[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 56 (Wednesday, April 13, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2021-S2022]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO JANET AIRIS
Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I join with the vice chairwoman of the
Appropriations Committee, Senator Mikulski, and the chairman and
ranking member of the Budget Committee, Senator Enzi and Senator
Sanders, in honoring Janet Airis on her retirement after 32 years of
distinguished service to the Congress with the Congressional Budget
Office. Janet is highly regarded by both Republicans and Democrats on
both sides of the Capitol for her encyclopedic knowledge of the
appropriations and budget process and its lexicon, her responsiveness
to committee and Member staff, and her dedication to the nonpartisan
role that CBO plays in the successful enactment of appropriations bills
year after year. Janet has been a valuable asset to eight of the nine
CBO directors.
Janet came to CBO in the waning days of 1983, fairly soon after
graduating from Wellesley College. She joined the scorekeeping unit in
the budget analysis division, which has the responsibility of tracking
and scoring the appropriations bills at each legislative stage as well
as tracking mandatory spending in authorizing legislation. Janet was
hired to assist in maintaining the database used by the division. Janet
has worked to keep the database in sync with the many changes in the
budget process, integrating new categories and methods so that CBO
could accurately tabulate and report on Federal spending. Janet started
as the scorekeeper for the defense and military construction
appropriation bills. Over the course of her career, she also handled
the Transportation, Veterans Affairs, Housing and Urban Development and
Agriculture, and legislative branch appropriations bills, in the
process gaining a vast array of knowledge of a substantial part of the
Federal budget.
In 2000, Janet made the transition to unit chief. For the past 16
years, she has successfully overseen the analysis of the President's
budget request for each of the appropriation bills, the scoring of the
appropriation bills at each stage, the production and review of
baselines, and the writing and coordination of CBO's annual report on
unauthorized appropriations and expiring authorizations. Through all of
these tasks, she has been the steady hand of the scorekeeping unit,
generous with her time and knowledge, and vital to the smooth
functioning of the budget analysis division. Senate staff and
colleagues have come to depend on her for her ready expertise,
diligence, and attention to detail.
Janet is also famous for sharing her prodigious baking talent. Every
year she has coordinated the provision of cookies during the conclusion
of the December baseline, which often coincided with the final days of
a congressional session. The appearance of a red-clothed table outside
of the scorekeeping unit bearing plates of homemade cookies always
brings a smile to stressed budget analysts checking final numbers or
scoring final bills.
Janet's expertise, corporate knowledge, and generosity of time and
spirit will be sorely missed, but she well deserves an opportunity to
rest after her years of outstanding service to the Congress. We are
grateful for that service, and we wish her the best in the years to
come.
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