[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 177 (Thursday, December 8, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6882-S6898]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GEORGE P. KAZEN FEDERAL BUILDING AND UNITED STATES COURTHOUSE
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask the Chair to lay before the body
the message to accompany Calendar No. 65, S. 612.
The Presiding Officer laid before the Senate the following message
from the House of Representatives:
Resolved, That the bill from the Senate (S. 612) entitled
``An Act to designate the Federal building and United States
courthouse located at 1300 Victoria Street in Laredo, Texas,
as the `George P. Kazen Federal Building and United States,
Courthouse'.'', do pass with an amendment.
Motion to Concur
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I move to concur in the House amendment
to S. 612.
Cloture Motion
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I send a cloture motion to the desk on
the motion to concur.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The cloture motion having been presented under
rule XXII, the Chair directs the clerk to read the motion.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
Cloture Motion
We, the undersigned Senators, in accordance with the
provisions of rule XXII of the Standing Rules of the Senate,
do hereby move to bring to a close debate on the motion to
concur in the House amendment to Calendar No. 65, S. 612, an
act to designate the Federal building and the United States
courthouse located at 1300 Victoria Street in Laredo, Texas,
as the ``George P. Kazen Federal Building and United States
Courthouse.''
James M. Inhofe, Roger F. Wicker, Orrin G. Hatch, Johnny
Isakson, John Cornyn, Thad Cochran, Mike Crapo, Pat
Roberts, Bill Cassidy, John Hoeven, John Barrasso, Thom
Tillis, John Boozman, John Thune, Daniel Coats, Marco
Rubio, Mitch McConnell.
Motion to Concur With Amendment No. 5144
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I move to concur in the House amendment
to S. 612, with a further amendment.
[[Page S6883]]
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Kentucky [Mr. McConnell] moves to concur
in the House amendment to S. 612 with an amendment numbered
5144.
Mr. McCONNELL. I ask unanimous consent that the reading of the
amendment be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The amendment is as follows:
At the end add the following:
``This act shall be effective 1 day after enactment.''
Mr. McCONNELL. I ask for the yeas and nays on the motion to concur
with the amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There is a sufficient second.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
Amendment No. 5145 to Amendment No. 5144
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I have a second-degree amendment at the
desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Kentucky [Mr. McConnell] proposes an
amendment numbered 5145 to amendment No. 5144.
Mr. McCONNELL. I ask unanimous consent that the reading of the
amendment be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The amendment is as follows:
Strike ``1 day'' and insert ``2 days''.
Motion to Refer with Amendment No. 5146
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I move to refer the House message on S.
612 to the Committee on Environment and Public Works with instructions
to report back forthwith with an amendment numbered 5146.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Kentucky [Mr. McConnell] moves to refer
the House message on S. 612 to the Committee on Environment
and Public Works with instructions to report back forthwith
with an amendment numbered 5146.
The amendment is as follows:
At the end add the following:
``This act shall be effective 3 days after enactment.''
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays on my
motion.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There is a sufficient second.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
Amendment No. 5147
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I have an amendment to the
instructions.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Kentucky [Mr. McConnell] proposes an
amendment numbered 5147 to the instructions of the motion to
refer the House message to accompany S. 612.
Mr. McCONNELL. I ask unanimous consent that the reading of the
amendment be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The amendment is as follows:
Strike ``3 days'' and insert ``4 days''.
Mr. McCONNELL. I ask for the yeas and nays on my amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There is a sufficient second.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
Amendment No. 5148 to Amendment No. 5147
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I have a second-degree amendment at the
desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Kentucky [Mr. McConnell] proposes an
amendment numbered 5148 to amendment No. 5147.
The amendment is as follows:
Strike ``4'' and insert ``5''.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.
Tribute to Dan Coats
Mr. ENZI. Mr. President, as this session of Congress draws to a
close, it provides us with an opportunity to acknowledge and express
our appreciation to those Members of the Senate who will be retiring in
a few weeks. One of those who will be retiring and will be greatly
missed is Dan Coats of Indiana. Dan has had an interesting career and
through his more than 15 years in the Senate has made a difference.
He has been a reliable vote for the best interests of his home State
and the future of the Nation, and he leaves behind a legacy of which he
should be very proud. Dan's first years of service in the Congress
began in 1981, when he served in the House of Representatives. He was
then appointed to the United States Senate when Dan Quayle was elected
Vice President.
He served in the Senate from 1989 to 1999, when his self-imposed
term-limit pledge brought to an end his first years in the Senate. It
was not long thereafter that Dan was again asked to serve, this time as
Ambassador to Germany.
He arrived in Germany and took up his service there just before our
Nation experienced the tragic event of September 11. Our relationship
with our allies took on prime importance after that, and we were
fortunate to have Dan abroad to maintain our strong friendship with the
German Government and people.
Several years later, the Indiana Senate seat was open again, and Dan
took up the challenge to run again to serve the people of his home
State in the Senate. The people of Indiana and our Nation,
conservatives and people of faith, have been fortunate to have Dan to
rely on. He has been a steady and dependable force for taking better
care of our Nation's finances and keeping a close watch on our
security.
Last year, after a great deal of prayer and thought and
consideration, Dan did announce that he would not be running for
another term in the Senate. It was a decision he made once again with
the people of his home State in mind. He has always been determined to
have the best representatives in place to serve the people of Indiana
and address those issues that most concerned him.
With that in mind, Dan announced that he believed ``the time has come
to pass this demanding job to the next generation of leaders.'' We will
miss Dan. We will miss his background and experience. We will miss his
reasonable, appropriate, and well-timed comments and his ability to get
results. I look forward to his next challenge or adventure and know he
will continue to look out for what is best for our Nation and our
people.
Dan has been a great source of strength and support for our party and
he will be missed. To you, Dan, Diana and I join in sending our best
wishes and our appreciation to you and Marsha. Together, you have been
great examples of the importance of public service. The organization
you founded, the Foundation for American Renewal, and the Project for
American Renewal that you created have helped you to focus on and work
toward solutions to many of our problems.
That is also a part of our legacy and why you will continue to
receive the recognition you deserve. You have also been a part of a
number of community and volunteer organizations. For these and so many
more reasons, we thank you and Marsha for devoting so much of your life
to making our Nation a better place to live. You certainly achieved
that goal and we wish you both the best.
Tribute to Barbara Mikulski
Mr. President, I also want to take some time today to speak about the
senior Senator from Maryland, Barbara Mikulski. In the years to come,
Senator Mikulski will be known for a lot of things that made her years
of service to the people of Maryland quite remarkable. It will always
be mentioned that she has been the longest serving woman in the history
of the United States Congress.
Although that is important, Senator Mikulski did not come to
Washington to see how long she could stay. She came here to see how
much of a difference she could make. In the end, she served for so many
years because of what she was able to do with her time in the House and
then in the Senate. The people of Maryland have such a strong affection
for Senator Mikulski because they always felt like she was one of them.
She never lost touch with the people back home.
Her family name was well known to the people in her neighborhood
because
[[Page S6884]]
her parents ran a grocery store. Every morning they opened their store
early so people could stop by to pick up something before they headed
off to work.
In that, and so many other ways, her family played an important role
in the day-to-day life of their neighborhood and her neighbors never
forgot that. When the opportunity came for Senator Mikulski to run for
a seat in the House representing Baltimore, she didn't hesitate. She
took her case to the people and they liked what they heard. She won
what was to be the first of a long series of elections, each of which
she won easily and impressively.
Senator Mikulski has a number of interests, and one of the things I
am sure she enjoyed about Congress has been her ability to take up a
number of those issues to make a difference in people's lives. In
everything she has done, she has always found a way to help the people
back home. A key example of that is her fight over ``the road.'' The
battle dates back to 1966 when Barbara was a social worker in
Baltimore. The city council proposed building a highway to connect
downtown Baltimore to its suburbs, a plan that Barbara worried would
cause Polish Americans, African Americans, and lower income residents
to lose their homes. As is her way, Barbara sprung to action by forming
a community group of opposition. The road was blocked. Barbara wound up
on the city council, and the area where the road was supposed to be
built is now one of Baltimore's biggest draws.
As far as her work in the Senate goes, one of her many legislative
victories that I will long remember is work she did on something that
came to be known as Rosa's Law. Rosa was a 9-year-old young lady who
was diagnosed with Down syndrome. Her mother was well aware of what a
hurtful label things like ``mental retardation'' and ``mentally
retarded'' were to those who saw them in the Federal laws that were
written to help them. Barbara knew there was only one solution to this
problem and that was to eliminate those terms from Federal law.
I was pleased to able to help in the effort to pass that bill, seeing
how much it meant not only to Rosa and her family but to Senator
Barbara Mikulski. Our work on that bill will stay with me and will be a
reminder of the reason we work so hard to pass legislation and answer
the needs of the people back home.
In the end, it is all about making lives better. That is something
Barbara has done every day of her service in Congress. As the longest
serving woman in Congress, she has continued to earn the title of
``Dean of Senate Women.'' She has been a mentor and source of good
advice to her colleagues who appreciated being able to ask for her
opinion and her guidance on their work on the Senate.
She certainly helped me when I was a new Senator and was advocating
for low-income housing in Jackson, one of the rich areas of our State.
With her support, we got that done and made sure there was a mix in the
community of different occupations and people.
Her reputation has been to not only help the Members of the Senate
with whom she has served, it also helped serve to encourage the women
of Maryland to get active and involved in the work that must be done to
make her home State and our Nation better places to live. In a very
real sense, her leadership skills have inspired the next generation of
Maryland's leaders.
Now Senator Mikulski is leaving the Senate after having made a
difference and leaving her mark on the history of Congress. One of the
key things she will be remembered for is her tireless support of NIH. I
know they will miss her and her commitment to the principles and values
that guided her through her career, from her service on the Baltimore
City Council to her work in the House of Representatives and then the
Senate. She made a difference everywhere she served. For that reason
and for many more, she will never be forgotten.
My wife Diana and I join in sending our best wishes to Senator
Mikulski for her years of service. Now that her Senate adventure has
come to an end, she will undoubtedly come up with more challenges to
pursue in the years to come. I am hoping these plans might include a
followup to her mystery novel that was set in the Senate. We are
looking forward to seeing what the next chapter of her life may
include.
Good luck to these fellow Senators.
Tribute to harry reid
Mr. President, at the end of each Congress, the Senate tradition is
to pause for a moment to share our thoughts about those Senators who
will be retiring when the final gavel brings the session to a close.
One of those senators who will be leaving the Senate is Harry Reid.
Senator Reid is quite a remarkable individual, and his story should be
read and considered by students of government and history--of all ages.
Over the years, I have spent some time with Harry at prayer
breakfasts and listened to his reflections on his life--personally and
politically. He has lived a life that few would ever believe to be
possible.
Harry makes for a great example of how to take your life and make the
most of it. He was born in a small cabin that offered few of life's
comforts, but he didn't complain about it. He took what he was given in
life and worked to make things better.
As a young man, he served as the student body president of his high
school and drew the notice of his teachers and his boxing coach. He
attended Utah State University, and his next stop was George Washington
University--my alma mater--where he worked to earn a law degree. To
make that possible, Harry needed a job, and so he worked as a U.S.
Capitol Police officer. Harry then returned home to Nevada and took up
what would be his lifelong ambition, serving the people of his home
State.
It wasn't long before Harry had served in Nevada's State legislature
and on the Nevada Gaming Commission. When the opportunity presented
itself, he served in the House and then moved on to the Senate.
He didn't win every election, but each disappointment only served to
make him more determined to make a difference for the people of his
State. His statistics are impressive--more than 30 years in Congress,
serving under five Presidents, and being a part of both the minority
and majority. And all the time, Harry has found ways to pursue and
support agendas to benefit the people of Nevada.
One of my favorite memories will always be the work Harry, and I did
to enable the LDS Church to purchase a site that has a great deal of
historic significance to them. The legislation had already passed the
House, but was stuck in the Senate as some concerns were raised. Harry
knew what he needed to do to make it possible for the bill to clear the
Senate, and together, we figured out a way to make it happen. Today
Martin's Cove is a popular site that draws large crowds every year.
This is one of those moments most of us thought would never happen.
It seemed like Harry Reid would always be in the Senate. He has not
only left a remarkable record, he also seems to be the last of an era.
I have no doubt those who will take up his position in the years to
come will do a good job and get results, but they will never do it
``like Harry did.'' He will forever stand as a unique mix of
personality, character, history, and background.
Diana joins in sending our best wishes to Harry and his wife, Landra.
Together they have been quite a team and have accomplished a great
deal. We didn't always agree on the issues, but one thing can be said:
If you had a tough battle before you and you needed someone by your
side who wouldn't give up until the battle was won, Harry was the kind
of guy you would want in the fight. If you were on the other side of an
issue, you would always prefer someone like Harry would not be opposing
you.
