[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 173 (Friday, December 2, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H7134-H7136]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LEGISLATIVE PROGRAM
(Mr. HOYER asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute.)
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from California (Mr.
McCarthy), the majority leader, for the purpose of inquiring of the
schedule for the week to come.
(Mr. McCARTHY asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. McCARTHY. I thank the gentleman for yielding.
Mr. Speaker, on Monday, the House will meet at noon for morning hour
and 2 p.m. for legislative business. Votes will be postponed until 6:30
p.m.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, the House will meet at 10 a.m. for morning
hour and noon for legislative business.
On Thursday, the House will meet at 9 a.m. for legislative business,
and no votes are expected in the House on Friday.
Mr. Speaker, the House will consider a number of suspensions next
week, a complete list of which will be announced by close of business
today.
The House will also consider H.R. 5143, the Transparent Insurance
Standards Act of 2016, sponsored by Representative Blaine Luetkemeyer,
which specifies U.S. objectives regarding international insurance
standards to ensure that our State-based system is preserved.
Additionally, the House is expected to consider the final Water
Resources and Development bill as well as the continuing resolution to
fund the government.
{time} 1145
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, as the gentleman knows, the current CR
expires on December 9. He has announced the CR will be on the floor
next week, and it is my understanding that December 9 may be our last
day in session, so I presume we need to act before December 8.
Does the gentleman have a perspective on the specific scheduling of
the CR and when it will be on the floor?
I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, the Appropriations Committee is continuing
to work on the CR, including the length of time and when. As soon as it
is done, it will be posted. It is our intention to have it done next
week, and it would be our hope that we could finalize it on Thursday.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I want to make a comment that I know the CR
will be the vehicle. I know Mr. Tom Cole made a comment--and I have
talked to him about it--with which I agree. I am disappointed, our side
is disappointed, and I think some on your side with whom I have talked
are disappointed that we were unable to do an omnibus appropriations
bill which would reflect the work of the committee on our side and,
indeed, the work of the committees on the other side of the aisle.
A CR is not helpful to management, obviously, not knowing
specifically what resources they will have available for the balance of
the year. Very frankly, although there will be anomalies in the bill to
reflect the changes from last year's funding levels, they will
undoubtedly not take care of a funding stream which will be appropriate
for good management in the Federal Government.
I would hope in the year ahead that we would certainly work toward
having bipartisan appropriation bills done bill by bill. Both sides
have had trouble
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doing that from time to time, but let's hope that we can work toward
that end. Because a CR, in many ways, is simply a failure; and
forgetting about who is at fault or who is not at fault, it is a
failure to operate the government in a way that is rational,
reasonable, and most effective.
So I want to make that comment. I know the gentleman agrees with me
on trying to go through regular order, and it is unfortunate that we
didn't get there.
I yield to the gentleman from California if he wants to say anything
on that. I have another question.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, I agree with the gentleman that we should
go through regular order and get our appropriation bills done. It is
our intention, as the gentleman knows from the new schedule coming out,
especially loading more days in, to make sure, as we come back into the
next Congress, that we start with appropriations and get that work
done.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, as a constructive suggestion, I notice that
the gentleman has scheduled--and I want to thank him for his
communication with our office so that we could work together on trying
to get the schedule together--we have four working weeks in June. As
you know, essentially, the Appropriations Committee tries to get its
work done by the end of May in terms of its bills--they don't get all
of them done by the end of May--so we can start moving them to the
floor.
I congratulate the gentleman for putting sufficient time in so that
we can do that in June and July, so that all the bills, hopefully--the
objective, I would suggest, ought to be to have all of the 12
appropriation bills sent to the Senate prior to the August break. I
thank him for his schedule on that.
Originally, March 31 was, as I understood, the CR date, but that is
somewhat flexible now, I understand. Can the gentleman tell me what
date he expects the CR to expire on?
I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, as I mentioned earlier, the Appropriations
Committee is continuing to work on the CR, and that would be including
the length of time. The gentleman is correct that March was the date we
were looking at. I believe that date will change. But as soon as
discussions have ended and we are able to post, it will include the
date of the length of the CR.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, one of the things that we are certainly very
hopeful of--your office and my office were having a lot of discussions
about that, as are Leader Pelosi and Speaker Ryan having a lot of
discussions--is the WRRDA bill. This deals very critically with the
Flint crisis that has been ongoing now for 2-plus years. I am very
concerned, although we apparently have an agreement on the dollar
figure, can the gentleman tell me whether that dollar figure will, in
fact, be appropriated within the structure of the WRRDA bill?
