs and
long-term economic growth.
Western States like Nevada, which have experienced an unprecedented
amount of growth over the past couple of decades, have the most to gain
from this highway bill. Nevada is one of the fastest growing States in
our Nation, adding nearly 850,000 people to that State in the last 15
years. In fact, the Silver State was the fastest growing State in the
Nation in the decade of the 2000s, experiencing a 35-percent population
increase. This growth, while exciting for the State, has posed
additional strains on our transportation infrastructure system. From
1990 to 2013, vehicle travel on Nevada's highways has increased 141
percent.
It is also important to note that the Silver State's economy relies
heavily on tourism. Travel spending adds nearly $60 billion to Nevada's
economy annually, accounting for about 13 percent of the State's GDP.
Safe and reliable roads and bridges in our State and throughout the
country are crucial to growing our economy.
Our rapidly expanding State has a long list of infrastructure
priorities to address. A multiyear highway bill will provide the
resources and tools that will benefit high priority projects such as
the Boulder City Bypass, the Carson City Freeway, and the I-15 widening
in Las Vegas--which, by the way, is Nevada's busiest freeway. Under
Nevada's most conservative budgetary plans, our Department of
Transportation has identified over $9 billion of capital improvement
projects over the next 20 years. Short-term patches will not put a dent
in that work plan. Additionally, it is important to cut bureaucratic
red tape that will speed up permitting and ensure that our Nation gets
more roads, more bridges, more rail projects and other infrastructure
developments for every dollar that we invest.
Over the past couple of months, I have worked diligently on my
committees and with the Environment and Public Works Committee in a
bipartisan manner to include a variety of Nevada and national safety
priorities in the highway bill, which are included in the Senate bill
that we will vote on today.
First and foremost of those priorities is the expansion of Interstate
11 to northern Nevada. I have been working for years with my colleagues
in both the Nevada and Arizona delegations on Capitol Hill to move I-11
forward. In the 112th Congress, we were successful in including
language in the last highway bill, MAP-21, to officially designate an
interstate route connecting Phoenix and Las Vegas. These are the two
largest cities that are not connected by an interstate highway system.
Let me say that again, Mr. President. Phoenix and Las Vegas are the
two largest cities in America that are not connected with an interstate
highway system.
I have been working diligently to extend the proposed highway to I-80
in northern Nevada. Earlier this year, I introduced the bipartisan,
bicameral Intermountain West Corridor Development Act to extend the
route north and worked with Chairman Inhofe to include it in the DRIVE
Act. This full north-to-south, Canada-to-Mexico interstate system is a
project of national significance, critical for our Nation's mobility,
economy, and national defense. This extension will open even more
markets for tourism and trade, create jobs and improve the economy for
the entire Western United States.
I have also worked to include policies in the bill that will greatly
benefit the Lake Tahoe region's transportation efforts. The Tahoe Basin
is a unique area, shared by the States of Nevada and California but
also heavily controlled by the Federal Government. In fact, the Feds
are the largest land managers of the Lake Tahoe Basin, controlling 77
percent of the land. Under current law, Tahoe is not considered as one
area, from a transportation perspective, because the size of Lake Tahoe
separates the individual communities that surround the lake.
The growing tourism industry greatly benefits the local economy but
also poses additional strains on the region's transportation system.
The language included in both the EPW and banking titles ensures the
population of California and Nevada communities surrounding the lake is
considered a singular entity. This will greatly benefit local leaders
as they seek additional resources to implement the Basin's innovative
21st century highway and transit plans.
As a member of the commerce committee, I also worked with Chairman
Thune on the Comprehensive Transportation and Consumer Protection Act,
which was approved earlier this month in our committee and is also part
of this bill. It includes important reforms that will enhance the
safety of our roads and our railways.
I am pleased legislation I introduced with my friend from
Massachusetts Senator Markey, Safety Through Informed Consumers Act,
commonly referred to as the STICRS Act, was included in the commerce
bill. This policy promotes the purchase of safer cars by requiring the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to integrate crash
avoidance technology information, such as active braking and lane
tracking technology, onto the safety ratings listed on your car's
stickers.
Consumers have a right to the most accurate and up-to-date
information possible when making decisions on what cars to purchase. A
separate five-star rating for crash avoidance technologies or an
adjustment to the current rating system that would preclude a new car
from getting five stars unless it has at least one of these new crash
avoidance technologies will make it clear to every buyer whether the
vehicle they are considering has the latest and the best in safety
technology.
Senator Schatz and I have also teamed up on a safe streets amendment,
aimed at improving pedestrian safety. Threats to pedestrian safety are
increasingly becoming a problem in my State. The number of pedestrian
fatalities has nearly doubled in the Silver State in just the last 3
years. In total, pedestrian fatalities are nearly one-quarter of our
overall traffic fatalities. Nevada is the sixth most dangerous for
pedestrians over the age of 65 years. I know our State regional
transportation organizations are working diligently to address the
pedestrian safety concerns. I hope our initiative will spur innovative
transportation planning throughout the Nation that aims to improve bike
and pedestrian safety.
Finally, I had a provision included in the bill that restores some
sanity to the Department of Transportation's hours of service
regulation. Under the existing rule, drivers of commercial motor
vehicles are required to take a 30-minute break after most 8 hours of
consecutive work. Industries such as
[[Page S6154]]
the ready mixed concrete industry, whose products are perishable, find
it difficult to implement the HOS regulation given the unique
conditions of their work.
Concrete is needed on a just-in-time basis. Once a delivery is
started, it must be completed or the concrete may harden in the truck,
causing thousands of dollars of damage in that vehicle. Concrete
delivery often takes more than 2\1/2\ hours to complete. Mixer drivers
are also unique in the commercial truckdriving industry, in that they
typically spend only 40 percent of their time on duty actually driving.
The other 60 percent is spent at the plant waiting to be dispatched, at
the job site waiting on the contractor to receive the concrete or
unloading the concrete itself. This one-size-fits-all regulation does
not make sense. I am pleased my provision making this existing
administrative exemption for perishable goods permanent has been
included in the commerce bill.
I would be remiss if I did not mention some important rail
infrastructure policies also included in the commerce bill. Freight
rail plays a major role in Nevada's economy. The Silver State has 1,192
miles of rail track, and nearly 43 million tons of freight moves
through the State each year via rail, supporting over 700 high-paying
jobs. I was proud to team up with my friends Senator Blunt and Senator
Booker on two stand-alone proposals that are in the rail title.