Thank you for your service, Harry. You have left an example that will
inspire and encourage others in the years to come. Whenever faced with
an impossible task, people will remember you and realize that with some
creativity, determination and an understanding of the rules of the
Senate, much can be done.
TRIBUTE TO BARBARA BOXER
Mr. President, at the end of each Congress, the Senate takes a moment
to express our appreciation and acknowledge the efforts of those
Members who will be retiring in just a few weeks. This year one of our
colleagues who will be returning home is Senator Barbara Boxer.
[[Page S6885]]
Barbara will be leaving us after a career of over 30 years in the
House and Senate. During her service, she has impressed all those with
whom she has worked with the strength of her views, her courage, and
her determination to fight for the things in which she truly believes.
Regardless of the circumstances that drew her into each legislative
battle, she has always held true to the principles that have guided her
in her life.
For Barbara, her early career work as a stockbroker soon found her
heading to California with her husband after he had completed his work
in law school. She then got interested in politics and became a strong
voice for the political views of the people who resided in the area she
now called home. Her constituents liked what they heard from Barbara--
and the way she expressed her views on the issues and proposals she
wanted to work on.
Her style of speaking soon became her trademark in Congress. She has
a convincing way of presenting her case, and that is one reason why it
was always good to be on her side. She calls it speaking ``extremely
candid and straight from the shoulders, and not to be mealy-mouthed or
waffle.'' Anyone who has had a chance to come to know her--or to tackle
an issue either with her or opposed to her--knows how accurate that
description is.
Right after the tragedy of 9/11, I joined Barbara as ranking member
of the subcommittee she chaired regarding terrorism financing. I was
proud to join her in that work, and I have appreciated the significant
role she has played on a number of highway bills, which are important
to both of our home states.
Over the years, there have been some other issues that we could
discuss and work on with an eye towards compromise. For each of us,
however, there were other issues that were of such importance to our
constituents it would have been hard for either of us to move too far
from the path that we had been following from our early days in
politics.
Barbara and I both have a strong touch of the West in our hearts that
we express every day in everything we do. That is why I was not
surprised when she mentioned as she spoke about her retirement that she
felt that it was time for her to return home--as she said so well--``to
the state I love so much, California.''
Barbara, Diana joins me in sending our congratulations for your hard
work and your dedication to your home State. You have left your mark
here in Congress, and I think it is safe to say you will not be
forgotten. Thanks again for your willingness to serve and work so hard
for what you believe in. You have helped to encourage and inspire the
next generation of leaders from your State. In that way and so many
others, you have made a difference.
tribute to mark kirk
Mr. President, when the current Congress is brought to a close with
the banging of the gavel, several Members will be departing our Senate
community. Whatever they will be doing after closing this chapter of
their lives, we wish them well and share with them our great
appreciation for their willingness to serve and make a difference over
the years.
Mark Kirk, one of our current senators from Illinois, has left a mark
on the Congress that will not soon be forgotten. He has served with
great distinction, and he has made a difference in the Senate.
Mark's time in Washington began when the people of Illinois voted to
send him to the House of Representatives. He represented their
interests in that Chamber from 2001-2010. In 2010, Mark ran for and won
an open Senate seat. When he was sworn in, he brought with him what had
earned him the trust and support of the people back home throughout his
years in the House--an independent streak and an open mind to
everything that drew his interest and captured his attention.
The statistics of the past 6 years bear that out. Whatever came
before the Senate gave Mark reason to review each issue considering the
best interests of the people of his state. He wasn't always found
exclusively on one side of the aisle or the other when it came time to
vote.
During his years of service in the Senate, two issues that
particularly drew his attention were Iran and the treatment of our
Nation's veterans. Mark has been focused on Iran and what our Nation
should be doing to ensure that Iran's threat to the Middle East and
other nations is minimized. He has been tireless in keeping watch over
their potential nuclear program. As chairman of the Appropriations
Subcommittee on Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, Mark has
focused on ensuring that those veterans who retired from duty with
medical issues have received the care they needed to recover and live
better, more healthful lives. This was an interest that stemmed from
his service in the Navy Reserve from 1989-2013 and is yet another way
for Mark to make a difference in the lives of those who had served our
nation.
Before I close, I must recognize the challenge Mark overcame by
recovering from a stroke during his Senate service. It was a long and
difficult road back to the Senate so he could again represent the
people of his home State, but Mark persevered. All told, it took him a
year before he was strong enough to return to Washington on a permanent
basis.
One moment I will always remember is the day he came back to the
Senate, walking the steps with Vice President Joe Biden and West
Virginia Senator Joe Manchin. The courage, determination and step by
step success Mark made in achieving another difficult goal could not
have been more clear to those of us who watched him climb the stairs.
The stroke that affected him physically also had an impact on his
personal outlook on life. When he was able, he wrote of his experience,
``I was once a pessimist. I'm not that man anymore. And that change,
brought about by misfortune, is the best thing that ever happened to
me.''
I have enjoyed the opportunity to come to know Mark over his
Washington years, and I wish he were going to stay with us so we could
continue to follow his life as he works on his goals, dreams,
ambitions, and efforts to keep us safe.
Mark, Diana joins me in sending our best wishes and our appreciation
for your willingness to serve. You have a record of which you should be
very proud--just as proud as we are of you. You leave having made a
difference far beyond your years of service.
tribute to kelly ayotte
Mr. President, at the end of each Congress, it is a tradition for the
Senate to pause for a moment to acknowledge and express our
appreciation for the service of each Senator who will not be returning
for the next session. One of those we will miss next year will be Kelly
Ayotte of New Hampshire.
During the past 6 years, those of us who had a chance to come to know
and work with Kelly have been impressed with her dedication to the
people of her home State, her involvement with the issues of concern to
them, and her willingness to work with members on both sides of the
aisle to find solutions to the problems and concerns of the people of
New Hampshire and America.
There were at least three key steps that brought Kelly to the Senate
after she earned her law degree from Villanova. First, she spent a year
clerking for the New Hampshire Supreme Court. Then she spent the next
part of her career in private practice. The third step brought her into
the State attorney general's office and then on to serve as New
Hampshire's attorney general. When Senator Judd Gregg announced his
retirement, Kelly knew the time was right for her to pursue another
goal. She decided to run for the Senate.
It wasn't easy, but those who doubted her underestimated Kelly's
innate political sense and her ability to reach the people of New
Hampshire. In the end she brought about a closely fought but well-
earned victory in the primary and a big win in the general election.
Kelly came to Washington in 2010 and started working right away on a
number of issues that she knew were a concern to the people back home.
She made it clear that she would fight for what was best for the people
of her home State and worked hard on national security, veterans
issues, health care, and substance abuse. She has also been a tireless
advocate and an outstanding partner for me on the Budget Committee.
[[Page S6886]]
I am sad to see Kelly leave the Senate at the end of this year, but
if her past is any indication of her future, I think she will make good
use of her talents, abilities, background, knowledge, and experience in
her future endeavors. I hope it is in some part of our government.
There is no doubt that we need good people like Kelly to make this a
better country for us all.
I have a prediction to make about her future--we haven't seen the
last of Kelly Ayotte. She has a lot more to give, and I think we are
all looking forward to seeing it.
Kelly, Diana joins me in sending our best wishes to you and your
family, and our appreciation for your willingness to serve New
Hampshire and the Nation. There are countless sayings about how
politics isn't for anyone but the brave and the resilient. I think your
experience, especially this past year, has shown that you are more than
tough enough for any career challenge. Good luck in whatever you choose
to do next. Clearly, you specialize in making the world a better place
and that is a win/win for us all--especially our children and
grandchildren.
tribute to david vitter
Mr. President, each year at the end of the Congress, it has been a
tradition for the Senate to pause for a moment to express our
appreciation for the service of those Members who will be retiring. One
of those who will be leaving this year is David Vitter.
David will be a loss for my party's membership in the next Congress
because he was a hard worker and we could always count on him for his
support of our conservative positions. Simply put, he made the most of
the terms he served and made an important difference on a number of
issues.
Over the years, David would study each bill in Committee and on the
floor carefully to determine how those who would fall under its
provisions would be affected. He had a good sense of what needed to be
strengthened or tweaked to make legislation more effective and less
costly. The people of Louisiana and the Nation have had a friend in
him, and they greatly appreciated how well he looked out for them.
One issue that drew David's and my attention was Obamacare. We both
had a lot of concerns about how it would work and whether or not it
would provide the kind of care its supporters promised. That is one of
the reasons why I hate to see him leave. We have a lot of work to do on
health care, and David would have been someone who could help with the
heavy lifting.
David also chaired the Small Business Committee in this Congress and
was able to put forward some ideas to preserve jobs and businesses. I
have been proud to work with him in that effort.
In short, Senator Vitter has had a remarkable career and has done his
best to serve the people of his State and champion the issues that were
of importance to them.
Now David has decided to end his Senate career and take on some new
challenges. I have no doubt that his skills and his background will
lead him down a new path to help the people of Louisiana. I wish him
well and look forward to seeing what he will do.
David, Diana joins me in sending our best wishes and our appreciation
for your service, as well as that of your family. Together with Wendy,
you were able to make a difference that will last for a long time in
the Senate and in Louisiana. It is good to know you won't be far away
and we can get in touch with you whenever we need your advice.
tribute to vice president joe biden
Mr. President, today I wish to recognize the service of a former
colleague and our current Vice President, Joe Biden.
Joe was born in Pennsylvania, but moved with his family to Delaware
when he was 13. He left Delaware for brief stints at St. Helena School
and Syracuse University Law School, but he has always returned to
Delaware, including the daily trips he made home during his Senate
career and the regular trips he makes home to this day.
Because of his devotion to Delaware, Joe quickly got his start in
politics, first on the New Castle County Council and then in the U.S.
Senate, where he became the fifth-youngest U.S. Senator in history in
1972. He also has the distinction of being Delaware's longest serving
Senator.
I worked with Joe on many different issues during his time in the
Senate and served on the Foreign Relations Committee when he was our
Chairman. Joe is known as a foreign affairs expert, and he has many
reasons to be proud of the work he's done in that area. One of those
things that we worked on together was the President's Emergency Plan
for AIDS Relief.
I remember being at the 2003 State of the Union speech when President
Bush said, ``We're going to put $15 billion into an AIDS effort.'' That
shocked all of us who were there. It was a lot of money. But we worked
together to develop a bill that passed the House and Senate
unanimously.
Joe managed the floor when we reauthorized that program in 2008, and
we worked with Senators Coburn, Burr, and Lugar to develop that
reauthorization. At the time, Joe suggested historians will regard
PEPFAR as President Bush's ``single finest hour,'' and I tend to agree.
A few years ago, I visited the Kasisi Orphanage in Zambia. We were told
that before PEPFAR, they had to bury 18 kids a month that died of AIDS,
but because of PEPFAR, they got that down to one a month. I know Joe
shares my pride in the difference that program is making.
We were all a little sad to see Joe move to the White House in 2009,
when he became our 47th Vice President. Lucky for us, he has been able
to keep his ties to the Senate in his role as President of this body,
and I think he has been one of our best partners in the administration.
All of us were glad to be able to honor Joe and his son, Beau Biden,
by naming the cancer section of 21st Century Cures Act after Beau. I
expect Joe will continue to be a voice for ending cancer, and I hope to
work with him towards that cause.
Joe, Diana and I send our best to you, Jill and your family. You have
served the people of Delaware and the people of the United States with
distinction.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maine
Senior$afe Act
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, at the end of a Congress, we all know how
easy it is for just one Senator to block a bill. I rise today to
express my great disappointment that we have been unable to overcome
objections from just one Senator from the other side of the aisle who
is blocking the passage of legislation called the Senior$afe Act that
is designed to help protect our seniors from financial fraud and
exploitation. This is a bill I introduced with my colleague, Senator
Claire McCaskill, as a result of extensive hearings and investigations
that we have conducted in the Senate Aging Committee. A companion bill
passed the House on a voice vote.
Nationally, as many as 5 million seniors may be victims of financial
abuse annually. Stopping this tsunami of fraud has been one of the top
priorities of the Senate Aging Committee.
In the many hearings we have held on this issue, what we found is
that scammers seek to gain the trust and active cooperation of their
victims, who are usually older Americans. Without that trust and
cooperation, their schemes would fail. Unfortunately, seniors often do
not see the red flags that signal that fraud is likely involved in
these sophisticated schemes. Sometimes seniors are simply too nice, too
trusting. In other sad cases, they may suffer from diminished capacity.
But just as often, they miss these flags because the swindlers who prey
upon them are extremely crafty and they know how to sound convincing.
