[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 126 (Wednesday, August 5, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S6370]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DRIVE ACT
Ms. BALDWIN. Mr. President last week the Senate passed a multiyear
surface transportation bill, the Developing a Reliable and Innovative
Vision for the Economy Act, H.R. 22, referred to as the DRIVE Act. I
was pleased to vote for this bipartisan bill. For the first time in 3
years, the Senate has passed a long-term surface transportation bill.
Unfortunately, the House adjourned before taking up our bipartisan
legislation--forcing the Senate to pass a short-term funding patch, the
34th since 2009.
I am disappointed that we were not able to get the long-term bill to
the President's desk. However, I believe the Senate has laid the
groundwork to make the most recent short-term extension the last for
the next few years. I look forward to working with my colleagues in
both houses of Congress to complete a long-term bill before the October
29 deadline, and I expect the DRIVE Act to be the baseline for those
efforts.
While the DRIVE Act's most important feature is that it provides
certainty to construction firms and state governments to invest in
rebuilding our crumbling roads and bridges, it also includes several
provisions to improve the way we move goods and people across our
nation. In the last few years, I have become very concerned with the
way one particular good--Bakken oil--moves through the country. The
fiery explosions that accompany Bakken oil train derailments have many
in Wisconsin rightfully concerned as we have unwittingly become one of
the most traveled oil train routes in the country.
The DRIVE Act includes a rail safety bill that was added thanks to
the leadership of Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Thune, Ranking
Member Nelson, and Senators Booker and Wicker. I was pleased that the
bipartisan bill that passed out of committee included provisions to
require a railroad liability study and comprehensive oil spill response
plans. These provisions were similar to what is included in the Crude-
by-Rail Safety Act, on which I worked closely with Senator Cantwell to
introduce.
While the liability study and oilspill response plans are steps in
the right direction, as the bill moved to the Senate floor, I believed
we needed to do more to improve rail infrastructure, transparency, and
first responder preparedness. That is why I was pleased to work with
Environment and Public Works Ranking Member Barbara Boxer, Commerce,
Science, & Transportation Committee Chairman John Thune and Ranking
Member Bill Nelson as well as Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to
include two sections in the bill that passed the Senate on July 30. I
was able to add these sections to the substitute amendment, No. 2266,
that was adopted on July 29, 2015, and the provisions were included in
the final version of the bill that passed the Senate.
The first section, section 35416, would require that the Federal
Railroad Administration keep on file the most recent bridge inspection
report prepared by a private railroad bridge owner and provide that
report to appropriate state and local officials upon request. This
allows State and local officials who are responsible for public
infrastructure integrity and public safety to have access to
information they need to keep the public safe. The substance of this
section is also contained in amendment 2538.
The second section, section 35431, addresses concerns raised by the
first responder community who have had to fight for access to real-time
information about hazmat trains entering their jurisdictions.
Firefighters want to know in advance when hazmat trains will arrive in
order to better prepare and keep their communities safe. The substance
of this section is also contained in amendment 2539.
The section modified the bill's original language that only required
real-time hazmat train information to go to Department of Homeland
Security Fusion Centers. The centers would then provide the information
to local first responders only in the event of an accident, when it is
less useful. My provision requires fusion centers to provide the real-
time information to State and local first responders at least 12 hours
prior to a hazmat train arriving in their jurisdiction. The
transmission must also include the best estimate of the train's
arrival.
I believe these two sections significantly improve transparency and
safety in communities along oil train routes. This is also a
significant achievement for state and local organizations, who are
often powerless to take action against federally regulated railroads--
despite being responsible for any problems they cause. In closing, I
again would like to thank Senators McConnell, Thune, Nelson, Boxer, and
Inhofe for their leadership on this legislation. And I pledge to work
with my colleagues in the House and Senate to pass a long-term surface
transportation bill in the next three months.
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