First, the Track, Railroad, and Infrastructure Network Act, which
streamlines permitting for the development of new railroad structure,
is critical to ensure scant infrastructure dollars are spent
efficiently and spent wisely. Additionally, the Railroad Infrastructure
Financing Improvement Act implements a variety of good government
reforms to the revolving loan program utilized to spur development of
railroad infrastructure. The program is notoriously underutilized. I
believe it is important that we ensure this valuable tool is reworked
so it can be used for new freight and passenger rail development.
I strongly supported the rail reform title when it was approved by
the commerce committee and believe it is important that we include rail
as part of the surface transportation bill. Improving rail safety,
expanding both passenger and freight rail infrastructure are critical
components of Nevada's and our Nation's long-term economic development
plans. A long-term surface and transportation bill is extremely
important to the State of Nevada and also to our Nation.
Transportation efficiency and reliability is critical for our
Nation's economic competitiveness, and the policies in the bill will
help address the need to maintain, repair, and expand the national
transportation system, but none of these important policies will get
done if Congress kicks the can down the road.
Passing a strong multiyear bill in the Senate sends an important
message to our colleagues in the House. I urge my colleagues to support
the DRIVE Act. Again, I thank Leader McConnell and Chairmen Inhofe,
Senators Thune, Shelby, and Hatch for working with me on my priorities.
They know how important it is that we enact policies that increase
infrastructure efficiency, improve safety, and create jobs throughout
the Nation. By passing this bill, we show the American people the
Senate is back to work supporting policies to create jobs and spur
economic development across our Nation.
I yield the floor.
Private Sector Engineering and Design Services
Mr. BOOZMAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to engage in a
colloquy with the distinguished chairman of the Environment and Public
Works Committee on an amendment that I have filed to H.R. 22, the DRIVE
Act.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BOOZMAN. Mr. President, as the chairman of the committee is well
aware, private sector engineering and design services can play an
important role in the development and maintenance of our Nation's
transportation infrastructure. By supplementing the capabilities of
engineers at State DOTs, private sector engineering and design services
enable State and local governments to deliver projects more efficiently
and with long-term cost savings.
In order to make better use of these private sector resources, I have
introduced an amendment which will provide incentives to States that
make use of innovative engineering and design approaches by bringing in
the expertise of private sector companies. This amendment is intended
to streamline and improve the efficient delivery of highway and bridge
projects and would not increase Federal spending. In the last Congress,
working with Senators Boxer and Vitter, the committee included this
identical provision in the highway authorization bill that was
unanimously approved by the Environment and Public Works Committee.
The language has not been included in the bill we are debating today,
and while I recognize that many hard decisions have had to be made in
order to achieve a bipartisan consensus on this bill, I ask for
Chairman Inhofe's commitment to work with us as the DRIVE Act
progresses to conference.
Mr. INHOFE. I thank the Senator for raising this issue and for his
commitment to helping to pass a long-term surface transportation bill.
The Senator is correct about the time constraints the Senate is under,
as we must pass this bill before July 31. Unfortunately, that means we
have been unable to include many worthy provisions in the DRIVE Act,
such as his amendment, which I support as a means of improving the
efficient delivery of Federal taxpayer dollars.
I share the Senator's enthusiasm for fostering the use of private
sector expertise in transportation construction. While this expertise
is useful at all times, it is particularly useful in the aftermath of
natural disasters, when a State must act quickly to rebuild its
infrastructure. This is something we are very familiar with in my home
State of Oklahoma.
I thank the Senator from Arkansas for his leadership on this issue
and he has my commitment that I will work with the Senator on this
matter during our bipartisan conference negotiations with the House.
Mr. BOOZMAN. I thank the distinguished chairman for taking a moment
to discuss this issue and I look forward to working with him on this
bill.
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, today the Senate will approve a
comprehensive, 6-year authorization for our Nation's transportation
systems. It will give our States and local communities the ability to
plan for investments in the critical infrastructure that supports our
cities and towns, enables inter- and intrastate commerce, and creates
jobs for American workers.
This bill is far from perfect; I have strong concerns about the lack
of safety measures in this bill. The battle on whether to allow mammoth
tractor trailer trucks--the equivalent of wheeled eight-story
buildings--to drive alongside all the other motorists on some of our
roads will come up again in the fall and so I will continue to fight to
put safety first. I am concerned that this bill will undermine the
goals of the National Environmental Policy Act. And I am concerned
that, while we have before us a needed 6-year authorization, this
transportation bill is funded only through 2018. I hope that as the
Senate and the House conference a long-term transportation
authorization bill, these concerns will be adequately addressed.
It is regrettable that some in Congress, for several years now, have
done their utmost to undermine what used to be strong bipartisan
support for responsible and timely reauthorizations and funding of the
highway trust fund and our transportation infrastructure. The result
has been a continuing era of stop-gap, short-term fixes, which hobble
State and local transportation planning and which impose unending
uncertainty on their vital work. How short-sighted, and how
irresponsible. We must get back to that kind of consensus, and that
kind of forward-thinking action.
A series of short-term patches do not provide States like Vermont--
where the construction season is short, and the infrastructure needs
are many--with the certainty they need to make needed repairs to the
bridges, roads and byways that keep business moving and connect our
rural towns and villages. This legislation, however, is the result of
compromise on all sides. This bill protects the MAP-21 funding formula,
which will benefit Vermont and maintain a level stream of Federal
funding
[[Page S6155]]
for Vermont. I am also pleased the bill includes a 20 percent revenue
provision dedicated to highway and transit growth, despite previous
attempts to decrease it to 6 percent. I am also gratified that, in
working with the relevant committee chairs, we were able in this final
bill to remove unnecessary and harmful exemptions to the Freedom of
Information Act, which remains the public's first line of defense in
the right to know what their government is doing. Nowhere is the free
flow of information more important than when the safety and wellbeing
of every Vermonter--of every American--is at stake.
The House of Representatives now has an opportunity. They can kick
the can down the road, beyond this year, or they can get to work, to
devise a meaningful, reasonable long-term transportation authorization
bill. Short-term authorizations will not adequately address our
Nation's crumbling infrastructure. After investing billions of dollars
in infrastructure development overseas, it is well past time to invest
right here at home, in our own people and their communities, and in our
own country. We need this certainty, and we need it now.
Ms. MIKULSKI. Mr. President, I support the bipartisan DRIVE Act
because we can't make the perfect the enemy of the good. This bill will
provide 3 years of funding and stability to States that want to plan
major multiyear construction projects. This means badly needed jobs in
construction for labor unions, contractors, engineers, and
manufacturers of transportation materials. This is good news.
