[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 185 (Friday, December 18, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8842-S8843]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OMNUBUS LEGISLATION
Ms. MIKULSKI. Madam President, I rise to speak on the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2016, otherwise known as the omnibus bill.
I wish to report to my colleagues in the Senate that the House has
passed the bill this morning with a robust vote of 316 to 113. Three
months ago it was unclear if we would be at this positive point. We
were uncertain if we could get a budget deal that would lift the caps
for defense and nondefense spending, it was unclear if we could cancel
sequester, and it was unclear if we could avoid a government shutdown.
I am happy to say today that we have completed our work, and we have
done it in the traditional style of this institution and also of the
Appropriations Committee and by working on a bipartisan basis. The
chairman of the committee, the Senator from Mississippi, Mr. Cochran,
and I worked across the aisle to get the job done. I thank him for the
leadership he provided the committee, for his professionalism, and for
the ability and the fact that we could work, both he and I, together. I
thank both of our staffs for working with civility and candor.
For the third year in a row, we left no appropriations bill behind.
We negotiated and we compromised. We compromised without capitulation
of our principles, which has always been a strong tradition of the
Appropriations Committee.
As we bring this bill to the floor, I urge all of my colleagues to
vote for this bill. I want to do it on the basis of content and on the
basis of merit.
Now, I will tell you what this bill does. First of all, it does a lot
to protect the United States of America. We know that right now America
feels on edge. We know our leadership needs to provide clarity,
consistency, and specificity, but most of all, we need to provide the
resources that our institutions need so they can protect our country.
This bill provides $606 billion for the national defense of the
United States of America and to support, train, and equip our troops;
to deal with the new threats of biosecurity and the rising efforts of
ISIL so we can follow through with our vow to defeat and destroy them.
We have a must-do list to make sure our troops have the best weapons
and know that the troops and families are supported. We looked out for
their health care and Tricare, and we looked out for the food that they
need to buy in their commissaries.
We know that protecting America is not only accomplished in the
Defense Department. It also lies in the important agencies that do the
tough work. We have adequately capitalized the State Department and
provided money for embassy security so we can protect our embassies and
those who work with them abroad. We have also funded Homeland Security.
We have approved close to $11 billion so that the Coast Guard can
protect our ports and waterways, and we have added $50 million in new
grants to counter violent extremism. We also made sure that we have
given TSA, or the Transportation Security Administration, the equipment
and people it needs to protect travelers with all of the airport
screeners that have been requested. At the same time, we have funded
the FBI, which is doing such an able job of rooting out the terrorists,
including the lone wolf threats that are emerging in our own country.
I want to particularly do a shout-out to the FBI in the Baltimore
district for uncovering a plot in our own home State of Maryland where
someone was organizing and planning a lone wolf effort.
I also wish to thank my colleagues for what we did in the budget
deal. This bill provides $65 billion more to meet our national security
needs, support compelling human needs, and promote the middle class. We
made sure we kept our promises to our veterans. We have a $1.3 billion
increase for veterans health care to meet their health
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needs, the educational needs we promised them, and to deal with this
backlog of disability benefits.
We are not only looking to the past, we are looking to the future. We
have made robust funds available in our innovation area, whether it was
the Department of Energy or the National Institutes of Health, which is
in my home State. On our committee and across the aisle--Senator Patty
Murray, the ranking member, and Senator Roy Blunt, the chairman of the
HHS committee--we renamed the National Institutes of Health the
``National Institutes of Hope'' because of what it does to find the
cures and the breakthroughs for Alzheimer's, on which we have almost
doubled the research in order to break the code on how we can find a
cure or a cognitive stretch-out. We have added $2 billion because we
worked together, because we know that when we want to find the cure for
cancer, Alzheimer's, autism, we need to be able to do that.
We looked also at working out other compelling needs, such as Head
Start, child care and development grants in which we have added more
money, and we make the first payment to fund the programs for
elementary, middle, and high school.
We also meet the physical infrastructure needs, where we have
increased our funding in the T-HUD bill for Transit New Starts to $2.2
billion.
We increased the funding for the HOME Program. Instead of cutting it
by 90 percent, we increased it by $50 million, to $950 million.
We have also looked out for our ports, creating jobs by keeping goods
moving through the full funding of the harbor maintenance trust fund
and the Army Corps of Engineers.
This is about jobs. This isn't about money; this is about jobs. In my
own home State of Maryland, the Port of Baltimore is an incubator for
jobs. It keeps people going, whether it is the people who work to bring
the ships in, whether it is the longshoremen, the tugboat operators, or
those who benefit from the goods and services coming into our port or
leaving our port. It is the ports that create our jobs, and we in
Maryland are ready for the new ships coming through the newly built
Panama Canal. We know this is a big deal that could help our
communities all over America if we invest in our ports.
I know many of our colleagues also want to know about riders. We
faced hundreds of policy riders, some of which were highly
controversial. We did the best we could with them. But while everybody
talks about one item or this item, I want to talk about some of the
ones we were able to deal with.
We prevented double-trailer trucks from taking over our highways. We
protected women's health against devastating riders. We also made sure
those who regulate our financial institutions so that we never have
another meltdown like we had 8 years ago are taken care of, and we
looked out for the environment.
The appropriations bills are good bills, and I could go over more
items, but I see that the chairman of the committee is on the floor. I
again reiterate my appreciation to Senator Cochran and his very able
staff.
I also want to comment about the other side of the dome. Working with
Congressman Hal Rogers, the chairman of the Appropriations Committee,
and Ranking Member Nita Lowey has indeed been a very professional
relationship. I wish that now, with new leadership in the House, they
could function like the Appropriations Committee. Do we disagree? Yes.
The Presiding Officer is a member of that committee, and she knows we
are ready to duke it out when we have to. But we put it all out on the
table. We discuss it. We debate it.
We had an open process with amendments in our committee. We have
worked to resolve conflict by actually meeting and discussing with each
other. We need the same thing with our colleagues on the other side of
the dome. That is what we mean when we say we want to get back to
regular order.
Thanks to the budget deal we have now, I do hope that next year we
can bring bills up one at a time for debate, discussion, and amendment.
I hope we can do that. But I also hope the tone of the Appropriations
Committee is adopted. We can make sure we advocate for our States and
for our viewpoints, but we can do it in a way that it gets done.
I want to conclude by thanking my entire staff, Chuck Kieffer and
Jean Toal Eisen, the staff on the other side of the dome, and all of
those who worked for me. I want to recognize Shannon Kula and Rachel
MacKnight, as well as Brigid Houton and Mara Stark Alcala and Jean
Kwon.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
Mr. COCHRAN. Madam President, I am pleased to recommend approval of
the Omnibus appropriations and tax relief bill that will soon be
considered by the Senate. This bill is consistent with the Budget Act
that was enacted in November. It funds the operations of the Federal
Government for the remainder of this fiscal year. It provides funding
for the Department of Defense and the State Department, along with the
FBI, Customs and Border Protection, and U.S. immigration enforcement
provisions. It provides a $2 billion increase for the National
Institutes of Health. It also funds improvements to our Nation's water
and surface transportation infrastructure.
I deeply appreciate the good work and active leadership of our
committee's vice chairwoman, the distinguished Senator from Maryland.
She has been a pleasure to work with. She has been very helpful in
producing this bill.
I also thank the very able staff members of the committee who have
been very diligent and professional throughout this process. They are a
credit to the Senate.
Madam President, I urge approval of the bill.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona.
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