Any of us who have received these calls at home know how persuasive and
persistent these con artists can be.
Whatever the reason, a warning sign that can slip by a victim might
trigger a second look by a financial services representative who is
trained to spot common scams and who knows enough about a senior's
habits to question a transaction that just doesn't look right. In our
work on the Senate Aging Committee, we have heard of so many cases
where an alert bank teller or credit union employee on the frontlines
has stopped a financial fraud in its tracks, saving seniors untold
thousands of dollars. In fact, the Government Accountability Office
estimates that our seniors lose an astonishing $2.9 billion a year to
this kind of fraud,
[[Page S6887]]
and that is probably the tip of the iceberg because many times this
fraud is never reported.
I will give an example. Earlier this year, an attorney in the small
coastal city of Belfast, ME, was sentenced to 30 months in prison for
bilking two older female clients out of nearly half a million dollars
over the course of several years. The lawyer's brazen theft was
uncovered when a local bank teller noticed that he was writing large
checks to himself from his clients' accounts. When confronted by
authorities, he offered excuses that the prosecutor later described as
``breathtaking.'' For example, he put one of his clients into a nursing
home to recover from a temporary medical condition and then managed to
keep her there for 4 years until the theft of her funds came to light.
In the meantime, he submitted bills for services, sometimes totaling
$20,000 a month, including charging her $250 per hour for 6 to 7 hours
to check on her house, which was a 1-minute drive from his office.
Financial institutions are in a critical position to check these
fraudsters. If properly trained, employees can be the first line of
defense. Regrettably, certain laws can inadvertently impede efforts to
protect seniors because financial institutions that report suspected
fraud can be exposed to lawsuits. Our bill, the Senior$afe Act,
encourages financial institutions to train their employees and shields
them from lawsuits for making good-faith, reasonable reports of
potential fraud to the proper authorities.
As Jaye Martin, the head of Maine Legal Services for the Elderly, put
it in a letter describing her support for the Collins-McCaskill bill,
``In a landscape that includes family members who often wish to keep
exploitation from coming to light because they are perpetrating the
exploitation, the risk of facing potential nuisance or false complaints
over privacy violations is all too real.''
This is a barrier that must be removed so that financial institutions
will act immediately to make a report to the proper authorities upon
forming a reasonable belief that exploitation is occurring. These
professionals are on the frontlines in the fight against elder
financial exploitation and are often the only ones in a position to
stop the exploitation before it is too late.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record
the full letter from Ms. Martin immediately following my remarks.
Our bipartisan bill is based on the State of Maine's innovative
Senior$afe Program. It has been a collaborative effort by my State's
regulators, financial institutions, and legal organizations to educate
bank and credit union employees on how to identify and help stop the
exploitation of older Mainers. It was pioneered by Maine's securities
administrator, Judith Shaw, and it has led to a significant increase in
reports of suspected senior financial exploitation and fraud.
The Maine program also serves as a template for model legislation
developed for adoption by the North American Securities Administrators
Administration, which is known as NASAA. The Senior$afe Act and this
model State legislation are complementary efforts, and I am very
pleased that the association of securities administrators has endorsed
our bill.
As I mentioned, the House Financial Services Committee approved our
companion bill by a vote of 59 to 0 in June, and it passed the House by
a voice vote in July. The Senate bill is sponsored by a quarter of the
Members of this body, balanced nearly evenly on both sides of the
aisle, and has the support of a wide range of stakeholders looking out
for the interests of consumers, including the securities administrators
whom I have already mentioned, the Conference of State Bank
Supervisors, and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
These are all regulators who are looking out for our consumers.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record
these letters of endorsement immediately following my remarks.
Under our bill, liability protections are only provided for good-
faith, reasonable reports of suspected fraud.
The legal obstacles facing financial institutions that report this
kind of suspected fraud and abuse are not limited to just privacy laws
because these institutions have also been threatened with claims such
as breach of contract, bad faith, slander, unfair practices, and even
harassment. As one compliance officer for one of my community banks put
it, without this kind of immunity for good-faith reporting, small
community banks will face the ``freeze effect'' and won't make reports
that could help to protect our seniors; thus, ``the effectiveness of
Senior$afe will be undercut.''
I just cannot believe we cannot clear this commonsense bill for the
President's signature when it would help so many seniors avoid becoming
the victims of financial fraud and abuse, when it is supported by
groups like Maine Legal Services for the Elderly, when it has won the
support of national organizations of State securities administrators,
State insurance commissioners, State bank regulators, when it would
make such a difference.
Sadly, because of the objections of just one Senator on the other
side of the aisle, we are stymied. That means we will have to start all
over again next year. Much needed help for our seniors--that could help
them avoid being swindled out of what GAO estimates is almost $3
billion a year--will have to wait for another day. I just don't
understand it.
I have made many good-faith efforts in this regard, but regretfully,
because we are at the end of the session, we don't have the time to go
through all of the procedural steps that would be needed to pass this
bill, which I am sure, given its broad bipartisan support, would pass
overwhelmingly. I hope the Senator in question will reconsider and
allow us to send this important bill to the President for his
signature.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
Legal Services for the Elderly, Free Legal Help for
Maine's Seniors,
December 5, 2016.
Re Senior$afe (S. 2216).
Senator Susan Collins,
Chair, Senate Special Committee on Aging, Dirksen Senate
Office Building, Washington, DC.
Dear Senator Collins: I want to thank you for inviting me
to speak with the Senate Special Committee on Aging about the
serious problem of financial exploitation of seniors by
guardians and others in a position of power. I also want to
thank you for your leadership in working to ensure there is
training of financial institution employees in reporting
elder abuse and an improvement in the timely reporting of
financial exploitation when it is suspected through passage
of the Senior$afe Act. I strongly support this legislation
that is based upon work done here in Maine.
I served for over two years on the working group that
developed Maine's Senior$afe training program for financial
institution managers and employees. It is a voluntary
training program. Through that work I came to fully
appreciate the very real concerns of the financial industry
regarding the consequences of violating, or being perceived
as violating, the broad range of state and federal privacy
laws that apply to their industry. I also came to appreciate
that absent broad immunity for reporting of suspected
financial exploitation, privacy regulations would continue to
be a barrier to good faith reporting of suspected financial
exploitation. In a landscape that includes family members who
often wish to keep exploitation from coming to light because
they are perpetrating the exploitation, the risk of facing
potential nuisance or false complaints over privacy
violations is all too real.
This is a barrier that must be removed so that financial
institution employees will act immediately to make a report
to the proper authorities upon forming a reasonable belief
that exploitation is occurring. These professionals are on
the front lines in the light against elder financial
exploitation and are often the only ones in a position to
stop exploitation before it is too late.
I want to add that tying the grant of immunity to required
training for not just supervisors, compliance officers, and
legal advisors, but to all who come in contact with seniors
as a part of their regular duties, will have the direct
result of bringing more cases of exploitation to the timely
attention of the proper authorities because it will
significantly increase the knowledge and awareness in the
industry of the red flags for elder abuse. In Maine, where
our training program is entirely voluntary and carries no
legal status or benefit, we have already seen what a
difference training can make.
Senior$afe is a much needed step in the fight against
financial exploitation of seniors and there is no doubt it
will make our nation's seniors safer. I thank you again for
your leadership in this important area.
Sincerely,
Jaye L. Martin,
Executive Director.
[[Page S6888]]
____
North American Securities
Administrators Association, Inc.,
Washington, DC, October 27, 2015.
Re the Senior$afe Act of 2015.
Senator Susan Collins,
Chairman, Senate Special Committee on Aging, Dirksen Senate
Office Building, Washington, DC.
Senator Claire McCaskill,
Ranking Member, Senate Special Committee on Aging, Dirksen
Senate Office Building, Washington, DC.
Dear Chairman Collins and Ranking Member McCaskill: On
behalf of the North American Securities Administrators
Association (``NASAA''), I'm writing to express strong
support for your work to better protect vulnerable adults
from financial exploitation through the introduction of the
Senior$afe Act of 2015. Your legislation will better protect
seniors by increasing the likelihood that financial
exploitation targeting the elderly will be identified by
financial services professionals, and by removing barriers
that might otherwise frustrate the reporting of such
exploitation to state securities regulators and other
appropriate governmental authorities.
Senior financial exploitation is a difficult but critical
policy challenge. Many in our elderly population are
vulnerable due to social isolation and distance from family,
caregiver, and other support networks. Indeed, evidence
suggests that as many as one out of every five citizens over
the age of 65 has been victimized by a financial fraud. To be
successful in combating senior financial exploitation, state
and federal policymakers must come together to weave a new
safety net for our elderly, breaking down barriers to
identify those who are best positioned to identify red flags
early on and to encourage reporting and referrals to
appropriate local, county, state, and federal agencies,
including law enforcement.
As you know, state securities regulators, working within
the framework of NASAA, are in the late-stages of our own
concerted effort to bolster protections for elderly investors
at risk of exploitation, including through the development of
model legislation to be enacted by states to promote
reporting of suspected exploitation. While the approaches
contemplated by the recently announced NASAA model
legislation and the Senior$afe Act differ in some respects,
they are complementary efforts, both undertaken with the
shared goal of protecting seniors by increasing the detection
and reporting of elderly financial exploitation.
The Senior$afe Act consists of several essential features.
First, to promote and encourage reporting of suspected
elderly financial exploitation by financial services
professionals, who are positioned to identify and report
``red flags'' of potential exploitation, the bill would
incentivize financial services employees to report any
suspected exploitation by making them immune from any civil
or administrative liability arising from such a report,
provided that they exercised due care, and that they make
these reports in good faith. Second, in order to better
assure that financial services employees have the knowledge
and training they require to identify ``red flags''
associated with financial exploitation, the bill would
require that, as a condition of receiving immunity, financial
institutions undertake to train certain personnel regarding
the identification and reporting of senior financial
exploitation as soon as practicable, or within one year.
Under the bill, employees who would be required to receive
such training as a condition of immunity include supervisory
personnel; employees who come into contact with a senior
citizen as a regular part of their duties; and employees who
review or approve the financial documents, records, or
transactions of senior citizens as a part of their regular
duties.
The benefits of the types of reporting that the Senior$afe
Act aims to facilitate and encourage are far-reaching.
Elderly Americans stand to benefit directly from such
reporting, because early detection and reporting can minimize
their financial losses from exploitation, and because
improved protection of their finances ultimately helps
preserve their financial independence and their personal
autonomy. Financial institutions stand to benefit, as well,
through preservation of their reputation, increased community
recognition, increased employee satisfaction, and decreased
uninsured losses.
In conclusion, state securities regulators congratulate you
for introducing the Senior$afe Act of 2015. We share and
support the goals of this legislation, and look forward to
working closely with you as the legislation is considered by
the Senate.
Sincerely,
Judith M. Shaw,
NASAA President and Maine
Securities Administrator.
____
NAIC & The Center for
Insurance Policy and Research,
September 14, 2016.
Re Senior Safe Act.
Chairman Susan M. Collins,
U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging, Dirksen Senate Office
Building, Washington, DC.
Ranking Member Claire McCaskill,
U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging, Hart Senate Office
Building, Washington, DC.
Dear Chairman Collins and Ranking Member McCaskill: On
behalf of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners
(NAIC), which represents the chief insurance regulators from
the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and five U.S.
territories, we write to express our support for the Senior
$afe Act and applaud you for your leadership to increase
identification and reporting of suspected senior financial
exploitation.
It is estimated that older adults in our country lose $2.9
billion annually from financial exploitation, and these
losses can result in a diminished quality of life for those
who fall victim to such exploitation. State insurance
regulators share your commitment to protecting seniors from
financial exploitation. State and federal officials entrusted
with the responsibility of protecting consumers must remain
vigilant in their oversight. That is why a key component of
the NAIC's Retirement Security Initiative is ensuring
consumers have clarity and transparency into the insurance
products they are being offered, that the products are
suitable for their needs, and that bad actors do not
undermine efforts to address lifetime income and retirement
security challenges. We look forward to continuing to work
with you and your committee on these important issues.
Thank you again for your efforts to combat financial
exploitation of seniors.
Sincerely,
John M. Huff,
NAIC President, Director, Missouri Department of Insurance,
Financial Institutions and Professional Registration.
Theodore K. Nickel,
NAIC President-Elect, Commissioner, Wisconsin Department of
Insurance.
Julie Mix McPeak,
NAIC Vice President, Commissioner, Tennessee Department of
Commerce and Insurance.
Eric A. Cioppa,
NAIC Secretary-Treasurer, Superintendent, Maine Department
of Professional and Financial Regulation, Bureau of
Insurance.
____
Conference of State
Bank Supervisors,
April 29, 2016.
