[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 18 (Tuesday, January 29, 2019)]
[House]
[Pages H1249-H1250]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




           NEGATIVE REPERCUSSIONS OF THE GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New 
York (Mr. Delgado) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. DELGADO. Mr. Speaker, today I rise, pleased that the government 
is reopened and determined to not repeat ourselves in 3 weeks.
  A poll taken last weekend found that 6 in 10 Americans believe the 
country is headed in the wrong direction, and nearly 70 percent have 
negative opinions on the state of the Nation. These findings are grim, 
but can anyone in this Chamber blame our fellow citizens for their 
skepticism?
  The longest shutdown in American history brought fear, confusion, and 
financial harm on upstate New York and our entire country--$11 billion 
worth of economic loss, according to the CBO. And here is what that 
looked like back home in upstate New York:
  The Small Business Administration stopped processing new loans to 
potential small business owners, slowing the engine of American 
enterprise;
  The FDA stopped routine food safety inspections, putting Americans at 
risk at their own dinner tables;
  The Department of Agriculture stopped administering farm support 
programs, which include subsidized home loans and tariff relief 
payments, putting additional financial stress on farmers in upstate New 
York already suffering from our Nation's ill-conceived trade wars;
  The Department of Housing and Urban Development stopped processing 
mortgage extensions or housing loans, leaving 100,000 rural homeowners 
at risk of eviction;
  The EPA suspended the cleanup efforts at Superfund pollution sites, 
including in places like Hoosick Falls, with poisoned groundwater.
  When the shutdown began, the EPA stopped returning calls from the New 
York Department of Environmental Conservation. I held two townhalls 
during the shutdown and opened up our phone lines on weekends in order 
to remain accessible to those in my district who need an advocate in 
Washington.

[[Page H1250]]

  I heard from constituent after constituent about the negative 
repercussions of the shutdown.
  I heard from store owners who couldn't accept EBT cards because their 
SNAP vendor license expired with no possibility of renewal.
  I heard from Federal employees, more than 4,200 of whom I am proud to 
represent in Congress, who worried about losing their dental and vision 
insurance.
  I met with members of the U.S. Coast Guard, the only military 
personnel who went without pay during the shutdown.
  And I heard from small business owners, more than 27,000 of whom live 
in my district, about the effect of the shutdown on their bottom lines.
  All of this for what purpose?
  From day one, I joined any colleagues in vote after vote to reopen 
the government on a bipartisan basis.
  It is incumbent on Congress to ensure that the government remains 
open when the current spending package expires on February 15.
  The border wall is a monument to division that, according to experts, 
is ineffective and wasteful. Holding the government hostage over it was 
wrong. Indeed, not a single Member of the House body--Democrat or 
Republican--representing a border district is for the construction of a 
wall.
  When discussing the need for improved border security, we must move 
past fear-driven partisan politics which seek only to divide us and 
paralyze our democracy. Moreover, we cannot allow ourselves to fall 
short of our constitutional obligation as Members of Congress.
  Let us not forget that our Founding Fathers began with the 
legislative body in Article I of our Constitution. This is the one body 
that represents the will of the people, legislatively.
  Our work should not be contingent upon the whims and desires of 
another branch of government meant to only execute the laws our body is 
obliged to legislate. This is not how to preserve a democratic order 
anchored in the separation of powers and sustained by healthy checks 
and balances.
  To be clear, now is not the time to run away from our responsibility 
as a coequal branch of government. Democrats and Republicans, alike, 
need to come together and have an evidence-based and transparent debate 
on the question of border security, have a vote, and then send 
legislation to the President. It shouldn't take a costly shutdown and a 
threat of another looming one in order to accomplish this.
  As Members of both parties from both Houses begin budget negotiations 
in a conference committee, I ask that they remember the hardships 
endured in recent weeks not only by the Federal employees who went 
without pay in upstate New York, but also by business owners, farmers, 
and so many others in our region who were harmed because of ripple 
effects of the shutdown.
  The government must not close again. My district and our country 
can't afford another shutdown. It is our collective responsibility to 
ensure we do not find ourselves on February 15 at the start of yet 
another shutdown.
  In short, I urge this body to do as envisioned by our Founding 
Fathers, get to work, and do our job.

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