[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 152 (2006), Part 5]
[Senate]
[Pages 5870-5887]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




MAKING EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING 
                     SEPTEMBER 30, 2006--Continued

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Hampshire is recognized.


                           Amendment No. 3594

  Mr. GREGG. Mr. President, we are now on the supplemental 
appropriations bill. One of the issues raised in the supplemental 
appropriations bill, of course, is national defense. The purpose of 
this bill is primarily to fund efforts to fight terrorism and 
especially to make sure that our troops in Iraq and in Afghanistan have 
what they need in order to effectively fight terrorism. A big part, 
however, of national defense is clearly border security--being sure 
that we know who comes into this country, know what their purposes are 
when they come into this country, and whether they are coming into this 
country for the purpose of visiting us or maybe participating in our 
economy or for the purpose of doing us harm.
  Unfortunately, we have for a number of years experienced borders 
which are very porous. That is a function of our history--where we have 
always believed in open borders, especially with our neighbors to the 
north and to the south.
  That has been one of our great attitudes as a nation--that we are an 
inviting nation, and we have always felt strongly that we should have 
reasonably open borders. But in the post-9/11 world--and especially in 
light of the dramatic number of people who have been coming into our 
country illegally--we can no longer tolerate that approach, 
unfortunately. We need to put more aggressive effort into making sure 
that we know who is coming over the borders and limiting those folks 
coming over our borders to people who want to come in here legally and 
who do not want to do us harm.
  As a result of that, we have undertaken for the last couple of years 
an aggressive effort to significantly increase the number and the 
effort of our Border Patrol agencies--Customs, Border Patrol, Coast 
Guard, and ICE. In fact, over the last 1\1/2\ years we have 
dramatically increased funding for all of these different agencies. 
This chart lists those types of increases in those prior supplementals 
and in the last appropriations bill relative to border security. We 
increased Border Patrol agents by 1,500. That is a lot. That is an 
increase of over 10 percent in agents, an increase in detention 
officers by 650 officers, investigators, and detention beds--again, by 
almost 10 percent.
  This is a significant ramping up of the number of, for lack of a 
better word, boots on the ground on our border--especially on our 
southern border. That is exactly what we needed to do. In fact, as we 
move into the outyears, the administration--the President 
specifically--has made a strong commitment to try to continue this 
increase in our border security.
  This chart reflects how many agents we intend to add every year so 
that we can make sure we have the necessary personnel on the border in 
order to make sure that we can limit dramatically--in fact, basically 
stop--illegal immigration into this country, especially along the 
southern border.
  The reason we have added 1,500 agents so far--and we intend to add 
another 1,500 or 2,000--and the reason we are not adding more every 
year is because the infrastructure can't handle any more, to be honest 
with you. We can't train more, and we actually can't find more agents. 
In many instances, people who qualify--I have forgotten the numbers. I 
think it is something like 30,000 or 40,000 applications that we have 
to go through in order to get down to 1,500 agents.
  It is actually hard to become a Border Patrol agent from a percentage 
standpoint of the number of people applying for the job versus the 
number of people who actually end up getting the job. It is harder to 
become a Border Patrol agent than it is to get into Harvard. That is 
because Border Patrol agents require special skills. They are

[[Page 5871]]

