[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 77 (Thursday, May 4, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2735-S2737]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HIRE VETS ACT
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the
Senate will resume consideration of the House message to accompany H.R.
244, which the clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
House message to accompany H.R. 244, a bill to encourage
effective, voluntary investments to recruit, employ, and
retain men and women who have served in the United States
military with annual Federal awards to employers recognizing
such efforts, and for other purposes.
Pending:
McConnell motion to concur in the amendment of the House to
the amendment of the Senate to the bill.
McConnell motion to concur in the amendment of the House to
the amendment of the Senate to the bill, with McConnell
amendment No. 210 (to the House amendment to the Senate
amendment), to change the enactment date.
McConnell amendment No. 211 (to amendment No. 210), of a
perfecting nature.
McConnell motion to refer the message of the House on the
bill to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and
Pensions, with instructions, McConnell amendment No. 212, to
change the enactment date.
McConnell amendment No. 213 (to (the instructions)
amendment No. 212), of a perfecting nature.
McConnell amendment No. 214 (to amendment No. 213), of a
perfecting nature.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Missouri.
Religious Freedom
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, I will speak in a few minutes about the
business before the Senate today, but first I wish to speak about what
is happening at the White House today.
President Trump is expected to sign an Executive order to protect
religious freedom. Many times during the last year, the President has
talked about his commitment and our commitment as a nation to religious
freedom, but I expect that today he will lay down, specifically, by
Executive order the policy of this administration to protect and to
vigorously promote religious liberty--not to vigorously promote
religion but to vigorously promote religious liberty.
Reports are that the President will tell the IRS that we can't
challenge churches and what they say, as well as challenge their not-
for-profit status, simply because of what that pastor or that rabbi or
that imam believes in the place where they deliver their message and
how they live out their faith. It also tells Federal agencies to stop
forcing religious organizations to pay fines if they don't want to
cover certain healthcare items that conflict with their faith views.
In fact, just this week, Senator Strange and I sent a letter to the
Attorney General after we saw that in the Fifth Circuit the Attorney
General's office had said that they want 60 more days for all of these
pending cases on this very matter. In the letter that Senator Strange
and I sent to our former colleague, the Attorney General, we just
pointed out to him that the President repeatedly said, as a candidate
for President, that this sort of
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continued action of taking religious organizations to court that simply
want the ability to practice their faith is going to stop, and we hope
it stops and we hope it stops now.
Lastly, I think this order has the potential to be either more
specific or to really instruct the Attorney General to look throughout
the agencies of government and issue guidance, so that in all of those
agencies, as they go about the work that they do, one of the things
they want to be sure they are doing is promoting religious liberty; so
that religious organizations that have traditionally or are hoping in
the future to be delivery services for adoption, delivery services for
addiction, delivery services for other problems that people face, would
continue to have the ability to be competing to provide those services.
We know this hasn't happened over the last several months. Religious
groups that have had contracts for a long time and the availability to
provide those services, even when they scored the highest on the
scoring of the competitive bids for these contracts, were not given the
contracts because they were faith-based.
Well, if there is any country in the world that has understood the
importance of religious liberty, it has been the United States.
Religious freedom is the first freedom in the First Amendment to the
Constitution, the first right in the Bill of Rights, and I don't
believe that is by accident. No other country in the history of the
world ever committed itself to religious freedom as our country did
from the very first weeks of the government under the Constitution. No
country ever held this as a principled tenet of what they would stand
for as a country prior to the United States doing that.
We might recall how we come to the place today where the President
has to issue an Executive order protecting religious freedom. In 1993,
President Clinton signed into law the Religious Freedom Restoration
Act. That act really affirmed that the Federal Government shouldn't
infringe on individual religious beliefs unless there was an overriding
public purpose to do so. If, in fact, it was found to be necessary to
infringe on somebody's religious beliefs because of that overriding
public purpose--if there was justification that there was one--then we
should really only interfere with it in the least intrusive way and we
should do the minimum necessary to meet whatever that greater public
need might be.
It is unbelievable to me that in recent years, groups like the Little
Sisters of the Poor, Christian colleges, or other groups that are
traditionally providing services are suddenly finding themselves in
court defending who they are and who they hope to be. The order issued
today would finally provide that relief in a case like the Little
Sisters of the Poor. I looked a few months ago at their stated purpose
and it is, for the Little Sisters of the Poor, to receive older people
without means, regardless of their faith, and treat them like they were
Jesus Christ. Now, that doesn't sound like a group that the Federal
Government would have to crack down on. But the Federal Government, in
recent years, decided that, in fact, they should force this group to do
things that violate its faith principles. There is no possible greater
good to be accomplished by that. Hopefully, this Executive order makes
it clear today that harassment of religious groups is going to stop and
that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act principles are still
principles in our country and, more importantly, that the First
Amendment is still a founding principle in our country.
There is no question in the mind of any American, I think, that the
U.S. Government should do everything in its power to defend and protect
religious freedom. Whether you are a person of faith or a person of no
faith at all, you should be able to pursue those beliefs.
When Jefferson was asked in the last year of his Presidency which
freedom is most important, he said that the right of conscience is the
freedom that we should most vigorously defend--the right to believe
what we believe and pursue what we believe. That has been further
defined over the years by this: If there are times when that creates a
true hazard to others, others have a right to come in and explain that,
and the government has a right to see what can be done about that and
still maintain in every way possible the essence of belief that people
have.
So I commend the President for the action that he is reported to be
taking later today. I continue to be not only supportive of the
President's view that religious freedom is a critical tenet of who we
are, but also I look forward to working with his administration as they
further put this Executive order into place throughout the agencies of
government.
