[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 159 (Wednesday, October 28, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7567-S7568]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRANSPORTATION BILL
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I came to talk about the Transportation
bill. We have it in front of us. Transportation has laid the foundation
of our country's success, whether it was
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Henry Ford, who showed us how to do mass automotive manufacturing,
revolutionized the manufacturing of cars, whether it was Henry Flagler,
who built a railroad on an unsettled land along the East Coast of
Florida, brought in the development of my State, whether it was the
Wright brothers--these guys were much more than bicycle shop owners.
These guys were geniuses who studied the movement of birds. They were
the first ones to be able to figure out how--what they called it in the
day--a heavier-than-air flying machine could do that. These ideas, and
over the years the investments, helped make this country become a
global leader in almost everything.
With regard to transportation, we have gotten off course. Rather than
making big investments, we keep kicking the can down the road. Today's
extension--short-term extension, I might say--of the highway trust fund
is one more example of this because it is just putting off what we have
to do, which is improve our roads, our rails, and our port
infrastructure. That means we have to increase the investments in our
infrastructure and focus on the area that will not only create jobs and
support our economy but will rehabilitate this infrastructure. Our
roads are crumbling. Our bridges are crumbling. Remember a few years
ago when the bridge collapsed on the main interstate highway in
Minnesota--killing a number of people, injuring others. Our
infrastructure is crumbling. We need to do these investments in our
transportation infrastructure to make sure it is safe.
In July the Senate stood tall. We had a Republican chairman and a
Democratic ranking member, Senator Inhofe and Senator Boxer, and they
came together just like that--like it is supposed to be around here--
and they passed the highway bill. We call it the highway bill, but it
includes a lot more: ports, rail, highway safety, all the things that
go on with building a new road, such as sidewalks. We passed that. It
passed overwhelmingly. It passed overwhelmingly bipartisan--but then
you get to the point of how in the world are we going to pay for it.
That bill included many important provisions that will keep workers
on the job. For the first time, the bill included a freight rail
program that aims to improve freight across all types of
transportation--not just freight but trucks, ports. Of course, what
this is going to do is it is going to help us move goods more
efficiently, whether they are traveling through a port or on rail or on
the highways.
For the first time, this highway reauthorization was a bipartisan
reauthorization of Amtrak. Amtrak was last reauthorized 2 years ago--
way back in 2013. With a strong commitment from the commerce committee
chairman, Senator Thune, all of us on the committee were able to
include provisions that will improve our passenger rail systems. In the
commerce committee, we fought to improve safety and increase
investments in our infrastructure. There were many provisions--
especially on trucking and vehicle safety issues--that needed to be
improved. What we put in the bill was to prevent rolling back safety
improvements in transportation.
Here we are. Today we need to pass this bill so we can quickly get to
work on the final bill. This is a stopgap temporary message. I urge the
House to work toward a bipartisan compromise like the Senate bill
rather than weigh the bill down with a whole bunch of ideological
things, safety rollbacks and giveaways to industries. This highway bill
is too important to get mired in partisan politics. For us to maintain
the safety, efficiency, and growth of our transportation system,
Congress must put an end to the instability caused by what we are going
to have to do today, which is a short-term extension. We can only do
this by working together to find commonsense and bipartisan solutions.
I yield the floor.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Scott). The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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