talented people. And the type of folks we want to draw into this 
responsibility are people who have to have a tremendous amount of 
ability and expertise, and they are very hard to find. But they are 
good people, and we are adding to them dramatically.
  We intend to get the Border Patrol up to 20,000 agents and an 
increase of detention beds of another 10,000. We will be literally able 
to control the southern border. We will no longer have this issue of 
people coming cross the southern border in waves illegally. Literally, 
we can stop that. We can do it, and we intend to do it. There is no 
issue about this. We intend to do this. However, we have found in 
ramping up the number of Border Patrol agents they have run into a 
fairly significant problem.
  As an aside, I note that the only reason we have been able to 
increase these Border Patrol agents so dramatically is because Senator 
Cochran, as chairman of the full Appropriations Committee, has allowed 
the subcommittee, which I chair--the Homeland Security Subcommittee--to 
get special allocations in order to fund those.
  It has really been out of his courtesy, his energy, and the support 
of Senator Frist in this effort that we have been successful in 
basically increasing these numbers. We are on this path of basically 
being able to have enough boots on the ground in the Border Patrol area 
and Customs area and ICE area in order to adequately control the 
border.
  What we found going through this process of expanding dramatically 
Border Patrol agents and Customs and ICE agents is that the 
infrastructure to support these people isn't there. They are driving 
old cars. For the most part they are flying helicopters which are 20 
years over their useful life. Customs is actually flying airplanes that 
are 20, 30, or 40 years over their useful life. In fact, just recently 
the Customs agency was forced to basically ground all its Customs 
planes for a brief period of time, and the P-3 fleet, which is 40 years 
old, because these types of cracks developed in their wings. They 
obviously couldn't fly them. So they had to repair all of them--or not 
all but those that had this potential type of stress.
  We have a very old fleet of aircraft. They are not able to do the 
job.
  Equally important, in the technology area where we really should be 
more aggressive and where we really have the capability of having a 
huge impact along the border through surveillance capabilities--not 
necessarily require people, but it can be done by electronics such as 
unmanned aerial vehicles--we only have one flying the border. 
Regrettably, that one crashed today. It is ironic that we have this 
amendment on the floor. The one UAV we have actually crashed. So we 
don't really have unmanned aerial surveillance. This is in the Arizona 
area.
  We think actually we should not only have one but that we should have 
a fair number of UAVs on the border. The situation with the purchase 
and buildup of UAVs is that if we are to stay with the present budget 
projections, we wouldn't have the full compliment that we would need 
for 4 or 5 years.
  The amendment I offer today is an amendment to try to address the 
capital needs of border security in the Customs account, in the Coast 
Guard account, in the Border Patrol account, and in the ICE account--
the capital operational needs, not the people on the ground but the 
capital needs which are deemed to be in an emergency distress 
situation.
  Why is this justifiable on this bill? Because this bill is about 
defense, especially relative to terrorism. Yet fighting the war in Iraq 
is critical to this war on terrorism, and fighting the war in 
Afghanistan is critical to the war on terrorism, but I think equally 
important is making sure that our borders are secure.
  That is as big an issue as we have today in the area of fighting the 
war on terrorism. We can't be effective on that issue unless we have 
the resources and the people in order to take care of securing the 
border. We are moving toward getting the people, and we are bringing 
them on line as fast as we can in the context of our capability to hire 
new people. But what we do not have is the resources to be able to 
support these folks.
  This amendment will essentially accomplish that. It will add money 
for airplanes, and specifically to try to address the issue of flying 
all of these P-3s that are so old. The vast majority of this money will 
be for aircraft--over $700 million of it. It will add money for 
purchasing more UAVs so we can get these UAVs in the air sooner rather 
than later.
  It cost about $30 million to put one of these up, to put the 
electronics behind it and the command center behind it. It will add 
money for purposes of construction so that as we add these new Border 
Patrol agents and these other new agents in these other departments, 
they will have the physical facilities to be able to handle their day-
to-day operational needs.
  It will add cars and SUVs, which are so critical, especially in some 
of these harsh frontier-type environments which they face along the 
border. It adds helicopters. Almost all the helicopters they are flying 
today are 20 years over their useful life. We replace those.
  In the area of the Coast Guard, it will put in the water the type of 
boats they need in order to chase down the boats that are basically 
being used for illegal transportation of people into this country. And 
it will also assist the Coast Guard in advancing their aircraft 
capability in that area.
  All of this is critical to putting in place the infrastructure to 
make sure that as we put the people on the ground, they have the assets 
necessary in order to effectively control the borders.
  It is an emergency. These facilities are either not there today, such 
as in the case of UAVs, or they are not working well today, such as in 
the case of the P-3s, or they simply have not been ungraded to the 
point of being effective as we move forward with this larger basically 
human commitment on the ground, such as in the case of headquarters and 
facilities for these folks to work out of, helicopters to move them 
around, and automobiles to move them around, or fast craft for the 
Coast Guard to use to get out there and do their job.
  It needs to be stressed that this amendment is completely paid for. 
It is paid for within the context of the President's initial 
presentation. The President sent up here initially a $92 billion 
proposal for emergency spending for the purposes of fighting the war on 
terror and addressing the issue of Katrina. Of that $92 billion, 
approximately $69 billion was specifically for fighting the war.
  We have basically reallocated within that $69 billion money to pay 
for this initiative. I feel very strongly, as do the cosponsors of this 
bill--and I will get to who the cosponsors are of this bill because it 
is important--that this issue be addressed sooner rather than later; 
that we give our Border Patrol agents the tools they need, Customs the 
tools they need, the Coast Guard the tools they need, in order to 
secure the border.
  This will be a major step forward in making sure we accomplish this 
goal. The goal is to make sure, at least on the southern border, that 
we know who is coming across the border, that we can control that 
border, and we do it in the near term rather than waiting for the long 
term.
  It is a fully paid-for amendment, keeping the proposal the President 
sent up here, keeping the integrity of that proposal, relative to the 
top line number which was about $92.5 billion. So this amendment is 
done in that context. It does not take money from the additions that 
came out of committee. I happen to believe those additions were 
inappropriate. I am hopeful they will all fall by the wayside except 
for the avian flu one which is a legitimate emergency, and that when 
this bill is completed, either in the Senate or in the conference, it 
will be back to the original number prepared by the President.
  I suppose I could have gone into the additional funding and taken it 
right out of that, but that would not be a legitimate approach. I am 
trying to make sure this offset is legitimate to the initial number 
which was $92 billion.

