[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 106 (Thursday, June 17, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4604-S4607]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--H.R. 1652
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, in the city of Chicago, which I am proud
to represent, there is an organization called Life Span. This is an
incredible group of people who dedicate their
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lives to providing comprehensive services for the survivors of domestic
violence and sexual assault.
Every day they respond to horrifying cases of abuse. They help
thousands of women and children access the support they need to address
trauma and to rebuild their lives.
For example, Life Span recently assisted a woman after her teenage
daughter was sexually assaulted by the woman's husband. Life Span was
able to help the mother and daughter navigate the overwhelming
challenges of pursuing justice against the abuser and offer support to
the daughter throughout this horrible process.
When the mother pursued a divorce from the abuser, Life Span filed a
petition and is representing the mother as she navigates issues of
child support and allocation of custody.
The three Life Span staffers that the mother and daughter have
interacted with all provided critical bilingual and bicultural support.
They have provided this crucial service for this family during an
incredibly traumatic experience. And all three of these staffers are
funded by assistance provided through the Victims of Crime Act, or
VOCA. Life Span told me that without VOCA funding, ``none of these
personnel . . . would be able to have done this job.''
Congress passed the Victims of Crime Act in 1984 to establish the
Crime Victims Fund. This fund provides grants to State victim
compensation and assistance programs, which assist victims with
expenses like medical bills, funeral expenses, and the loss of wages
during recovery.
How often I have heard Members of Congress come to the floor and in
committee speak about the plight of the victims of crime. This is an
effort--an overt effort by Congress--to make sure that we are there
when they desperately need us.
The fund also provides funds to thousands of victims service
providers, like Life Span, across the Nation. These providers offer
programs serving victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, child
abuse, trafficking, and drunk driving.
The Crime Victims Fund doesn't receive a dime of taxpayer dollars.
How about that? It is funded through criminal fines, penalties,
forfeited bail bonds, and special assessments collected by the Federal
Government.
Historically, most of the money in the fund comes from those criminal
fines. But in recent years, deposits into the fund have dropped
significantly, as the Justice Department began relying more on deferred
prosecutions and nonprosecution agreements.
Monetary penalties from these deferred prosecutions and
nonprosecution agreements are currently deposited into the general
Treasury instead of this fund, and, as a result, this shift has had a
devastating impact on the fund and the services available to crime
victims in America.
That is why a bipartisan, bicameral coalition of Members of Congress
worked with the advocacy organizations on a fix to the VOCA law to
sustain the Crime Victims Fund.
Our bill would stabilize the depleted fund by redirecting monetary
penalties from deferred prosecutions and nonprosecution agreements to
the victims and service providers that desperately need help.
The reduced deposits into the fund have already had a devastating
impact. Victim assistance grants have been reduced by more than $600
million in 2021, and more cuts are looming if we don't do something.
The executive director of Life Span in Chicago told me that VOCA
funds 44 percent of the agency's services--about $1.6 million annually.
A substantial loss in VOCA funds would mean that they would have to cut
back staff who provide legal services, affecting an estimated 880
clients
Life Span is not alone. Advocates across the State of Illinois and
across the country have reached out and shared what these cuts would
mean for their agencies and the victims they serve.
The Center for Prevention of Abuse in Peoria, IL, noted:
We never want to be in a position where we are made to turn
away people who need [our] specialized services and whole-
hearted, dedicated care. Our teams are already stretched thin
as they live the promise of our mission day in and day out.
Fewer VOCA dollars means less staff and a lessened ability to
help those who need to find safety, food, shelter,
empowerment, freedom, and peace.
There is no time to waste. Every day that goes by, we miss an
opportunity to help replenish this fund. In 2021, the fund has already
missed out on approximately $400 million in deposits. We are not even
halfway through the year. Imagine how much more money the fund may lose
if we don't do something.
That is why it is imperative that the Senate immediately pass this
bill. The House already did it in March, with broad bipartisan support,
and here in the Senate we have a bipartisan coalition of 56 Senators--
36 Democrats and 20 Republicans--cosponsoring the legislation. We could
send this bill to the President's desk today. We should have sent it to
him weeks ago. Unfortunately, there is an objection that has prevented
us from moving forward.
In a recent letter to Leader Schumer, victims' rights and law
enforcement organizations said that, ``The objectors are, in effect,
holding victim services hostage in an ideological quest to overhaul the
Appropriations process by eliminating budgetary offsets.''
