[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 174 (Monday, December 5, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6686-S6696]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TSUNAMI WARNING, EDUCATION, AND RESEARCH ACT OF 2015
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will
resume consideration of the House message to accompany H.R. 34, which
the clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
House message to accompany H.R. 34, an act to authorize and
strengthen the tsunami detection, forecast, warning,
research, and mitigation program of the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, and for other purposes.
Pending:
McConnell motion to concur in the amendment of the House to
the amendment of the Senate to the bill.
McConnell motion to concur in the amendment of the House to
the amendment of the Senate to the bill, with McConnell
amendment No. 5117, to change the enactment date.
McConnell amendment No. 5118 (to amendment No. 5117), of a
perfecting nature.
McConnell motion to refer the message of the House on the
bill to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and
Pensions, with instructions, McConnell amendment No. 5119, to
change the enactment date.
McConnell amendment No. 5120 (to the instructions
(amendment No. 5119) of the motion to refer), of a perfecting
nature.
McConnell amendment No. 5121 (to amendment No. 5120), of a
perfecting nature.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
Remembering James Tancill Lyons
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I rise today to pay tribute to Jim Lyons, a
longtime staffer on Capitol Hill--my staffer--and a fixture in tax
policy here in DC, who passed away on September 29 of this year.
James Tancill Lyons was born on March 7, 1973, to Stephen and Ann
Lyons, both natives of the DC-Virginia area with longstanding ties to
the local community. Growing up in Springfield, VA, Jim was an
accomplished athlete, excelling in both baseball and basketball. Oddly,
for a sports fan in the DC area, his favorite football team was the
Dallas Cowboys--a decision he made consciously because his older
brother, Stephen, was a big Redskins fan.
Jim was also a great student, eventually graduating summa cum laude
from James Madison University. He went to law school at the University
of Texas, where he made the Editing Committee of the Texas Journal of
Business Law and won a scholarship for being the best tax law student
in his class after pulling the top grade in his business associations,
income tax, international tax, corporate tax, and estate and gift tax
classes.
After law school, he earned a clerkship at the Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals and then got a job working for Cleary Gottlieb, one of the
finest law firms in the country. Of course, you would never guess any
of this if you knew Jim. While he was always an incredibly valuable and
often brilliant attorney and congressional staffer, he talked about his
college and law school days as though he spent most of his time having
fun and just barely skating by. That, of course, was vintage Jim
Lyons--incredibly outgoing but unbelievably humble.
Jim could have a long conversation with anyone about pretty much
anything, but he was never one to spend all that much time touting his
own accomplishments. Make no mistake, Jim Lyons was very accomplished.
After his time at the law firm in New York, Jim made his way to the
House Ways and Means Committee, and, following a brief subsequent and
successful stint at the Department of Justice, he was hired by Chairman
Chuck Grassley to serve as tax counsel on the Senate Finance Committee.
In his 8 years on the Finance Committee, he made a mark on every
major tax bill, not to mention a number of debt and budget deals that
went through the Senate, including many tax-extenders bills, some of
which he seemed to be able to cobble together singlehandedly.
[[Page S6687]]
Jim was smart as a whip. He was a tremendously valuable congressional
staffer because he had both a remarkable understanding of tax policy
and an uncanny ability to see all the traps and pitfalls that stood
ahead for any particular proposal or piece of legislation. He had an
encyclopedic knowledge of the technical aspects of the Tax Code, as
well as a clear understanding of the real-world implications,
immediately seeing where a particular tax policy or bill would fit in
the larger policy and, when necessary, the political landscape. Jim was
one of those people who could go into the weeds to discuss, debate, and
negotiate tax policy literally with anyone on the planet but also break
that same policy down to its essential elements and explain it to
lesser mortals, including, I have to say, more than a few of us U.S.
Senators.
Of course, like all of us, Jim had his own ideological views and
opinions, and he made no secret about the way he saw the world and his
beliefs about the best path forward for our country. When necessary, he
was a fierce advocate for his own views, but more importantly, for
someone in his position, he was able, when necessary, to
dispassionately apply his accrued knowledge and expertise to any tax
proposal, whether it came from a conservative or liberal or a
Republican or Democrat, and then break it down to its essence and give
a clear and concise assessment of the policy and its chances for being
enacted.
All of this made him an essential and indispensable part of our
efforts on the Senate Finance Committee for close to a decade. As I
think all of my colleagues will attest, staffers with that kind of
knowledge and ability to evaluate policy and lay out its chances for
success really can be hard to come by.
However, in the weeks since Jim's passing, it hasn't been his
accomplishments or his knowledge of the Tax Code that people have most
remembered; instead, most of the focus has been on his friendly
demeanor, his mischievous sense of humor, and most of all, his kind
heart.
Dozens of Jimmy's friends and colleagues visited Jim and his family
in the hospital during his final days, and during the October recess,
hundreds attended a memorial service held here in the Capitol. Each one
of these people had at least one personal story to share about Jim.
Sure, some of the stories did touch on his successes as a staffer and
his professional disposition, but far more often the stories were about
Jim's kindness, even to strangers, or his ability to make people feel
at ease--and sometimes laugh uncontrollably--even in tense situations.
Jim was always quick to offer assistance and comfort to those in need
and to provide a much needed laugh when things got really tough. He is
one of very few people I have come across on Capitol Hill--and keep in
mind I have been here a while--who will be remembered more or less
equally for the bills he successfully drafted and negotiated and for
the way he cracked everyone up at the negotiating table.
I think my favorite story I have heard about Jim came from his mother
Ann. In 2003, Jim was living in New York City when much of that part of
the country suffered a massive blackout. It is difficult to be in a
place like New York without power, and Jim noticed many people on his
way home who were stranded and in need of assistance. Rather than look
down at the ground and head quickly for home, as many would probably
want to do in that situation, Jim offered help to a dozen or so people,
bringing them all home to his apartment, giving them both food and a
comfortable space to ride out the power outage. Most of these people
were strangers. Yet Jim, ever the kind soul, offered his time and his
home to help them through a difficult evening.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that a copy of pages 14 and 15
from the August 2003 edition of Cleargolaw News, a newsletter for the
law firm where Jim worked at that time, be printed in the Record
following my remarks.
The article tells the story of Jim's efforts during the power
blackout.
These are the types of stories that have constantly been shared since
Jim's passing, and I know these memories and stories from people who
knew and worked with Jim have been helpful to his family during this
difficult time.
When I hear these accounts of people's interactions with Jim, I am
reminded of a popular hymn in my church, which reads:
Each life that touches ours for good
Reflects thine own great mercy, Lord;
Thou sendest blessings from above
Thru words and deeds of those who love.
What greater gift dost thou bestow,
What greater goodness can we know
Than Christ-like friends, whose gentle ways
Strengthen our faith, enrich our days.
When such a friend from us departs,
We hold forever in our hearts
A sweet and hallowed memory,
Bringing us nearer, Lord, to thee.
Jim Lyons led a life which touched many others for the better. His
positive influence has been felt by countless people, pretty much
anyone who had the opportunity to interact with him. I personally
already miss Jim's stalwart presence on the Finance Committee. I miss
his wise and plain-spoken advice and unequalled knowledge of tax
policy. More than that, I miss the kind and humorous manner that
endeared Jim to so many of us working in and around the Senate.
There is a simple quote--an anonymous proverb of sorts--that has
often been attributed to Dr. Seuss, though its origin is ultimately in
dispute: ``Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened.''
Over the past couple of months, I think that has been the prevailing
sentiment among those of us who were lucky enough to know Jim Lyons.
While tears have been shed and great sadness has been felt, the
remembrances we have had of Jim's life and our interactions with him
have given all of us reason to smile and even laugh.
I want to once again express my condolences to Jim's family, his
parents Stephen and Ann, his brother Steve, his two nephews, Tyler and
Blake, and of course his beloved dog Buddy. Recently, I have had the
opportunity to spend time with and get to know Jim's wonderful family.
They are truly extraordinary people, and my prayers continue to go out
to them. I know I am not alone in that regard. I care for them.