I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, I do want to thank the gentleman from
Maryland for his work with his staff on this issue of the Flint crisis
when we were dealing with WRRDA and the continuing resolution just
short months ago.
The Speaker and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi are continuing to talk.
It is our intention that it gets solved inside WRRDA, and we are
hopeful that we can close out on that even today. As soon as it is
finished, it will be posted as well.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, when you say within WRRDA, in the event that
that does not occur, would the gentleman believe that we would deal
with the assurance of the funding in the CR itself?
I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, as soon as it is finished, we will be able
to put it out. But it is our intention, on the work that we agreed to
with Members on your side of the aisle--and I know Speaker Ryan has had
discussions with him as well, and he feels very comfortable about where
we are and with funding on that--as soon as we are able to finish that
up, I think everybody will be quite happy with the outcome. I think
this is a work-on-both-sides-of-the-aisle compromise to find common
ground to actually solve a problem.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I want to say to the gentleman from
California that I appreciate the fact that our offices work together,
that the Speaker and the leaders' offices have been working together
and that the committees have been working together.
I would urge, however this money is appropriated--whether it is
appropriated within the CR, whether it is appropriated in the WRRDA
bill itself--that the money needs to be made available before we leave
this week because this is an issue that has dragged on for too long and
the people of Flint are still in dire distress, which is terribly
unfortunate given the length of this crisis and the causes of this
crisis, in some respects.
Lastly, Mr. Leader, I asked this and you responded that December 9
was the date; but do you see any possibility of going beyond the 9th
that we need to warn our Members about? We are hearing that both on the
Senate side and on our side, that there is every expectation that next
week will be the last week that we will be in session in the 114th
Congress.
I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, the gentleman knows better than I--he has
been here longer than I--that we can always set a date, but Congress
sometimes has a problem making that date.
It is our hope that we can be finished by December 8, but no one can
predict what happens on this floor, whether we have to be here longer.
It is always my intention that Members understand, if the work is not
done, we will not leave.
So we will not leave until we get a continuing resolution done and
get WRRDA done. I believe that the prior work that we have done working
together--and knowing where both of them are right now--that we can
finish this up and be done on time.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, the gentleman mirrors my words. When people
would ask me when we are going to conclude, I would say we are going to
conclude when we finish our work. Now, finishing, I guess, one's work
is a subjective judgment; but certainly these two pieces of legislation
need to get done, and hopefully we can get those done.
If we don't have a further week, this will be the last colloquy. I
want to say to my friend that we have been able to work on a lot in the
114th Congress. We have had real substantive differences. We will
continue to have those differences. But I look forward to working
closely with the majority leader when, in fact, we agree, and when we
disagree, to try to work constructively on trying to get to an
agreement.
This election has caused us, I think, some real challenges. The
election itself was a challenge, and I know we will have a lot more to
say on that afterwards.
I want to thank the gentleman from California for the ability to work
together and constructively on behalf of the American people where we
have been able to do that.
I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, I want to take a moment and congratulate
the gentleman from Maryland on his reelection to whip.
Hopefully, this is our last colloquy for the year, but you know as
much as I know.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, well, I know how much you look forward to
these colloquies.
I yield to the gentleman from California.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, it is the highlight of my week.
I look forward to the next Congress. I do enjoy working with the
gentleman from Maryland, even when we disagree, because the gentleman
is honest and forthright with his disagreements. The gentleman is
willing to work where we do find common ground.
We are going to have philosophical differences, but we are going to
have the same commitment that we are going to try to find a way to move
forward. At times, we are going to disagree; but those times that we do
agree, we work very well together. I admire the gentleman. The
gentleman works very hard when he disagrees, and that is just part of
what I think the American people expect. We have got a lot of work to
go before us. The election is over. I think it is time that this
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country comes together. We are going to have a lot of work.
As the gentleman from Maryland knows, with the new schedule, Members
are going to be here much more than they have been in the past, and we
are probably going to be on this floor with legislation a little more
than we were last year. I look forward to that and look forward to
working with the gentleman on ways that we can work together.
I wish the gentleman from Maryland a very Merry Christmas.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from California and
return that wish for a Merry Christmas. This is not our last week. We
are going to be here next week, so maybe we will save that for then.
I do look forward and the people look forward. This election has been
a deeply troubling one for all sides in many respects. I think it is
our responsibility to try to bring some degree of confidence to all of
our constituents, whatever they believe, whoever they voted for, that
we are going to move forward in a constructive, positive way to make
America an even greater country than it is now.
I yield back the balance of my time.
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