[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 140 (Thursday, September 15, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5732-S5733]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO KRYSTA JURIS
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I want to switch from my friend Tim Mitchell
to another friend I have. Ten years ago, I was in search of a
scheduler. I needed someone to help with my scheduling and work here in
my Capitol office. The office is just a few feet from here and it is
extremely busy. We have people coming and going all day long, including
the end of the night, and so I knew I needed someone who was good and
would get better. Little did I realize that the woman I would hire
didn't just get better, she has been the best. Her name is Krysta
Juris.
I have a few months to go as a Member of Congress. I have been here
34 years, and I have had some remarkable employees. I have had such
loyal staff with me now who have stayed until the bitter end, but it is
hard to find a description for someone who is as capable, as nice, as
competent, and as smart as Krysta Juris.
David McCallum, who helps me line up staff, told me he had a
candidate and thought she was really good. He gave me her background
and told me she had worked in Senator Clinton's office and on her
Presidential campaign. He told me--I guess this was the clincher--she
was a collegiate lacrosse player. Lacrosse is a game I have gotten to
know quite well because I have grandsons who play that sport. It is a
really difficult, hard game. A college lacrosse player? I understand
the difference between a high school lacrosse player and a college
lacrosse player. Without knowing a lot more, I said she would be
perfect. If she played lacrosse, she would know how to head a front
office.
As I have indicated, serving as a scheduler for my office is not
easy. She, as I indicated, was a college player. She played for the
University of Maryland. They have excellent athletics there, generally.
She has had a demanding schedule for at least 10 years. She incurs
long, long hours. Of course, it goes without saying that quickly she
became the scheduler--not the assistant, not the deputy. To put it
simply, to do this job you have to be really tough and fair. My
colleagues who come to that office regularly--Durbin, Schumer, Murray,
and others--know Krysta. They always know that when they call Krysta,
she tells them the truth: He is here; he is not here; he can see you;
he can't see you. She is tough. She is strong and unafraid. She is not
intimidated by some big-shot Senators. She handles them just fine.
She has been my gatekeeper and my loyal adviser, and she has
performed phenomenally. She is the best at her job that I have ever
seen in my many, many years of public service and as an attorney prior
to my public service. For everything I have done, as far as setting the
schedule, there is no one who is a close second.
She has been in the thick of things. She has been through my ups and
my downs. She has been by my side. There are many, many examples. Some
of us will never forget the snowstorm of 2009. It became so tense here
that one of my Republican colleagues said that he hoped Senator Byrd
would die during the night so we wouldn't have 60 Senators. With his
being ill and having trouble navigating on his legs and living in
Virginia and coming through the blizzard, we were worried. But he
showed up. I told Krysta: Try to do all you can from home, because of
this Snowmageddon, as we called it. We were in session. We had to
finish the health care bill, and every day meant so very, very much.
No, she did not stay home. She trudged through blocks and blocks of
snow and snowdrifts to be here. She never missed a day. She spent many,
many long, long nights in my office. I said: We will get someone to
drive you or walk with you. She said: No, I am OK. I will be fine.
During the fiscal crisis of 2012, we were in session on New Year's
Eve. She was at her desk working while the rest of the world rang in
the new year. Frankly, she was probably glad she was here. She has a
little dog and those firecrackers and all that noise drives her little
dog crazy. So she could be away from the firecrackers and keep her dog
safe. She had reasons for being here during that period of time.
When the Republicans shut down the government for 17 days in 2013,
she was here every day overseeing my schedule, making things run
smoothly, even though no Senate employee was guaranteed that they would
be paid for the work they were doing. As my colleagues will recall,
many Senate employees didn't come to work.
On a more personal note, as happens in everyone's life, there are
times of difficulty. The Reid family has had a few problems. As some
will remember, I was engaged in my office trying to work out a deal
with health care--the Affordable Care Act--and in walked Janice and
Krysta and said there was a call: Your wife has been in an accident. It
was very bad. It broke her neck in two places and her back, and her
face was messed up. That was a hard time for us. Krysta was there. She
was there. She helped with the scheduling. We got over that. Then
Landra got an extremely aggressive form of breast cancer that went on
for months. Krysta balanced my schedule here with my schedule with
Landra. She made sure I had time with Landra to help. I will always
remember her. I didn't have to ask her to do it; she did it.
When I had my unfortunate accident, Krysta knew how I had been hurt,
and I did the best I could covering how I had been hurt. My three
leaders--Durbin, Schumer, and Murray --helped me cover my disability
for a while. She took care of things. My scheduling was done. I missed
very, very few things because of her.
My children know her. My grandchildren know her. It is no surprise
then to say that Krysta is and always will be part of my family.
Krysta's time is ending this week. It is kind of like my service here
in the Senate. I wish it would never end. I wish Krysta could be with
me always. But things change and things happen. But really with Krysta
it is not time for distress or sadness; it is time for happiness
because I have nothing but fond memories of this very beautiful woman--
beautiful on the outside and on the inside. Why is it time for
celebration? Because Krysta, at the ripe old age of 32, is having her
first baby. She is so excited. I remember with all her babies, Landra
wore the smocks that were kind of the style at that time. We don't do
that anymore, and that is terrific. She is so pretty with her
pregnancy, as she is without her pregnancy. She has never missed work
because of her pregnancy. She has never complained about morning
sickness or afternoon sickness or asked to go home early--never. So I
am happy for her. I am happy for Trevor, her good husband.
[[Page S5733]]
Senator Durbin has helped me on a number of occasions with things
that he could help with regarding Krysta. He has been so thoughtful
about making things work out.
So I am happy for Krysta. I am happy for Trevor. She is going to have
a little girl. My hope is that that little girl will turn out to be
just like her mom--a person everybody loves, a person who is dependable
and trustworthy, and a person whose friendship is so important to those
she knows.
My friendship with Krysta is not going to end when I leave the
Senate. It is forever.
So thank you, Krysta, for a job well done. I wish you and your family
the best that life has to offer.
Now back to some other things. I am sorry to have taken so long, but
that is sometimes the way things are.
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