What a target to choose if you want to change the procedure of the
committee--crime victims?
I agree with the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence and so
many other groups. More than 1,700 that are begging us to do something
and stop holding this critical legislation.
The passage of this legislation today would ensure that victims are
able to maintain these critical services. Don't we owe it to them after
the promise of help to come through?
At this point, I would like to turn to my colleague Senator
Murkowski.
And I ask unanimous consent that Senators Murkowski, Toomey, and I be
able to complete our remarks prior to the vote.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The Senator from Alaska.
Ms. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, I want to acknowledge and thank my
colleague and friend from Illinois for his leadership on this issue. He
has outlined well the situation in front of us with regard to the
status of the Crime Victims Fund.
Again, this is a nontaxpayer source of funding, which is designed to
help the millions of victims of crimes--those who have been violated,
those who are extraordinarily vulnerable. And we are at a place where,
as he has indicated, we have a proposal here that could help address
how this fund is replenished to, again, ensure that those who have been
made victims can receive some level of compensation.
We are kind of stuck here this morning, which is extraordinarily
unfortunate. Folks back home in Alaska are just starting their day, and
they are looking with anticipation and hope and, quite honestly,
prayers that today might be the day that they get good news on this.
Right now, I have about 30 organizations in Alaska, including our
domestic violence shelters, our child advocacy centers, our victim
advocacy organizations--they have all been notified that they are going
to expect a 35-percent cut to their funding, effective the 1st of July,
so just in a couple of weeks here.
And because of this broken VOCA deposit issue, this cut is set to
affect their funds for not only this year but for next year going
forward.
So think about it. You are the shelter in Kodiak, where I was just 6,
8 weeks or so ago. When you are told you have a 35-percent cut to your
budget coming and you have a small community, where are you going to
find those resources? Because, believe you, me, the individuals who
still require those services are not staying at home and saying: Well,
I guess we didn't have the services here on this big island of Kodiak;
so I am just going to stay put.
The need is still there. In fact, the need is more enhanced or
exacerbated than ever before. We have seen this as a follow-on from
COVID. We have seen those aftereffects, that aftershock, when you have
been in an isolated situation where you have been forced to kind of
shelter in place, if you will, but your home is not a safe shelter. It
is not a shelter in that sense of the word. But you don't have
services. And so where do you go? You stay with your abuser. You stay
in the situation that is unsound, unsafe, because you don't have
anyplace to turn. So the need out there is considerable.
[[Page S4606]]
We had a situation last summer of devastating loss, with five village
residents in different villages who had died in domestic violence
murders over a course of 10 days. These are small villages where
everybody knows everybody, and the loss of one person--an elder, a
child, or a victim--is extraordinary. And so we looked at that, and we
said: Well, that is exacerbated by COVID and what has happened.
But, no, this has been a situation for us long prior to COVID, in
terms of, unfortunately, the levels that we see of domestic violence,
sexual assault, the victimization that we see--so being there to
provide funding for services to help prevent these deaths, the trauma
that children experience when they are in the room, the murders that
affect families for generations. There is a story in the news just
today--a domestic situation, the husband and the wife. The husband took
the wife's life and then took his own, and it was a 6-year-old with an
iPad who notified the authorities.
I think about the reality of what a 35-percent cut means, what it
means when you say your service providers are faced with $6 million
less in funding for victims services. The shelters are calling out to
us for help. One domestic violence shelter in the State is facing the
reality of laying off six full-time jobs within their organization.
This is unacceptable.
I understand that there are concerns. Senator Toomey is going to
speak to them. But this legislation doesn't change how Federal tax
money is spent. It provides a technical fix by directing additional
nontaxpayer dollars from criminal monetary penalties into this fund. So
we are sitting at a point where the longer that Congress delays this
fix, the larger the cuts that victims services in my State and all
around the country will face.
This has been a hard time for us, and I think we recognize it, but
for those who are trying to serve victims, for those who are trying to
serve the most vulnerable at an exceptionally vulnerable time in their
lives, it makes it 10 times harder. Our providers are exhausted, they
are burned out, and now they are faced with massive cuts. We simply
cannot fail them.
I would urge us to look past the politics on this. This is what these
victims' advocates are saying: Please don't use us as the political
lever here. So I join not only with Senator Durbin but with the many in
this body who would urge that we pass this technical fix to VOCA.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I want to thank the Senator from Alaska
for her heartfelt remarks.