[[Page 5872]]

  This amendment is cosponsored by myself, by the majority leader, 
Senator Frist, who has been a tremendous advocate for this type of 
initiative, and by the senior Senator on the Democratic side, Senator 
Byrd, who also happens to be the ranking member of the Committee on 
Appropriations and the ranking member of the Subcommittee on Homeland 
Security. I very much appreciate Senator Byrd's cosponsorship and 
obviously greatly appreciate Senator Frist's cosponsorship.
  Again, I stress none of this would be able to be accomplished had it 
not been for the efforts which were well beyond what one might have 
expected from the Senator from Mississippi who a year and a half ago--
after the administration regrettably sent up a budget which was 
woefully short because they allocated incorrectly for homeland 
security--he came forward and gave us an allocation which allowed us to 
put in place the people on the ground, the extra 1,500 border people, 
the extra beds which we are now trying to give to the backup facilities 
with what I would call a capital funding initiative for emergency 
capital needs of the Border Patrol. It was the Senator from 
Mississippi, the chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, who was 
able to get us on this path to a constructive and appropriate approach 
for addressing the border issue.
  I believe the amendment is at the desk and I ask it be reported.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from New Hampshire [Mr. Gregg], for himself, 
     Mr. Frist, and Mr. Byrd, proposes an amendment numbered 3594.

  Mr. GREGG. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose: To provide, with an offset, emergency funding for border 
                           security efforts)

       At the appropriate place, insert the following:

                       TITLE __--BORDER SECURITY

       EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR BORDER SECURITY

                    Department of Homeland Security


            office of the secretary and executive management

       For an additional amount for the ``Office of the Secretary 
     and Executive Management'' to provide funds for the Office of 
     Policy, $2,000,000: Provided, That the entire amount is 
     solely for a contract with an independent non-Federal entity 
     to conduct a needs assessment for comprehensive border 
     security: Provided further, That the entire amount is 
     designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 
     402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the concurrent 
     resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.


                office of the chief information officer

       For an additional amount for the ``Office of the Chief 
     Information Officer'' to replace and upgrade law enforcement 
     communications, $50,000,000, to remain available until 
     expended: Provided, That the entire amount is designated as 
     an emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. 
     Res. 95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the 
     budget for fiscal year 2006.


   united states visitor and immigration status indicator technology

       For an additional amount for ``United States Visitor and 
     Immigration Status Indicator Technology'' to accelerate 
     biometric database integration and conversion to 10-print 
     enrollment, $60,000,000, to remain available until expended: 
     Provided, That none of the additional appropriations made 
     available under this heading may be obligated until the 
     Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and the House of 
     Representatives receive and approve a plan for the 
     expenditure of such funds: Provided further, That the entire 
     amount is designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to 
     section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the 
     concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.