Everybody who knew Jim and has now known them cares for them. Our
sympathy and our heartfelt thanks go out to them for allowing their son
to become the great person he became, and, of course, allowing him to
come and work with us on Capitol Hill.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
Thank You for Taking Care of Us
(By Alice Steinert)
Here is a wonderfully refreshing story about a truly good,
kind person.
The day of the blackout was scary for some, devastating for
others, and just plain inconvenient for many. There are those
of us who still have thighs and calves that ache from all
those flights of stairs! Many people could not get home that
night for a number of reasons--1) after walking down that
many flights of stairs, some people were a bit lame and
therefore could not walk the distance to their homes, or
their homes were too far to walk to; 2) there were few, if
any, buses, taxi cabs, cars, trains, ferries, no subways, and
no hotel vacancies; 3) etc., etc., etc.
But, for those of us fortunate enough to know Jim Lyons,
CGSH Associate extraordinaire, we certainly know the meaning
of the true human spirit.
Jim invited many people to his home that day when we had to
evacuate OLP. He provided an immediate ``base'' for people to
relax, calm down, regroup, make contact with family/friends,
eat, drink, whatever they needed. But, for nine of us (Ron
Becton, Robert Franklin, Monica Gagnon, Glenville Hunter, Amy
Menendez, Alice Steinert, Jason Steinert, Naj-Lah Toussaint
and Carol Whatley), he provided much, much more. He provided
a safe haven for the night.
At about 7:45 P.M. Jim walked from his home to OLP to see
if there was anyone else in need of assistance. Well, he
found nine of us who were seriously thinking about bunking
down for the night in front of the lobby doors. Without
hesitation Jim invited all of us to his home (he had never
even met some of us before). Not only did he provide us with
a roof over our heads, he also offered food and beverage, the
use of his cell phone, pillows and blankets, and even gave up
his bed to two of us ladies. Not only that, he bought
toothbrushes for us; What ensued was a night we will all
remember--good people, stimulating conversation, a lot of
fun, and a great deal of bonding and comeraderie.
While we will individually, and as a group, thank Jim, I
think everyone in the firm should recognize what an
exceptional person Jim is. If there were more ``Jim's'' in
the world, what a different place it would be. God Bless You
Jim.
Remembering King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I rise today, December 5, 2016, in
commemoration of the 89th birthday of the late
[[Page S6688]]
King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand and in recognition of the National
Day of Thailand. In remembrance of the extraordinary life, steady
leadership, and remarkable 70-year reign of the beloved King Bhumibol,
I have introduced S. Con. Res. 57, along with Representative Matt
Salmon in the House. This resolution honors the late King's lasting
legacy, extends our collective condolences to the royal family and the
people of Thailand, and celebrates the alliance and friendship between
our two nations. I would like to thank the cosponsors of this
resolution, Senators Whitehouse, Roberts, Markey, Flake, Cotton, and
Gardner. Additionally, I express my appreciation to Chairman Bob Corker
for his assistance in receiving timely consideration of this bipartisan
effort in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
His Majesty, King Bhumibol Adulyadej, enjoyed a special relationship
with the United States, having been born in Cambridge, MA, in 1927,
while his father was completing his medical studies at Harvard
University. He was always a trusted friend of the United States in
advancing a strong and enduring alliance and partnership between our
two countries.
At the time of his death on October 13, 2016, King Bhumibol Adulyadej
was the longest serving head of state in the world and the longest
serving in the history of Thailand. He dedicated his life to the well-
being of the Thai people and the sustainable development of his
country. His Majesty was an anchor of peace and stability for Thailand
and for the region, earning him the deep reverence of the Thai people
and the respect of leaders around the world.
I hope my colleagues will join me tomorrow in passing S. Con. Res. 57
as a gesture of respect and appreciation for the life of this great
leader and as a symbol of our continued commitment to and friendship
with Thailand. Additionally, I am sure my colleagues in the Senate will
join me in offering our warmest congratulations and best wishes to the
new King of Thailand, His Majesty King Maha Vajiralongkorn.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
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. HATCH. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Passage Vitiated--H.R. 5602, S. 3336, and Calendar Nos. 675 through 683
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to vitiate passage
of H.R. 5602, S. 3336, and Calendar Nos. 675 through 683.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. HATCH. 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. VITTER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Farewell to the Senate
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, I rise today to speak on the Senate floor
for the last time. I am not generally big on nostalgic reminiscences,
but I would like to briefly reflect on what is clearly the greatest
honor of my professional life--my 12 years in the U.S. Senate and 5\1/
2\ years in the U.S. House of Representatives and the enormous honor of
serving the people of Louisiana to whom I will always be so deeply
indebted.
In some ways it seems like just yesterday that I was on the floor of
the U.S. House being sworn in, surrounded by our very young children,
except for Jack, who wasn't born yet. I said then: ``I am honored,
humbled, awestruck to stand before you today.'' I stated my simple
goal: to become at ease and comfortable as I learn the ways of
Congress, as I hopefully become an effective representative and
respected colleague and friend, but never to become so at ease and
comfortable that I lose these feelings of honor, of humility, of awe,
and, believe me, I haven't.
My very first year in the Senate was a very memorable one. That year
Louisiana was struck by Hurricanes Rita and Katrina. After the initial
shock of those cataclysmic events, I realized that for quite some time,
my priorities as Louisiana Senator would be dominated by the desperate
need to rebuild our State, including dramatically improving our
hurricane and flood protection and restoring our coastline.
Katrina's devastation was hard to imagine, destroying much of
Southeast Louisiana and Coastal Mississippi. Less than 1 month later,
Hurricane Rita slammed into Southwest Louisiana as another one of the
most intense hurricanes in history. I immediately went to work with
Senator Landrieu and the rest of our Louisiana delegation as well as my
good friends Thad Cochran, Trent Lott, and others to secure the
necessary disaster recovery assistance and also to make reforms to the
Army Corps of Engineers to better protect our families and communities
from future natural disasters.
Louisiana has continued to face and survive other major disasters,
including Hurricane Gustav in August and September 2008, Hurricane Ike
in September of that same year, Hurricane Isaac in 2012, the Red River
flooding in Northern and Central Louisiana, and the 1,000-year-flood
event in greater Baton Rouge and Acadiana this past August.
As if all of that weren't enough, in April of 2010, the Deepwater
Horizon oil rig exploded off the coast of Louisiana, killing 11 men and
devastating our coastline. The disaster, followed by the horribly
misguided offshore drilling moratorium President Obama put in place,
caused economic and environmental chaos in Louisiana.
Once again, I immediately went to work with so many others to
increase and improve safety measures and reopen the Gulf of Mexico to
energy exploration and put people back to work. We introduced
legislation to dedicate a majority of the BP penalties toward restoring
coastal ecosystems and economies damaged by the spill. It was an uphill
battle to ensure Louisiana was fairly compensated, but we did, and we
achieved substantial wins, including passage of that critical RESTORE
Act that I described.
During the recovery fight following each of these disasters, I found
that the most effective leadership involved communicating clearly and
employing solutions based on Louisiana common sense, and what always
inspired me and kept me going was the unbelievable resilience, faith,
and determination of my fellow Louisianans. Their strength and optimism
have been oh so powerful reminders of how blessed I have been to serve
them.
On a host of other important issues, I always sought to further two
sets of political values, really modeled after my two favorite
Presidents, Ronald Reagan and Teddy Roosevelt. I always strove to
further the central American tradition of limited government and
individual freedom, and I was never afraid to shake things up, to
demand needed reforms to ensure that leaders in Washington served the
American people and not the other way around.
I have had the honor of protecting Louisiana's traditions and proud
heritage while here in the Senate. Louisianans love the outdoors and
want strong environmental conservation and sportsmen's policies to
maintain that culture, and that certainly includes securing the rights
afforded to each American by the Second Amendment, which I have fought
to do.
Louisianans respect the sanctity of life, which has been one of my
top priorities while serving in Congress. I have introduced many bills
that end taxpayer funding of abortion and abortion mills and have
proudly stood in the defense of life.
When it comes to our Nation's immigration policies, I have been an
advocate for targeted reforms that fix the immigration crisis, starting
with border security and enforcing the immigration laws already on the
books. I fought President Obama's unconstitutional attempts to
implement Executive amnesty, which only encourages more immigrants to
come here illegally and insults the millions of fine immigrants who do
follow U.S. law.