There are innocent people who are victims of domestic violence whose
fate depends on what we do right here and now. This is an important
budgetary debate that the Senator from Pennsylvania is raising. I ask,
please don't use these people in this desperate situation as a pressure
point. Let's try to reconcile this on a rational basis without
jeopardizing them.
As if in legislative session, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate
proceed to the immediate consideration of H.R. 1652, which was received
from the House and is at the desk; further, that the bill be considered
read a third time and passed and that the motion to reconsider be
considered made and laid upon the table.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Ossoff). Is there objection?
The Senator from Pennsylvania.
Mr. TOOMEY. Mr. President, in reserving the right to object, let me
say I think I agree with 98, 99 percent of what I just heard from my
colleagues.
In the 11 years I have been in the Senate, I have lost track of how
many rape crisis centers and how many child advocacy centers I have
visited. They have expanded the number, fortunately, because they have
gotten additional resources from Congress. They do some of the most
important work I know of--incredibly painful work--in helping a child
through an appalling, traumatic experience when there is a law
enforcement need to get information that can further traumatize a
child. I mean, the work these folks do is amazing, it is essential, and
the Senator from Alaska is exactly right in that there is a real need
here.
The good news is that there is a real, very clear, and easy path
forward here. The legislation that the Senator from Illinois is
proposing creates a new source of money for the Crime Victims Fund. It
is a new category, it is substantial, and it is going to be new
resources for the advocates for crime victims to better be able to
continue to do their very, very important work, and I fully support
that.
So where do we disagree? Here is where we disagree: The legislation
does require a lot of money--new money--to go into the Crime Victims
Fund. The Senator from Illinois is exactly correct in that it is not
taxpayer money; it is money from the settlements for criminal and civil
penalties. I fully support that. What their legislation doesn't do,
however, is require a dime of that money to actually get to the
advocates of crime. It is very nice to put a lot of money into an
account that has a name on it that is the Crime Victims Fund. That is
very nice, and I support that, but I would like to take one more step
and make sure the money actually gets to the victims of crime and their
advocates.
Now, there is a little bit of budgetary information that explains
why, if we don't adopt my approach here, this money will not get to the
victims of crime and their advocates. You see, the appropriations
process, the spending process around here, always operates under some
limit. It could be a statutory limit or a limit passed by a budget
resolution, but there is a limit. There is no limit as to how much
people want to spend around here, but there is a limit as to how much
they actually can.
We have a very perverse budgetary rule, and that rule says that, in
any given year, if there is money in this Crime Victims Fund--mind you,
not tax dollars, but if there is money in it--and Congress doesn't give
it to the crime victims as it is supposed to, you can pretend that it
is a savings, and it allows you to spend more than you would otherwise
be able to spend on any number of other things, on anything--tanks,
buildings, roads, whatever. That is the dynamic. That is what happens
here. It actually creates an incentive, however perverse this is, for
Congress not to allocate this money to the victims of crime and to
their advocates. By not doing so, they get to claim a savings which
isn't real--but that is the way the budget rules work--and spend that
money elsewhere.
Now, you might say: Well, who would do a thing like that? Oh. Ha.
Well, it used to happen all the time. In 2014, there was $9 billion
available in the Crime Victims Fund, but in order to spend more money
elsewhere, less than $1 billion was actually allocated to victims of
crime and their advocates, so they got $8 billion of difference that
they could spend on whatever else they wanted, and they did. In 2013,
it was the same story.
This was going on routinely until 2015 when I and some of my
colleagues said: Wait a minute. This isn't right. This money is
supposed to be going to crime victims, and it is not.
That is the first and most objectionable problem. It is also
dishonest because there is no savings of taxpayer money here; this is
just not giving crime victims the money from criminals that they are
supposed to get. It is outrageous
For a while, we got some cooperation, and they did less of this. In
other words, more of the money that was supposed to go to crime victims
for a while did, in fact, go there. But I am very concerned--and I have
been concerned since 2015--that, at any point in time, we will go back
to this process. So I introduced legislation called the Fairness for
Crime Victims Act. I introduced it in 2015. What it does is it just
requires that the money going into the fund actually go to the victims
of crime and their advocates, and there are various mechanisms for
doing it. The bill was reported out of the Senate Budget Committee in
2015, and it was unanimously adopted by the Bipartisan Budget Act of
2019.