                     Customs and Border Protection


                         salaries and expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Salaries and Expenses'', 
     $180,000,000, of which $80,000,000 is for border patrol 
     vehicle replacement and $100,000,000 is for sensor and 
     surveillance technology: Provided, That none of the 
     additional appropriations made available under this heading 
     may be obligated until the Committees on Appropriations of 
     the Senate and the House of Representatives receive and 
     approve a plan for expenditure of these funds: Provided 
     further, That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.


 air and marine interdiction, operations, maintenance, and procurement

       For an additional amount for ``Air and Marine Interdiction, 
     Operations, Maintenance, and Procurement'' to replace air 
     assets and upgrade air operations facilities, $790,000,000, 
     to remain available until expended, of which $40,000,000 is 
     for helicopter replacement and $750,000,000 is for 
     recapitalization of air assets: Provided, That none of the 
     additional appropriations made available under this heading 
     may be obligated until the Committees on Appropriations of 
     the Senate and the House of Representatives receive and 
     approve an expenditure plan for the complete recapitalization 
     of Customs and Border Protection air assets and facilities: 
     Provided further, That the entire amount is designated as an 
     emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 
     95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget 
     for fiscal year 2006.


                              construction

       For an additional amount for ``Construction'', 
     $120,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That none of the additional appropriations made available 
     under this heading may be obligated until the Committees on 
     Appropriations of the Senate and the House of Representatives 
     receive and approve a plan for expenditure for these funds: 
     Provided further, That the entire amount is designated as an 
     emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 
     95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget 
     for fiscal year 2006.

                  Immigration and Customs Enforcement


                         salaries and expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Salaries and Expenses'' to 
     replace vehicles, $80,000,000: Provided, That the entire 
     amount is designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to 
     section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the 
     concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.

                       United States Coast Guard

               acquisition, construction and improvements

       For an additional amount for ``Acquisition, Construction, 
     and Improvements'' for acquisition, construction, renovation, 
     and improvement of vessels, aircraft, and equipment, 
     $600,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.

                Federal Law Enforcement Training Center


     acquisition, construction, improvements, and related expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Acquisition, Construction, 
     Improvements, and Related Expenses'' for construction of the 
     language training facility referenced in the Master Plan and 
     information technology infrastructure improvements, 
     $18,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.

                     GENERAL PROVISIONS--THIS TITLE


                          reduction in funding

       Sec. __. (a) Reduction.--Except as provided in subsection 
     (b), the aggregate amount provided by chapter 3 of title I of 
     this Act and chapter 3 of title II of this Act may not exceed 
     $68,962,188,000.
       (b) Inapplicability to Amounts for Military Construction.--
     Subsection (a) does not apply to amounts provided by chapter 
     3 of title I of this Act and chapter 3 of title II of this 
     Act for military construction.

  Mr. GREGG. I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, the Senator from Georgia has indicated he 
wishes to speak on the amendment and I defer to him.
  Mr. ISAKSON. I commend the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire, 
the chairman of the Committee on the Budget, on the offering of this 
amendment for the emergency supplemental. This is so important.
  We went through 2 weeks of debate prior to the Easter recess where we 
ended up doing nothing on the issue of immigration and illegal 
immigration. We did nothing because there was a fear in this country 
and there is a fear in this Senate that no matter what we do, if we do 
not fix the borders first, secure the borders first, there is no way 
whatever to have true, meaningful immigration reform legislation.
  The distinguished chairman of the Committee on the Budget, in his 
original budget document and now again in this amendment, is proposing 
exactly what the United States of America must do; that is, appropriate 
the money to fulfill the promises to secure the border so we can gain 
control of our immigration system and return to

