[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 96 (Thursday, June 16, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4285-S4287]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMMERCE, JUSTICE, SCIENCE, AND RELATED AGENCIES APPROPRIATIONS ACT,
2016--Continued
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cassidy). The Senator from South Carolina.
Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate be
in a period of debate only for the next 30 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Remembering the Victims of the Mother Emanuel AME Church Mass Shooting
Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President, a few weeks ago, when I started preparing
to give this speech, I must admit I was overwhelmed with emotion. One
year ago tomorrow, a brutal attack, fueled by hate, led to the deaths
of nine parishioners at Mother Emanuel AME Church in my hometown of
Charleston, SC.
A year later, the idea that someone's heart could be filled with so
much anger and venom is still jarring.
Then, over the weekend, we saw it again. In Orlando, FL, a brutal
attack, fueled by hate, led to the deaths of 49 people at the Pulse
nightclub. This was an assault against the people of Orlando, the State
of Florida, and the United States as a whole.
We can, and we will, have a much longer discussion on ISIS, Islamic
terror, and the steps that must be taken in those areas. But today, as
Orlando mourns and Charleston remembers, I want to return to 365 days
ago and show how, with the world watching, love overcame hate.
On the night of June 17, 2015, I was here in Washington. Much like
this week, we were debating the NDAA and our military priorities. But
in Charleston, there was a Bible study. Cynthia Hurd, Susie Jackson,
Ethel Lee Lance, Depayne Middleton-Doctor, Tywanza Sanders, Daniel
Simmons, Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, Myra Thompson, Felicia Sanders and
her 5-year-old granddaughter, Polly Sheppard, and my friend, the
Reverend Clementa Pinckney, had gathered together for a Bible study at
Mother Emanuel.
Among them was a young man who was new to Emanuel--a young man they
welcomed into their presence with God's love. While they did not and
could not possibly see the darkness in his heart, they showed him the
loving nature of their own hearts--so much so that he later told police
that he almost, almost did not go through with this vicious, vile
attack because everyone was so nice to him. But, tragically, almost was
not enough.
In an instant, the horrors unleashed by this young man changed South
Carolina forever. I remember getting a phone call about 9 o'clock p.m.
on that Wednesday night from one of my friends at the Sheriff's office
about the shooting at Mother Emanuel. Reports continued to come in, and
so I texted my friend, Clementa Pinckney, hoping that he would respond
and tell me what was going on at the church.
I am looking at my texts from June 17, 2015, at 10:31 p.m. I asked
him: Are you and your parishioners OK? It was met with silence--silence
that is still deafening, silence that I will never forget.
He should have been able to text back. He should have been able to go
home and see his family, raise his daughters. He should have been able
to have gone on and finished his work as a State senator in the
statehouse and to continue spreading God's love. As we people of faith
know, sometimes things simply don't go as they are planned. But as the
families of the Emanuel nine showed you, God had a plan.
Within 48 hours, these men and women set the tone for my grieving
city, my grieving State, and my grieving Nation. On Friday morning,
about 36 hours later, looking into the killer's eyes, they said to the
killer of their family members: ``I forgive you.''
Family member after family member, nine consecutive times, to the
shock and the amazement of the world that was watching, said: ``I
forgive you.'' Your life can be better in God's hands.
Those of us here today cannot even imagine how hard that must have
been--how in their immense grief, these families chose to take this
unique path. But they did. We as a nation, as a State, and certainly as
a city are forever thankful.
I am fortunate enough to have had the opportunity to talk to many and
all of the families at some point. I continue to be amazed at their
grace, their dignity, and their righteousness. They have truly been the
rock on which we all stand. In the days and weeks after the shooting,
Charleston and South Carolina came together like never before. As the
clergy and parishioners at Mother Emanuel said after the attack:
``Wrong church, wrong people, wrong day.''
It was the wrong place to try and sow the seeds of discord. It was
the wrong people to try and break their faith and the wrong day to try
and bring down the people of South Carolina.
Last summer, we saw chapters of history close and new ones open.
While the debate over the Confederate flag may be the most widespread
symbol of Emanuel's aftermath, the actions and words of folks across
Charleston and South Carolina are the most enduring.
Looking ahead, we have come so far, but we certainly still face many
challenges. It is going to take a lot of effort and strength to stand
together in times of division. It is going to be hard sometimes in a
world that is too often so full of hate to know that we are still
taking steps forward, and it is going to require a continuing
conversation on issues that are uncomfortable for some but necessary
for all.
So where are we headed from here? Three words show where I believe
that we, as a nation, are headed. These three words show where I
believe we, as a nation, must head. They are simple words--words found
in 1 Corinthians 13: faith, hope, and love. We saw these in abundance
throughout South Carolina over the past year, and they remain our final
goal.
As I head back to Charleston tonight, I will be thinking about the
events honoring the Emanuel nine tomorrow. I am certain there will be
tears--lots of tears. There will be moments, as there have been in the
last few minutes, when it will be hard to speak, to truly show what all
of this means to all of us, but the world will also see this from
Charleston, SC: They will see that you can cannot destroy love with
hate and that you cannot kill the spirit. We
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have not been torn down by this fury of hate, but instead we will
continue to build a bridge, brick by brick, to a future without hate, a
future filled with faith, hope, and love.