Senator Susan Collins,
Chairwoman, Senate Special Committee on Aging, Dirksen Senate
Office Building, Washington, DC.
Senator Claire McCaskill,
Ranking Member, Senate Special Committee on Aging, Dirksen
Senate Office Building, Washington, DC.
Dear Chairwoman Collins and Ranking Member McCaskill: On
behalf of the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS), I
write to express strong support for S. 2216, the Senior$afe
Act of 2015. State regulators are committed to combatting
financial abuse of elderly residents and believe that S. 2216
recognizes the contribution of states while empowering
institutions to reduce financial exploitation of the elderly.
State regulators supervise a diverse credit ecosystem, are
locally-focused, and have a unique insight on the
consequences of abusive practices in their communities. State
banking regulators supervise approximately 4,850 state-
chartered depository institutions, representing over 75% of
our nation's banks. Additionally, most state banking
departments regulate a variety of non-bank financial services
providers, including mortgage lenders.
Since the 1980s, several states have enacted laws to
address the abuse, neglect, and financial exploitation of
their elderly residents. These state laws provide immunity
for financial service professionals to report abuse in good
faith, contain penalties for failing to report or making
false reports of elder abuse, and combat power of attorney
abuse. S. 2216 recognizes the important work of states and
creates a consumer protection floor upon which states can
build.
Financial services professionals are in a position of trust
and have a unique window into the financial condition of
seniors. Their expertise and vantage point should be
leveraged to forcefully combat the growing epidemic of elder
abuse.
The Senior$afe Act incentivizes financial services
employees to report any suspected exploitation by making them
immune from any civil or administrative liability arising
from such a report, provided they exercised due care and
reported in good faith. Additionally, to ensure financial
services personnel have the requisite expertise, the bill
requires, as a condition of receiving immunity, that
financial institutions train key personnel regarding the
identification and reporting of senior financial exploitation
as soon as practicable.
Early detection is key to combatting elder financial abuse.
Not only can it minimize losses, but it may be able to
prevent abuses from occurring in the first place. Moreover,
this bill can deepen the involvement of financial
institutions in their community, enhance the training of
financial services personnel, and reduce insured losses.
[[Page S6889]]
In sum, CSBS strongly supports S. 2216 and looks forward to
working with you as the Senate considers this legislation.
Sincerely,
John W. Ryan,
President and CEO.
Ms. COLLINS. I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, Senator Leahy and I are on the floor for
the same issue. I defer to Senator Leahy if he prefers to go first.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
EB-5 Regional Center Program
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I have been here on the floor before,
joined by Senator Grassley, to share my frustration with the EB-5
Regional Center Program. Senator Grassley and I have been working for
years to improve this flawed program that is set to expire tomorrow,
but, once again, unfortunately, the congressional leadership on the
other side has rejected our bipartisan reforms and the program will be
extended in the continuing resolution.
We have done this in a way, as has been pointed out, as a Republican
and as a Democrat--two of the most senior Members of this body--who
have introduced real reforms, but time and again leadership has caved
behind closed doors to narrow corporate interests. I believe that is a
serious mistake.
The EB-5 Program I once championed seems like a distant memory. The
program was designed to bring jobs to underserved rural and distressed
urban communities. For some time, it did just that. Communities in
Vermont, like Warren and Vergennes, once used EB-5 to create and save
jobs during difficult economic times, but that is EB-5 of yesterday.
Today EB-5 is mired in fraud and abuse. It suffers from obvious and
outrageous flaws. It is a magnet for fraud, security violations are
rampant, and the incentives Congress created to promote investment and
create jobs in rural and high unemployment areas--the sole reason I
championed the program--have been rendered obsolete through economic
gerrymandering.
Only 3 percent of EB-5 investors now invest in rural areas--3
percent. The distinguished senior Senator from Iowa and I understand
what a rural area is, and they are not being served. Less than 10
percent invest in true high unemployment areas. Almost every other EB-5
project uses gerrymandering to qualify as distressed, despite many
being located in the most affluent areas of the country. The fact that
a luxury hotel in Beverly Hills can use gerrymandering to claim it is
located in a distressed community is troubling. Beverly Hills is not
rural Iowa or rural Vermont, but the fact that this type of abuse now
represents almost 90 percent of the entire EB-5 Program is appalling.
Anyone who maintains that today's EB-5 Program is about creating jobs
is either a lobbyist for the real estate industry or is simply not
paying attention. An untold number of the luxury developments that now
dominate EB-5 would be pursued even if you did not have EB-5 financing.
Financing provided through EB-5 represents a small portion of the
capital stack. To claim that EB-5 is responsible for all of these jobs
is a farce. EB-5 merely allows developers to replace their conventional
financing with dirt cheap capital subsidized by the sale of U.S. visas.
It is not just exploited by wealthy American developers. Chinese
developers, and even the Chinese Government itself, are now exploiting
the EB-5 subsidy. That is beyond troubling when a foreign government is
permitted to earn tens of millions of dollars through the sale of U.S.
visas.
The proposal I developed with Senator Grassley would address this. It
would require background checks. It would require third-party oversight
of funds. It would create protections for defrauded investors. It would
ban foreign government ownership of an EB-5 company. It would end
gerrymandering and provide modest incentives to direct a small portion
of investment to underserved areas--just 15 percent to both rural and
urban poor communities--but even this was too much for some developers
and some lobbyists.
Gluttonous, shortsighted corporate greed blocked these critical
reforms, greed that was given a voice by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Unfortunately, the leadership has allowed a couple of powerful
developers to exploit this program's flaws to derail critical reforms.
I find it shameful that the worst abusers of this program have been
given, by some in Congress, veto power over its reform.
I commend Secretary Johnson and his efforts to improve EB-5. I
commend his efforts to change the rules to address fraud, inadequate
investment levels, and the abuse of development incentives.
I will work with the chairmen of the Senate and House Judiciary
Committees and the next Secretary of Homeland Security to get these
reforms implemented and enforced, but the EB-5 regional Senate program
no longer serves the American people's interests. It certainly does not
serve the rural and urban poor communities as Congress intended.
Next year, I will be the vice chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, and I will continue to press for broad bipartisan reform. I
know Senator Grassley and Senator Feinstein, the incoming ranking
member of the Judiciary Committee, will not sit idly by either.
If EB-5 cannot be reformed due to the paralysis of leadership, it is
very simple. If it cannot be reformed, then let us end EB-5.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I heard my friend and colleague Senator
Leahy express his opposition, and opposition that I share, to the EB-5
Regional Center Program. I am here for the same purpose, to express the
same opposition to the EB-5 Regional Center Program that was extended
without reforms. One year ago, we made similar statements. I could
easily read the same statement I gave at that time and it would be just
as relevant today. We are very disappointed that reforms were not
included in the continuing resolution, which simply extended this very
flawed immigration program.
The EB-5 Regional Center Program has been plagued by fraud and abuse.
It poses significant national security risks. There are serious
allegations that the program may be facilitating terrorist travel,
economic espionage, money laundering, and investment fraud. Yet
considering all of those things, the continuing resolution before us
fails to include much needed reforms.
So after a year, we have yet another missed opportunity. The chairs
and ranking members of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees have
agreed on a package of reforms. We have worked in a bipartisan and
bicameral fashion. We have agreed--all four of us--on every aspect. We
instituted compliance measures, we instituted background checks, and we
instituted transparency provisions. We made sure rural and distressed
urban areas benefited from the program, as Congress already intended
and as Senator Leahy very clearly laid out the problems.
Despite the bipartisan support, not a single one of our
recommendations will be implemented. Instead of reforming the program,
we will have the status quo. The status quo means the following:
Investments can be spent before business plans are approved.
Regional Center operators can charge excessive fees of foreign
nationals in addition to their required investments.
None of the jobs created have to be ``direct'' or verifiable jobs,
but rather they are ``indirect'' and based on estimates, not knowing
for sure if there are jobs created or based upon economic modeling--
again, not knowing for sure if jobs are created.
Investment funds are not adequately vetted.
Gifts and loans from anyone are acceptable sources of funds from
foreign nationals.
There is no prohibition against foreign governments owning and
operating regional centers or projects.
Regional centers can be rented or sold without government oversight
or approval.
Regional centers don't have to certify that they comply with
securities laws. There is no set of sanctions for any violations--in
other words, no recourse for the bad actors.
There are no required background checks on anyone associated with
these regional centers. The investment level is lower than Congress
ever intended.
[[Page S6890]]
Gerrymandering continues, and rural and urban distressed areas then
lose out.
Site visits or even audits are not required.
There is no transparency on how funds are spent, who is paid, and
what investors are told about the projects they are investing in.
The preferential treatment we have seen in the past is enabled
without a strict code of conduct rules.
Those are just some of the things that are wrong.
The four of us on the two committees, in a bicameral and bipartisan
way, tried to address awareness and have a process for dialogue leading
to reform. My committee held two hearings this year. The House held
one. Staff met with very interested stakeholders who asked for and we
offered more concessions than we did last year. To top it off, we were
ready to provide a 6-year reauthorization. This would have provided
long-term stability for investors and regional centers.
But let's talk about why this package was not acceptable to some,
most notably, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which was the most rigid in
not compromising. Here is a list of issues raised by this leading voice
of business in opposition to our package.
They want, in effect, one investment level. They don't want any
meaningful discount for rural or urban distressed areas. Don't forget
that this law was passed 20 years ago to help rural and high-
unemployment areas. That is the purpose of it.
They don't want visas set aside for areas that Congress selected as
targeted employment areas for fear that investors in affluent areas
would have to wait slightly longer for a visa.
They didn't want to incentivize foreign investors to fund
manufacturing projects that create long-term, sustainable, and real
jobs that this country desperately needs.
They wanted to make it harder for rural areas to qualify at a
discount investment level, even though it is common knowledge that
small and rural communities have a harder time attracting capital.
They wanted certifications and compliance measures to be delegated to
the agency. They did not want Congress to dictate transparencies and
reporting requirements.
We must remember that our job is to legislate, not to delegate.
Delegating authority to the executive branch on this program would
result in more of the same, because even by the departments in charge,
there is very little oversight and monitoring now, even if it might be
required by law. But not enough of it is required by law. That is why
they get away with all this stuff.
The Chamber of Commerce didn't like a provision saying a foreign
national had to be 18 years old to invest and obtain a green card
through the program. They would like children as young as 14 to be able
to make these major financial decisions and invest up to $1 million--a
14-year-old, to do that.
They wanted restrictions on where investor funds came from lifted.
Our package limited a foreign national from taking out a questionable
loan or taking gifts from unknown sources. One way to find out what is
wrong is to follow the money. We wanted to be sure that those investing
were doing so because they obtained funds lawfully. The U.S. Chamber of
Commerce wanted no such restrictions.
They wanted foreign governments and even sovereign wealth funds to
own EB-5 projects. They wanted to delay rules saying foreign
governments could not own or administer regional centers by requiring
bureaucratic rulemaking. Despite the changes we made this year on this
very strict provision, they continued to want to water it down in every
negotiating session we had.
They didn't want regional centers to have to consult with local
officials about EB-5 projects to ensure that economic development
efforts were coordinated.
They wanted to do away with a requirement that a foreign investor
would have to create at least one direct job before obtaining a green
card. Now, here we have a situation where a program was instituted 25
years ago to create jobs--particularly in rural America and high
unemployment areas--and they don't even want the investors to show that
they are going to create at least one job right now.
Then they used economic modeling to show indirect jobs. Neither the
existence of those jobs nor the location of those jobs can truly be
verified. When you have the Federal Government setting up a program
like this that is supposed to create jobs in rural areas and high
unemployment areas, wouldn't you think there ought to be a way of
showing that those jobs are actually created?
They raise new concerns about provisions that have been discussed way
back since last June, such as requiring regional centers to pay a fee
to an enforcement and monitoring fund.
They wanted a 3-day notification of a site visit by the agency to
determine if the regional center truly exists. Sure, tell the
inspectors you are coming so you can get everything in order before the
inspectors get there.
They fought efforts to require transparency of how investor funds
were used. Now, this is a major problem of the existing program. Nearly
every story of fraud relates to how regional center operators use EB-5
funds for their own personal gain and luxury.
This program is meant to create jobs, not to help individuals in
charge of the program have personal gain and, more importantly, even
the luxury that might go with that.
But the kicker in all of this is that these business interests insist
on more visas and to make those visas even cheaper. They want Congress
to increase immigration numbers through controversial recapture
mechanisms or by exempting certain people from the annual cap. The pro-
EB-5 groups want more visas for an already faulty program, which makes
more money and puts more money in their pockets.
