[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 151 (2005), Part 19]
[House]
[Pages 25330-25331]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                              {time}  1400
                   HURRICANE WILMA AND RECONCILIATION

  Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent to claim 
the time of the gentlewoman from the Virgin Islands.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the 
gentlewoman from Florida?
  There was no objection.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the 
gentlewoman from Florida (Ms. Wasserman Schultz) is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Ms. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to talk about a 
crisis in South Florida.
  The third most destructive hurricane ever to hit this country struck 
my congressional district just over 2 weeks ago. Thousands of people 
are still without power, thousands still have holes in their roofs that 
threaten to condemn their houses with every new rain.
  Thousands have mobility issues and are without housing because they 
cannot get up and down the stairs to their apartment. The list goes on 
and on, and it is truly heart wrenching.
  Just last week I was delivering meals to seniors in my district who 
could not get out of their third floor condominiums. Even though it was 
5 days after the hurricane struck South Florida, the residents there 
said that no one had heard from FEMA, no one had seen FEMA and, worse 
yet, no one knew how to get in touch with FEMA to make sure things did 
not get any worse.
  And why do I fear that things could get worse? Because of problems 
like this. This is a third floor apartment, that is the ceiling of the 
apartment, and as we can see, you can look right through the ceiling at 
the sky.
  This is the woman's master bedroom and literally during the storm, 1 
minute after she walked out of that master bedroom the ceiling came 
down on her bed. The roof caved in. A minute earlier and it would have 
caved in on her.
  Obviously, this apartment is uninhabitable. However, this is a three-
story building. If we delay the disaster response, if we do not get 
FEMA tarp distribution centers set up right away, if we wait weeks 
before we deliver individual assistance, then not only are we saying to 
the woman that lived in this unit, tough it out, you are on our your 
own for now, but we are also making the problem worse because there are 
two floors below this apartment unit.
  If it rains through this massive hole in the ceiling in this woman's 
apartment, then it will leak down onto the apartments on the second 
floor and possibly weaken the structure, leading to the evacuation of 
everyone in that part of building. And that is beginning to happen; 
this is what is happening. Our ineffective response is not only 
irresponsible, but it also costs the taxpayers more money than 
necessary.
  Now, I have been talking about a natural disaster, which is Hurricane 
Wilma. But I also want to talk a minute about a man-made disaster that 
is coming, something that will victimize once again the victims of 
Hurricane Wilma, Katrina and Rita. I am talking about the Draconian 
budget cuts proposed by the Republican leadership in their so-called 
budget reconciliation package.
  Last week, the papers in South Florida blared the news that over 
5,000 people's homes had been condemned, much of it affordable housing. 
In Broward County the median price of a home is $348,000, making many 
homes and even rental apartments out of reach for thousands of south 
Floridians.
  While the loss of 5,000 homes damaged by Hurricane Wilma is terrible, 
I would like to point out that the budget reconciliation package 
endorsed by the

[[Page 25331]]

Republican leadership eliminates affordable housing vouchers for 3,500 
people in Florida alone.
  In other words, Mr. Speaker, while Hurricane Wilma made 5,000 Florida 
families homeless last week, the Republican leadership is proposing 
cuts that would make 3,500 more Florida families homeless. So first we 
get hit by Katrina, then we get hit by Wilma and either this week or 
next the American people will get hit by Hurricane Republican.
  Hurricanes are natural disasters, Mr. Speaker. What we will be 
debating in the House this week or next is a man-made disaster, a man-
made disaster that not only would leave 3,500 Florida families homeless 
through cuts to Section 8 housing vouchers, but also, incredibly, would 
cut $58.9 million in elementary and secondary education funds for 
Florida students, $4.9 million in cuts for supplemental nutrition 
programs for women infants and children, $25.1 million in cuts for 
children and families.
  These are funds that provide for the Head Start program and help 
abused and neglected children. Cutting funds for abused and neglected 
children, what are we coming to here?
  I urge my colleagues to vote against a man-made disaster that will 
originate from this body this week and sweep across the country, 
displacing thousands of people nationwide. I urge them to vote against 
the Republican budget reconciliation package.

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