[[Page 5873]]

a system where people come to this country to work and to enjoy new 
lives and prosperity legally, where our borders are secure and our 
Nation is more secure.
  I rise for a moment to point out that this amendment in and of itself 
to this emergency supplemental is, without question, the most 
significant component to the issue of illegal immigration and gaining 
control of our borders. I urge all of my colleagues in this Senate, 
when this amendment comes to a vote, to vote in favor of it. Only 
through appropriating the money and actually spending the money to make 
the investment, to improve the eyes in the skies in terms of unmanned 
aerial vehicles, to improve the boots on the ground, to more Border 
Patrol officers--the only way to do it is not with promises of 
authorizations but with the commitment of appropriations.
  I commend the Senator from New Hampshire. I thank the Chair for the 
time. I urge all Senators to vote in favor of this amendment to secure 
the borders of the United States of America.
  I yield back the remainder of my time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the 
committee amendment be agreed to, that the bill as thus amended be 
considered as original text for the purpose of further amendment, and 
that no points of order be waived by this request.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  (The committee amendment in the nature if a substitute was agreed 
to.)
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I appreciate the cooperation of Senators 
in laying this groundwork for the further consideration and debate of 
this bill. I particularly appreciate the comments of the Senator from 
New Hampshire with respect to the situation regarding funding for 
border security activities, programs, and equipment necessary to help 
guarantee the strict enforcement of our laws and to ensure integrity of 
our borders. His suggestion in this amendment is going to result in a 
major step forward in achieving our goals.
  His comments about our efforts when the Department of Homeland 
Security was initially established and funding for various activities 
under the jurisdiction of that Department are appreciated very much, 
but his leadership is demonstrating we can do a better job. He has made 
another suggestion in the offering of this amendment that carries out 
that past practice of identifying ways to use funds wisely, make 
investments in equipment, personnel, and strategies that will lead to a 
higher level of security for our country.
  The offset identified in the bill for adding this money takes it away 
from certain Defense appropriations activities. We have consulted with 
the chairman of that subcommittee, the distinguished Senator from 
Alaska, Mr. Stevens, and this offset can be accommodated, I have been 
advised, and without doing detriment to any military activities funded 
in this bill.
  Unless there is a Senator who wishes to be heard in opposition or 
requesting a vote on this amendment, I recommend this amendment be 
accepted.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
  Mr. SCHUMER. I have no objections to the amendment of the Senator 
from New Hampshire and would be fully supportive of it.
  I will speak on another issue for about 5 minutes. I thank my 
colleague from West Virginia, our great leader, for ceding the time.
  From one end of New York to the other, all the talk this past week 
has been on the high price of gasoline, the high price of oil, the high 
price of all petroleum products. Oil prices went up to $75 a barrel. 
Gasoline went up 40 cents in 1 month.
  This is not only burning a hole in people's wallets and pocketbooks, 
but it is also putting a real crimp in our economy. In upstate New 
York, in New York City, we depend on tourism. Fewer people will drive, 
fewer people will come. People are making decisions not to buy that 
extra outfit of clothes for youngsters, not to take the trip to see the 
grandkids because of the high price of gas and oil.
  Yet, today, when the President spoke about this issue for the first 
time, we did not hear what we needed to hear. The President seems to 
think that gouging is a problem of the corner gas station. It is not. 
It is a problem of the dwindling number of large behemoth oil 
companies. We did not hear from the President the five words we need to 
hear: Get tough with big oil.
  That is the problem. Of course we have a supply and demand problem. 
We know that. The big oil companies, faced with no competition, take 
advantage of every twist and turn. Katrina occurs and the price 
naturally would have gone up, but it goes up higher, stays high longer, 
and spreads to more areas than need be because the oil companies are 
taking advantage.
  Now we have had the changeover to summer fuels. Again, that cuts down 
production for a short period of time. But the big oil companies take 
advantage and keep the price high for too long. Over the last 5 years, 
never has production been as low as it has been today and stayed so 
low.
  The bottom line is simple. We let--and this happened under Republican 
and Democratic Presidents--we let 20 oil companies become only 5. When 
there are so few, there is no competition. And who pays the price? The 
American consumer and the American economy.
  The record profits are not an accident or part of free market 
capitalism. When you have so few energy producers, you are going to be 
taken advantage of. That is what the average citizen has found.
  To ask for an FTC investigation, as the President did, about gouging, 
without mentioning big oil, does not make sense because it sure as heck 
is not the corner gasoline station.
  The bottom line is we need to do three things: First, we most 
definitely need to conserve much more than we have. The fact that 
China's miles per gallon standards are higher than ours--and China is 
hardly an environmental country; they are doing it for economic 
purposes--should make us hang our heads in shame. We need a crash 
program to find new energy sources.
  I, for one, am not averse to finding more fossil fuels while we wait 
for the new energy source to come online. The amount of money the 
President has proposed in this budget to do that is paltry.
  Finally, we should, for the first time, seriously consider breaking 
up the big oil companies. As long as they have a stranglehold on us, we 
are not going to solve this problem. As long as they want to have 
fossil fuels be the dominant way we power ourselves and keep the prices 
high as possible and work in cahoots with places such as OPEC, we are 
not going to solve this problem. When there were 20 competitors, we 
always faced the fact that 2 or 3 would say I am going to expand market 
share by keeping the price a little lower. Not anymore. It does not 
happen.
  When you ask, why have things gotten so much worse with oil prices 
and gasoline prices, part of it is supply and demand, but part of it is 
we let the antidote to collusion and gouging--good old-fashioned 
American competition--go by the wayside in the oil industry.
  At some point I will be offering an amendment that we do a serious 
study about whether to and how to break up big oil as was once done 
about 100 years ago. I don't think there is any other solution that 
makes sense.
  From President Bush, we finally heard some talk. But talk is cheap. 
The price of gasoline is not. We need serious action on conservation, 
on new energy sources, and on dealing with big oil if we are going to 
solve this problem and keep America as strong as possible.
  I thank my colleague from West Virginia and yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.
  Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, I thank the very able Senator.
  Last month, the Senate began debate on immigration and border 
security legislation, part of which would authorize a whole host of 
items intended to secure our borders. The legislation