On top of that, they asked us to make the visas cheaper than it is
even under current law. I, of course, refused to do that. I refuse to
go below the $1 million level that has been in law since 1990. The
demand for visas is there. There is no justification to further cheapen
this program and the green cards that come with that program.
We will have 5 months until we are faced with another reauthorization
because that is how far this continuing resolution goes. In those 5
months, I expect that proposed rules changing the investment level and
stopping gerrymandering will be published by the end of the year by the
Obama administration, and I will support those proposed rules. I will
be asking the new Trump administration to keep those new regulations
and build off them.
In regard to the new administration coming in, they took a very
strong position on various immigration issues. In taking that position,
I would expect them to consider very closely the fraud and misuse of
the EB-5 Program. When this administration sees things wrong with it
and they correct those things that are wrong with it through
regulation, those are regulations that should be backed up very solidly
by the new administration coming in.
Next year, we will have to start over again. So as we heard Senator
Leahy speak about this--and we know his feelings and mine are very
similar; I have already referred to the House Judiciary Committee--we
will continue to work in a bipartisan and bicameral way to ensure this
program.
Now, I want to speak about the new ranking member, Senator Feinstein.
I intend to continue this work as closely with her as I did with
Ranking Member Leahy, and Ranking Member Leahy will still be involved
in this process. I want to point out that she is not a fan of this
program at all, and she has been very vocal about closing this program
down because of all the fault we find with it, whether it is fraud,
whether it is misuse of the program, whether it is possible terrorist
activity taking advantage of it, or whatever it is for national
security reasons--all of those. Some of these have been pointed out by
law enforcement agencies at the Federal level.
So I want everybody to know that change is coming. I have always
wanted to reform the program, but I am not sure that the industry will
ever come around. The leadership of this body and the other body could
help by ending this program in a continuing resolution. Let it sunset,
and let all these people come to the table with a more compromising
point of view to correct everything that is wrong here. But the
industry loves the status quo and, of course, they love the billions of
dollars
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that pour into affluent areas. Consequently, the money is not directed
where it was intended to in 1990, when this legislation was passed,
which was to rural areas and high unemployment areas.
I am not sure, with the attitude of the industry, that reforms are
possible. So just leaning on Senator Feinstein a little bit and
considering her point of view, it may be time to do away with the
program completely.
I said that same thing a year ago, and I repeat: Maybe we should
spend our time, our resources, and our efforts in other programs that
benefit the American people as opposed to benefiting the well-healed
and the well-connected. Maybe it is time this program goes away.
I yield the floor and thank Senator Leahy for his speaking on it.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida.
REMEMBERING JOHN GLENN
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, it is my sad duty to announce the passing
of John Glenn.
John Glenn was one of the original seven astronauts of this country.
All of them were characterized as having the right stuff, and if you
knew any of them, that was certainly true.
John Glenn was not only a pioneering astronaut and a great Senator,
he was a first-class gentleman as well as a devoted husband and father.
He leaves behind Annie, his beloved, who always stood with him as he
ventured into the unknown cosmos, and it was unknown because John was
the first to go into orbit as an American. He paved the way for all the
rest of us.
At his passing, America is in the planning and the developing of the
rockets that will take us, a human species, all the way to Mars. John
Glenn was the pioneer. He was the one who paved the way.
Thank you, Mr. President.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I was a little bit delayed getting to the
floor this afternoon because I was in tears, literally, when I heard
the news about John. I think of my last long conversation with him just
a few weeks ago. I will speak more on the floor about him later.
I came to the Senate with John Glenn. I enjoyed traveling with him,
with the anonymity it gave me when people said: there is Colonel Glenn.
It was not Senator Glenn, it was Colonel Glenn, even after having been
sworn in. We traveled, he and Annie, Marcelle and I, all over the
world, but the time I remember the most was the weekend we spent at our
old farmhouse in Vermont because they wanted to see the foliage.
We used a seaplane and went flying around, landing in little ponds;
taking off, then landing in another one. We went to a trappers
convention where everybody was saying, ``It is Colonel Glenn and some
bald guy with him,'' and that was me, of course. We went there and then
flew back to Montpelier where Marcelle and Annie had been traveling
around. John landed the plane in a stiff crosswind. Of course, the
pontoons did not help. He had to bring it in sideways. I did not worry.
It was John Glenn. Then he turned to me with a big wink and said: I
have never been so frightened flying anything in my life. I do not
think John ever was frightened at anything, but my heart did stop.
I will speak more about him on the floor, and I appreciate my friend
from Iowa yielding so I could speak.
John was one of the best people I ever served with. When I speak of
what it was like coming here as a brand new Senator, every time I am
asked about that, I talk about the fact that I came here and was sworn
in with John Glenn.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, it is my understanding that I was going
to go next. But my distinguished colleague from West Virginia has
important visitors--miners, who help fuel our country. So I ask
unanimous consent that after he is recognized, I be recognized
immediately thereafter.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
The Senator from West Virginia.
Miners Protection Act
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, let me say to my dear friend from New
Jersey, I appreciate his support so much. He has been right with me
from day one, basically for the working men and women of this country
but, most importantly, for the miners who have given us the country we
have had today.
I have been doing this for quite some time now. It is nothing new.
This is not new to anybody. This has not been sprung on somebody at the
last minute, what we are fighting for and what we are trying to do.
As of October, we had over 16,000 of our retired miners and a lot of
elderly women--widows whose husbands have passed away--who were
notified they would be losing their health care benefits December 31 of
this year. We have been working for a permanent fix called the Miners
Protection Act, and if that bill were brought to the floor today, it
would pass. We have all of the Democratic caucus--all 46 of us--and we
have at least 15 who have committed to voting for it from our
Republican colleagues, but that is not to be. That is not going to
happen.
We have been working everything we can. We have gone through regular
order. That means it has been to the Finance Committee. It has gone
through and been debated and vetted, and it came out of there with an
18-to-8 vote--very strong in a bipartisan way.
Now what do we do? We are not going to get a vote on the floor. We
thought, well, let's attach it. The Cures Act came over, and it is a
health care act. It was germane to that bill, and it should fit in
perfectly. They said, no, we can't put it in there.
The only thing we have left is what we are doing now, a CR. This is
something I have never done. I have been here 6 years and have never
used this procedure to say: Wait a minute. If we don't stand for the
people who have fought, worked, and died for us and basically given us
the country we have--we have won two wars with the domestic energy that
has been mined right here in America, an awful lot of it in West
Virginia, I might add. We have the strongest country in the world. We
are a superpower. That would never have happened. We would never have
the military might we have today. We would never have the middle class
we have. We just wouldn't have the quality of life we have in America
if had not been for the domestic energy our miners have given us.
What we are asking for and all they are saying is this is a promise
that was made in 1946 that President Truman said: Listen, we are going
to commit to you that every ton of coal mined from this day forward and
the coal companies you work for, we are putting money aside to make
sure you have lifetime benefits for health care and for your pension.
These are not big, elaborate pension plans. They are very small. They
are subsidies, if you will. The health care has been so very important
to many people. This has been going on for quite some time, and we have
been involved many times. Yes, the Federal Government has been involved
to make sure the companies put that money aside so they would have
their health care and their pensions.
Then, lo and behold, Congress basically passed bankruptcy laws that
let people walk away from their obligations through bankruptcy. Now the
promises were made and the promises that were kept by Congress were
done away with through the bankruptcy laws that were so lenient that
people could declare bankruptcy and say: Listen, I am sorry, but we are
just not going to fulfill that commitment. That legacy goes away. That
is somebody else's problem.
To fast forward to where we are today and why we have the problems we
have, let me bring you up to speed with what we are dealing with. We
have asked for the Miners Protection Act, which was the permanent
health care fix and a permanent pension fix. These are for the
retirees. We have another group of retirees here who have gone through
bankruptcy and there was money set aside, about $47 million. That was
supposed to run out in June. We were going to bring all of them
together so we took care of everybody.
Now, the bill they put in front of us that the House of
Representatives has given us is horrendous and it is inhumane. They
gave us a bill and said: Take it or leave it on the CR.
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Nobody wants to close this great institution, this government down--
not a person. You have to stand for something or surely to God, you
will stand for nothing. That is where we find ourselves. They gave us a
4-month extension.
If your aunt or your mother were getting a notice in October that she
would lose it in December--they want us now to say: OK. We are going to
be so sympathetic, we will give you 4 more months, through April. That
same person is now going to get another notification in January that
she is going to lose it in April. On top of that, she will not even be
able to meet her deductibles. So there is no insurance. There is
nothing.
You remember the money I said they set aside, $47 million, for the
miners who basically have gone through a bankruptcy and lost their jobs
and retired, they were going through June. Those same miners now are
going to lose May and June--2 months. They are going to lose 2 months.
There is going to be a $2 million surplus that goes back to Treasury.
I had one woman call me. She said: Senator Manchin, I don't know, but
back home where I come from, they call that thievery. She is absolutely
correct. This is why we are so committed, and we are so dug in on this
issue. It is a fairness. It is the right thing to do. All we have asked
for is to take care of our miners' health care. We will come back and
fight another day for pensions, but give us the health care that has
been promised and committed time after time again.
I have never seen anything this callous in my life, that we weren't
willing to fulfill a promise we have made and the Federal Government
put its stamp of approval on.
For those who are saying it is inconvenient and the procedures I have
been using and my other colleagues with me--I have had everybody, and I
appreciate them so much. And for them to say: Hey, you have held up a
lot of goods bills--yes, a lot of bills that I have worked on for a
year or more I have held up, but if we can't pass forward on this and
walk out of here basically knowing we did the right thing, what is our
purpose for being here? Why do we come?
We all talk. I have seen everybody's elections. All of our election
advertisements, whether they be Democratic or Republican, are we are
all for the middle class. We are all for the working class. We are
going to make sure the working men and women really get a fair shake.
They have been screwed and left behind so let's do it. OK. We are all
for that. All of our advertising, our campaigns say that. We are
committed to it. The only thing I am saying is now fulfill it. It is
either put up or shut up. That is all.
You have already told them, you have asked them to vote for you
because of this reason. Now you have a chance to show them that is why
you are here. I came here to do exactly what I told you I was going to
do--fight for you, make sure you are treated fairly. We have pay-fors.
This is not coming out of taxpayers' money. This is AML--abandoned mine
lands. The abandoned mine land money comes from every ton of coal.
There is a certain percentage of money from that coal that goes into a
fund and that is put aside to do reclamation.
Now, I have some of my Western States that don't have quite the
reclamation we have had. In the Eastern part of the country, in West
Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Southwestern Virginia, there is an awful
lot of work to be done, and we do that work. We have done this for
quite some time. We are saying: Listen, we are not denying you getting
your money, but you shouldn't get first dibs on it and then hinder us
from taking care of the responsibility we have to the miners who have
been giving you the opportunity to live in this great country.
That is really what it comes down to. I have been asking all of my
colleagues--this is not a fight that is going to be damaging to
anybody. This is the only time-sensitive issue we have before us. There
is nothing else we have before us. All of the bills are on hold right
now. Not one bill has time sensitivity. We can come back and do it
again. We have no problems doing them over and over. We have been here
a long time.
This is the only one where the miners lose their health care--16,500
lose it December 31. You show me anything else we have in here where
someone is going to be that harmed at a time specific when we walk out
of here. That is what this is about. To tell me they are going to give
us 4 months and they are doing us a favor for 4 months, that is
inhumane. How they did it and paid for it is a crime. It is awful. That
is why we are standing here fighting, and that is why I am going to
continue to fight.
I think we have a purpose in life. If you have a purpose in life in
public service, then serve the public. Don't come here to serve
yourself. That is all people have asked for--do your job. You wonder
why we have a low rating from the public, why they think so little of
Congress. This is common sense. It is so easy for us to do. It is so
easy for us to do. It is so easy for us to be able to say: Fine, we are
going to fulfill this, and then we have a lot of other things we want
to take care of.
That is all we have asked for, and that is all we are asking for now.
We can do the right thing between today and tomorrow. We truly can.
Someone said the House has left. I am so sorry they were
inconvenienced and had to leave so early to go home for Christmas. You
go home and tell the people I live with, the people I was raised with,
the people who have taken care of me: I am so sorry. We had to go home
for Christmas. I am sorry you are losing your health care December 31.
I didn't mean for that to happen, but you know I had to get home for
Christmas.
That doesn't play well where I come from. That is not a commitment,
and that is not public service. I am so sorry. I hope I have haven't
inconvenienced anybody. I hope I haven't made you feel uncomfortable. I
hope I haven't held up a bill that you have been working on because I
have held up all my bills. No one was left unscathed in this. All we
are saying is, for Pete's sake, do the right thing; stand up for this.
Stand up for the people who gave us what we have today.