I will close by asking one more time, as I did a little more than a
year ago in this very same place for a moment of silence to remember
Cynthia Hurd, Susie Jackson, Ethel Lee Lance, Depayne Middleton-Doctor,
Tywanza Sanders, Daniel Simmons, Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, Myra
Thompson, and my good friend and former State Senator, the Reverend
Clementa Pinckney.
You are forever in our hearts.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from South Carolina.
Mr. GRAHAM. Mr. President, I wish to thank Senator Scott for his
eloquent words on behalf of our State and the leadership he has
provided since this horrible tragedy a year ago.
What can I add? I will just remind people who might not remember why
he did it that his goal was to start a race war. Well, he failed
miserably. Quite the opposite happened in my State. I have never seen
anything quite like it.
We have had our fair share of problems in South Carolina, and still
do, but churches all over the State were filled. Black, White, rich,
poor--all came together to help each other. So this young man's dream
of starting a race war was a miserable failure.
I am sure this guy who attacked the nightclub in Orlando wanted to
break our will and try to get us to kowtow to a radical form of
religion. Well, you are not going to break a will. We will all stand
behind the folks in Orlando and come together as a nation as best we
can.
Senator Scott said it is hard to understand the hate that someone has
to do what these two people did. What blows my mind is how someone can
go and sit in a Bible study for an hour, after being welcomed in off
the street to discuss the Word of God, and then get up and shoot the
people you have been praying with. I don't know how you get there. Only
God knows that. And what this man did in Orlando was beyond vicious.
Here is a question that I have asked myself a thousand times, and I
am beginning to understand the answer: Why was it different in South
Carolina? We have had shootings throughout the country where people
took to the streets. There were riots, sores were exposed, and scabs
were pulled off old wounds. What was it about South Carolina that was
different? I promise you that we are not a perfect people. I promise
you that under the right circumstances, what you saw in other places in
the country would have happened in South Carolina.
Here is the difference: We were all in such a state of shock that
somebody could come into a church and just randomly kill the people
they prayed with. It was hard to get our heads around the thought of
somebody being able to do that. But what woke us up was the way the
families behaved.
Senator Scott indicated that within 48 hours of the killing, there
was an arraignment of the accused, and all the family members appeared
in court. Instead of taking to the streets and showing their
frustration with a system that I am sure can always be made better and
is far from perfect, they decided to channel their grief into something
constructive, not destructive, and I promise you I could not have done
this. If this had been one of my family members, I know Lindsey Graham
well enough to know I could not have done this. I consider myself
person of faith but lacking when it comes to folks at Mother Emanuel
AME Church. Nadine Collier, the daughter of Ethel Lance, who was 70
years old, said the following, as her voice was breaking:
You took something very precious from me. I will never talk
to her again. I will never, ever hold her again. But I
forgive you. And have mercy on your soul.
That is what is different. That is why the people of South Carolina
followed her lead. She and the victims touched our hearts. They
appealed to our better nature and reminded us of what humanity is all
about. It is about love and forgiveness. Politicians--we can take all
the credit we want, but if these people had not done this, it would
have been a different result. I could have talked until I was blue in
the face. If people had chosen to be angry, there was no way in hell I
could have talked them into not being angry because they have every
right to be angry. But because these people did what they did in open
court, the rest of us followed behind and followed their lead.
A year later I am here to tell you that the reason South Carolina
handled this so well, in my view, is that the people in that church
chartered a path for the rest of us, and we were smart enough to follow
their lead. It would be nice if, in the future, when we get mad at each
other here in this body and other places throughout the country over
something maybe not as important as losing a loved one, we could slow
down for just a moment and try to imagine how things would be different
if we could draw upon the example of the families of the fallen.
Look what we argue about. Look how we interact in America today over
things not quite as significant as having your loved one gunned down.
If you really want to honor what happened in South Carolina, as an
individual and a society, whenever you can, remember what the people in
that church did after losing their loved ones, and try to follow their
lead. That would be the greatest respect you could pay to those
families and the greatest honor you could give to those who died for no
good reason.
I need to follow my own advice. There is no better feeling in the
world than being petty and thinking of a reason you were wronged. It
feels good. But every now and then I catch myself. I go back to last
year and wake up and realize that there is a better way.
To those who showed us that better way, I know your pain is as real
as it was on the day this happened. I know you will never get over it,
but I hope you realize that your loved ones did not die in vain
because, through their tragic deaths, you gave us--not just in South
Carolina but throughout the world--the way forward. Whether we choose
it or not is up to us. You have done all you could do and then some.
To the people of South Carolina: I am proud of the way we handled
this tragedy, but we have a long way to go. This weekend will be tough
throughout our State, and as we look back, let's make sure that we
learn from the past and apply it to the future. If we can take that
love and forgiveness and apply it in a constructive way to future
problems in South Carolina, then we will have honored these victims and
their families. If we go back to our petty ways, they will have died
for nothing.