Mr. President, I also wish to speak for a few minutes while I am here
about the bill before the Senate today. I think the fact that we are
moving forward with an update on how we spend our money and a
prioritization of how we spend our money is incredibly important. I
would have been and would be, if somehow we failed to do our job today,
very disappointed if we think that the priorities of a year ago have to
be the exact same priorities today.
Now, many of them will be the same, but many of them will not. So all
of these appropriating committees have worked together, House and
Senate, and have come to a process where we will have 12 bills--not
debated on the floor as intensively as I would have liked to have seen
them debated--that should be our goal for this year--but 12 bills where
House Members and Senate Members, Republicans and Democrats, came
together and decided what our priorities should be.
The subcommittee that I chair--the Labor, Health and Human Services,
Education, and Related Agencies Subcommittee--dollar-wise, after we
take Defense off the table, that is the biggest of the committees and,
in some ways, it has the most challenging debates as to where we wind
up in these areas, but I think we have made good choices that hopefully
can be improved on next year, but I am absolutely confident they are
better than last year.
It is really important for the people we work for to understand that
we had to make choices. There is very little difference in the money
that will be spent this year and the money that was spent last year,
but there is a difference in priorities. I think in the Labor, Health
and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Subcommittee, we
have either eliminated or consolidated in a dramatic way 28 programs so
that we could find that money and use it for what we now believe to be
a better purpose.
One of those better purposes would be an increase for the second year
in a row, and the second year in the last 14 years, in health research
at the National Institutes of Health. There were 12 years with no
increase at all, and now, for 2 back-to-back years, we are trying to
get us back to the research buying power we were at 12 years ago.
Again, as to the programs that weren't performing, many of them wound
up with zero appropriations in both of these last 2 years so that the
NIH appropriation could increase.
At a time when we are looking at precision medicine, when we are
looking at immunotherapy, when we no longer look at cancer as just
cancer and throw everything at it we want to throw at it, in fact, we
look at the individual cancer, and we are at that moment because we
understand now what we didn't understand a decade ago. We can look at
the individual cancer and the individual patient and figure out how
that patient has a unique potential to fight that cancer in their body.
We looked at things that may not be required for people with cancer and
other diseases, and if we can figure out which people need this
procedure and which people don't, not only do you not pay for the
procedure for people who don't need it, but also people don't go
through the physical challenge of procedures they don't need.
As to Alzheimer's, one of the growing concerns in American families
today--right up there now with cancer as one of the things that people
worry about most as they look to the future--if we could reduce the
onset of Alzheimer's by an average of 5 years, we would be spending
almost 50 percent less in 2050 than we will be otherwise. In 2050,
spending of tax dollars on Alzheimer's care will overwhelm the budget,
but research commitments can do something about that.
The Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies
Subcommittee bill puts us back, for
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the school year that begins next fall, where we will be back to year-
round Pell. What does that mean? What is year-round Pell as opposed to
what we have now? Right now, we have two semesters where you can
qualify for the Pell grant. A Pell grant is given based on income and
need. If you qualify for a full Pell--I believe, in the Acting
President pro tempore's State and, I know, in my State--there is no
community college where full Pell doesn't pay for all tuition, all
books, all fees. If you are at the level of need where you qualify for
the full Pell grant, you have other things you have to worry about to
sustain yourself, but paying for school is not one of them. As an adult
going back to school and someone paying for your own school with your
own effort, if you are the first person in your family to hope to
graduate from school, anything that disrupts whatever pattern you are
in minimizes the chances to achieve your goal. So if you have things
working in the fall and the spring and you can also stay in a summer
term, not only do you get done quicker, but you don't disrupt the
pattern you found yourself in.
For 8 years now we haven't had year-round Pell. This vote we will
take today allows that to happen, and it will make a big difference. It
will also make a difference when you are in a program where you are
being prepared to do a job that is uniquely available or available in
your community. It is pretty hard to explain why we can do this and we
have ways to pay for it through the fall and spring, but by the summer
we just have to take a break. That is not a very easy thing to explain
to an employer who has come to the community because you have that
training potential in your community.
The third major allocation of money that had to come from somewhere
else is opioid abuse. This bill will increase by 430 percent our
commitment on this issue. It is not because we had 650 million new
dollars to spend on opioid abuse. It is because in many places in our
country today and in many States in our country, more people die from
opioid overdoses than die from car accidents. It is because many
families are destroyed by addiction to prescription drugs that leads to
other drugs when those prescription drugs can't be available and,
frankly, the abuse of prescription drugs, in some cases, where they are
available. So we are looking at new ways to deal with pain and looking
at new ways to deal with this growing problem.
In 2014 and 2015, each year more than 1,000 people in Missouri died
of drug overdoses. In my State and most States, a fire department that
also has a first responders unit is three times more likely to respond
to a drug overdose than the average fire department to a fire. So there
is a third area where this bill prioritizes what needs to be done.
In the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, title I, charter
schools, all those things have a new focus as this bill passes. The
mental health initiatives, rural healthcare, and Head Start are all
benefited by a reprioritization of what happens here, as are veterans
workforce issues and Job Corps issues.
I think this bill is far from perfect, but it is better than the way
we are spending our money today and better than we were spending our
money a year and a half ago. Hopefully, it will not be quite as good as
the way we spend our money starting October 1.
So we need to get this work done and get started immediately doing
the business of setting priorities, making difficult choices, and
spending people's money in a way that has a long-term plan to benefit
them, their families, and our growing economy. I look forward to that
vote later today, and then to have, I would hope--as I know the
majority leader hopes--a greater effort this year than ever before to
get these bills on the floor and to have them fully debated. The best
possible thing would be to pass them one at a time and put them on the
President's desk one at a time. But the next best thing is to look at
the bills and reach individual conclusions about these individual
bills. That is what the bill before us today does, and I urge its
passage.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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