According to the American Society of Civil Engineers, Maryland's
infrastructure has a C- rating. Our roads and transit have a C- rating
and our bridges a B- rating. Nearly a quarter of Maryland's major
roadways are in poor condition and 317 of our 5,291 bridges are
structurally deficient.
In addition, Marylanders face some of the worst traffic congestion in
the Nation. I commute every day from Baltimore to Washington and know
how bad it has become. The Washington region is the No. 1 most
congested area in the Nation and the Baltimore region is the fifth.
These conditions cost Maryland's commuters between $1,200 and $1,500
per year.
We need at least $4 billion to replace the B&P and Howard Street
tunnels in Baltimore. If we want to double stack these major rail
arteries for the Port of Baltimore, we need $8 billion.
In 2013, the State of Maryland was forced to pass a gas tax. Sadly,
today our statewide transportation needs still remain unmet. If we add
up every Maryland county's No. 1 transportation priority, it equals $20
billion. Yet, we still have competing job corridor needs in the urban
and rural parts of the State.
That is why I was hoping for a more substantial bill--a true shot in
the arm to tackle our aging infrastructure and ease congestion. But I
will vote for the DRIVE Act because doing nothing is unacceptable and
short-term extensions do not provide the planning and funding certainty
States need to put millions of workers on the job. These are jobs in
construction, engineering, and manufacturing right here in the United
States.
Bright spots in this bill for Maryland include the new formula-based
freight program. These additional dollars will help the class I
railroads in Maryland, CSX and Norfolk Southern, and our short line
railroads. It also is good news for the operations at the Port of
Baltimore.
I also appreciate the strengthened transit safety oversight role of
the U.S. Department of Transportation for the Nation's metro systems.
While I would have liked the Metro Senators' stronger amendment to be
debated and adopted, the underlying bill is a good step in the right
direction for safety. Safety is our collective No. 1 priority for the
riders and workers of the Washington Metro system.
The bill gives the Secretary of Transportation the authority to
establish minimum safety standards for the safe operations of metro
systems. This builds upon what I was able to accomplish in MAP-21
working with Senators Dodd, Shelby, and Menendez. We gave the
department new authority to establish and enforce Federal safety
standards focusing on railcars.
The bill also requires the Secretary to review the existing safety
standards and protocols of metro systems. It requires a report to
Congress with the findings, list of recommendations, needed legislative
changes, and the action the Secretary will take to establish Federal
safety standards.
Before I conclude, I would like to voice my disappointment that the
DRIVE Act is not stronger on safety. I am a cosponsor of the Feinstein-
Wicker amendment on double 33 truck trailers. Because of the
parliamentary procedures to prevent consideration of amendments,
including germane amendments, this amendment was not considered.
I am opposed to extending the length of double truck trailers. The
State of Maryland prohibits operation of these trucks. I have heard
from Maryland families who have lost loved ones in truck crashes. The
Slattery family lost Mrs. Slattery and the crash left their son,
Matthew, with severe brain damage. Mr. Slattery and Matthew came to the
Appropriations Committee markup of the fiscal year 2016 Transportation,
Housing and Urban Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill.
Sadly, this same amendment failed by a tie vote of 15 to 15.
I also heard from Don Bowman, owner of D.M. Bowman, Incorporated, a
family-owned trucking company in Williamsport, MD, and our State's fire
service community. They all think double 33 truck trailers are a
dangerous idea.
I commend Senator Boxer for her hard work on this bill. Passing this
bill is the right thing to do for jobs and our economy.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Flake). The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, I do appreciate the comments from the
Senator from Nevada. It is a reminder that a lot of people think almost
all of this act is from the Environment and Public Works Committee.
About 75 percent is, but we do have the commerce committee, we have the
banking committee, and the other provisions. A lot of people have been
working on this, not just our committee.
I am glad we got a good vote yesterday. I think it is important that
we have a strong vote because we certainly want to encourage the
House--and I think the House will be taking up our bill. In fact, I
think a lot of the staff people are working on that right now over on
the other side. Anyway, the importance of this is significant. If we do
not pass the DRIVE Act out of this Chamber, then what we are doing is
reinforcing current law.
What is current law? Current law is short-term extensions. That means
it is the worst possible outcome. It means no big projects, for one
thing. We spent yesterday--most of the day yesterday, our comments were
on the big projects, the big bridges, and those things that need to be
done.
But the big projects--normally you are talking about between $700
million and $1.4 billion. They can't be done on short-term extensions.
Logically, everybody knows that. They are not done. Our problem is, the
last bill we passed was in 2005. It ran out in 2009. Since that time,
it has been short-term extensions. So we have not gotten into any of
the projects that have to be done.
The tendency, I guess, to do the hard things, is to wait until
something collapses and a bunch of people die, such as happened in
Minnesota. That could have been done before. That was done in the 2005
act in my State of Oklahoma, however, not until after a young lady was
driving her car under one of our bridges and a bunch of concrete fell
off and killed her, the mother of three children.
Why wait until a disaster occurs? The current law fails to provide
the long-term certainties the States and cities are going to have to
have on their big projects to get them off the ground. Current law
funding has no growth, not even for inflation. The DRIVE Act provides
growth in highway and transit programs to each State. The current law
gives States and local governments no certainty. There have been 33
short-term extensions since the SAFETEA-LU bill was passed--that is 33.
When you pass those extensions, as I said, it takes 30 percent off the
top. Clearly, the conservative position is to have a long-term bill.
You would not have the project delivery. The DRIVE Act eliminates the
duplicative review
[[Page S6156]]
and expands categorical exclusions. We cannot do that with short-term
extensions.
Transparency. That was a lot of work. What we don't want is, as we
are spending money as the years go by and the months go by and the
weeks go by--we have transparency built into this so people can have
faith and know exactly what programs there are.
Innovation. The DRIVE Act prepares our Nation's transportation system
for the future by promoting innovation across all aspects of the
program. The transportation system will be stuck in reverse if we stick
with the current law. The current law, now this is what we have been
doing since 2009.
I think it is also worthwhile for us to keep in mind that there are
some things I wanted in the bill that we could not get in. I wanted to
change this 80-20 Federal match program. First of all, we had 60-40--
that was not acceptable--and 70-30. I have to admit it was not the
Democrats; it was the Republicans who objected to that.
Consequentially, we had to go ahead and go back to 80-20. If this
legislation does not pass, then it is still going to be 80-20 because
that is current law. So that would not change.
Anyway, the freight section of this directs new funding toward
freight transportation projects that provide the platform for our
businesses to compete globally. The freight program sometimes does not
get the attention. One of the good things about a transportation bill
and the way we do this, and have done it historically, is we go to the
States.
