[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 7 (Wednesday, January 11, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H310]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HUMAN TRAFFICKING MONTH
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Farenthold) for 5 minutes.
Mr. FARENTHOLD. Mr. Speaker, this year, Texas has the great honor of
hosting the Super Bowl. In just a couple of weeks, Houston will host
the largest event of the year in the United States with approximately
100,000 people expected to attend and more than 100 million expected to
tune in on television.
The Department of Homeland Security calls the Super Bowl the most
attractive target for those who want to commit harm. Thanks to
partnerships between local, state, and Federal officials, K9s will be
deployed for bomb detections, officers on the lookout for suspicious
activity, and air security will be ramped up, to name just a few of the
precautions.
Law enforcement is doing a great job of reminding everyone who plans
to attend: if you see something, say something. Since it is January and
it is Human Trafficking Awareness Month, I want to remind everyone that
``see something, say something'' doesn't just apply to unattended
backpacks.
During a recent meeting on Capitol Hill, DHS reminded all of us that
events such as the Super Bowl bring the good, the bad, and the ugly.
While a majority of the attendees are coming to have a good time and
with good intentions, the few who do not can disrupt and ruin many
lives.
So I ask those who attend to help us in keeping Texas one of the
safest and best States in the country by reporting anything to law
enforcement they may believe to be suspicious and allow trained
officers to investigate. This includes suspected human trafficking.
According to the Polaris Project, warning signs of someone being a
victim of human trafficking include not being allowed to leave or come
and go as they wish; appearing malnourished; not being in control of
his or her own identification documents; not being allowed to speak for
themselves; and showing signs of physical abuse, torture, or physical
restraint.
While law enforcement will be ramping up efforts to reach out to
victims and give them the resources they need to get help, it lies on
each and every one of us to be aware of our surroundings and help when
someone is in trouble or something is not right.
It is important to remember that human trafficking doesn't just
happen during large sporting events. It happens every day, often going
unseen. While events like the Super Bowl help bring it to our
attention, it is important to remember that, when the event is over,
men and women, boys and girls are still being victimized each and every
day.
UNICEF has estimated there were 1.5 million victims of human
trafficking in the United States alone in 2014, and that number soars
to 27 million worldwide. This is a problem that is going to continue to
need our attention 365 days a year. We have got to work together to end
this form of human slavery.
ObamaCare Repeal and Replace
Mr. FARENTHOLD: Mr. Speaker, I spend most of my time, when Congress
is not in session, back home in Texas. I hear over and over again from
constituents: ObamaCare is not working for me. Premiums are too
expensive and deductibles are too high.
That is just not a problem in Texas. ObamaCare is failing nationwide.
It is now the unaffordable, no-care act. That is why I support
repealing and replacing it. The House will set up the framework to do
just that with the budget bill we expect to pass this week. It sets up
budget reconciliation that will be the vessel for beginning to fix this
failing law.
I am looking forward to a healthcare system that allows individual
consumers more choice in the plan that they pick, a healthcare system
that will return choice to the American consumer while ensuring that
people can't be turned away or lose coverage due to age, medical
condition, or circumstances.
I also look forward to a healthcare system that protects Medicare for
senior citizens while ensuring Medicare is financially solvent and will
be there for future generations.
I also look forward to a healthcare system that is free of burdensome
bureaucracy and a tax system that hampers the development of new
medical devices and therapies, discourages savings, and penalizes
employers and the American people if they don't do Uncle Sam's bidding.
I have heard from restauranteurs in my area. In Port Aransas, I ran
into a guy at the airport. He said: I want to expand my restaurant, but
it will put me over the limit for employees and put me under ObamaCare.
I just can't afford it.
So he chose not to expand. He wasn't able to hire more people, give
people jobs.
Another restaurateur in Corpus Christi said: You know, I am over the
limit now, but I am only hiring part-time people. I can't afford the
coverage, and I can't afford to raise prices because the market just
won't bear more expensive meals.
This means that people who could have gotten full benefits under a
different plan are having to suffer with no benefits and work two part-
time jobs rather than a full-time job.
It is time we repeal and replace ObamaCare and replace it with a
healthcare plan that meets people's needs, not Washington, D.C.'s
needs. You can read more about the House plan at Better.GOP.
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