[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 159 (Wednesday, September 15, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6515-S6517]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]


                           EXECUTIVE CALENDAR

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the 
Senate will proceed to executive session and resume consideration of 
the following nomination, which the clerk will report.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk read the nomination of 
Margaret Irene Strickland, of New Mexico, to be United States District 
Judge for the District of New Mexico.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Louisiana.
  Mr. CASSIDY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I be 
permitted to speak for up to 10 minutes.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


Gulf Coast Hurricane Aid Act and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act

  Mr. CASSIDY. Mr. President, just a few weeks ago, Southeast Louisiana 
was pummeled by Hurricane Ida on the 16th anniversary, to the day, of 
Hurricane Katrina's landfall. Ida knocked out power across the State, 
including the entire city of New Orleans and its populated suburb of 
Jefferson Parish. The storm brought intense flooding that took lives 
and devastated communities.
  I have some posters to place here. This is of St. John Parish in 
LaPlace, LA, and this of Galliano. You can see both the flooding and 
the damaged housing.
  Hurricane Ida struck Louisiana's shores as a category 4 storm, with 
winds as high as 150 miles per hour, making it the fifth most powerful 
storm to ever hit the United States. Ida hit just 2 days after the 1-
year anniversary of Hurricane Laura, which at the time, on August 27, 
2020, was the strongest storm to hit Louisiana in 164 years. Laura 
devastated Southwest Louisiana. So Ida hit the southeast, and Laura, 
last year, hit the southwest.
  Unfortunately for my State, we are no strangers to extreme weather as