I can assure you that the Arizona Transportation Department knows a
lot more about what their needs are than we do in our infinite wisdom
here in Washington. So they don't get as concerned about freight
programs and freight expenditures because they do not directly benefit
the particular State it goes through, but they benefit the entire
country.
We actually have a freight section in this that is very good. It
hasn't been done before. I will go into greater detail about the new
National Freight Program and what it means to America's economy. Today,
the National Highway System carries more than 55 percent of the
Nation's highway traffic and 97 percent of the truck freight traffic.
Of the 4 million miles of public roads, the National Highway System
represents only 5.5 percent. So what we are saying is, 5 percent of the
roads out there transport 55 percent of the highway traffic and 97
percent of the freight traffic.
Americans depend on the well-maintained National Highway System that
provides a critical connection between the urban areas and the rural
areas. American businesses pay and estimate $27 billion a year in extra
freight transportation costs due to the poor condition of the public
roads, which increases shipping delays and raises prices on everyday
products. Recognizing that this is the foundation for the Nation's
economy and the key to the national ability to compete in a global
economy, it is essential that we focus efforts to improve freight
movement on the National Highway System.
The DRIVE Act includes two new programs to help the States deliver
projects and promote the safety in that delivery. The bipartisan
freight program levies its Federal investment by encouraging public-
private partnerships and other creative financing approaches.
It also will create the first-ever freight-specific investment
program, prioritizing investment in our commerce-moving network. The
first new program is the National Freight Program. It is distributed by
a formula that will provide funds to all States to enhance the movement
of goods that go through their State.
This is something, as I have said, that has not been done before, and
I haven't heard any objection. In fact, this isn't just State specific
because this goes to the whole Nation, and so it is very popular. The
program expands the flexibility for both rural and urban areas to
designate key freight corridors, and it will help identify projects
with a higher return on investment.
The second program that is new is the Assistance for Major Projects
Program. It creates a competitive grant program to provide funds for
the major projects. This is what we have been talking about the past
several days, the very large projects that can't be done with short-
term extensions. They are just neglected.
These new freight programs will only exist with the passage of the
DRIVE Act, when it is enacted by Congress. It is time for us to become
innovative and forward-thinking in how the Federal Government is using
taxpayer dollars.
In talking about this type of program for States to improve the
National Highway System, the DRIVE Act is the answer. It directly helps
to relieve the freight bottlenecks around the country.
This is a chart of Chicago I-290, I-90, and I-94, the three
intersections. This goes between those three. Look at it. It is all of
these. I haven't even counted the lanes. Traffic is stopped, and it is
just one of the congestions. When this happens, the average speed in
this case is 29 miles an hour. In the morning and evening rush hour, it
is 20 miles an hour. Then it talks about all of the pollution that is
there. People are idling their engines while they are waiting in
traffic.
There is a very similar situation in Houston, TX, the I-45. I have
been on this one quite often, quite a few times. It is I-45 at U.S. 59.
If you look at the chart, it is home to five of the top freight
bottlenecks in the Nation. Texas is home to nine of them. The overall
cost in conjunction with this to individuals in Texas is $671 million
annually and 8.8 million hours of delay. The I-45 is ranked third by
the congestion index.
We have an index, and people know how bad it is and how it compares
to other States. That is why this has been so popular.
I-45 at U.S. 610 is ranked 15th. The average speed is below 39 miles
an hour. For morning and evening traffic, of course, it is much less
than that.
Fort Lee, NJ, I-95. Anyone who is in Washington and wants to go
anyplace on the north coast--New York, Connecticut, and on up--they
have to go all the way up on I-95. This particular intersection, which
is in Fort Lee--this is the George Washington Bridge. It connects Fort
Lee, NJ, to New York City. By congestion index, it is the second worst
freight bottleneck in the Nation. The average speed is 29 miles an
hour. I have been on that one before, and it is a very old bridge. When
you drive over it, you worry about whether you are going to make it.
The George Washington Bridge is the world's busiest motor vehicle
bridge, carrying over 106 million cars a year.
The DRIVE Act, with the newly formed freight program, will make
targeted investments in the infrastructure critical to moving commerce
and alleviating these bottlenecks I just mentioned. These new programs
invest in the infrastructure needed to move goods across the Nation.
When you look at the corridors and you look at the bridges--we
actually had one presentation where we went over the 20 busiest of all
the traffic-congested areas in the country.
We are going to have a vote in 40 minutes. It is going to be one of
the most critical votes of the year. I have no doubt that it is going
to pass. But I wanted to send the signal across America, to the House
of Representatives, and to everyone else that we really care about
infrastructure.
I repeat--I feel compelled to do so--there are a lot of people who
don't realize that the conservative position is to vote for a long-term
infrastructure bill because it costs about 30 percent off the top--and
that is a figure no one has debated, no one has talked about--if you do
it piecemeal with short-term extensions, along with not getting this.
The other thing is, we have that old document nobody reads anymore;
it is called the Constitution. If you look up article I, section 8, it
says--you know, we do a lot of things around this Chamber that our
forefathers never envisioned. They said what we ought to be doing--and
it says so right in the Constitution--is two things: defend America,
and roads and bridges.
Well, that was foreseen by Dwight Eisenhower. I have here in the
Chamber a picture of Dwight Eisenhower. Many of us who are old enough
to remember or those of us who have studied World War II know what a
hero this guy was when he came in as President of the United States. He
wanted the first national system to be primarily for defense, for
defending our Nation. He said: Yes, it will help the economy. Here is
the quote he makes. He talks
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about how this will be helpful to the economy. We all know that. There
will be jobs, and people will be put back to work. But he also said--
this was after World War II--that we have to move our goods and
services around this country to defend this Nation.
I kind of have a dual role in this. The two major committees that I
have--and I have served as the ranking member on both of them--are the
defense committee, the Senate Armed Services Committee--and so I am
very sensitive to the fact that there is a defense component to this
bill we are going to be voting on today--as well as chairing the
Committee on Environment and Public Works.
This is what he said back then. He said it is for defense purposes
and it is something we have to have so that it goes in a uniform way
across the Nation, not just for defense but for our economy. I would
make one comment. You hear people say, and I used to say it myself--
they talk about the program called devolution. Devolution is what a lot
of people have looked at, and it sounds so good on the stump.
Confession is good for the soul. I remember when I was the father of
devolution, along with Connie Mack from Florida when we were both
serving in the House. What that says is you repeal the Federal highway
taxes and then you make them local taxes, you make them State taxes so
the States are participating.
