[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 209 (Thursday, December 21, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Page S8237]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DISASTER RELIEF
Mr. CRUZ. Mr. President, as the jet fumes swirl around the Halls of
Congress and Members get ready to head to the airport to get home for
the holidays, I rise to remind my colleagues that there are still
hundreds of thousands of people in Texas, Florida, and Puerto Rico who
are still hurting from Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria. They will be
spending Christmas not in their homes but in a hotel or with family and
friends or in temporary housing.
All across these regions, there are houses, businesses, schools,
churches, and community establishments that still need to be rebuilt.
They are waiting, counting on our help. It is wrong. Indeed, it is
maddening to those in the affected regions that the Senate is not
taking up legislation today to give them what they need to continue to
rebuild and recover.
In my home State, there is no doubting that Texas's gulf coast
communities suffered tremendous losses in Hurricane Harvey, but the
hurricane also brought out the best in Texas. We saw Texans standing
together and lifting up each other, first through rescue and response
and now as we come together and rebuild our communities. The Nation
witnessed our iconic moments, from the thousands of Texans who went out
on boats to save their neighbors, to Houstonians of all ages lining up
to volunteer at disaster recovery centers, embodying the Texas can-do
spirit.
Texas has worked diligently since August on cleanup and recovery
efforts from Hurricane Harvey, but I am sorry to say that the U.S.
Senate is now leaving town without delivering on its commitment to help
Texas, Florida, and Puerto Rico recover.
Congress has already passed two disaster relief bills in the wake of
these hurricanes. In addition, Congress passed a bipartisan disaster
relief tax bill that I was proud to offer. But there is still much more
that needs to be done.
Just hours ago, our colleagues in the House passed a bill to further
provide for emergency rebuilding efforts. This bill represents
progress, but much more work needs to be done to make sure that it does
enough, especially for Texas, which was promised by both this Congress
and by the administration that Texas would be given everything we need
to rebuild. Early estimates from the supplemental bill that passed the
House are that Texas would be eligible for only a small percentage of
the $81 billion in that legislation. That is unacceptable, and the
Senate needs to fix it.
Texas experienced the worst flood event in U.S. history. Hurricane
Harvey was unlike any other storm we have seen before in Texas--the
number of people impacted, the scope. It brought 250 miles of
devastation to our Texas gulf coast as winds obliterated whole
communities and rain flooded out parts of Texas that have never flooded
before.
Due to the level of damage the storm caused to homes, businesses, and
infrastructure, Hurricane Harvey was the costliest disaster this year
and may well prove the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history.
According to the Governor of Texas, the damage to our State from the
hurricane is well over $120 billion and could prove to be closer to
$180 billion. Any bill to provide disaster funding brought to this
floor should recognize the unprecedented level of damage wreaked upon
the State and should provide the level of assistance necessary to help
Texas rebuild.
I spoke this afternoon with Governor Greg Abbott, and he expressed
serious concerns that the supplemental bill coming out of the House
does not direct nearly enough resources to the State of Texas given the
magnitude of the damage, the magnitude of the suffering. Disaster
relief needs to focus where the suffering occurred and where the
disaster occurred.
I am hopeful that when this body returns in 2 weeks, we will work
together in a bipartisan way to ensure that the promises made to the
State of Texas are fulfilled and that the resources are there to help
our State rebuild. The emergency response is over, but recovery and
rebuilding efforts go on. As we keep working to keep our promises, I
remain determined to keep fighting to ensure that Texas has the Federal
resources to which the State is entitled under Federal law.
The spirit of Texas is strong. Some weeks ago, I tweeted out a
picture that I think captured some of that spirit. It was a picture of
a man in his living room. The Sheetrock was torn down from all the
walls--nothing but studs on the walls and no carpet. The flooring was
taken up. There was no furniture. He had a lawn chair. He had an Igloo
ice chest as a coffee table and a TV screen, and he was wearing a
Houston Astros jersey and cheering as the Astros won the World Series.
The tweet simply said: ``This is why it matters.'' That is the spirit
of Texas. We need to remember that spirit, and we need to make sure the
disaster relief responds to the real damage and real suffering that
Hurricane Harvey visited upon the State of Texas.
I look forward to working with my colleagues, hopefully from both
sides of the aisle, to deliver on that commitment that Texans are owed.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
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