History said if you don't know where you come from, you sure don't
know where you are going. If we are not going to stand up for the
people who have given us the life we have, I am not sure where we are
going. I know one thing. I go home and look them in the eye. I can say
I am doing everything I can, and I am going to fight for you. I am
willing to take whatever it takes, whatever medicine it takes here,
however upset people get with me, however uncomfortable they may be. I
am asking: Please, take care of the miners' health care. That is all
right now. We will talk about the rest later.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I came to the floor for a different
purpose, but I do want to say to my friend and colleague from West
Virginia and to those he is fighting for, Senator Manchin has been at
this in the most constructive way possible, trying to prick the
conscience of the Senate to do what is fundamentally right, to help
those who help make the country great, help them at their greatest time
of need--to simply be able to go to sleep at night not worried that you
are one illness or one black lung away from dying.
He has ceded time and time again, asking for regular order. I was
very pleased to support Senator Manchin as a member of the Senate
Finance Committee, where there was a markup and there was a strong
vote, and members who were running for reelection got to go home and
say we passed it in the Finance Committee. We will take care of it when
we come back after the elections.
Well, here we are, and now it is time to put your votes and insist on
having the miners' health care taken care of. If I were a miner, I
couldn't have anybody better fighting for me. I want those you have
been fighting for to know you have been doing it for some time and
tenaciously and graciously as well but, nonetheless, with conviction. I
strongly support my colleague.
Immigration
Mr. President, I rise, as I have many times before, to discuss the
urgent need for the United States to have an immigration system that
reflects our values as a nation of immigrants.
Today, in my first floor speech on the subject since Donald Trump won
the election, I am deeply troubled by the
[[Page S6893]]
fear and panic I hear from our immigrant community, from our young
immigrants known as DREAMers and their families to the workers in the
field, to those in our restaurant kitchens and our homes.
Their panic is justified and palpable because of the inflammatory
remarks made by the President-elect on the campaign trail about
immigrants. His campaign promises made it seem as if no immigrant was
safe from deportation, even otherwise law-abiding, decent people who
came to this country searching for the American dream for themselves
and their children. The threat of deportation was heard loud and clear
by over 744,000 young, law-abiding immigrants who are American in every
way, except for a piece of paper.
These DREAMers were brought to the United States, many as infants or
toddlers, for reasons beyond their control or their knowledge. They
grew up in America going to school. The only flag they have ever
pledged allegiance to is that of the United States. The only national
anthem they know is the ``Star-Spangled Banner.''
The effects of deporting them or their families would be
incomprehensible and destructive. The Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals Program, or DACA, has been a tremendously successful
program. It is something I fought for, to allow young men and women to
come out of the shadows and step forward to register themselves with
our government and make them right. DACA has allowed nearly 800,000
undocumented youth who came to the United States as children to obtain
temporary protection from deportation and a 2-year work permit that is
renewable. First, they would have to register with the government by
handing over their personal information and the information of their
immediate families, pass a criminal background check, and pay nearly
$500 in fees, and we said the information would be confidential and not
used against them. Now their fears of deportation are justified.
The DACA Program now has the potential of becoming a registry of
millions of undocumented immigrants who are now exposed for seeking a
better life for themselves and their kids. Let's think about this for a
second. These kids came into this country without any notion that they
were doing anything wrong. Many of them didn't even know they were
undocumented until they tried, for example, to go to college or get a
loan for school. We asked them to come out of the shadows, voluntarily
turn over their information and the information of their immediate
relatives in exchange for protection from deportation, a work permit,
and a chance for a better life. As early as next year, once again
through no fault of their own, these young immigrants and their
families are at risk of losing it all. The human cost is too high to
pay. It is a cost measured in the thousands of parents separated from
their children who are deported, husbands and wives separated from
their spouses, millions of families who are torn apart because of our
broken immigration system.
Among his many campaign promises, President-Elect Trump pledged to
end the DACA Program. This means that DACA recipients, a group of
individuals the U.S. Government has deemed as otherwise model citizens
who pose absolutely no threat to our national security, would be at
risk for deportation and could no longer continue working legally.
We are here talking about children who have grown up in the United
States and attended our schools. Many of them were the valedictorians,
salutatorians, and in the top tier of their graduating classes. These
are children who serve our communities and were given a chance to be
fully integrated into the only country many of them have ever known.
I have listened many times to my colleagues talk about the core of
family values, and the essence of that core is a family unit. I have
heard that you don't subscribe the sins of the parents to the children,
and yet those who are advocates of ending DACA would undo all of those
things they have spoken to.
If the DACA Program is dismantled, young immigrants will be stripped
of the jobs, education, and forced back into the shadows of our
society. In fact, the Center for American Progress finds that ending
DACA would cost the United States $433 billion in gross domestic
product over the next 10 years.
Having said that, I am hoping that when President-Elect Trump said on
election night, ``Now is the time for America to bind the wounds of
division''--he later said in an interview that millions of undocumented
immigrants are ``terrific people.'' I hope the next administration
thinks long and hard about binding the wounds of division. A good start
would be a clear and unequivocal message that there will be no mass
deportation task force and that the DACA Program will continue,
something the President-elect already alluded to this week in an
interview with Time magazine, saying that ``we're going to work
something out that's going to make people happy and proud . . .
[DREAMers] got brought here at a very young age, they've worked here,
they've gone to school here. Some were good students. Some have
wonderful jobs. And they're in never-never land because they don't know
what's going to happen.''
It appears to me that hopefully we are getting to a place where there
is universal respect and admiration for DREAMers. This acknowledgement
offers a glimmer of hope for a productive way forward, and I hope that
is the case.
Let me close by saying the following: I do not intend to sacrifice
one set of immigrants for another. Let me be clear about our Nation's
immigrants. It is not just enough to say DREAMers are terrific people.
Protecting a temporary program is not enough, although the panic and
sense of urgency to protect these young immigrants is justified. It is
not enough because the reality is that DREAMers do not exist in a
vacuum. They have parents. They have loved ones who have instilled
values and work ethic and supported them to pursue an education and
reach their full potential to benefit our country. Their parents are
also terrific people and so are so many other hard-working immigrants
who have lived in this country for years, have obeyed the law, are not
criminals, and have integrated themselves into the tapestry of American
society. We know them. You have to be blind not to know them. They are
sitting next to us in the pew in church. They attend parent-teacher
conferences. They are our neighbors. They pick our crops. There isn't a
person in this country who isn't beholden to an immigrant worker. They
watch our kids. They open businesses. They perform back-breaking work--
work we can't get many Americans to do--to keep the gears of this
economy turning.
Immigration is not an easy problem to fix, but I think we came close
in 2013, when the Senate came together to pass comprehensive
immigration reform. I was part of that bipartisan Gang of 8 that
produced a bill which passed with strong bipartisan support of nearly
three-quarters of this Chamber. That bill is a strong model for
reforming our immigration system as we look ahead to the Congress.
The bill, S. 744, addressed the key pillars necessary for a
functioning, legal immigration system. It addressed the 11 million
undocumented so we can know who is here to pursue the American dream
versus who is here to do it harm. It reformed the legal immigration for
high- and low-skilled workers. It had strong family reunification
provisions, it put DREAMers on a path to citizenship, and it included
tough border security measures. The bill, S. 744, wasn't perfect, but
it was a significant milestone in our Nation's efforts to truly reform
our immigration system.
We must remember what our economy and America needs. Our Nation will
be stronger when there is an accountable path to citizenship for the
undocumented living in the United States, our borders are secure,
employers are held accountable for whom they hire, jobs are filled with
qualified and documented workers who contribute to the economy,
families are kept together, and we don't have downward pressures by an
underground economy against the wages of all other Americans.
With an immigration system as flawed as ours and with so many things
still to fix, DACA has been a beacon of hope--one shining light leading
the way toward fairness, justice, and a better life for so many young
immigrants looking for a chance to succeed in America as Americans.
[[Page S6894]]
Yes, abolishing it would be a tragic mistake for an administration
seeking to unite what they helped divide. Let me be clear, as I have
said all along, we cannot lose sight of our ultimate objective. The
only real solution in the end is a permanent legislative solution that
doesn't pick winners and losers amongst the most vulnerable in our
society. That is why I am pleased to once again see a bipartisan
coalition of voices begin to resurface so we can work toward a
bipartisan moment to fix our immigration system once and for all
because beyond stopping those who wish to turn the clock back on any
progress we have made, we still need to implement a functioning legal
immigration system for all. We need to make sure we don't take a giant
step back and focus our Nation's resources against the most vulnerable,
talented, and hardworking.
I have always been and remain committed to solving this problem in a
fair, comprehensive manner that reforms our immigration system, and I
will continue to work with a bipartisan coalition of voices toward this
goal. Our DREAMers, their parents, immigrant families, and our Nation
deserve nothing less. Irrelevant of who occupies the White House, I
will never stop fighting for those who, like my mother, came to this
country in the last century to give their families a chance to
contribute to America's exceptionalism in this century.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
Indiana's Bicentennial Celebration
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, I am pleased to speak with Senator Donnelly
about a momentous occasion for our beloved home State of Indiana--a
celebration of our bicentennial.
On December 11, 1816, President James Madison signed the Indiana
Enabling Act, which allowed Indiana to be the 19th State to join the
Union and require that Indiana's leaders draft the State constitution.
In the two centuries since Indiana's admission to the Union, Indiana
residents--we call ourselves Hoosiers--have accomplished extraordinary
things.
In 1840, William Henry Harrison became the first Hoosier to be
elected President. In 1888, Benjamin Harrison, his grandson and fellow
Hoosier, followed in his footsteps to the Presidency. Five Hoosiers
have served our Nation as Vice President: Schuyler Colfax, Thomas
Hendricks, Charles Fairbanks, Thomas Marshall, and Dan Quayle. Just a
few short weeks ago, Americans elected Gov. Mike Pence to serve as our
next Vice President. He will become the sixth Hoosier to serve in this
role. We have a well-deserved reputation as the mother of Vice
Presidents.
As many of you know, when Dan Quayle was elected, George Herbert
Walker Bush's Vice President, I was appointed to fill his vacant Senate
seat. Vice President Quayle has been a close friend and source of
advice to me throughout the years.
When President Trump named Mike Pence to be his running mate, I knew
Hoosiers would continue to have a strong impact on our country,
providing guidance and leadership in one of the top elected offices in
our land.
I am honored to call both Dan Quayle and Mike Pence close friends and
commemorate the great work they have done for the State of Indiana and
have and will do for our Nation.
We have had excellent Governors, Representatives, Senators, and
others who have contributed significantly to this body, the Congress,
and the Nation, and we are proud of that as Hoosiers.
I keep using the name Hoosiers because we were misnamed Indianians,
which is hard to pronounce and awful hard to spell. We are Hoosiers. I
could go into a long discourse on what Hoosiers means, but I will not
take the Senate time to do that right now. Please contact my office and
we will send you a full description of what a Hoosier is, but you will
see two of them on the floor here today.
Loyal public servants is not the only contribution our great State
has made to the Nation. During the Civil War, over 200,000 Hoosiers
answered the call to serve; although only one Civil War battle was
fought in Indiana, more than 41,000 Hoosiers lost their lives and an
estimated 50,000 were wounded.
During World War II, nearly 10 percent of Indiana's population joined
our Nation's Armed Forces. Those who stayed behind contributed greatly
to the manufacturing boom required for the war effort, manufacturing
nearly 5 percent of all weapons and equipment required for the war.
Our State has continued that call to service to the military. We have
for years and decades been one of the leading States providing per
capita support to our Armed Forces.
In addition to these accomplished Hoosiers whom I have named, the
places and events that make Indiana unique are numerous. I just want to
mention a few, and I apologize to those that we don't have to time to
put in place here. But as Senator Donnelly and I know, a few months ago
we commemorated the 100th running of the Indianapolis 500 on this
Senate floor.
Known as the ``World's Greatest Spectacle in Racing,'' the
Indianapolis 500 is a great source of pride to Hoosiers throughout the
State and throughout the country. Every year our race is an epic event
as drivers jockey for position at speeds regularly surpassing 200 miles
per hour. In addition to the ``Indy 500,'' the automotive industry has
deep ties to Indiana.
In 1896, the Haynes-Apperson Company opened its doors in Kokomo, IN,
producing one of the very first automobile manufacturing sites in the
entire United States. It operated until 1905. Its 1904 model seated two
passengers and sold for $1,550 at the time.
Now, you don't have to go too much farther than Kokomo, IN, to arrive
in the city of Auburn, where the Cord Dusenberg and other popular cars
were manufactured. Every year, the Cord Dusenberg festival, parade, and
museum are open to people from around the world to see a magnificent
parade of cars in that era in absolutely perfect shape.