[[Page 5874]]

would authorize the hiring of additional Border Patrol agents. The 
legislation would authorize the hiring of additional immigration 
enforcement agents and detention officers. The legislation would 
authorize border surveillance technology and unmanned aerial vehicles.
  However, the immigration bill is just an authorization bill. Now, if 
we are serious about border security, we must approve real dollars--
real dollars.
  Together with our colleague, Senator Larry Craig, and with the 
support of my Homeland Security Subcommittee chairman, Senator Judd 
Gregg, I led the effort in the Senate last year to appropriate hard 
dollars to begin to put real teeth into our border security agenda. We 
did not merely authorize the hiring of more Border Patrol agents; we 
appropriated hard cash, hard dollars to hire 500 more Border Patrol 
agents as well as more immigration enforcement agents and detention 
officers. The administration opposed this effort. But those 500 Border 
Patrol agents have been hired. They have been trained. They are now 
deployed on our borders defending our Nation and making us more secure.
  As we continue to hire more Border Patrol agents and other 
immigration enforcement officials, we need to give them the tools they 
need to do their job. Yes. We need to start paying for those tools now 
so they will be available as more and more Border Patrol agents and 
immigration enforcement officials are hired and trained.
  The Border Patrol needs new helicopters because the average age of 
its helicopters is nearly 40 years. The average age of our Customs 
primary fixed-wing aircraft is 30 years. All of our border enforcement 
officials, including the newly hired officials, need more vehicles, 
including all-terrain vehicles, high-endurance vehicles, and more buses 
to transport and remove illegal aliens. More radios are needed and 
other communications equipment, especially for those individuals 
operating in remote desert areas along our border.
  Customs and Border Protection has a requirement for 18 unmanned 
aerial vehicles or UAVs. The immigration bill authorizes more UAVs, but 
until this morning, we had only one UAV operating on our border.
  At 5:49 a.m. this morning, where were you? I was asleep. I bet you 
were, too. At 5:49 a.m. this morning, that one UAV crashed--get that, 
now--it crashed in the Arizona desert. Clearly, one UAV system is not 
adequate.
  The amendment that Homeland Security Chairman Gregg is offering this 
afternoon provides $1.9 billion--$1.9 billion--in real dollars for our 
aging border security infrastructure. As ranking member on the Homeland 
Security Subcommittee, I support that funding. It provides $120 million 
for fencing and tactical border infrastructure, including an additional 
$20 million for the fence being constructed in San Diego. It provides--
hear me, now--$790 million for new helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft, 
UAVs, and the facilities to house and maintain them. It provides $60 
million for replacement vehicles for our border and immigration 
personnel. It provides over $150 million for communications equipment 
and sensors and cameras and other technology along our border. That 
ain't all, either. That ain't all. You better believe it. It provides 
$60 million to expedite the interoperability of the FBI and Homeland 
Security fingerprint databases so that we can have greater confidence 
about whom we allow to enter this country.
  We know that as security at our land borders is tightened, illegal 
aliens, drug runners, and, yes, terrorists also--terrorists--will turn 
to our waterways for entry into this country, our country.
  According to Coast Guard statistics, the flow of illegal aliens 
through our waterways has more than doubled in the last 10 years, and 
it will continue to grow. It will continue to grow. The administration 
has concluded that international migration ``will be one of the most 
important factors affecting maritime security through the next 10 