I was also the first to introduce legislation in 2007 to end
dangerous sanctuary city policies and have continued to do so each
Congress since. I have also been critical of too big to fail in the
banking sector and have found
[[Page S6689]]
banking reform to be an area in which Republicans can absolutely find
common ground with Democrats. That is where I found success in passing
into law specific measures that restrict too-big-to-fail and tax-funded
bailouts. Also during my time in Congress, I have introduced several
important government reform bills so we can get back to the best
traditions of our democracy, which includes electing citizen
legislators, making sure they don't make themselves into a separate
ruling class, and advocating for term limits so individuals don't
remain in office for an eternity.
Americans of all backgrounds think Washington is on a different
planet and Members of Congress just don't get it. That is why I fought
to end Congress's automatic pay raises each year. I first introduced
that language in 2009, and the raises have been successfully blocked
each year since. Congress can be an effective representative body only
when it lives under the same laws it imposes on the rest of the
country, and one major way to support that is through term limits. When
I was a member of the Louisiana State legislature, I was successful in
establishing legislative term limits there, and I have offered the
leading term limits measure for Congress here, as well as imposing it
on myself.
I fought for commonsense legislation that helps all Americans have
access to high-quality and affordable health care. That includes the
work to dismantle ObamaCare and replace it with patient-centered health
care reform, which I am very hopeful the incoming Trump administration
will achieve. In the meantime, I have been fighting to end Washington's
exemption from ObamaCare, an illegal Obama administration Executive
order that allows Washington elites to avoid the most inconvenient,
expensive aspects of the Affordable Care Act by giving themselves
taxpayer subsidized health care through an exchange meant solely for
small businesses. Also in the health care arena, I was able to pass
into law the bipartisan Steve Gleason Act of 2015. It provided
immediate relief for patients who have been denied access to lifesaving
and life-altering medical equipment. It was about a 2014 Medicare
policy change that we had to reverse. Our bill allowed these patients
to have access to medical equipment that truly empowers them, that is a
true lifeline, and it changes their lives absolutely for the better.
I have also fought against large drug manufacturing lobbies to allow
for reimportation of safe and approved prescription medicine from other
countries, which gives patients, especially our seniors, relief from
rising health care costs.
I have been honored to serve in the Senate in additional ways as
well, including as a top Republican on the Environment and Public Works
Committee and most recently as chair of the Senate Committee on Small
Business and Entrepreneurship. I am very proud to say that we have
accomplished so many of our goals in those two roles.
We worked in a bipartisan fashion on EPW to pass several major pieces
of legislation, including the Water Resources and Development Act of
2007 and the even more significant WRDA of 2014, several
reauthorizations of the highway bill, the bipartisan and historic
rewrite of the 40-year-old Toxic Substances Control Act, which began as
conversations between Senator Frank Lautenberg and myself, a
partnership which Senator Tom Udall continued after Frank's unfortunate
passing.
We were also able to hold the administration accountable by
conducting investigations into some outright corruption within the
Obama EPA, and we advanced key transparency initiatives that shed light
on government's attempts to implement policies that were not based on
sound science or strategic needs.
As chair of the Small Business Committee, I have been advocating to
make sure the voices and concerns of small business owners across the
country are heard in Washington. We have held 23 hearings here, 18
field hearings, numerous roundtable discussions. We have heard
testimony from over 175 witnesses, usually about the disastrous
negative effects of Obama policies like the new waters of the United
States rule, key and disastrous effects on small businesses and job
creators and their employees.
At the very same time, we found common ground with Ranking Member
Shaheen and other Democrats on the committee. During my tenure as
chair, we passed 32 bipartisan bills out of the committee, which is 22
more than my predecessors did over a much longer period, and 8 of our
bills have passed through the entire legislative process and have been
signed into law.
These accomplishments are but a fraction of the years of hard work my
staff and I have dedicated to the people of Louisiana and, indeed, the
American people. I have worked hard to be a champion for them because
the government should serve the taxpayer and not the other way around,
and that includes by working hard to stay in touch through 398 townhall
meetings, at least 5 in each parish of Louisiana, through 231 telephone
townhalls, and through active, energetic casework and constituent
service.
Clearly what I will treasure most about my service here is the people
with whom I have been honored to serve; my colleagues, including my
fellow Louisianian Senator Bill Cassidy, mentors like former Senator
Rick Santorum and Senator Jeff Sessions, and most especially each of
the dedicated people who have been part of Team Vitter. I have come to
the Senate floor several times this year to thank key departing staff
members.
That is for a very simple reason. My staff has been the key
ingredient--the key--to every success we have enjoyed together in
public service. Wendy and I consider them a part of the family. I truly
thank my staff again for their tireless, dedicated service to
Louisiana. I am so very grateful. Wendy joins me in that.
I want to specifically recognize some of our leaders: my chief of
staff, Luke Bolar; my legislative director, Chris Stanley; my wonderful
finance director, Courtney Guastela; our state director, Chip Layton;
and committee staff director, Meredith West; our grants coordinator,
Brenda Moore; my media head, John Brabender; and senior infrastructure
policy advisor, Charles Brittingham; my senior economic adviser, David
Stokes; campaign treasurer Bill Vanderbrook; and communications
director, Cheyenne Klotz.
I know a few of our other former senior staff members are here or are
watching, like Mac Abrams, Joel DiGrado, Bryan Zumwalt, Travis Johnson,
and Michael Long. Last, and obviously not least, is my beloved family.
My five wonderful brothers and sisters, our children, their children,
the extended family, led by the ultimate leader of Team Vitter, my wife
Wendy.
I can never thank them enough, and certainly I can never ever thank
Wendy enough. Through it all, Wendy has been so enormously patient and
supportive and understanding, not to mention being the life of every
Team Vitter party, leading the rounds--rounds plural--of Fireball
shots. She and our daughter Lise are in the Gallery today. I thank them
and Sophie, Airey, and Jack for decades of love and support. Lise, up
there, was in my arms as a 2-year-old when I was first sworn into the
House of Representatives and made those previously quoted remarks: ``I
am honored, humbled, awestruck to stand before you.'' She has changed
some, but as I said at the beginning of my reflections, those feelings
certainly have not.
I would like to close as I did that day in the House over 17 years
ago; that is, simply by recognizing the wonderful, loving forces that
have brought me here today: God, family, led by my parents up above,
and my wife Wendy, staff and friends, and of course the wonderful,
wonderful people of Louisiana. They are here with me today. They are
here with me always. I thank them from the depths of my heart.
For the last time, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
Tribute to David Vitter
Mr. CASSIDY. Mr. President, I have the honor to recognize and thank
my colleague and friend, the Honorable Senator David Vitter, for his 25
years of service to Louisiana. Our State has been fortunate to have him
as its voice and advocate in this Chamber for the past 12 years.
On a personal note, when I arrived at the Senate, David worked with
me, sharing with me some of the privileges that normally he, as a
senior Senator,
[[Page S6690]]
could have kept all to himself. With great graciousness, he worked with
me and said: Listen, this is how I think the process should be set up.
I would like you to have some of this privilege as well. I will do the
same with whoever replaces David. He has set a pattern that, again, by
his graciousness and magnanimity, deserves repetition.
As a new Senator, I was fortunate to have him as a resource for
advice and knowledge that comes from time and experience in this body.
There are some things that happen here that you have to kind of have
experience to follow. David had both the experience, the sharpness, and
the insight to recognize.
I again look forward to sharing what he has taught me with whoever
takes his place. I will note, as David did, he helped lead our State
through some of our worst times. From Hurricane Katrina in 2005 to the
great flood of 2016, all of the way in between, David has worked hard
to make sure Louisiana and the people of Louisiana have what they need
to recover.
The hallmark of Senator Vitter's tenure is that he has always cared
deeply about our State, constantly looking for what he could do that
would benefit our State, not just in the short term but doing that
which is consistent with his principles to help Louisiana and the
United States thrive in the long term.
He has been on the side of that family whose father goes for 2 weeks,
works on an oil rig in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico, working hard
so his family has a better future. David has been on the side of that
mom juggling two jobs to earn enough to make sure her children's needs
are met.