Here is my bet: South Carolina is never going to go back because the
people of Mother Emanuel AME Church showed us the way. It is up to us
to follow them, and I will do my best to follow their lead.
To the people throughout the country who have been generous to this
church, thank you for the dollars that have been raised. It is
appreciated. Thank you for your prayers and the support you have given.
It was essential. You helped us in our time of greatest need.
On behalf of the people of South Carolina to the people of this great
land, thank you for having us in your prayers and for your support and
for being there for us a year ago when we needed you the most.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan.
PIPES Act
Mr. PETERS. Mr. President, this week I was pleased that the Senate
acted unanimously to pass a pipeline safety bill that will help ensure
the safety of our Nation's vast energy pipeline network.
The bipartisan bill, known as the PIPES Act of 2016, now heads to the
President's desk to be signed into law. Safely transporting energy to
our communities and businesses is a goal that we all share. It was
encouraging to see my colleagues come together on both sides of the
aisle and on both sides of the Capitol, as well, to come up with a
final product that will improve pipeline safety and oversight.
With more than 2.6 million miles of oil and gas pipelines across this
Nation, the energy industry must work together at all levels of
government in order to protect lives, communities, and our environment.
Pipelines can be one of the safest ways to move oil and gas products;
however, we have seen
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truly devastating explosions and spills with pipelines, including in my
home State of Michigan. The cost to clean up an oil spill from a
pipeline break near Marshall, MI, into the Kalamazoo River has totaled
over $1.2 billion. A similar spill in the Great Lakes would be
devastating to our economy, environment, and drinking water supply.
The transition to a clean energy economy is one of my top priorities,
but in the meantime, as we push this transition forward, we cannot
accept that pipeline spills are simply the cost of doing business. Our
safety regulators must be equipped with the tools and equipment to
better prevent pipeline accidents, protect public safety, and demand
accountability when things invariably go wrong.
Our pipeline transportation system must be more transparent, and
technology will continue to provide better insight into the pipeline
network without compromising national security and proprietary
information. Our land, air, water, and wildlife must be safeguarded
against leaks and spills. By enhancing safety standards, we can reduce
waste and cleanup costs while making sure we can proudly pass down a
strong outdoor heritage to the next generation. We can also create jobs
for our construction workers, pipefitters, steelworkers, and utility
workers as we upgrade pipelines and fit them with state-of-the-art
technology.
The PIPES Act will make strides in these and many other areas. I was
especially focused on creating measures to safeguard against the
catastrophic consequences of an oil spill in our precious waterways,
especially the Great Lakes. Thanks to a provision I originally worked
on with my colleague Senator Stabenow, the entire Great Lakes Basin
will be designated as an unusually sensitive area. This will make any
pipeline that could spill in and around the Great Lakes area subject to
higher standards for operating safety. The bill also adds coastal
beaches and maritime coastal waters as areas that should be considered
when making an ``unusually sensitive'' determination.
We also must recognize the unique regional challenges our Nation's
far-reaching pipeline network present. In Michigan, we get serious
winters. Lakes and rivers freeze, and even the Great Lakes end up under
very thick ice cover. To address these challenges, I worked to include
a provision requiring pipeline operators to prepare response plans that
address cleanup of an oilspill in ice-covered waters. The Coast Guard
has stated that it does not have the technology or the capacity for
worst-case discharge cleanup under solid ice and that its response
activities are not adequate in ice-choked waters. We need to address
this problem now before a spill under ice-covered water happens.
Any oil pipeline that is deeper than 150 feet underwater will be
required to undergo an inspection every year as a result of this bill.
This requirement would be especially relevant for pipelines running
through the Great Lakes, especially the twin oil pipelines resting on
the lakebed in the Straits of Mackinac. The bill also establishes
emergency order authority so that PHMSA can take quick action to ensure
safety when pipelines pose an imminent threat.
This bill goes beyond just addressing pipelines; it also directs the
Department of Transportation to issue minimum safety standards for
underground natural gas storage facilities. The dangers of a leak from
an underground storage facility was illustrated in a massive methane
leak at a facility in California just a few short months ago which
resulted in evacuations and an emergency declaration. These new
standards are especially important for my home State of Michigan
because we have more underground natural gas storage facilities than
almost any other State in the Union.
Other sections of the PIPES Act encourage collaboration on research,
development, mapping, and technology between Federal agencies, public
stakeholders, and industry leaders. All of these constituencies were
key to providing input into this bill.
I would like to thank Senators Fischer, Booker, and Daines, and of
course Chairman Thune and Ranking Member Nelson for their hard work on
the PIPES Act. The Energy and Commerce Committee and the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure in the House were also instrumental
in making changes and important improvements.
As we continue to move forward and find better ways to meet our
energy needs, it is my hope that we can learn from past catastrophes
and prevent future ones before they ever occur.
The bipartisan PIPES Act can be a model for how we work together to
improve performance and raise our standards in the energy sector.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CASEY. 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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