[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 212 (Wednesday, December 8, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Page S9002]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                         BUILD BACK BETTER ACT

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, Build Back Better: So, in the first few 
days of December, we have successfully avoided a government shutdown. 
We have cleared the path, hopefully, for addressing the debt limit; 
and, as I mentioned, I am optimistic that the NDAA will soon be 
settled.
  None of these are easy accomplishments, but we are clearing the path 
for Democrats to turn to our biggest domestic priority of the year: 
passing President Biden's Build Back Better Act before Christmas.
  Later today, four Senate committees will release the final texts of 
their portions of Build Back Better, along with CBO scores for each, as 
required by the reconciliation process. Those four committees are 
Commerce, Small Business, Banking and Housing, and Veterans' Affairs.
  In the meantime, I continue to hold daily conversations with my 
Democratic colleagues, with the White House, with the Speaker, and 
House colleagues. We continue to make good progress, and we are still 
on track to vote on a final product before Christmas. The sooner we can 
pass Build Back Better, the better off American families will be as we 
start the new year.
  This bill has always been about a simple goal: cutting costs for 
working and middle-class families.
  People are complaining about higher costs. They are right to do that. 
This bill actually lowers costs in many different areas and will help 
families who are trying to make ends meet and stretch those dollars. 
Let me give you some examples.
  Families are still struggling to pull themselves out of a once-in-a-
century economic crisis brought about by COVID. They want to pay less 
for things like healthcare, prescription drugs, childcare--some of the 
biggest costs average middle-income and working families have. They 
want us to find ways to make that happen, and that is exactly what 
Build Back Better does.
  America, if you want lower costs, tell your Senators to vote for 
Build Back Better.
  If we invest in American families, then we make it easier for them to 
work, to be productive, to flourish in society, and that makes our 
country stronger and lowers costs in the long term.
  One of the great problems, we are told, is a shortage of workers. One 
of the greatest reasons for the shortage of workers is the lack of good 
childcare. People can't go to work if they have to look after their 
kids. And in this post-COVID era, a lot of the patterns that used to 
happen don't happen anymore.
  Making childcare affordable will help bring people back to work, get 
our economy humming along again, and deal with some of the bottlenecks 
in certain areas, from certain industries, which is creating inflation.
  Helping families afford childcare, of course, saves parents money, 
but it goes a long way to alleviating our labor shortage. If parents 
don't have to worry about how they will keep their kids safe during the 
day, they will have greater flexibility to reenter the workforce and 
increase the country's output. That lowers inflation.
  In the long term, everyone wins--kids, parents, employers, and the 
entire economy. This single investment alone is enough reason to keep 
pushing Build Back Better, but there are so many.
  One of the greatest costs we face is prescription drug costs. That is 
what families complain about above all. This bill goes a long way to 
making prescription drugs cost less.
  Another great cost people are complaining about is the rising cost of 
housing. This bill puts more money into housing--into both 
rehabilitating housing that has deteriorated and putting them back into 
the marketplace in a real way and into creating new housing. It will 
reduce the dramatic increase in housing costs.
  So you want to talk about inflation, you want to talk about people 
having to pay more, this bill is an antidote in so many areas. I have 
mentioned childcare, healthcare, and housing, just to name a few, but 
there are many others as well.
  So we are going to keep working in getting this bill done. It is so 
important to working families and to America. To working families: less 
expenses, easier to make that dollar stretch when we sit down Friday 
night after dinner and say, ``How are we going to pay the bills this 
week?'' To America: relieving bottlenecks and making sure that our 
economy hums along at a rapid rate, where people are getting good 
wages, but the bottlenecks caused often by COVID are reduced.

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