A recent example--again for the short-term and long-term perspective
David handled so well--he stayed persistent for years working across
the aisle, first with Senator Frank Lautenberg, then Senator Udall, to
pass the much needed reform of the Toxic Substances Control Act, the
first reform of its kind in 40 years.
This reform protects both the workers--those people on that rig,
perhaps, at least the people who would be processing the products of
that rig--but also gives the manufacturers of Louisiana and across the
country the certainty they need to expand their businesses and create
more jobs.
On a lighter note, David is a great Saints fan. We in Louisiana kind
of liked the fact that when the slogan ``Who Dat'' came up
spontaneously, and people started to put it on their shirts and the NFL
was going to go court to stop this from happening, David wrote a letter
to Roger Goddell. The letter started off by saying: ``Who Dat.'' So
speaking truth to power on behalf of the ``Who Dat Nation'' is one
credit of his.
Similarly, David was tweeting before our President-elect made it
perhaps as high profile. I remember during the 2013 Super Bowl in New
Orleans--and again the context of this is, the Saints had just been
punished--of course Saints fans think unfairly--by Roger Goddell. So
during the 2013 Super Bowl in New Orleans, when the power went out,
David's tweet, without missing a beat said: ``Like most Saints fans, I
am immediately assuming Roger Goddell is the chief suspect for the
power outage.'' The quick-witted quip cut to the emotion of the ``Who
Dat Nation.''
As the 114th Congress comes to a close, the Senate will be losing an
important Member. David brings a sound, strategic mind to this Chamber
that will be missed. I wish him, Wendy, their children, Lise, Sophie,
Airey, and Jack, the best of luck in their journey forward. On behalf
of all Louisiana, I say thank you.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Louisiana for his
very kind remarks. More importantly, I want to thank him for years of
great partnership, great work on behalf of Louisiana. I know he will
make an outstanding senior Senator. Thank you.
I yield the floor.
Mr. CASSIDY. 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.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, I rise in strong support of the 21st
Century Cures Act, and I commend the chairman and ranking member of the
Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, Senator Lamar
Alexander and Senator Patty Murray, for their unwavering commitment to
this very significant bipartisan legislation.
The Senate HELP Committee, on which I am privileged to serve, has
devoted considerable time and effort to this comprehensive legislation.
It includes many reforms and priorities that will benefit so many
families across our great country. The 21st Century Cures Act will
support the research and development of safe treatments and cures for
millions of Americans and their families who are coping with
devastating diseases. It will improve the process of moving new
discoveries from laboratory benches to patient bedsides.
I doubt that there is a family in America who will not be touched by
this important legislation in some way. All of us have a family member,
a coworker, or a friend who has courageously faced the struggles of
living with a debilitating chronic illness or a rare disease or who has
received a devastating diagnosis and has passed away far too soon,
leaving a hole in our hearts. Imagine how this could change with the
passage of the 21st Century Cures Act and strong support of the
research and development that will lead to new treatments and therapies
that can help us achieve our dream of conquering so many devastating
diseases.
Simply put, this legislation matters. It matters to the children who
know firsthand the burden of living with type 1 diabetes and who beg
their parents for just one day off--their birthday or Christmas--from
having to deal with the consequences of their juvenile diabetes. It
matters to the family members who know the agonizing experience of
looking into the eyes of a loved one suffering from Alzheimer's
disease, only to receive a confused look in return. It matters to the
parents of young boys who have Duchenne muscular dystrophy, who know
what it is like to give their all in an effort to help their sons
achieve their dreams, whether it is finishing college or driving a car,
even as every day their children battle the progression of this
debilitating and ultimately terminal illness. The 21st Century Cures
Act will drive progress in medical innovation so that we can prevail
against these diseases and many more that cause so much pain and
suffering, so much fear and uncertainty, and so much heartbreak.
There simply is no investment that we can make that provides greater
return for Americans than our investment in biomedical research. It not
only leads to new discoveries and the development of better treatments
and even cures but also can have a dramatic effect on the budgets of
families, States, and the Federal Government. The bill before us will
help direct $4.8 billion to the National Institutes of Health,
including $1.6 billion for the BRAIN Initiative to improve our
understanding of diseases such as ALS, Parkinson's, and Alzheimer's,
our Nation's most costly disease.
We spend $263 billion a year caring for people with Alzheimer's
disease. Of that amount, approximately $160 billion comes from the
Medicare and Medicaid Programs. If the current trajectory continues as
our population grows older, this disease will bankrupt the Medicare and
Medicaid Programs. That is why I am so pleased to see the BRAIN
Initiative funded in this bill and also the work we are doing in the
Appropriations Committee to boost funding for Alzheimer's disease and
other dementias so that we can finally find effective treatments, a
means of prevention, or perhaps even a cure for this disease that
brings so much heartache not only to those suffering from it but to
their families as well.
Our bill will also help provide $1.8 billion for the Vice President's
Cancer Moonshot. We all know that Vice President Biden has taken on
this cause--a very personal one for him--because he lost his beloved
son Beau to cancer.
Another exciting field that will be funded by this bill is $30
million for regenerative medicine, using adult stem
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cells. How exciting it was to have an individual come before our policy
lunch whose sight had been restored due to innovative stem cell
surgery. This individual lives in Tennessee now but happens to be from
Presque Isle, ME, just 13 miles from where I was born and grew up. How
I wish so many older people in this country who are losing their vision
to macular degeneration and glaucoma--in some cases, a combination of
both--or injuries to their eyes could benefit from this exciting
development with adult stem cells, which has restored the sight of
someone who was legally blind. He now can drive. That is so exciting,
and that is the promise of researching regenerative medicine.
In addition to support for NIH, the 21st Century Cures Act will help
direct $1 billion in much needed funding to address the horrendous
heroin and opioid abuse problem in this country. Maine has been
particularly hard hit by this epidemic. In just the first 9 months of
this year, Maine experienced a record 286 overdose deaths. That is more
than one a day. Tragically, that number already exceeds the 272
overdose deaths in Maine during all of 2015.
I am distressed when I hear about the lack of treatment options for
Mainers who are struggling with drug addiction, particularly in rural
areas. As a result of the shortage of treatment alternatives, this
epidemic is playing out in emergency rooms, county jails, and on the
main streets of my State. I can't tell you how many sheriffs have come
to me pleading for help, telling me that the intake area of their jail
looks like a detox center or an emergency room of a hospital. They are
overwhelmed by these cases.
We can and must do more to support access to treatment and to alert
people of all ages to the risks of opioid abuse and heroin use. The
21st Century Cures Act will provide a vital infusion of $1 billion over
2 years to support grants to States to supplement treatment and
prevention efforts.
I was talking with one of my colleagues earlier today. Both of us
remember when we were in school hearing lectures from recovering heroin
addicts who came into the schools, and I can state that it was highly
effective. We would never have tried heroin. I can't even think of a
proper analogy.
We know, unfortunately, that many of the people who are using heroin
started with prescription opioids, and that is why I am encouraged by
movements across our country and by actions taken, at my request and
the request of other Senators, by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services to make sure we are not putting pressure on providers to
overprescribe opioids. Surely they are appropriate in certain cases,
but the number of prescriptions has soared in this country and is twice
the number prescribed on a per capita basis as in our neighboring
country of Canada.
The 21st Century Cures Act also includes a bill that I introduced
with several of my colleagues--Senators Warren, Kirk, Baldwin,
Alexander, and Murray--that is called the Advancing NIH Strategic
Planning and Improving Representation in Medical Research Act. Despite
its extremely cumbersome name, it is an important bill that has been
incorporated into this legislation. It will require the NIH to release
periodically a strategic plan outlining how the agency will meet its
mission statement, and it will provide us with important guidance and
metrics as we continue to work together to increase this vital funding.
It will also help to ensure that study populations in clinical
research are more representative of the diverse population in our
country. For example, women face many of the same health threats as
men, such as heart disease and cancer, but they react differently to
various treatments.