But there are two problems with that. One is, how do you get a
uniform program across the country? Take Wyoming, for example. If they
repeal their Federal tax, in order to make up for it, since there are
very few people in Wyoming but there are a lot of roads, they would
have to pass a 48-cent tax increase. That is not going to happen.
Devolution is based on the assumption that all States will pass a tax
increase, and that isn't going to happen.
So that is the other reason we really need to have this, and we will.
We are going to pass this bill. I think in the final analysis the House
will too.
I will share with you, I say to the Presiding Officer, that when we
had our last bill, it wasn't all that good. It was only a 27-month
bill.
I can remember going over there, after we passed that on the floor of
the Senate, and I requested an audience with the members of the
Transportation and Infrastructure Committee at the House, with the
Republicans because there were a lot of them who were tea party
Republicans, a lot of conservatives. I explained to them the same thing
I just went over--the constitutional aspect of it as well as the cost
of it and the fact that you cannot get projects done if you continue to
do short-term extensions. When this came up in the House, every one of
the 33 Republicans--all 33 of them--voted for it. I think that is what
gives me confidence that when they see that there is a bill that we
have passed out of this Chamber--you know, I was disappointed that the
House was only going to be in session until Thursday; that is today.
But they left last night; they moved it up a day. And I am not saying
they did that so they wouldn't have to make a decision on this bill,
but nonetheless that did happen.
I understand there are other Senators who wish to speak before the
vote, and I certainly want to give them the opportunity. So I will
conclude by saying that this is arguably one of the most important
votes we will have. We are doing what the Constitution tells us to do.
We are going to pass it, and it is going to happen.
I know there are two Members--one from the majority and one from the
minority--who wish to speak. I think the majority leader will be coming
in a matter of minutes too. So we do have several who want to be heard
on this bill.
I think it is worth stating that 75 percent of the bill is in the
Committee on Environment and Public Works. That is the committee I
chair. When we developed this bill, we developed it over a period of
time. They took about 4 months, and we worked on it. We took
amendments, and we had major changes. In fact, I can remember going to
the Republican conference and saying: If you have amendments, before
this is passed out of our committee and goes to the floor, I think it
is important for you to get your amendments in so we can make them a
part of the bill and then later on part of the managers' package. Well,
the managers' package didn't work as we wanted it to, and everyone
knows there are problems that caused that.
But we argued. We discussed this bill. We put it together for about 4
months in the committee. On June 24, we passed that out of the
committee unanimously. All 20 members of the Environment and Public
Works Committee--all Democrats, all Republicans--all voted for it. That
doesn't happen very often.
The ranking member, the ranking Democrat on the committee is Senator
Boxer from California. Senator Boxer and I don't agree on very much,
but we do agree on this. I mean, she is a very proud liberal, and I am
a very proud conservative. What we have in common is this bill; that is
about it. As soon as this bill is over--I was joking with a group this
morning--I said then we will go back to fighting again. Maybe that is
more fun.
But with all of the problems we have in this country right now, a lot
of people don't realize that one of the greatest problems is the
overregulation by the bureaucracies, the unelected bureaucracies. We
have watched that coming. We have seen it particularly in this
administration. Just look at what the EPA is doing to harm businesses
that are trying to do the American thing and hire people out there. We
have all of these regulations that are coming online. We have the water
regulations.
This is kind of interesting because historically the regulations over
water have always been a State function, with the exception of
navigable waters. Well, I understand that. I think everyone else
understands that. But there are always the collectivists, the liberals
who want to bring all of that power into Washington and take it away
from the States. In my State of Oklahoma, we do a lot better job than
the Federal Government does, so we have been in a position to be able
to continue to have that regulation of water as a State function.
About 5 years ago, Senator Feingold in the Senate and Congressman
Oberstar--they are from Wisconsin and Minnesota--introduced a bill to
take the word ``navigable'' out, which means then the Federal
Government would have regulation over all the waters. We have areas in
Oklahoma that are very arid. The other day, I was out in the panhandle,
Boise City. You don't get anyplace drier than Boise City, OK. I was out
there and I told them that if the Federal Government were doing this,
they would probably find the time after a rain to declare the panhandle
of Oklahoma a wetland because that is what they do. They want power.
They want to expand their authority.
Anyway, they had this bill, and not only did we defeat the
legislation to take the word ``navigable'' out, but we also defeated
both the Senator and the House Member who were the sponsors.
I see my good friend from New York has arrived.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
Planned Parenthood
Mrs. GILLIBRAND. Mr. President, I rise to strongly oppose this
cynical and opportunistic ploy to fulfill a longtime ideological goal
to defund Planned Parenthood.
Let's talk facts, not rhetoric. The fact is no Federal funds can be
used for an abortion. No Federal funds can be used for an abortion,
except in the dire circumstances of rape, incest or the life of the
mother.
Here is another fact. Only 3 percent of Planned Parenthood's work is
dedicated to abortion services. The other 97 percent of their work is
dedicated to preventive women's health services, such as STD testing
and screenings, contraception, Pap tests, breast exams, cancer
screenings, and other services, such as adoption referrals, pediatric
care, and immunizations. So when someone says let's defund Planned
Parenthood because they never liked that it ever existed, what they are
saying to women, particularly low-income women, women in low-income
communities, and many women of color is that they won't have access to
a wide range of essential services because of an ideological desire to
control what choices are being made by women and their doctors.
I fail to see the logic here. This exploitative movement, advanced by
special interests, would effectively tell a
[[Page S6158]]
half million American women: Sorry, you can't have a breast exam this
year. Of all the issues that we are going to debate on the floor right
now, why are we debating this? Why are we telling 400,000 American
women: Sorry, you won't be able to have a lifesaving screening for
cervical cancer.
We have kids in all 50 States who are going hungry during summer
vacation because their parents can't afford to have that extra lunch
they normally got from school. We have college graduates who can't
afford to start their lives, buy a home, get married, and have kids
because they are drowning in student debt. We have men and women in
this country who work 40 hours a week, with no vacation days, no sick
days, and are still stuck in poverty. That is not my vision of the
American Dream.
We have millions of hard-working Americans who have to quit their
jobs and lose paychecks every time they have a family emergency. It
doesn't matter if it is a new baby. It doesn't matter if their husband
is dying of cancer. It doesn't matter if their mother is on her
deathbed. They don't have access to paid family and medical leave. We
are literally the only industrialized country that doesn't have paid
leave.
