[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 94 (Tuesday, June 14, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3842-S3843]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMERCE-JUSTICE-SCIENCE APPROPRIATIONS BILL
Mr. PERDUE. Mr. President, I rise today to speak very briefly to
highlight my opposition to the cloture motion on the appropriations
bill for the Department of Commerce, Department of Justice, and the
Science agencies and to discuss an issue of critical importance to my
home State of Georgia and what I think is a direct abuse of what the
Founders intended for Senate debate.
For over 20 years, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and the Army Corps of
Engineers have been engaged in various lawsuits over water rights among
those three States. Georgia has two reservoirs in question--Lake Lanier
and Lake Allatoona--that are operated by the Corps, that provide
drinking water for Metro Atlanta, and that provide water downstream for
the Chattahoochee, Flint, Coosa, and Tallapoosa Rivers. These river
basins also provide water to South Georgia and parts of Alabama and
Florida.
Currently, litigation is pending in the U.S. Supreme Court, the
Federal DC district court, and the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of Georgia. Negotiations are also ongoing between the State
governments on this very topic, and I believe they are closer to a
solution right now than we have ever been.
Clearly, this is an issue that should be left to the States to settle
through negotiation and, if needed, litigation. But now another attempt
is being made by some in the Senate to surreptitiously influence the
courts through language included in the report that accompanies this
CJS bill.
We will vote on that bill sometime this afternoon. I strongly oppose
this bill. This is the business of the States and should not be
resolved or influenced in this manner. Let me be clear. It is not this
body's place to try and tip the scales in any way on this matter.
Furthermore, we have already had this fight. This same language was
inserted last year during debate over the omnibus spending bill. Then
it was removed after further examination and explanation was given to
leaders in both Chambers over its purpose. Let me reiterate that. When
the leaders of this body and the leader in the House saw what was
really happening in this language, they both independently removed the
language. It was removed then, and nothing has changed to merit having
this debate again in this Senate this year.
Multiple lawsuits and negotiations between the States are ongoing.
There is nothing unusual about that. Any attempt to create a role for
Congress during the appropriations process on this issue would set a
dangerous precedent and should alarm every Senator who cares about the
rights and integrity of the States. Injecting Congress into this would
give an unjust advantage to other States involved, stripping away any
incentive for them to negotiate in good faith with our State of
Georgia.
Furthermore, this congressional involvement would establish a
dangerous precedent for any State involved in water resource
negotiations. The negotiations on water rights in the West make these
pale in comparison. That is not a role our Founders intended for
Congress to play, and inserting the Federal Government into another
issue where it doesn't belong would be emblematic of why folks back
home are so fed up with the dysfunction in Washington.
For these reasons and others, as I will discuss throughout this week
as
[[Page S3843]]
we debate this bill, I will definitely vote no on advancing to the CJS
appropriations bill.
I yield back and note the whip is in the Chamber.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority whip.
____________________