I remember years ago an infamous study that was called MRFIT. It had
only men enrolled in it. I believe, if memory serves me correctly, it
was to look at heart disease. Well, women often have different symptoms
of heart disease than do men, and they respond differently to different
medications, therapies, and treatments. We also know that women are at
higher risk for certain chronic health conditions, such as Alzheimer's
disease and osteoporosis. They suffer from those diseases in far
greater numbers than do men. With Alzheimer's disease, I am wondering
whether it is simply a matter that the biggest risk factor is age and
women live longer than men, but perhaps there are other factors at
play.
My point is that by helping to ensure that women, African Americans,
Latinos, and other demographic groups are appropriately represented in
clinical research, we can increase our scientific understanding of the
causes, risk factors, prevention strategies, and effects of treatments
for diseases that commonly or disproportionately affect these
populations.
The bill before us also includes legislation that I introduced with
my colleague from Wisconsin, Senator Baldwin, to help address the
educational debt burden that many young researchers face. This is so
important to help ensure that America's finest, up-and-coming young
researchers continue to help lead the world in biomedical discovery in
this country. I don't want to lose these young talented people to other
countries. I want them to stay right here. If they come to work for the
NIH or the CDC or other federally funded institutions and agencies and
we can get them help with their medical school, college, their advanced
degrees, and their debt, that is a very good agreement for us to be
making.
It is also of tremendous importance that we were able to add mental
health legislation to the 21st Century Cures Act. The reforms in this
bill will enhance coordination, address a lack of resources, and
develop real solutions to improve outcomes for individuals with serious
mental illness and to help their families, who are often desperate to
get them the help they need.
I am pleased that the bill also includes the Mental Health on Campus
Improvement Act, which I offered as an amendment when we considered the
mental health legislation in committee. My colleague, Senator Dick
Durbin, and I introduced this legislation for the first time in 2009. I
commend him for his leadership.
College students in Maine and across the country must have access to
critical and often lifesaving mental health services. Despite growing
demand for these critical services, far too many students still lack
access. Without these services, students may experience detrimental
effects that range from declining academic performance to drug
dependence and to being at greater risk of suicide.
While millions of Americans suffer from mental illness, only a
statistical few engage in unspeakable acts of violence against
themselves or others. Suicide, however, is the leading cause of death
among Americans between the ages of 15 and 34. In addition, recent
tragedies on college campuses, such as the shooting at a community
college in Roseburg, OR, or at Northern Illinois University, highlight
the dire need for mental health outreach and counseling services on
college campuses.
Perhaps some of the tragedies that we have witnessed might have been
prevented had the resources been in place to support timely diagnosis,
early intervention, and effective treatment for those struggling with
severe mental illness.
One of the saddest meetings I have had in the last year was with a
group of families from Maine who had adult children who were suffering
from severe mental illness, yet these families felt powerless in
getting them the help they needed. These adult children were not
compliant with the medication they had been prescribed, and in many
cases their families felt powerless to be able to get them the help
they needed.
In one terrible case, a man's son was released from a hospital in the
State of Maine--from a hospital for people with mental illness--and he
killed his mother, thinking she was Al Qaeda. Only then could his
father get his son the institutionalized help his son so desperately
needed.
It was just such a painful, painful story to hear from this anguished
father and husband. I believe the language in this bill will help to
change that.
The 21st Century Cures Act passed the House last week by an
overwhelming vote of 392 to 26. Think how few bills pass with that kind
of strong, bipartisan support. It is supported by President Obama, who
had an op-ed in Maine newspapers this weekend endorsing the bill. It is
the product of years of bipartisan work on the Senate HELP Committee,
and it has earned the support of more than 300 organizations.
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Frankly, I am surprised that we are having a rollcall vote--a cloture
vote on this bill. I am surprised because, while this bill may not be
perfect--and no bill is--there is so much that is worthwhile, good, and
significant in it that will make such a difference to so many American
families.
I urge all of our colleagues to vote in support of this bill so that
we can quickly send it to the President's desk, where he is eager to
sign it into law. It may well be the most important, far-reaching
legislation that we pass this year in terms of its benefits for
families across this great Nation.
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. TESTER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Supporting Our Veterans
Mr. TESTER. Mr. President, I rise today on behalf of nearly 100,000
veterans who live in Montana. These are folks who have earned our deep
respect and gratitude.
I have traveled the State many times, listened to their ideas, and I
have listened to their concerns. Montana's veterans have not been shy
about expressing their views.
What I have heard is this. There is no doubt that we must hold the VA
accountable and work to improve access to health care, jobs, education,
transportation, and housing for veterans.
That is why it is critically important that we are taking marching
orders from veterans and the advocacy organizations that are led by
veterans, because we know that their top priority is to do right by the
folks who they serve.
Veterans in Montana also tell me that when it comes to solving the
problems facing veterans, they expect folks in Washington, DC, to check
their politics at the door and go to work.
Unfortunately, there are groups out there that are funded by dark
money. They hide their out-of-touch political agenda behind the veil of
our Nation's veterans.
As the incoming ranking member of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, I
have serious concerns about who President-Elect Trump is listening to
when it comes to honoring our veterans and this Nation's commitment to
those who have worn the uniform. That is why it is so troubling that
recent news reports have indicated that the Trump administration is
relying heavily on guidance from Concerned Veterans for America.
Concerned Veterans for America is a political advocacy group funded by
the Koch brothers, who want to dump unlimited amounts of dark money to
push dangerous policies that would privatize the VA or to convert the
Veterans Health Administration into an independent, nongovernment-
chartered, for-profit corporation. CVA also wants to divert funds from
the VA and cripple its ability to plan for the long term to recruit
doctors and nurses and to invest in the information technology that can
improve veterans' experiences at the VA. These cuts will undermine the
quality of care at the VA.
There is nothing wrong with helping veterans get specialty care in
the community in a timely fashion when the VA cannot do it. That often
happens in rural communities, but CVA's push for wholesale dismantling
of the VA is not what we want, and that is not what the veterans need.
We need to talk to the veterans--the veterans I have spoken to--and
this is what we will see.
When folks volunteer to serve in the Armed Forces, this Nation is
indebted to them. We must ensure that we deliver on those promises that
are made. Privatizing the VA will fail our veterans and their families.
It will reduce the quality of care that our veterans receive, and it
will be more expensive for taxpayers. Privatizing the VA will
ultimately mean that veterans will wait longer for doctors'
appointments and the cost of care will go up.
All we have to do is take a look at the Veterans Choice Program,
which allows veterans to access care at private facilities. It has
resulted in longer wait times, and this is unacceptable.
Under this program, veterans are actually waiting longer to see
doctors. Hospitals are increasingly frustrated and refusing to see
veterans, and costs are going through the roof. Imagine this program on
steroids. That is what the CVA wants to do--all while starving the VA's
existing workforce and infrastructure. In fact, what CVA is pushing for
is similar to what Speaker Ryan wants to do with Medicare, and we have
seen the backlash to that proposal by seniors across this Nation.
The same is true with the veterans and proposals to privatize the VA.
It is simply bad policy. Groups such as the VFW, the American Legion,
Disabled American Veterans, Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America,
and many others oppose privatization, and they oppose it for good
reason.
The American Legion national commander, Dale Barnett, said it best:
The private sector didn't send our heroes to war. Uncle Sam
did.
Barnett is right. The Federal Government has an obligation to honor
those incredible sacrifices. When we shirk that responsibility, it
dishonors those brave men and women. We need to listen to the American
Legion and countless other veterans groups, whose mission is to help
the veterans, not unravel the VA. Veterans service organizations are
very different and have a very different mission and tax structure than
Concerned Veterans for America, the first being that VSOs take their
cues from the veterans they represent, not from billionaire political
activists who fund their operation. Groups such as the Legion, the VFW,
and Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America are organized as nonprofit
groups whose missions are simply to help veterans.
Concerned Veterans for America is an issue advocacy group with a
political mission. VSOs disclose their donors. CVA doesn't have to. Yet
CVA has incredible influence and the ear of the President-elect. This
is deeply concerning to me and, more importantly, it is deeply
concerning to the veterans across this Nation.
I talk to veterans every week when I am home in Montana. They
universally tell me that they like the care they receive from the VA
once they get in the door; the problem is getting in the door. They
don't want to see a private doc; they want to be seen by a VA doc. They
know that the VA understands their unique issues. They know that
doctors and nurses at the VA are attentive to the wounds of war.