This makes no sense in a country that believes if you work hard every
day, you will be able to get into the middle class. That is simply not
true for low-wage workers who are working 40 hours a week and are still
below the poverty line and cannot meet those family needs because they
have no paid leave.
But the issue this body wants to debate is defunding Planned
Parenthood. This body wants to make sure that millions of women don't
get basic access to health care. Whether or not to maliciously hurt an
organization that provides vital health services to millions of
American women--this is the issue our colleagues are using to threaten
yet another government shutdown--controlling women's choices about
their health, about their families, about their reproductive health
care.
It is clear that some of my colleagues just want to roll back Roe v.
Wade. That is their goal. That is their mission in life. It is
ideologically driven and funded by special interests. That is their
mission. But we should not return to the days when women had no medical
independence.
Some of my colleagues will use any excuse they can to overreact and
force this same tired old Planned Parenthood debate on us. But here is
the fundamental truth about Planned Parenthood. Millions of women in
this country--women in low-income communities, women of color, women in
every State--rely on Planned Parenthood for basic health care--
mammograms, cervical screenings, access to contraception, and family
planning. They rely on it to prevent disease. They rely on it to detect
disease. They rely on it to treat disease. We cannot and will not
defund Planned Parenthood.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority whip.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, over the last couple of weeks we have been
discussing some pretty basic and important work that we need to do when
it comes to our Nation's infrastructure--specifically, the highway bill
that we will vote on and pass out of the Senate today.
I am very encouraged by the fact that the House of Representatives
has now taken up the challenge of coming up with their own highway
bill, and we are going to pass a 3-month temporary extension to give
them the chance to do that and then to give all of us a chance to get
to a conference committee and come up, hopefully, with an even better
bill.
That is the way the Senate and the House are supposed to work, and
that is why I am encouraged. I think the debate we have had over the
highway bill is a good one, and I am glad to see, as I say, that we are
on the right track.
In my State of Texas we know that good infrastructure and a working
highway system are important for a number of reasons. First, it is
important for public safety. Second, it is important for the
environment. Third, it is important for the economy because when goods
can flow freely across the roads and the highways and the freight lines
in our State, it helps improve our economy and creates a more favorable
condition for jobs.
When you come from a State such as mine, which is a fast-growing
State, that growth requires the improvements, repairs, and
modernization of our roadways to accommodate the visitors who come to
our State, as well as those who move there--some 1,000 more each day.
So that is why I am pleased this legislation will include resources
that will make the lives of everyday Texans better.
Resources in this bill--which I should stress involves no tax
increases--invest in interstates and freight routes and provide for
much-needed border infrastructure projects to promote legitimate trade
and travel flowing across our international border, while supporting
economic development and improved quality of life.
Work in the Senate
This bill is just another reminder of the Senate's progress we have
made in the 114th Congress under new management. This year, the Senate
has made a lot of progress on key pieces of legislation. The fact is we
are finally back working again in a bipartisan manner that provides
real solutions for the American people.
I am proud to say that work includes things on a wide spectrum of
priorities, including passing a budget for the first time since 2009,
legislation that fights the scourge of human trafficking, a trade bill
that will open up new markets for American-made products, and of course
earlier this year, the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act, which was
signed into law and freezes the administration's ability to lift
sanctions on Iran until representatives of the American people have had
a chance to carefully examine President Obama's deal.
As I mentioned a number of times, I have many concerns about this
deal, and I will continue to remind the President of his own words when
he said that no deal is better than a bad deal. I couldn't agree more,
even though he and the rest of the administration are actively
suggesting that the only real alternative to this deal is war--a
statement which is demonstrably false.
I think, unfortunately, that is a scare tactic. I hope people of
goodwill will be persuaded by the facts and not scare tactics, and I
hope we will have that debate in September after all the Members of the
Senate and the House have had a chance to thoroughly immerse themselves
in the terms of this deal and are prepared to debate that on the floor
of the Senate and on the floor of the House.
But our work is not over. Earlier this week, I cosponsored
legislation, along with a number of my colleagues, which would provide
additional money for women's primary health care services while at the
same time defunding Planned Parenthood. I know I speak for many of my
colleagues on both sides of the aisle when I say I was shocked,
saddened, and disgusted at the several recent videos that depicted
human life being reduced to spare parts for sale. This is a
heartbreaking practice, and we cannot let it stand. We must stand up to
protect the most vulnerable.
This bill does that by defunding Planned Parenthood, which has made a
practice of taking aborted children and then selling the body parts for
compensation. The one reason why this is so important is that, beyond
the immediate disgust at these videos in the way that somehow this
trafficking in human body parts has become a commercialized practice
that Planned Parenthood engages in, since 1976 there has actually been
a prohibition in U.S. law against the use of tax dollars to pay for
abortion, except in some rare circumstances, and that is known as the
Hyde amendment, named after Congressman Henry Hyde. This has been part
of the law of the land since 1976.
What Planned Parenthood has done is taken tax dollars and claimed
they have separated those tax dollars from the privately raised money
they use that then finances abortion. They say: Well, we use the tax
dollars for women's health services, and we don't use any tax dollars
to pay for abortions. Well, we all know that is a convenient fiction,
because money is fungible. The tax dollars paid by you, me, and all of
us in the United States who are taxpayers goes into a single fund that
[[Page S6159]]
pays for the operation of Planned Parenthood--the largest abortion
provider in America.
So this legislation is very important because it does take care of
the primary care women's health services, but it defunds Planned
Parenthood's abortion practice, consistent with the Hyde amendment,
which has been the law of the land since 1976.
By doing it in this way, I would say that we are actually improving
and increasing access for women to health care services through places
such as our community health clinics. In my State alone, there are
almost eight times more community health centers that could provide
these primary care services to women than there are Planned Parenthood
outlets. So this actually will increase access to primary care for
women, while defunding Planned Parenthood's abortion practice,
consistent with the Hyde amendment.
I hope this is legislation we can all unite behind. I would implore
all of our colleagues, when we vote on this next Monday afternoon, to
join us in getting on the bill by voting for cloture and then debating
it and passing it.
While I am glad Congress has a clear way forward to meet our Nation's
infrastructure needs on this bill, we have a lot more we need to do to
protect and serve the American people.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, just one quick comment before Senator
Boxer makes some remarks.
We have talked about this. We have talked about the significance of
the upcoming vote. I just want to reemphasize to my conservative
colleagues on the Republican side that this is something which is a
conservative position. The only alternative to this is short-term
extensions, which cost about 30 percent off the top.