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2020 set a record nationally for the most named storms in a single 
season, with 30, 5 of which hit my State. Last year, Louisiana's 
farmers also had catastrophic damage to livestock, crops, structures, 
and other things during unprecedented winter storms. In the aftermath 
of Ida, 29 Louisianans and 85 Americans total died.
  Yesterday was the first day the number of folks in Louisiana who were 
without power was below six figures. Those in Lafourche Parish, lower 
Jefferson Parish, and lower Terrebonne Parish are estimated to have 
power restored on September 29. That is still 2 weeks from today and a 
month after Ida made landfall on August 29.
  I will put up pictures now of Jefferson Parish and of Lafourche 
Parish. Again, you see flooding and damage, with power lines knocked 
down and lines hanging from the sky, it seems, but you can see the kind 
of devastation it did to electrical grids. Again, here is the damage 
widespread in Lafourche Parish.
  By the numbers, FEMA has received over 594,000 applications for 
individual assistance, of which 285,000 have been approved by the Blue 
Roof Program. We call it that because, when the shingles are blown off 
your roof and sometimes the boards or the tin, tarps are placed over to 
keep the rain from coming through. So it is a measure, if you will, of 
how many people had significant roof damage, but this is an 
underestimate. The Blue Roof has almost 50,000 validated requests, and 
the National Flood Insurance Program has 10,579 claims. The Small 
Business Administration has 17,083 disaster assistance loan 
applications, and temporary sheltering assistance to almost 10,000 
households with almost 29,000 individuals.
  So, as Louisiana begins to recover, we need two things.
  First, we need supplemental disaster assistance. By the way, this 
goes back to the 2020 storms--Hurricanes Laura, Delta, and Zeta. Just 
last week, the White House's budget office sent a formal request to 
Congress, acknowledging the unmet needs for these communities over a 
year later.
  Now, recall I spoke to the blue tarps and how your shingles blow off 
or the tin blows off or the boards blow off, and you put on a blue 
tarp. If you fly over Lake Charles now, a year after those storms, you 
will still see blue tarps, which is to say homes vulnerable to a rain 
event like Hurricane Nicholas, in which rain continues to come through, 
damaging the inside of the house and making the home unlivable. Not 
surprisingly, many folks are not back in their homes.
  It is time to pass the disaster assistance bill for Laura, for Delta, 
for the winter storms, and for Ida.
  Second, we must also take steps to prevent this level of devastation 
in the future. Ida gives us a harsh reminder that we need to strengthen 
the infrastructure that protects us from the worst of these storms, 
including improving highways and evacuation routes, hardening our 
electrical grid, and investing in flood mitigation.
  Now I will put up posters of Larose, LA, and of St. Bernard. Again, 
this community is without power, and in this community, you can see the 
destruction done to port facilities.
  The bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which awaits a 
vote in the U.S. House of Representatives, is a critical missing piece.
  It benefits all States, by the way. The Presiding Officer's State has 
been affected by natural disasters. Resiliency money would really mean 
a lot in his State. It would mean a heck of a lot in my State. It would 
mean a lot in every State.
  But to speak specifically of Louisiana, Louisiana will receive almost 
$6 billion over the next 5 years for roads and bridges. That is $1.2 
billion more than we would ordinarily receive. There is an additional 
$8.8 billion available nationwide for transportation infrastructure, 
including evacuation routes and at-risk coastal infrastructure grants.
  In Louisiana, this money could help complete Interstate 49 in 
LaFayette, complete the segment in the south, and complete the segment 
in Shreveport, I-49, to give an unfettered evacuation route should a 
storm hit either New Orleans or the Bayou region. It also includes six-
laneing Interstate 12 through the Florida parishes, as we call them, 
and a new Mississippi River bridge in Baton Rouge. It should not take 
hours to go through a 10-mile--literally, hours--to go through a 10-
mile stretch in the Capital Region of Louisiana when a storm is on its 
way, and there is a mandatory evacuation order.
  Now, by the way, we know resiliency works. We know this investment 
pays dividends because the damage from Ida could have been worse. But 
George W. Bush made a commitment 16 years ago to build levees to 
protect Jefferson Parish, Orleans, St. Bernard, and Plaquemines Parish.
  So when I went down to St. Bernard afterward--when I went down to 
Jefferson Parish recently, and I met with elected officials, one of 
them looked to the ground and said: The ground is dry. We did not 
flood. And we did not flood because 16 years ago George W. Bush said: 
We shall build a levee system. We shall build resiliency.
  Now the onus is upon us to make a commitment to harden the grid, to 
bury the power lines, which not only protects Louisiana in a hurricane 
but Texas in an ice storm and the West from forest fires caused by arcs 
from utility lines to a dried-out forest.
  In the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, there is $26 billion 
specifically to strengthen our Nation's electrical grid and to prevent 
these sorts of widespread power outages and these sorts of natural 
disasters. This funding includes $5 billion to enhance the resiliency 
of electrical grids from extreme weather and natural disasters, $12.5 
billion to increase power transmission to maintain reliable access to 
energy, and $9 billion to develop and deploy new technology to 
strengthen grid reliability and resiliency. Now, some of these pots of 
money are specifically targeted for States like Louisiana which have 
been impacted by federally declared natural disasters over the last 10 
years. That is the way to build resiliency.
  So my plea is that we cut politics and actually get something done 
for the American people. I was meeting with a parish councilwoman, 
Jennifer Van Vrancken, from Jefferson Parish, and she said: When we get 
to the point where we don't do what is right because of politics, our 
country will go down.
  I said that to another group of people shortly after that, rock-
ribbed Republicans--some of them wearing their MAGA hats--and I quoted 
Councilwoman Van Vrancken, and they all said: That is the situation we 
are in now. So my rock-ribbed Republicans were agreeing with the 
Republican councilwoman. But speaking more generally, if we don't do 
what is right because of politics, our country will suffer. We have got 
to get this bill done and put the politics aside.
  There is so much good in this bill. There is flood mitigation 
dollars, coastal restoration dollars, permitting reform to get projects 
done early and on time, and I can keep going. But recovery is a two-
pronged approach. It starts with aid, and it finishes with the 
bipartisan infrastructure bill, a bill that helps our communities 
rebuild from past storms and better prepares our communities for future 
storms.
  My folks in Louisiana are strong. They are resilient. But we need the 
long-awaited supplemental disaster aid, and we need to build resiliency 
for the future. Both is how we prepare not just my State but our 
Nation. Let's finally get it done.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. PADILLA. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Hickenlooper). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                  Unanimous Consent Agreement--S. 2093

  Mr. PADILLA. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to withdraw the 
cloture motion with respect to the motion to proceed to S. 2093.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. PADILLA. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.

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  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.