[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 171 (Wednesday, November 30, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6595-S6596]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MINE WORKERS' HEALTH CARE AND PENSIONS AND THE 21ST CENTURY CURES BILL
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, right now our Nation's retired coal
miners--and I know Senator Kaine and Senator Warren care about this,
too--are on the brink of losing the health care and retirement benefits
that they have earned over a lifetime of hard work.
It is within the power of this Congress to stop this, to help the
mine workers, and to do right by these hard-working Americans. Many of
them are
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veterans. Most of them wore their bodies out to give their families a
better life. There is no more fitting action that we can take during
this holiday season than to honor this promise that the American
Government has made to our Nation's mine workers since Harry Truman
made that promise. The workers held up their end of the bargain. It is
despicable that we are not holding up ours and that we are preparing to
leave town without lifting a finger to help these workers.
United Mine Workers of America's health care and pension plan covers
some 100,000 mine workers; 6,800 live in Ohio. If Congress fails to
act, thousands of retired miners could lose their health care this
year. I emphasize that it is retirement security they worked for,
security they fought for, and security they sacrificed raises and their
own health for.
Understand this: Too many people that dress in suits, work here, draw
good salaries, and draw good benefits don't understand what happens at
the bargaining table for workers in our country. They often give up
raises today to defer that money so that they have retirements and
pensions in the future.
Say that again: People at the bargaining table give up dollars today.
Rather than take a little higher pay today, they are willing to defer
that so they will have better pensions and health care. This Congress,
this Senate leadership is blocking us from doing that.
These are workers who worked for decades in the mines--hard,
backbreaking work but work that had dignity. I live in a place that
some national media people, including President-Elect Trump, have
referred to as the ``rust belt.'' When they say ``rust belt,'' that is
a direct attack on the dignity of work. It demeans their work. It
diminishes who they are. It is saying that those people, such as
miners, steelworkers, and others who make things, are in the past.
For these mine workers, every year in their work in the mines, they
have earned and contributed to a health plan and pension plan. I have
met with some of these workers--Ohioans like Norm Skinner, Dave Dilly,
and Babe Erdos. I have heard their stories. They knew they were signing
up for tough, dangerous work. They worked in the mines, after all. They
knew that. But they also know their work had dignity. That work was
part of a covenant we used to have in this country--a covenant that
said: If you work hard, if you put in the hours, if you contribute to
retirement, if you provide for your own health care in the future, you
will be able to support yourself and your family. It is what built our
country. It is what created the middle class.
Today, the value of that work is eroding. Too often, too many major
corporations in this country are choosing profits over people. We
haven't lifted a finger, frankly. The political agenda here--some
people who run this Senate simply don't have respect for the mine
workers, for the union. They seem to have some anti-union sensibilities
about this. Whatever it is, they are not lifting a finger to help these
workers who put in the effort and who are in trouble through no fault
of their own.
There is no reason to leave town. We shouldn't be going home for the
holidays without taking care of the 6,800 mine workers in Ohio, a
number of mine workers in West Virginia, thousands of mine workers in
Virginia, Eastern Kentucky, and Southwest Pennsylvania.
This is a bipartisan solution. It will not cost taxpayers a dime. If
this bipartisan mine workers legislation were brought to the floor
today, it would pass with majorities in each party. We shouldn't be
taking up other legislation. Until we do this, it should be part of the
Cures Act that we will be voting on later.
The Cures Act has important components to it, good steps on mental
health, on hospital reimbursement. It has my National Pediatric
Research Network Act in it. But it is a 900-page bill negotiated
entirely in the House. It has major flaws.
It does include funding for NIH, funds to fight the opioid epidemic.
We know how important that is. But the funding isn't mandatory. It will
be subject to the whims of future Congresses. This is pretty good happy
talk, and we are saying the right things. We are putting language in
this bill, but it doesn't guarantee the money will be there. It is so
important to my State.
A new report released this week showed Ohio had the most drug
overdoses that resulted in death in the country in 2014, not the most
per capita. We had more drug overdose deaths than California, three
times our population; Texas, twice our population; more than Illinois,
Pennsylvania, New York, Florida--all States with more people than we
have. More Ohioans died from drug overdoses from OxyContin or oxycodone
or heroin or the new synthetic drugs we are seeing more and more. We
have to do more.
The billion dollars in grants in this bill are critically important,
but it needs to be mandatory funding. It can't be that down the road
some powerful Member of the House or Senate stands in the way of
actually getting these communities the money. We can't fight year after
year to get these dollars appropriated.
The Cures Act gives significant concessions to Big Pharma, which is
the big drug industry, the drug giants in this country, but it does
absolutely nothing to combat drug prices. We give concessions to the
big drug companies, but we do nothing to fight the high cost of drugs
in this bill.
We shouldn't be spending time on this flawed bill until we keep our
promises to the 12,000 mine workers I mentioned. These miners worked in
some of the most dangerous conditions of any jobs in this country. They
deserve the full pension and health benefits they were promised. They
have worked a lifetime to earn these benefits. They kept faith with us.
We must keep faith with them. It is simply irresponsible and immoral
for us to leave town and not take care of the mine workers.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SASSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Barrasso). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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