So let's do in this vote what the Constitution tells us to do and
take care of one of the two assignments that are given to us in article
I, section 8 of the Constitution; that is, roads and highways.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I am very pleased to be here today. This
has been a long and winding road to get to the point where we can pass
a transportation bill which is a very good bill and which is very
bipartisan. According to a formula, each and every one of our States
will get more than they have in the past.
This is what our States are facing. This is a bridge between Arizona
and California. I am sure my friend knows what happened. People
commuting between our States have had to go 400 miles out of their way.
We cannot turn away from this vote today. I know and my friend from
Oklahoma knows that each one of us would have written a different bill,
but the process means we have to come together. This person says ``I
don't like the process'' and this one says ``I don't like the pay-
fors.'' Well, I am sure Senator Inhofe and I feel the same way, but we
know that if we run into a construction worker who is unemployed and we
say ``Well, we didn't vote for this because we didn't like the
process,'' they would say ``I need a paycheck.''
So I am going to ask our colleagues to vote aye for three reasons.
First, let's get our construction workers back to work. We have so
many of them--hundreds of thousands--who are out of work. The general
contractors told us last week that in 25 States they are seeing layoffs
of construction workers because we are not doing a long-term bill. So
let's help our construction workers get back to work.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record
three letters of support from the Nation's leading construction unions
and additional letters of support I received from the Transportation
Construction Coalition and the Highway Materials Group.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the National Infrastructure Alliance, July 22, 2015]
H.R. 22--Senate Cloture Vote
(By Raymond J. Poupore, Executive Vice President)
The leading construction unions building our country's
surface transportation infrastructure strongly urge a ``YES''
vote on the Motion to Proceed to debate H.R. 22--The DRIVE
Act.
As persistent high unemployment still plagues the
construction industry, we need a well funded, multi-year
infrastructure bill to put hundreds of thousands of our
members to work building critical highway and transit
projects. It is our understanding that the transit title in
this bill actually exceeds its traditional 20 percent share,
despite rumors to the contrary.
Through this legislation, we can begin to address the most
pressing needs facing our transportation infrastructure.
Please support your constituent construction workers by
voting to proceed on the DRIVE Act.
____
Laborers' International Union
of North America,
Washington, DC, July 21, 2015.
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Dear Senator: On behalf of the 500,000 members of the
Laborers' International Union of North America (LIUNA), I
urge you to support the motion to proceed to consideration of
a long term reauthorization of the federal highway and
transit programs.
Last month, the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee unanimously approved S. 1647, the Developing a
Reliable and Innovative Vision for the Economy (DRIVE) Act.
Now is the time for the rest of the U.S. Senate to join
together and embrace a bipartisan effort to invest in this
Nation and reject the politics of division.
A long term highway bill will help provide necessary funds
to improve America's crumbling transportation infrastructure.
Our economy requires a functioning transportation network and
with bridges literally falling apart and highways unable to
handle current traffic volumes, America's transportation
infrastructure is in dire need of a robust and sustainable
investment.
Under the current extensions, the Highway Trust Fund is
unable to fully fund these necessary repairs, making our
highways and bridges more susceptible to further
deterioration. A long term federal commitment to invest in
the Nation's infrastructure and safety needs is essential.
I urge you to end the delays on political games and pass a
long term highway bill before Congress leaves for vacation.
With kind regards, I am
Sincerely yours,
Terry O'Sullivan,
General President.
____
International Union of
Operating Engineers,
Washington, DC, July 21, 2015.
Hon. Harry Reid,
Hart Senate Office Building,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Charles E. Schumer,
Hart Senate Office Building,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Dick Durbin,
Hart Senate Office Building,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Patty Murray,
Russell Senate Office Building,
Washington, DC.
Dear Senators Reid, Durbin, Schumer, and Murray: At this
critical moment for America's transportation infrastructure,
the International Union of Operating Engineers respectfully
requests the support of Senate Democratic Leadership for
immediate passage of a long-term highway and transit bill.
Passage of the cloture vote today is a necessary step in
order to have a debate on revenue options to fund the
nation's biggest, most important infrastructure programs.
The model developed by the Environment and Public Works
Committee in the DRIVE Act (Developing a Reliable and
Innovative Vision for the Economy Act), both procedurally and
substantively, should serve as the framework for Senate floor
consideration. The bipartisan process led to a consensus and
unanimous committee vote. The substance of the policy issues
ensured that extreme measures from both the left and the
right were rejected.
Aspects of the Commerce Committee markup were a serious
disappointment, as you know. Similarly, consistent references
to partisan revenue-raisers understandably make policymakers
reluctant to engage in serious debate. While the sensitive
nature of negotiations and legislative strategy leaves us
with precious few details, we are assured that ``real
revenue'' could be available to the program with bipartisan
support. Serious revenue options must be on the table, and
egregious, partisan provisions must be off the table. It is
that simple, if we have any chance of success.
The DRIVE Act addresses what is perhaps the most pressing
domestic economic issue of our time: reauthorization of a
multiyear highway and transit program. The Act's legislative
framework provides a six-year certainty to transportation
planners, the construction industry, and its supply chain. It
builds on important successes in MAP-21 by
[[Page S6160]]
expediting project delivery and making the approval process
more transparent. Additionally, it creates a new, national
emphasis on freight movement, and it targets resources at
projects of national and regional significance.
As you know, we need a long-term solution. We cannot afford
to wait. Thousands of Operating Engineers depend on these
investments for their livelihoods. We cannot rely on
``aspirational thinking'' about comprehensive agreements that
could include funding for this essential program.
The transportation advocacy community believes
wholeheartedly that now is the time to build on the
bipartisan momentum generated in the Environment and Public
Works Committee to move a robust, long-term bill through the
Senate before the summer break. We look forward to working
with you to enact such a long-term highway and transit bill
as soon as possible.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
James T. Callahan,
General President.
____
July 29, 2015.
Dear Senator: The 31 national associations and construction
trade unions of the Transportation Construction Coalition
(TCC) urge you to support passage of the ``Developing a
Reliable and Innovative Vision for the Economy (DRIVE) Act.''
The bipartisan surface transportation reauthorization bill
would guarantee three years of increased highway and public
transportation investment and provide further certainty to
states by distributing six years of contract authority.
The Highway Trust Fund has suffered five cash flow crises
requiring $65 billion in temporary cash infusions since 2008.
With a sixth trust fund revenue shortfall less than a month
away, seven states have delayed or canceled projects valued
at $1.6 billion. Furthermore, the Congressional Budget Office
projects the trust fund will be unable to support any new
highway or transit spending in FY 2016 without remedial
action.