If you find yourself in Southern Indiana, take a minute to stop by
the Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial in Spencer County. Abraham
Lincoln may have been born in Kentucky, and he may have ended up in
Illinois, but he was raised and shaped in Indiana.
In addition to our landmarks, some of America's most famous buildings
have been constructed using Indiana limestone. The Pentagon, the
National Cathedral, the Lincoln Memorial, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum, the Empire State Building in New York, and many more, all
feature Indiana limestone quarried in south-central Indiana.
Our State has been blessed with a climate of soil fit for all kinds
of agricultural activities. God has blessed us with a climate and a
soil fit for all kinds of agriculture activities.
While corn and soybeans are our top commodities by value, Indiana
produced $11.2 billion worth of agricultural products in 2012. This
includes 41.5 million broiler chickens, 10.5 million hogs and pigs,
numerous dairy products, and 37,000 acres of vegetables harvested for
sale. The next time you head to the movie theatre, think of Indiana.
Indiana produces more than 20 percent of the United States' popcorn
supply, and a great deal is exported around the world.
We are also a world leader in pharmaceuticals, biologics, and medical
devices. Our medical device industry is the fifth largest in the United
States, generating more than $10 billion in annual economic output.
Hoosiers are truly working hard to provide healthier, longer, and more
rewarding lives for all Americans. Not only does Indiana seek to enrich
the quality of life of Hoosiers through its contributions to the
medical manufacturing field, we also do this through our institutions
of higher education.
Hoosiers don't need to travel far to receive a high-quality
education. We boast a rich variety of world-class colleges and
universities, such as Indiana University, Perdue University, Butler
University, Notre Dame University, Indiana State, Rose-Hulman, Trine,
Grace, Manchester, Earlham, Evansville, Indiana Wesleyan, Valparaiso,
and on and on we could go.
I would be remiss if I were to neglect mentioning my own graduate
school, the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law.
This quality of education bleeds into the quality of coaching found
in Hoosier schools. There is nothing quite like being in the stands
during a Hoosier high school basketball game. The
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coaching quality that we have has produced all-stars in every facet of
basketball, whether it be professional, college, high school, or
elementary.
There is nothing quite like being in the stands during Taylor
University's Silent Night, where the fans pack the basketball stadium
and stay completely silent until the home team scores their tenth
point. Then the noise really starts and the game finishes with the fans
signing singing ``Silent Night.''
Through the years, so many Hoosier teams have proved to be formidable
foes on the court and the field. We are the home of the Colts, the
Pacers, the birthplace of Larry Bird, James Dean, and David Letterman.
On and on I could go with that.
But in addition to recognizing all that Indiana has contributed to
our Nation over the past 200 years, I would like to add that one of our
greatest contributions has been and will be always Hoosier hospitality.
While at times our country is a more divided and complicated place,
Hoosiers continue to demonstrate that kindness and a good meal can make
the world a little better.
It is an honor for me to commemorate this bicentennial for this great
State of Indiana. I am honored to be able to do this with my fellow
Senator Joe Donnelly from Indiana.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
Mr. DONNELLY. Mr. President, I rise today to join my colleague, Dan
Coats, our senior Senator from Indiana, who is wrapping up his time in
the Senate as of the next few weeks. What an extraordinary service he
has provided to our Nation, to our State. We are incredibly grateful to
Senator Coats for what he has done. I also want to celebrate Indiana's
bicentennial. I want to reflect on the past two centuries of our
State's rich history and the important contributions Hoosiers have made
to our State and our Nation. For nearly a year now, in every corner and
in every community of Indiana, from the biggest to the tiniest, we have
been commemorating the storied history of our beloved Hoosier State.
Together, we will culminate the celebration on Sunday, December 11,
when Indiana turns 200 years old. Admitted to the Union in 1816,
Indiana has developed and grown into the crossroads of America, a
welcoming place, where businesses and families can grow and succeed.
As Hoosiers, we take pride in putting in an honest day's work. We
don't want a free lunch. We don't want a handout. We want the chance to
work, to work a good job, to educate our children in good schools, to
ensure that our kids have the tools to make a better life than we did--
the American dream, the Hoosier dream--and, eventually, after a life of
hard work, to retire with dignity, to have a chance to go fishing in
one of our lakes, to have a chance to be with our family in one of our
extraordinary parks or a national forest.
Indiana has a proud tradition of serving our country, and working to
protect our Nation's security. Nearly 500,000 veterans and many
servicemembers and military families call Indiana home. Our National
Guard dates back to 1801, when we were still a Territory. Today, our
National Guard is the fourth largest in all of the United States.
Hoosiers have proudly served our country in all of our wars, in all of
our efforts to protect our Nation over the years.
It is also home to Naval Support Activity Crane, the third largest
naval installation in the world. I think we can take particular pride
that in the middle of the country, about as far away as you can get
from the Atlantic and the Pacific, we have the third largest naval base
in the entire world. Our State is also home to Grissom Air Reserve Base
in Kokomo, where the 434th Air Refueling Wing is based. The 122nd
Fighter Wing is in Fort Wayne, and A-10s are training daily. As well,
there is Camp Atterbury and the 181st Intelligence Wing based at Terre
Haute Air National Guard Base.
Throughout our 200-year history, Indiana's success has helped drive
America's success. The backbone of our State has been built from our
manufacturing and steel plants, our small businesses, and our farms.
Hoosier farmers and those involved in agriculture know what it means to
work hard and do their part. Our corn and soybean farmers, our pork
producers, and our beef producers have helped to feed not just Indiana
but our country and the world.
Our dairy farmers have produced incredible products. On a hot summer
night, some of the best ice cream in the world comes right between the
Illinois border and the Ohio border, and the Michigan border and the
Ohio River--that beautiful place we call home. In the cities and towns
across Indiana, small businesses are the cornerstones of our
communities.
Indiana is home to nearly half a million small businesses, employing
almost 1.2 million Hoosier workers. So many of those small businesses
are in agriculture as well. We don't want to leave anybody out. There
are the ag producers--so many--and the turkey producers, the chicken
producers. If it grows, we make it. We feed the world every single day.
Throughout our State's history, steel has been not just a major
employer but also a source of pride for Hoosier communities. Hoosier
steel serves as the foundation of buildings and bridges all across the
United States. What Indiana makes the United States and the world
takes. Still today, Indiana is the largest producer of steel in the
United States.
Speaking of construction, the limestone from Southern Indiana has
traveled all over the world, from places like Yankee Stadium to
buildings in other parts of the world, to buildings all across the
Nation's Capital. Some of the most beautiful buildings you have ever
seen are built from Indiana limestone and from Indiana products.
Manufacturing is central to our economy. It contributes to roughly 30
percent of Indiana's economic activity and economic growth.
Manufacturing plays a larger role in our economy than it does in any
other State in the Nation, and we are really, really good at it.
Manufacturing employs 17 percent of our workforce, some of the most
skilled workers in the world.
Hoosier manufacturers and their workers build some of the most
advanced, highest quality products in the world, from engines to RVs.
Just down the road from my home in Granger, is Elkhart, the RV
capital of the world. I know that the Presiding Officer has traveled a
few miles in RVs as well, from one end of our State to the other. More
than 80 percent of global RV production is based in Elkhart, and
throughout the northeast region and the north-central region. So if you
see an RV on the road, there is a really good chance it was built by
hard-working Hoosier manufacturers. There is a real good chance your
family is going to have an awesome time.
We boast some of the best educational institutions in the world--as
my colleague Senator Coats mentioned as he listed them off--attracting
students, professors, and researchers from across Indiana, across our
country, and across the world. Our colleges and universities provide an
exceptional education to our students and lead the way in innovation
and cutting-edge research.
Not surprisingly, many know our State because of our sports heritage,
particularly in auto racing and basketball. This year marked the 100th
running of the ``Greatest Spectacle in Racing,'' the Indy 500. It is a
special event unlike any other.
We don't just showcase the best Indiana has to offer on the racetrack
but also on the hardwood. Basketball has been part of Indiana's
identity since the late 1890s. It remains king today. Our State has
achieved great basketball success, including with history-making teams
like the Flying Tigers of Crispus Attucks High School, who, in 1955,
became the first all African-American high school athletic team in the
country to win a State basketball title. Few things have defined our
State's culture and fabric as much as basketball.
As Senator Coats, the Presiding Officer, knows, John Wooden may be
considered the father of all coaches in this country. He came from
Indiana. As we reflect on our 200 years, we have so much to be proud
of. As we look to the next 200 years, we know that through hard work
and by working together, we can make our State's future even more
prosperous because that is the American promise--that we work nonstop,
that we work together, so that when we look at our kids and our
grandkids,
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we can tell them and tell all of you: We are going to build a stronger,
better Indiana. We are going to build a stronger, better America
because that is the promise that we pass on from one generation to the
other.
To my friend, the senior Senator from Indiana, I wish to tell you
what a pleasure it has been to serve with you, what a good friend you
have been, and how lucky I am to have been your junior partner in this
endeavor where we try to stand for America every single day.
I yield back the remainder of my time.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Coats). The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cassidy). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, as my two colleagues from Indiana
leave--again, congratulations on their bicentennial.
There are many great Hoosiers who have made their way to the State of
Washington. One was a most beloved Mariner broadcaster named Dave
Niehaus, who was from Evansville, IN. He was a great, great part of our
sports history. Certainly, I should mention Dave Calabro, who was a
Hoosier and another great announcer for our basketball team. We also
have the great Bill Ruckelshaus, former EPA Director under President
Nixon. He works on salmon issues and does other great things.
Congratulations to those Hoosier Senators today.
Energy Legislation
Mr. President, I come to the floor with my colleague Senator
Murkowski of Alaska to talk about all the great work that was put into
developing the Energy Policy Modernization Act. The Presiding Officer
knows well how much work we put into that legislation.
We are here today after many markups, many amendments, and what was
an unbelievable Senate vote of 85 to 12, to urge our House colleagues
to consider the conference report on this legislation before adjourning
for the year. There are so many important provisions in this
legislation that should be enacted.
We reached an agreement to mark the National Park Service's 100th
birthday by making an investment in our national parks. In response to
requests from 47 Senators, the bill protects hundreds of thousands of
acres of land.
We were also able to reach agreements on important issues such as
water resources, providing and securing funding for fighting forest
fires, and making sure that communities that are at risk of wildfires
get the attention they so deserve. Having lost seven individuals
fighting wildfires over the last decade and a half, I can say, from the
State of Washington's perspective, it is essential that we provide the
communities the resources they need to fight fires. We also included a
sportsmen's bill that will help hunters and fishers.
We were also able to reach agreement on numerous energy provisions.
For instance, the legislation bolsters our energy security against
cyber attacks. We improve the Department of Energy's capabilities to
protect the grid. We are not just talking about hardening some of our
physical infrastructure such as hydro power projects, but actually the
work that it takes to make the grid more resilient from hacking. We
also reached agreement on provisions to develop the workforce that will
be needed to fill the 1.5 million new energy workers that the
Quadrennial Energy Review estimates will be needed by 2030. We were
also able to reach agreement encouraging investments in hydro power
projects, geothermal energy, nuclear power and other emissions-free
resources. Finally, this conference agreement also would promote
innovation in many areas of science that are so important to us.
What is so frustrating is that we followed regular order in putting
together an Energy bill. We held numerous hearings followed by a 3-day
committee markup. On the Senate floor, we considered in excess of 300
amendments. We then worked all summer long and all fall with our House
colleagues to reach a conference agreement.
It is so disappointing to now have our House colleagues refuse to
consider these important provisions. There were many hard-fought issues
upon which we eventually agreed. We all had to come to the table and
take into consideration all interests. Whether you are talking
sportsmen and open access to hunting, which my colleague from Alaska so
championed, or whether you are talking about how to get water
agreements that involve fishermen, tribes, farmers, and a variety of
river interests--we were able to accomplish that. Or whether you are
talking about fixing the fire funding budget issue that has been
debated back and forth among our House and Senate colleagues for almost
7 or 8 years now, we were able to reach agreement on all of these
things. It is very irresponsible for our House colleagues to drop the
ball by failing to consider these solutions and taking yes for an
answer.
What is even more outrageous is that now the House wants to take a
provision subject to the Energy and Natural Resource's jurisdiction--
the California water issue--and airdrop it into the WRDA bill, which is
subject to the jurisdiction of the Environment and Public Works
Committee.
As much as our House colleagues like to boast about their mythical
no-earmark rule, the California water deal that is now being decried in
newspapers in California as the ``midnight rider,'' was airdropped in
as an earmark in the WRDA bill and sent over to the Senate. This is an
issue that should be considered by the Energy Committee.