My hope is that President-elect Donald Trump starts talking with the
folks who want to help veterans and not to organizations with a
political agenda. My hope is that he will work with Chairman Isakson
and me and countless other reputable veterans groups to hold the VA
accountable while increasing access to care. My hope is that he will
work with Democrats, Republicans, and Independents to reform our
campaign finance laws so that we can increase transparency and know who
is trying to influence this government. My hope is that he will put
veterans first as he chooses the next VA Secretary.
I remain hopeful that we can find common ground to work together to
hold the VA accountable, to improve care, and to ensure that we are all
delivering for veterans. When our brothers and sisters and sons and
daughters are sent to war, we make promises to them--promises we must
keep. When they come home, they are changed people, and we cannot
expect the private sector to address these seen and unseen wounds of
war.
In this upcoming Congress, there will be incredible opportunities to
make progress, and I am fully committed to Montana's veterans and
veterans across this country and their families, and I will push back
against those who attempt to undermine the noble mission of the
Veterans' Administration.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I wish to support the 21st Century
Cures Act, which would make vital investments in research to develop
new treatments for deadly diseases, including cancer. The bill would
also dedicate desperately needed funding to address some of our
country's most pressing public health problems--opioid addiction and
mental illness.
First, I would like to speak about the bill's provisions for cancer
and rare diseases. Cancer touches the lives of all Americans; it
doesn't discriminate. We
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have all experienced the grief and pain that comes with losing a loved
one, friend, or colleague to this terrible disease.
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in our country. Nearly 40
percent of Americans will be diagnosed with cancer at some point in
their lives, according to the National Cancer Institute. We have made
great strides in improving detection, treatment, and survival rates for
many cancers, including early-stage breast cancer, prostate cancer, and
melanoma.
Despite this progress, other cancers like pancreatic and certain
brain cancers remain extremely deadly, with very low 5-year survival
rates. These cancers are typically detected in late stages, and even
the most cutting-edge treatments may result in just a few more months
of life.
The Cures Act designates nearly $4.8 billion in additional funds for
medical research through the National Institutes of Health, $1.8
billion of which will expand and accelerate cancer research, in line
with Vice President Biden's Cancer Moonshot Initiative. This research
funding also supports important initiatives focused on precision
medicine and neurological research.
Next, I would like to talk about the bill's funding to combat opioid
addiction, which is an epidemic in this country. Nearly 2 million
Americans are addicted to opioids, and 19,000 Americans overdosed and
died in 2014. This epidemic stems from a surge in the use of
prescription drugs. It is not a coincidence that prescription overdose
deaths quadrupled during the same period that opioid prescriptions
quadrupled.
In 2012, 259 million prescriptions for opioids were written. That
means 80 percent of Americans could have a bottle of pills.
Prescription drug abuse frequently leads to heroin addiction because
these drugs affect the brain in the same way. This problem is
exacerbated because heroin is significantly cheaper that prescription
opioids like OxyContin or fentanyl.
This crisis demands an immediate, comprehensive, national response.
Congress took a first step earlier this year, passing the Comprehensive
Addiction and Recovery Act in May. This bill authorizes grants to
expand access to substance use disorder treatment, strengthen
prescription drug monitoring programs, and supply first responders with
naloxone, which can reverse the effects of an overdose. However, this
bill didn't include any funding for the initiatives it authorized. The
Cures Act takes that step, providing $1 billion for the Department of
Health and Human Services to fund many of the prevention and treatment
programs authorized by Congress earlier this year.
Lastly, I would like to highlight the bill's provisions to improve
our country's mental health system. This is an area where we fall far
short. We don't do nearly enough to ensure those with mental illness
are able to access appropriate treatment and this has ripple effects
throughout society.
In October, I was briefed on the homelessness crisis in Los Angeles
and toured a shelter for homeless women. A significant percentage of
the city's homeless population is battling mental illness. So, by
improving our mental health system, we are also going to address
connected issues like homelessness.
Under the bill, Health and Human Services will develop a strategic
plan to address mental health priorities. There is increased funding to
train our doctors and nurses to better integrate substance abuse and
mental health treatment into primary care visits.
The bill also reauthorizes many important existing programs,
including the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and the National
Child Traumatic Stress Network, and increases support for mental health
and drug courts. These innovative approaches to criminal justice
provide an alternative process for individuals to receive and comply
with needed treatment and are supported by the law enforcement
community.
The bill further provides for police training when police officers
encounter individuals who exhibit mental illness. I recently convened
meetings in Los Angeles and San Francisco with law enforcement and
community leaders, and they all stressed the importance of deescalating
situations with mentally ill individuals to make sure that situations
do not end with violent encounters.
In closing, I reiterate my support for the 21 Century Cures Act and
urge its swift passage. This is a great opportunity to spur this
century's medical innovation, improve access to needed treatments, and
strengthen public health.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Coats). The Senator from Tennessee.
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that Senator
Kirk be recognized next and then Senator Murphy following him and that
after that, I be recognized. We will be voting at 5:30.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. KIRK. Mr. President, 4 years ago I climbed the Capitol steps for
those who could not. I vowed to return to the Senate to create and
establish a standard of care for rehabilitation in this legislation to
make sure many people can have access to the best rehab, as I did. With
the passage of the Cures Act tomorrow, we will achieve this lofty goal.
The Cures Act also contains bipartisan provisions to provide
accelerated approval of regenerative medicines and therapies. The
Regrow Act, which is also in this bill, is a major step forward so that
Americans will not have to go to other countries for their own stem
cells to be used in their own therapy. Making sure this faster approval
process happens in this bill means that many more people will be able
to receive advanced stem cell therapies that are also available
overseas, right here at home.
I would like to thank everybody. We have made progress with the FDA.
I championed with Senators Collins and Manchin on this. I thank my
senior colleague from Tennessee for all of his action on the Regrow Act
so we can make the fundamental point of using your own stem cells to
accelerate healing. In the case of using your own stem cells, they
already have your exact DNA match. I think it is wise that we go
through a shorter process. I thank the Senator for putting the Kirk
language in the Regrow Act.
I yield the floor.
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, while we are waiting for Senator
Murphy, let me salute Senator Kirk for his leadership from the very
beginning. He has pointed out to the committee and the Senate that, as
the Mayo Clinic has said, regenerative medicine is a game changer for
stroke victims, for heart disease, and for people with retinal disease.
Thanks to Senator Kirk, Senator Collins, Senator Manchin, and Senator
McConnell, we have legislation that takes an important and responsible
step forward to recognize the promise of regenerative medicine.
This bill includes $30 million to the National Institutes of Health
for clinical trials to support regenerative medicine. Then there are
two other provisions in the bill. One of them allows the Food and Drug
Administration to make regenerative therapeutic products eligible for
the FDA's existing accelerated drug approval pathway. We have had great
success over the last 4 or 5 years with an accelerated pathway for
drugs, similar to what Senators Burr and Bennet and others got enacted
into law. We are doing the same thing with combination drugs and
devices in this legislation. Now Senator Kirk has added regenerative
medicine to the accelerated pathway, and I salute him for that
leadership.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. KIRK. Mr. President, I wish to remind my colleague, who is also
the chairman of the Appropriations Energy Subcommittee that controls
the exascale funding, one of the most complicated things we can face in
our world is biological systems when we look at the new Aurora computer
that is going to be built in the Argonne National Laboratories. I know
that at Oak Ridge, we have exascale computers. My goal is to make sure
we are always way ahead of the Chinese. In the case of Aurora, we now
have $165 million to make sure that we have a computer that is far
faster than the computer in China. With that, we will be able to model
proteins themselves to make sure we make these advances much faster. My
hope is that we will be
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stunned at how much biological work is being done at the Oak Ridge lab
with their leading computer to make sure we accelerate progress on
this.
Let me say one thing about the work of the Senator. Every piece of
legislation that he touches goes through by a couple hundred votes.
When we see Lamar take over a bill, we know it is going to be going
through on a big walloping. He got a huge vote in the Senate, and I
hope he gets a big vote again. Everything he touches turns to gold, and
we cannot have a better friend in medical care than we have in Lamar
Alexander.