I have been working as closely as I can with the appropriators to
address this so that we will actually send to crime victims the money
that is supposed to go to them. Since 2000, over $82 billion of money
has not been allocated to crime victims, as it should have been,
precisely because of this mechanism.
Some might say: Well, hasn't it gotten better? Yes. The answer is
that it has. But how do I know it is going to get worse? How do I know
we are going to go right back to this? I will tell you
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how I know. All I have to do is read the President's budget.
President Biden's budget, if you look at table S-8, explicitly calls
for withholding money from victims of crime and advocates for those
victims from the Crime Victims Fund and also the Children's Health
Insurance Program so as to spend more money in other areas. It is right
here: ``changes in mandatory program offsets: $26 billion.'' It says
the limitation enacted will come from the Crime Victims Fund program
and cancelations in the Children's Health Insurance Program. This is
not like wild speculation; this is President Biden's budget, saying:
Oh, here is what I want to spend, and part of how I will spend it--part
of how we will get there--is by withholding money that should be going
to victims of crime.
So I am fully in support of this new allocation of money into the
account, but money in the account doesn't solve the problem. We need
one more step, that is all--the step that says we are actually going to
send it to victims of crime instead of whatever spending people in this
town decide they prefer. That is what this is about. That is what the
difference is.
We have developed a process. We have worked with people on both sides
of the aisle, and we have passed legislation in committee to do it. We
want to simply require the money that is meant for victims of crime and
their advocates to get to them, and we are being told it won't all get
to them under the status quo.
There is a simple solution here. There is a simple path forward. I
think there is a genuine, sincere agreement, among everybody who has
spoken, about the need for this service. All I am asking is that we
actually have a mechanism to get them the money rather than to do what
we all know is coming: Pretend they are going to get all of this money
when, in fact, it is going to be diverted to other purposes.
Therefore, I ask that the Senator modify his request to include my
amendment, which is at the desk; that it be considered and agreed to;
that the bill, as amended, be considered read a third time and passed;
and that the motion to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the
table with no intervening action or debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there an objection to the modification?
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, in reserving the right to object, I am
disappointed that the Senator from Pennsylvania is adamant in his
position, even though we are dealing with victims of crime, victims of
domestic violence, and victims of child abuse. Like Illinois,
Pennsylvania has experienced a nearly 70-percent cut in VOCA funding
since 2018, and more cuts are on the horizon because of his strategy.
Here is what it boils down to: If you listen carefully to what the
Senator from Pennsylvania has said, he is not suggesting that the money
is being spent for other purposes but is suggesting that it could be.
In fact, there is a conscious effort by the Appropriations subcommittee
to make sure, if all of the money is not spent in 1 year, that enough
will be maintained to stabilize the fund for future years. That is
thoughtful, and that is what we like to hear, but we are in a desperate
moment now wherein we need the money and need it at this moment.
I understand my colleague's concern about the scorekeeping in the
budget. It is an important issue, even though it is esoteric. But to do
it in relation to the Crime Victims Fund seems entirely misplaced.
While this adjustment does not, in fact, transfer money from the fund
to other priorities, it is just a budgeting gimmick that he is
suggesting.
This is not the right place or time to do this when thousands of
people across the United States are in desperate need of shelter to get
out of an abusive home; of help for their children who have witnessed
murders; and of dealing with court proceedings that may be
unintelligible to the average person to try to protect their families
and themselves. To think that we are engaged in this high-level budget
debate at this moment at their expense is just not right.
I urge my colleague to withdraw his amendment and allow the
legislation to proceed. We can debate the budget within the budget
resolution and the appropriations process but not at the expense of
crime victims across America. If he will not withdraw his amendment, I
must object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard to the modification.
Is there an objection to the original request?
Mr. TOOMEY. Mr. President, in reserving the right to object, I will
just say briefly that, clearly and certainly, this is not a
scorekeeping debate, and this is not about budgets. This is about
whether victims of crime and their advocates will actually get the
money that we say they are going to get. It is not about what could be;
it is about what has been. This money was routinely raided for other
purposes until we brought a stop to it recently, and it is about what
will be because the Biden administration is telling us it intends to do
this.
In order to ensure that crime victims and their advocates actually
get the money that we say they are going to get, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.