[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 187 (Thursday, November 21, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6733-S6734]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Amendment No. 1250
Mr. PAUL. Mr. President, I rise to present an amendment to this bill.
My amendment is simple, and it reflects the kind of commonsense
budgeting we ought to be doing in Washington. Today I offer the penny
plan for infrastructure. This plan cuts one penny, 1 percent of all
spending, and puts that money in a fund for infrastructure.
My amendment would put about $12 billion per year into a fund to fix
our roads and bridges. Every agency would still get 99 percent of the
spending they got the previous year. Sure, they would need to trim some
fat, but they would still be fine. A lot of businesses and
organizations will tell you they have to cut much greater than 1
percent a year.
I visited a business recently that in the downturn of 2008-2009 had
to cut 30 percent of their expenditures. Business men and women in
America are used to having to cut expenditures; government never does.
Whether it is our highways or our bridges or our waterways, our
infrastructure in America is falling behind. Everyone knows it, but
like so many things, Washington can't figure out how to fix it, how to
find the money to fix it.
Politicians on both sides of the aisle talk about trillion-dollar
infrastructure plans but offer no way to pay for it. My plan is much
more modest, doesn't increase taxes, and doesn't increase our debt. The
penny plan for infrastructure pays for it with money we have already
allocated.
To be clear, we do have the money. Washington just spends it in
inappropriate ways. Washington spends, for example, $233 million on a
single highway in Afghanistan. We have money to pave roads in
Afghanistan, but they will not vote to spend the money here to pave
roads.
The people in Afghanistan got $233 million for a road, but they
couldn't even maintain it, so we gave them another $22 million to
maintain the road.
We spent $326 million to pave 2,000 kilometers of dirt roads in
Afghanistan. We have enough money to spend over $300 million to pave
dirt roads in Afghanistan, but we can't come up with $1 billion to help
our infrastructure here. They were supposed to pave 2,000 kilometers;
it turned out they only paved 159 kilometers. They paved less than 10
percent of what they actually promised to do with the money. What is
that equal to--$2.7 million per mile.
It is outrageous, and it goes on year after year after year. I think
it is time we try a new way. Just in Afghanistan, we have spent more
than the Marshall Plan did to rebuild Europe after the devastation of
World War II, and we are still there, spending good money after bad. So
when people come up here and
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say that a 1-percent cut would somehow be a disaster, we need to remind
them that the money is there. They just have to listen to the people
and pull the plug on this kind of crazy spending overseas.
My amendment would move 1 percent of current spending, and it would
put that 1 percent of the current spending bill into infrastructure.
Supposedly, Republicans, Democrats, and Independents all agree on
infrastructure. Yet we don't allocate more money to it because we are
too busy paving roads in Afghanistan. If we did this, it would be about
$12 billion. It is not enough to fix everything in the country. It is a
modest sum. This is actually a modest proposal to move over a few
billion dollars.
Do you know what it would do? Twelve billion dollars would pave up to
6,200 miles of a new four-lane highway, resurface 20,000 miles of a
four-lane highway, and 2,200 miles of a six-lane interstate. It would
pay for multiple big-ticket infrastructure projects that are currently
stuck without funding. In my State, they have been advocating money for
the Brent Spence Bridge across the Ohio River since before I was
elected--8 or 9 years of advocating for a bridge for which we can't
find the money. We have the money. Quit paving roads in Afghanistan,
and let's start building bridges and paving roads here.
This amendment would improve our infrastructure, benefit our
communities, eliminate government waste, and help our economy. By
cutting 1 percent of the current spending, we will force all of
government to do a better job.
There is at least 1 percent waste. There is probably 10 percent waste
in government. I am asking to cut 1 percent of waste. Take that money
you cut by making government more efficient and put it into
infrastructure.
I encourage the Senate to consider this amendment. I think we have
very few amendments come forward where people have a chance to vote for
infrastructure.
At this point, I move to concur on the House amendment to the Senate
amendment--
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Will the Senator suspend?
Mr. PAUL. At this point, I am about ready to do that.
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