I say to my colleagues that, if you want energy policy considered in
the future and you want it to be a product of the regular order process
in the Senate that creates consensus, you need to say to our House
colleagues that are refusing to move forward on a conference report
that this situation is problematic. The process that we are supposed to
follow includes the Senate and House resolving differences as part of a
conference committee. Instead, if we pass the WRDA bill, we will be
rewarding those that wish to sidetrack regular order and drop into
bills other items that have not been worked out and basically don't
adhere to the rules of the Senate or even the House's own rules against
earmarks they hypocritically claim to follow.
It is a very cynical view of the world to allow the House to add
Energy and Natural Resources Committee jurisdictional legislation into
another committee's bill and violates the House's own rules and
basically overruns the collaborative process we used for the Energy
Policy and Modernization Act. The House has, instead, turned to
backroom deal making.
I join my colleague, Senator Murkowski, tonight to describe the great
and hard work that was done in our conference. I think she and I
believe in it. I think we believe in the Senate the way it is supposed
to work. We believe in the hard work that it took to reach compromise
on so many issues, and I think we want to make sure that our colleagues
know that getting to yes was just inches away.
It is very unfortunate that the House, instead of doing its homework,
pursued a very cynical approach to the legislative arena--something I
thought we jettisoned a decade ago--airdropping things in the dark of
night. I mistakenly thought the House leadership was being earnest
about making sure that the legislative process is transparent.
I hope our colleagues will understand these are important policy
issues and take the remaining days--if we happen to be here an extra
few days this weekend or even into next week--and encourage the House
leadership to get our energy and natural resources bill enacted and
bank what is good public policy in the best interests of the United
States.
I thank my colleague from Alaska for her leadership on the Energy
Committee, her hard work and dedication, her willingness to work across
the aisle, and a willingness to be very tough on these important thorny
public policy issues--and not to back away from that--and to find
solutions for everybody in the Senate.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alaska.
Ms. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, I acknowledge the very good work of my
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friend, colleague, and neighbor to the south of us from Washington
State, Senator Cantwell.
She has been a partner throughout this 2-year process we have been
engaged in as we have tried to formulate and format a renewed energy
policy for this country, something that has not been done in close to a
decade.
We acknowledged early on that there were going to be policy
differences we each have, given where we come from and some differing
views, but we were committed to working together to work through the
thorny issues, to work toward consensus, not only that she and I could
come to but our whole committee and, ultimately, the Senate. We were
successful in doing that.
I also acknowledge the good work of Senator Cantwell's staff, as well
as my staff, on the Energy Committee. These folks have been working
tirelessly for 2 years, but more immediately--and when I say
tirelessly, pretty much 24/7 for the past several weeks, in trying to
get us to a point where instead of talking about what might have been
in an energy bill, being able to stand in front of my colleagues and
tell them these are the policy changes that we will now see placed into
law.
I had truly wished I would not be in a situation where I would have
to come to the floor and speak negatively about where we are right now
because, as Senator Cantwell outlined, the process we have been engaged
in is one that we are proud of, but also that the institution should be
proud of.
Our committees are designed to be incubators of good ideas and how we
then allow these ideas to materialize and come together through good
debate, amendments, refinement and then bringing that forward to the
full body, again, for further work and refinement.
We have done it by the book. There are not too many things in
Congress that look like what you learned about how a bill becomes law.
I am looking at the young pages sitting here. In your classes, in
American Government, you learn about how a bill becomes law.
If you read that and you see what happens around here, you would say:
these are two different universes. You are nodding because you know you
are seeing that.
What we have attempted to do and what we have done for the past 2
years is to allow our committees to work, to take the good ideas from
energy-producing States such as Alaska and Louisiana, and to work with
colleagues from the interior of the country with views and ideas that
are perhaps different than ours, building consensus with energy policy,
with resources, with access. We did it. We have been that textbook
example of regular order process.
I am actually told that they have a training course or a training
program offered in the Congress that walks committee staff through
examples of how a bill should be moved through a committee. Just the
other day, I was told that our bill, the Energy bill, is the model that
is being used as what to do in that training program.
This is quite the compliment; however we still have to get it over
the finish line. This is where Senator Cantwell and I are so
frustrated. This is where we are so frustrated because, after 2 years
of work and being this close to the finish line, we are being denied
that opportunity to share this success and all because of lack of
action over in the other Chamber.
We started this Energy bill by convening ideas. We held hearings in
Washington, in Alaska, and other places in between. We gathered the
ideas for what we hoped was going to be the first major Energy and
Natural Resources bill signed into law in nearly a decade. We held
oversight hearings and legislative hearings. We reviewed over 115
separate bills. We spent weeks negotiating a base text of the
bipartisan bill. We held markups where our bill drew support from
nearly all of our Members. Then we brought it here to the floor.
Yes, we had some bumps along the way. Flint, which certainly needed
to be addressed, was part of it. That seems like ancient history now.
But we persevered. We worked through all of the issues. We added more
priorities for our Members, to the point where over 80 different
Senators had their priorities incorporated into our bill.
Then, in April, 85 Members of this body--85 Members--voted in favor
of passage of this bill. When we think of all that was contained in it,
to gain that level of consensus, I think the Senator from Washington
and I were doing something positive, to get everybody on board.
Then the House responded to our Energy bill in late May, and in July,
we went to a formal conference. We began work right away. The
negotiations started just about immediately, even before the first
formal meeting of our conference.
So think about it. We have been working this conference between the
two bodies since July--and not just on an occasional basis; rather, we
have been working this aggressively. During this conference, we have
held more than 75 bipartisan and bicameral negotiating sessions at the
staff level. There have been countless more meetings and daily
interactions amongst our staff. The final conference report includes
provisions from 74 Members of the Senate and 224 Members of the House.
That means there is input from almost 60 percent of the U.S. Congress
included in the conference report. This is not a bill where we are
cramming it through; this is a measure of considerable consensus.
The chairmen and the ranking members of the committees of
jurisdiction, whether it is here in the Senate Energy and Natural
Resources, the House Natural Resources Committee, the House Science
Committee, the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee--we have
been meeting to resolve our differences. Again, staff has been working
around the clock. Just this weekend, we went through hundreds of pages
to close out all of the issues. Again, we did it by the book. We did
what we were supposed to be doing. We were the team players here. We
adhered to the regular order process.
Senator Cantwell said we were doing the ``normal'' process. But I
think what we are doing now is extraordinary. It is not normal--because
it seems that, if there is guerilla warfare that is going on, that
seems to be the way to move a bill nowadays. That does not send a very
powerful message nor set a good example for how to advance a consensus
measure such as we have with the Energy bill.
We were really on the right track until just a couple of weeks ago
when it became pretty apparent that the House was, plainly stated, just
done. They were finished. They stopped negotiating in good faith. They
stopped trying to work to reach agreement.
So we are at that point where we have the House going out. We are
told we here in the Senate are going to be wrapping up shop. But, as
Senator Cantwell has outlined, what colleagues need to know is what is
being left behind on the table. It is not just the guts of this
conference bill that we have been negotiating that is on the table;
what is on the table a tremendous amount of time and effort put forth
into a good committee process that has built a consensus and a good
product. That is a problem, and I think it is something we are going to
have to work on. It looks like we are going to have to work on this
aggressively in the next year.
There has been a lot of speculation about what is really going on.
What is the problem? Why can't you get a deal? Well, I mentioned that
we have closed out every aspect of this bill with the exception of two
issues, but there have been a lot of excuses out there that we don't
have enough time; the bill is too complicated; there is not enough in
it; then suddenly, there is too much in it. So we worked to address all
of that, and we got it down to two issues. Both of those issues can be
easily resolved in plenty of time for us around here if everybody is
willing to sit down and work through them in good faith. In fact, on
both of those issues, the Senate has already written--we have already
proposed the modifications that were necessary to reach the final
agreement. What happened when we sent them over? We wait. It is going
to be half an hour, an hour, and now it is half a day. That is not good
faith.
I will give one specific example. This relates to LNG export
projects. This is something, quite honestly, that folks had agreed was
going to be a part of the bill. We have included it in every Senate
offer. It was taken out by the House. Then, when the House says,
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``Your bill doesn't seem to have enough in it. What happened to LNG?''
we say ``You took it out.'' Let's not be moving the goalpost.
What we have is vitally significant for many in our Western States.
It includes forest management reform with the potential for a fire
budget fix, for our sportsmen and women who care about accessing our
public lands for hunting and fishing and recreational shooting. It
includes a water package to help boost our water storage and management
in some of our most drought-stricken Western States. It has a robust
public lands title with more than 50 bills in it that provide
everything from the expansion of a VA cemetery in South Dakota to high-
priority land exchanges in places like Colorado. We have language
related to the National Park Service Centennial that really sets our
national parks on track for a second century. It includes a range of
nuclear, cyber security, and hydroelectric innovation policies. These
are good things that will help our country move forward and produce
more energy that is affordable, reliable, and free of any form of
pollution. We have worked so hard.
To be here on the 8th of December and say we are out of time--well,
tell that to the sportsmen who have been working for 6 years to get a
legislative package. And here we are on December 8 saying we are done.
Tell that to those--particularly from the West--who are concerned about
wildfire threats year after year and whether the funds are going to be
there not only to address fire but to be there for the other accounts
that our agencies are worried about. Tell them that we ran out of time
on December 8.
Mr. President, I have to say that we have not run out of time; we
have, unfortunately, run out of a desire to work together to finish
important work for this country. We have plenty of time and should not
be making excuses. Now is not the time to run down the clock. We must
recognize that we have worked for 2 long years and this work deserves
to be placed into law.
I urge my friends and my colleagues in the other Chamber to work with
us on this. Let's not give up on energy policy.
With that, I yield the floor. I thank my colleague for the indulgence
of some additional time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I appreciate the good work Senator
Murkowski does in cooperation with people in this institution.
Remembering John Glenn
Mr. President, today our country lost an American hero, Col. John
Glenn, Senator John Glenn. I will be back on a later date to deliver a
more formal tribute with my colleague Senator Portman, but I wish to
share some initial thoughts as I, along with my wife Connie and so many
Ohioans, mourn for John Glenn and join so many people around the
country who loved him and cared for him and respected him.
It has been one of the great lessons of my life to get to know John
Glenn and for Connie and me to count him and Annie as mentors and
friends. We remember just a few short years ago, on the 50th
anniversary of his flight into space, the night before, we had dinner
with John and Annie, Connie and I and his children, David and Glen, and
his daughter-in-law, David's wife, and how interesting and joyous it
was to hear him recount his experiences and so much of what he has
done. We loved him. We will miss him. We will continue to draw strength
and wisdom from the lessons he shared with us over the years.
The first time I met John Glenn was in 1969. It was Colonel Glenn
then, long before he was elected to the Senate. Colonel Glenn spoke at
an Eagle Scout dinner in Mansfield, OH. Only a few short weeks earlier,
in my court of honor, I was awarded the Eagle Scout award. I was 16
years old. I got to meet Colonel Glenn. His words inspired us. They
stayed with me as I grew up and looked for ways to serve community and
country.
Thirty years later, John granted me the honor of walking me down this
center aisle. When Senators are sworn in, any term they serve, they are
often accompanied by a Senator from their State or a former Senator--
whomever that Senator-elect or that Senator who is soon to be sworn in
chooses--and I chose to walk down with my friend and former Senator, at
that point, John Glenn.
John had a humility and a kindness unusual, perhaps, in this business
and in, perhaps, somebody of his level of accomplishment. His kindness
and intelligence, his courage--we know about that--and his commitment
to service set an example that our country needs today more than ever.
His legacy will live on not just in the pages of history books, it will
live on through the Americans he inspired, whether it was a passion for
exploration that led him to join NASA, a dedication to country that
called him to the Armed Forces, or a desire to make the world a better
place that led him to public service.
John will live in the hearts of everyone who knew and loved him,
including his beloved wife Annie and his wonderful children, Glen and
David.
I spoke with Annie and John on their 73rd wedding anniversary, and
Annie told me the story that--I knew they knew each other in grade
school. They dated beginning--I don't know exactly when. I asked Annie
if they wanted to marry in high school, and she said yes, but her
parents said they couldn't do that because it wouldn't last. So they
waited until after Pearl Harbor, when I believe John was 20 and Annie
was 21, and they were married for 73-plus years.
Ohio and the United States have lost a great light today, but that
pales in comparison to what we gained over his 95 years on Earth. I
hope my colleagues will join me in sending out our love and prayers to
John's family at this difficult time during the holidays.
I heard John Glenn stories even today at the ceremony unveiling the
portrait of our Democratic leader Harry Reid, which took place in the
Russell Building, and a number of former colleagues of John's came up
to me and they had just heard of his death that happened midafternoon
today. So I thank them for their memories.
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