[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 30 (Tuesday, February 15, 2022)]
[Senate]
[Pages S693-S694]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--S. Res. 512
Mr. HAGERTY. Madam President, for nearly 2 years, the U.S. Capitol
Building and Senate offices have been largely closed to the American
people whom we serve. Our constituents have been unable to enter the
Senate buildings to meet with their representatives, and Americans of
all ages, from schoolchildren to seniors, have been deprived of the
patriotic sense of wonderment that comes from visiting the hallowed
halls of the Capitol Building. The openness of the Halls of Congress
and public participation in the legislative process have always been
hallmarks of American democracy.
It is long past time for the Senate to reopen its doors to the
American people. Thanks to Operation Warp Speed, vaccines have been
available for more than a year for those who want them. Americans have
learned how to safely gather and enter public places despite the
pandemic. Over 70,000 people attended the Super Bowl in Los Angeles on
Sunday, in fact. Yet there are reports that some of the leadership in
this building want to significantly limit the number of lawmakers who
are allowed to attend President Biden's State of the Union Address in
just a couple of weeks.
From stores to venues and most workplaces and schools, the rest of
the United States has reopened to gatherings and regular business.
Shouldn't the Senate, whose buildings belong to the public, do the
same? That is why I have introduced a resolution providing that the
Senate, first, recognizes the importance of reopening the Capitol and
Senate office buildings to the public and, second, supports returning
to the pre-COVID visitor policies for areas within Senate jurisdiction.
I am pleased that 26 of my colleagues have joined me as cosponsors of
this resolution.
Importantly, if there are operational matters that need to be worked
out as part of reopening, this resolution provides no obstacle to doing
so. It simply states that the Senate supports reopening and recognizes
the importance of doing so.
I am asking my colleagues to join me today in support of the access
to American democracy and a return to normal life and in opposition to
endless pandemic lockdown, and I am pleased to be joined here today by
my colleague from Indiana.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
Mr. BRAUN. Madam President, as ranking member of the Legislative
Branch Appropriations Subcommittee, I rise today in support of the
Senator from Tennessee's resolution to reopen the Capitol and the
Senate office buildings. As he said, for nearly 2 years, we have not
been operating from what I was used to for the short time I had been
here prior to that. Governors across the country finally are beginning
to do the same thing, even in places where they were almost in lockstep
with the way we were doing things here.
Today, you can only enter the Capitol Complex with an escort by a
staff member. One of the things constituents from back in Indiana
enjoyed most--the senior Senator from Indiana, Todd Young, started it
before I got here--was the Hoosier Huddle. From 9 to 10 every Tuesday,
every Wednesday, we had folks from all over our State coming into the
Capitol so we could have that conversation on issues that were
important. Now we do it by Zoom.
The rest of the country is saying: Enough is enough; we want to get
back to at least some of the ways that were in place prior to COVID.
Now, Washington lobbyists are allowed in because of their close
connections with congressional staff, but the American people don't
have that same access, and that is just wrong.
The legislative branch Agencies have continued to provide support to
Congress throughout the pandemic. It is time that Congress reopens the
Capitol to the American public, including Hoosiers from my home State.
I yield the floor.
Mr. HAGERTY. Madam President, as if in legislative session, I ask
unanimous consent that the Senate proceed
[[Page S694]]
to the consideration of S. Res. 512, submitted earlier today. Further,
I ask unanimous consent that the resolution be agreed to, the preamble
be agreed to, and that the motions to reconsider be considered made and
laid upon the table with no intervening action or debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
The Senator from Minnesota.
Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Madam President, reserving the right to object, I
object.
As chair of the Rules Committee, with oversight of the security of
this Capitol, I share Senator Hagerty's goal and Senator Braun's goal
of ensuring that this building is open and accessible to the public. I
agree with them that it is important to reopen the Capitol, and I
personally can't wait to have my constituents back as well for our
Thursday morning breakfasts. But we must do this in a way that takes
into account the health and safety of everyone who works here and not
just the Senators.
This is a decision for the Capitol Police Board, in consultation with
the medical experts in the Office of Attending Physician.
While the worst of the Omicron surge is behind us--and that is such a
good thing--they have told us there is still work to do. At the same
time--and I think this is one of our challenges as we look at how we
are reopening and how we do it, because I think we will end up doing
this incrementally, and I hope we can start soon--at the same time,
ongoing staffing challenges facing the Capitol Police are an important
consideration that must be managed carefully by the Capitol Police
Board. The Capitol Police are already stretched thin. More than 130
officers have left the force since the January 6 insurrection last
year.
At a Rules Committee hearing that I held with Senator Blunt just last
month, Chief Manger testified that the Department is down 447 officers.
Let me repeat that: 447 officers. The officers who remain have had
vacations canceled and have worked significant overtime. The
Department, as we learned at our oversight hearing--we had two in the
last 3 months--has taken steps--and I personally asked about this,
Senator Hagerty, because I care so much about reopening the Capitol--
they have taken steps to address these shortfalls, including addressing
the number of recruit classes, with the goal of recruiting 280 officers
per year for the next 3 years. That is additional officers. The
Department has also taken steps to retain officers already on the
force, including by issuing retention bonuses and hazard pay.
We took a very important step last summer on a bipartisan basis to
provide funding for security improvements at the Capitol and to ensure
that the Capitol Police have the resources to do their jobs when we
passed the emergency funding bill led by Senator Leahy and Senator
Shelby that the President signed into law. But, as Chief Manger just
said at a public hearing when he explained that we were 447 officers
short--which, of course, means who is the at the doors, what doors are
open, and what backup do they have--he said we still have a ways to go
before he has officers to staff all the posts needed to safely reopen
to the public.
So there is still much more work to do. I, for one, am in favor of
making changes so we can begin the process of reopening as soon as
possible. The Capitol Complex should, of course, reopen so Americans
from across the country can visit and see our democracy at work. We are
simply relying on the health and security experts to ensure that how
and when we do reopen, we do it safely for everyone who works here,
including the staff.
For these reasons, Madam President, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The objection is heard.
The Senator from Tennessee.
Mr. HAGERTY. Madam President, I greatly respect my colleague from
Minnesota, and I have enjoyed working with her on the Rules Committee,
but her objection to this resolution provides an unfortunate but clear
answer: No, Democrats don't support reopening the Senate.
Hopefully sometime soon, my Democratic colleagues will wake up to the
fact that Americans are sick of endless lockdowns and the condescending
message that it sends to the American people that they need government
to tell them what to do.
With regard to the objection that we need a more measured process in
consultation with various officials, I talked to the Capitol Police
Chief last week, and we can work with his team and the Sergeant at Arms
to address any specific operational issues. We can also work with the
Attending Physician. All of that is downstream of the basic question
here, which is whether the Senate supports reopening. If the Senate
supports reopening, then we can figure out the rest.
Senate leadership sets the policy for the Capitol Building and the
office buildings that are under Senate jurisdiction. That is why we
have different COVID policies than the House. If it was up to the
Attending Physician or the Capitol Police, the policy probably wouldn't
change at the midpoint of the Capitol Building, as it does today.
We are the elected officials in the building. We are the ones who
were elected to make decisions. We shouldn't dodge that responsibility,
and we need to lead by making a clear statement that it is time to
reopen the Senate to our constituents. It is unfortunate that many of
my Democratic colleagues don't feel the same way. We need to reopen the
Senate now.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.