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, the Senator from Illinois is very
generous, and I thank him, but I would remind him that he was the
persistent agent for the change in support for regenerative medicine.
That wasn't easy to do, and he has been the leader, along with others
of us who cared about the same thing, in making sure the United States
maintains its lead in supercomputing competition around the world.
Senator Murphy, the Senator from Connecticut, is coming. I think what
I will do is begin, and when he comes I will stop and let him make his
5 minutes of remarks and then resume so I don't delay the vote because
I know everyone is looking forward to casting a great big ``yes'' vote
in a few minutes.
The U.S. Senate majority leader, whose position in the Senate this
is, has said more than once in private meetings I attended and on the
floor of this body that the 21st Century Cures bill on which we will be
voting in a few minutes is the most important legislation Congress will
pass this year.
In his address to the Nation this past weekend, President Obama urged
us to vote for the bill today and tomorrow. ``It could help us find a
cure for Alzheimer's,'' the President said. ``It could end cancer as we
know it and help those seeking treatment for opioid addiction.'' The
President continued: ``It's an opportunity to save lives and an
opportunity we just can't miss.''
Vice President Biden has been telephoning Senators urging support for
21st Century Cures because, in the Vice President's words, it is a big
step for cancer research and the Cancer Moonshot that is so close to
his heart.
Speaker Paul Ryan in the House of Representatives has made 21st
Century Cures explicitly a centerpiece of his vision for our country's
future, describing it as ``bipartisan legislation that would accelerate
the discovery, development, and delivery of lifesaving treatments.''
With such bipartisan support from the President of the United States,
the Vice President of the United States, the Speaker of the House, the
Senate majority leader--two Democrats, two Republicans--it is no wonder
that on last Wednesday, the House of Representatives approved 21st
Century Cures by the overwhelming vote of 392 to 26.
This legislation holds the promise of improving the life and health
of virtually every family in the country.
It will provide $4.8 billion in a one-time surge of funding for
biomedical research in a time of breathtaking opportunity.
It will advance Vice President Biden's Cancer Moonshot to find cures
for cancer and President Obama's Precision Medicine Initiative, as well
as the BRAIN Initiative.
It will help move safe and effective treatments and cures through the
development and regulatory process more rapidly, and it will lower
costs, making medicines available sooner and hopefully also at lower
costs to patients.
It will provide $1 billion in grants to help deal with the raging
opioid epidemic.
It includes legislation to help the one in five adults in this
country suffering from a mental illness, help them receive treatment by
updating many of our country's mental health programs for the first
time in a decade.
It will improve health information technology for doctors who are
eager to get rid of the overdocumentation of hospitals and their
patients and help get the Nation's electronic health records system out
of the ditch.
From a taxpayer's point of view, it does all of these things in a
fiscally responsible way by reducing other spending to pay for every
penny of the $6.3 billion cost.
I see the Senator from Connecticut on the floor, so I would like to
suspend my remarks for 5 minutes so that he can make his, and then I
would ask unanimous consent that the totality of my remarks follow his
remarks.
Before he speaks, let me just say once again how much I appreciate
his leadership and that of Senator Cassidy and Senator Cornyn. One
reason the majority leader calls this the most important piece of
legislation Congress will act on this year is because it includes the
mental health legislation that these Senators, including Senator
Murphy, Senator Cornyn, and Senator Cassidy, have offered.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.
Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I appreciate Senator Alexander's kindness
in allowing me to say a few words in support of this bill on behalf of
myself and Senator Murray. I wish to congratulate Senator Alexander for
once again showing how the Senate can work properly, how we can bring
together Republicans and Democrats for a priority that really has
nothing to do with whether one is a Republican or a Democrat or whether
one voted for Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump. If people are out there
suffering from a life-altering or potentially terminal disease or
suffering from mental illness or addiction, they need help, and we are
coming together in maybe one of the most important pieces of health
legislation that has passed this Congress in a very long time to
deliver that help.
So I am not going to endeavor to recreate the remarks of Senator
Alexander when it comes to describing the important aspects of this
bill except to say that after passage of this bill, it is going to be a
whole heck of a lot more likely that a life-changing, lifesaving drug
is going to be able to make it to market in time to save a life.
Every single one of the underlying reforms in this bill to the drug
discovery process is bipartisan. I think about Senators Bennet and
Hatch's bill, the promise for antibiotics and therapeutics for health,
which establishes a new pathway for antibacterial and antifungal drugs
that will treat serious, life-threatening infections for patients. I
think about Senator Casey and Senator Isakson working on the Advancing
Hope Act, which will extend the pediatric priority review voucher
program until 2020. It incentivizes drug companies to research
treatment for life-altering diseases that impact pediatric patients.
Inside this bill are all sorts of good, important, bipartisan
achievements. As Senator Alexander noted, there is also help on the way
for people suffering from addiction. In my tiny little State--only 1
percent of the Nation's population--we are going to have over 800
people die this year from drug overdoses. Yes, we need to get to the
source of that epidemic and stop people from getting addicted to pain
medications in the first place, but, boy, we have an awful lot of
people showing up with overdoses in our emergency rooms who have no
place to go, have no detox programs, no long-term residential programs.
The $1 billion authorized in this legislation to fight the opioid
epidemic is going to save lives in my little State.
Finally, when it comes to the issue of mental health--Senator
Alexander, Senator Cassidy, and I were on the floor last week talking
about this legislation; the focus on funding prevention, the focus on
making sure parents are part of the care for their adult children, the
focus on ensuring that insurance companies really do pay attention to
the Parity Act we passed 10 years ago in this Congress to assure that
you get covered for mental illness just like physical illness. A broken
leg really isn't any different than a broken brain when we think about
it. We can treat both. These are important advances in mental health as
well.
I know this place has a bad reputation; that people pay attention to
the fights here more often than they do to the moments where we get
together and cooperate. The 21st Century Cures Act that Senator Murray
and Senator Alexander, with help from Senator Cornyn, me, Senator
Cassidy, and in the House Congressmen Upton, Pallone, Tim Murphy, and
Eddie Bernice Johnson--this is an example of how this place can work
better.
As we head in to what may be a very charged atmosphere in January, I
hope we remember this moment. I wanted to
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come down on behalf of Senator Murray, who has helped shepherd this
process, to congratulate Senator Alexander on it and recommend its
passage to all of my colleagues.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, I thank the Senator for his words,
support, and his leadership this year. I thank also Senator Murray from
Washington. She would be here, except her plane is delayed. The vote
will be held open to make sure she can be here, but Senator Murray is a
Member of the Democratic leadership and well respected on that side of
the aisle but also on this side of the aisle because, when she can, she
creates an environment where we can do today exactly what we are doing
today. I think the American people appreciate that, and Senator Murphy
and I both benefit from that. I thank the Senator for those remarks and
will now continue my remarks.
At a Senate hearing earlier this year, Dr. Francis Collins, the
distinguished head of the National Institutes of Health--an agency he
calls the ``National Institutes of Hope''--offered ``bold predictions''
about major advances to expect in the next 10 years from sustained
investments in biomedical research, such as we are doing with this
bill.
One prediction is that scientists will find ways to identify
individuals at risk for Alzheimer's even before symptoms appear, as
well as how to slow or even prevent the disease. Today, Alzheimer's
causes untold family grief and costs $236 billion a year. Left
unchecked, the cost in 2050 would be more than our Nation spends on
national defense.
Dr. Collins' other predictions are equally breathtaking. Using stem
cells, doctors could use a patient's own cells to rebuild his or her
heart. This personalized rebuilt heart, Dr. Collins says, would make
transplant waiting lists and anti-rejection drugs obsolete. He expects
development of an artificial pancreas to help diabetes patients by
tracking blood glucose levels and creating precise doses of insulin. He
says a Zika vaccine should be widely available by 2018, with universal
flu vaccine and HIV/AIDS vaccine available within the decade. To
relieve suffering and deal with the epidemic of opioid addiction that
led to 28,000 overdose deaths in America in 2014, he predicts new
nonaddictive medicines to manage pain, an even more effective antidote
than the $1 billion we would be authorizing by our votes today. These
truly would be miracles.