This repeating cycle of uncertainty and piecemeal
management undermines the ability of state transportation
departments to implement multi-year transportation plans and
discourages the private sector from making investments in new
capital and personnel. By supporting the DRIVE Act, senators
not only have an opportunity to stabilize surface
transportation investment, but to do so as part of
legislation that would enact a series of meaningful policy
reforms to help grow the economy and promote improved
mobility for all Americans.
The DRIVE Act includes provisions that would streamline the
transportation project review process to expedite the
delivery of needed highway and bridge improvements. The
measure would also create a dedicated freight program and a
major projects assistance program--both of which would help
enhance U.S. economic competitiveness.
The members of the TCC remain concerned about the need to
enact a permanent solution to stabilize and grow Highway
Trust Fund revenue. The Senate surface transportation
reauthorization construct would provide ample time to develop
and enact such a plan while federal highway and transit
investment is unthreatened over the next three years.
We strongly urge all senators to support the DRIVE Act to
provide your states with the stable and growing resources
they need to help them deliver the highway and public
transportation improvements the U.S. economy and all
Americans need.
Sincerely,
The Transportation Construction
Coalition.
____
July 29, 2015.
Statement of the Highway Materials Group (HMG) as the Deadline Nears on
Highway Funding Reauthorization
The Highway Materials Group applauds the efforts by all
Senators--notably Majority Leader McConnell, Chairman Inhofe
and Ranking Member Boxer and their staffs--in support of a
long term reauthorization bill that increases funding for the
nation's highways and transit systems.
We fully support final Senate passage this week and urge a
YES vote on the bipartisan, multi-year Developing a Reliable
and Innovative Vision for the Economy (DRIVE) Act which
offers great hope to the modernization of our nation's
infrastructure.
We urge House Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman
Shuster and House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Ryan to
utilize the hours of hearings, site visits and stakeholder
input they have held and bring together their Committees soon
after the August recess to produce a multiyear, fully-funded
bill that warrants House support.
Most importantly, before departing for the August recess,
we urge House and Senate leadership to unequivocally state
their commitment to send to the President a well-funded,
multiyear highway bill by the end of October.
The Highway Materials Group (HMG), comprised of nine
national associations listed below, represent companies that
provide the construction materials and equipment essential to
building America's roads, highways, and bridges. We employ
tens of thousands of men and women in well-paying American
jobs, and we stand in support of this important legislative
action.
American Coal Ash Association, American Concrete Pavement
Association, Association of Equipment Manufacturers,
Associated Equipment Distributors, Concrete Reinforcing
Steel Institute, National Asphalt Pavement Association,
National Ready Mixed Concrete Association, National
Stone, Sand & Gravel Association, Portland Cement
Association.
____
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, it is rare to have the National
Association of Manufacturers and the Chamber of Commerce in agreement
with the entire structure of the construction industry workers, all of
those unions. I put their names into the Record. It is unique to have
Mothers Against Drunk Driving in that coalition and to have the
National Governors Association in that coalition and to have the mayors
organization in that coalition.
My friend from Oklahoma and my friend from Illinois, Senator Durbin,
whom I thank from the bottom of my heart--we were kind of smiling the
other day because we had the mayor of Oklahoma City and the mayor of
New York ask us for a long-term bill; no more short-term extensions.
That is the kind of coalition building we are seeing out in the country
and one that I think we are living proof of here today.
So I will close with where I started. To me, this is the poster child
for why we have to act today. There are more than 60,000 bridges that
are obsolete or deficient. If we don't pass this bill today and the
House doesn't take it up and pass it or something else similar to it or
get to conference, we are back to, I think it is, the 34th short
extension. That is doomsday--doomsday.
I am sad the House went out for a 5\1/2\-week break. It is the first
time in 10 years they went out for an August break before August. I
find it ironic that they went out even a day earlier so they are not
there if we do, in fact, pass our legislation and send it over.
Why are they doing this? They need to act. I am encouraged that
Speaker Boehner said that he has asked his committee to act. If we can
do it over here, they can do it over there.
I will close with this: I am very pleased that we have reached this
point. It has taken a lot of work and a lot of compromise. We had to
give some ground, but we found common ground. We all believe this bill
is so important for our Nation.
I urge everyone, regardless of how we voted before, to understand
this is not what we want to see in America. We can't have more of these
bridge collapses, and we can't have more of these streets falling
apart. Now, 50 percent are in disrepair. This is the day.
I thank Senator Inhofe. I thank Senator Durbin. I thank Senator
McConnell. I thank Senator Nelson. And later, when we finish with this,
I will thank many others. The staffs have been unbelievable. We were
working into the wee hours of the morning for the last week.
I also thank you, Madam President, for your role in this and your
help in this. I am proud that I serve on the committee with you. We
have worked well together. I hope we have a good vote, a solid vote for
this bill.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Fischer). All postcloture time is
expired.
The amendment was ordered to be engrossed, and the bill to be read a
third time.
The bill was read the third time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill having been read the third time, the
question is, Shall the bill pass?
Mr. INHOFE. Madam President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There appears to be a sufficient second.
The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. CORNYN. The following Senator is necessarily absent: the Senator
from South Carolina (Mr. Graham).
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber
desiring to vote?
The result was announced--yeas 65, nays 34, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 260 Leg.]
YEAS--65
Alexander
Ayotte
Baldwin
Barrasso
Bennet
Blunt
Boozman
Boxer
Burr
Cantwell
Capito
Cardin
Cassidy
Coats
Cochran
Collins
Coons
Cornyn
[[Page S6161]]
Daines
Durbin
Enzi
Ernst
Feinstein
Fischer
Franken
Gardner
Grassley
Hatch
Heitkamp
Heller
Hirono
Hoeven
Inhofe
Isakson
Johnson
Kaine
King
Kirk
Klobuchar
Leahy
Manchin
McCain
McCaskill
McConnell
Mikulski
Moran
Murkowski
Murray
Nelson
Peters
Portman
Roberts
Rounds
Sanders
Schatz
Sessions
Shaheen
Stabenow
Sullivan
Tester
Thune
Tillis
Vitter
Whitehouse
Wicker
NAYS--34
Blumenthal
Booker
Brown
Carper
Casey
Corker
Cotton
Crapo
Cruz
Donnelly
Flake
Gillibrand
Heinrich
Lankford
Lee
Markey
Menendez
Merkley
Murphy
Paul
Perdue
Reed
Reid
Risch
Rubio
Sasse
Schumer
Scott
Shelby
Toomey
Udall
Warner
Warren
Wyden
NOT VOTING--1
Graham
The bill (H.R. 22), as amended, was passed.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
____________________