The bill has taken more than 2 years to assemble both in the Senate
and the House. There have been major differences of opinion, but the
resolution of those differences--thanks to Senator Murray and many
other Senators--has been bipartisan every step of the way. We saw that
on display in the work of the President, the Vice President, the
Speaker of the House, and the Senate majority leader. We saw it in the
House with its vote of 392 to 26 last week, thanks especially to the
leadership of Chairman Upton, Ranking Member Pallone, and
Representative DeGette. We saw it in our Senate Health Committee, where
we approved 19 bills that include 50 proposals, and every one with both
a Democratic and Republican sponsor, except for 1 bill offered solely
by Senator Murray, who is the ranking Democratic member of our
committee.
We have a diverse committee of 22 Members--that would be an
understatement, actually--some of the most liberal Members and some of
the most conservative Members, but when our committee considered these
19 bills during our 3 markups held over several months, the largest
number of votes against any one of these 19 bipartisan bills was 2. Let
me say that again. The largest number of votes--recorded votes--against
any one of these 19 bipartisan bills was 2 in our committee of 22.
Here is what some of those 19 bipartisan bills--again, approved
unanimously or by a wide margin--would do to help move safe and
effective treatments and cures more rapidly through the regulatory
process and into patients' medicine cabinets and into doctors' offices.
For example, Senators Bennet, Warren, Burr, and Hatch's act would
allow researchers to use their own data from previously approved
therapies when they submit for review a treatment or cure for serious
rare genetic diseases, like Duchenne's, a rare kind of muscular
dystrophy that could impact children as young as 3.
Senators Burr and Franken's legislation will help to bring innovative
medical devices--such as artificial knees, insulin pumps, and heart
stents--to patients more quickly by getting rid of unnecessary burdens
in medical device evaluations and streamlining the review process for
clinical trials.
Senators Baldwin and Collins have a bill to improve opportunities for
our young researchers, essential to advancing biomedical research.
Senator Kirk just talked about his legislation with Bennet, Hatch,
Murkowski, Isakson, and Collins to improve rehabilitation research and
help the approximately 800,000 Americans who suffer a stroke each year.
Senators Isakson, Murphy, Casey, Wicker, and Vitter will help advance
our understanding of neurological diseases.
Senator Murray, as I mentioned earlier, will clarify that the FDA
requires cleaning and validation data for reusable medical devices.
Senators Murray, Hatch, Bennet, Cassidy and Whitehouse's bill will
improve health information technology for doctors and their patients.
We had six hearings on medical information technology programs in a
ditch. We think we are helping to get them out of the ditch. We have
been working with the Obama administration to do that, and I look
forward to working with the Trump administration to continue that.
Senators Burr, Bennet, Hatch, and Donnelly would speed safe
breakthrough devices, putting senior people in charge of the review
process.
Casey, Isakson, Brown, and Kirk's legislation. If you are the parent
of a child with a rare disease like brain cancer, their bill would
increase the likelihood that your child will be able to take a drug
that will help by giving a drug company that develops a drug for such a
disease a voucher they could keep or sell that would speed up the
review of another drug.
One may say this is getting boring. This is too long. It is not
boring to the millions of Americans who stand to benefit from this, and
it is exactly the kind of work we ought to be doing in the United
States Senate and what the American people would like to see us do more
of.
The Medical Electronic Data Technology Enhancement Act, with Senators
Bennet and Hatch and many others interested in that.
Senators Burr and Casey and Isakson and Roberts have important
legislation for planning ahead for events like bioterror attacks, to
help protect against anthrax, for example, or smallpox.
The Combination Products Innovation Act, with a number of Senators
involved on the committee, will help prevent the growing field of
combination products--like bandaids with Neosporin built in or a heart
stent that can be implanted to deliver blood thinners to prevent
clots--from being caught in redtape.
Then there is legislation that will give patients and their families
a voice in drug development. There is one that is a top priority for
the heads of FDA and NIH which will help those agencies attract and
keep the kind of talent they need to approve all these exciting
advances that are coming.
There is legislation to shorten the development of new treatments to
help those affected with life-threatening superbugs.
The Advancing Precision Medicine Act, which Senator Murray and I
cosponsored, is in direct support of President Obama's initiative to
map 1 million genomes so researchers can develop treatments and cures
tailored to a patient's genome.
There are five or six other major pieces of legislation that I will
include in the Record but not read at this time because we are
approaching the time for a vote, but let me conclude by saying that in
addition to these bipartisan policies, the 21st Century Cures bill
includes $6.3 billion in funding. We usually don't attach such funding
to a bill authorizing programs. We usually work
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along two tracks; one track for authorizing programs and one deciding
how much to spend on those programs.
During the last 2 years, while we have been working on our
authorizing legislation, our appropriations committees have recommended
major increases in support for biomedical research, and it is important
that every Senator know this. In the current year, at the urging of
Senators Blunt and Senator Murray, Congress added $2 billion a year to
the $32 billion budget of the National Institutes of Health, which
could total $20 billion over 10 years. Then, the Senate Appropriations
Committee recommended another $2 billion increase for the next fiscal
year, 2017, which could total another $20 billion over 10 years. This
21st Century Cures legislation adds $4.8 billion in a surge of one-time
spending for the National Institutes of Health on top of the regular
appropriated money toward key objectives: $1.8 billion for the Cancer
Moonshot, $1.4 billion for precision medicine, $1.6 for the BRAIN
Initiative, and it adds $1 billion for State grants to help States
fight the opioid abuse epidemic. I believe that for every State
represented by a Senator here tonight, the opioid epidemic is on the
front pages of the newspapers. It adds $500 million for the Food and
Drug Administration, and 21st Century Cures also gives the National
Institutes of Health $30 million for clinical trials to support
regenerative medicine, which the Mayo Clinic has described as a ``game-
changing area of medicine with the potential to fully heal damaged
tissues and organs, offering solutions and hope for people who have
conditions that are beyond repair.'' It gives the FDA authority to
allow regenerative therapeutic products to be eligible for FDA's
existing accelerated drug approval pathway.
I wish to acknowledge the work of Speaker Ryan and Leader McConnell
in designing a way to secure funding that both Democrats and
Republicans can accept. That is not always easy. For those concerned
about additional spending--often on our side of the aisle--Speaker Ryan
and House Budget Chairman Tom Price made sure the funding is one time,
not mandatory, paid for, and approved each year by Appropriations
Committees. It doesn't add one penny to the overall budget because for
every increase in the discretionary budget, we reduce the same amount
in the mandatory ledger.
For those who worry that Congress might not approve the $6.3 billion
in additional spending in later years--I have heard a little of that
from the other side of the aisle--my answer is that the best way to
ensure the money is spent in the following years is a big vote today
and tomorrow when we finally pass the bill, just as the House did last
week.
In conclusion, it will be hard to explain why you voted to spend $6.3
billion for cancer, the Precision Medicine Initiative, and opioids this
year but then voted not to spend it next year, and the legislation
provides that the money cannot be diverted for any other purpose than
what we vote for today and tomorrow.
In addition, this year's portion of Cures funding--including one-half
billion for opioid grants--is included in the continuing resolution
that we will vote on later this week.
This is the kind of lasting legacy the President of the United States
and our Congress can be proud of. The next administration or the next
Congress will not be repealing this law because we have taken the time
to work out our differences and create a consensus of support. We did
this at this time last year with an equally complicated bill to fix No
Child Left Behind, which, despite its complexities, received 85 votes
in this body. When he signed it, the President called it a ``Christmas
miracle.''
The 21st Century Cures bill will present President Obama with another
Christmas miracle, one that will help virtually every family. When we
pass this legislation, the real winners will be the American families
whose lives will be improved by this bipartisan legislation.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
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. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, with the permission of my
distinguished chairman, who has worked very hard on this bill and whose
efforts I appreciate very much, I wanted to add, very briefly, that I
hope very much and look forward to working with my colleagues to assure
that the second tranche of the opioid funding is aligned with the CARA
bill, or the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act, which we just
passed in such bipartisan fashion a few months ago.
We have not achieved that alignment yet, and I hope that we do very
soon. I appreciate the terrific efforts of my chairman.
With that, I yield.
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. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The VICE PRESIDENT. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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