years'' and that ``a significant commitment of security resources'' is 
necessary. Yet--could you believe it--the President did not request any 
supplemental money for the Coast Guard to repair, replace, or enhance 
its ships, its planes, and its helicopters.
  The Coast Guard secures our waterways, but the Coast Guard is doing 
it with ships and planes that, in some cases, date back to World War 
II. Man, that is a long time. How about that--doing it with ships and 
planes that, in some cases, date back to World War II? This has 
resulted in a huge gap between operational commitments and operational 
capabilities. For instance, total Coast Guard patrol boat hours were 
only 75,000 in 2004, compared to 100,000 hours in 1998. Under the 
administration's deepwater modernization plan, this gap will not be 
closed until 2012. Now, I wonder if I will be around that long. This 
gap will not be closed until 2012, at the earliest. How about that? Do 
you believe it? How about that?
  Current Coast Guard maritime patrol airplanes can only provide half 
of the hours required to meet operational commitments. At the same 
time, funding constraints require maintenance on Coast Guard ships and 
planes to be deferred more and more every year. You may not be around 
that long, either. No. Who knows? From fiscal years 2001 to 2005, the 
Coast Guard deferred over $121 million in maintenance needed for its 
surface fleet and $159 million in maintenance needed for its air 
assets.
  The administration has ignored this problem--ignored this problem--
for too long. Recent budget requests by this administration have 
allowed this crisis to fester, and fester. The pending amendment 
provides $600 million to accelerate the Coast Guard's program to 
modernize its fleet of ships and planes.
  This funding will provide for seven additional maritime patrol 
airplanes and three new patrol boats. The funding in the amendment 
would also allow the Coast Guard to retrofit and arm its helicopters, 
refurbish existing medium endurance ships, accelerate the production of 
new medium endurance ships, and provide the technology necessary for 
commanders to speak to each other through a common operating 
environment. This level of funding is consistent with the recently 
filed Coast Guard authorization conference report.
  The President often says that we live in a post-9/11 world. Frankly, 
the Coast Guard's fleet of ships and planes is fit for the last 
century. To properly secure the maritime domain, the Coast Guard needs 
a fleet fit for this century--the here and now, this century.
  If we are truly serious--and I hope we are--about securing our 
borders and not just engaging in rhetoric and hot air, then we will put 
real dollars--real dollars--where the rubber hits the road.
  So, Mr. President, I urge my colleagues to support the Gregg 
amendment, the amendment offered by Senator Judd Gregg, of which I am a 
principal cosponsor.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I know of no further Senators seeking 
recognition on this amendment. I, too, support it.
  I am advised that the leader wants to speak on the amendment.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, I understand we are on the Gregg amendment 
now, and that will proceed under some fashion or form. I wish to take a 
few minutes to talk about an amendment I will offer when this amendment 
is dispensed with one way or the other.
  I wish to announce my intention to offer an amendment to this 
supplemental bill to ensure that Federal funding appropriated for 
workforce investment is used to help people in genuine need and not to 
pay exorbitant salaries or bonuses to program executives.
  The amendment I will be offering would address a gross abuse of 
Federal funds that was exposed recently in a

[[Page 5875]]

State audit of the Central Iowa Employment and Training Consortium, or 
CIETC. The audit showed that three executives of this program were paid 
nearly $1.8 million over the past 2\1/2\ years. The chief executive 
officer alone received almost $800,000 in salary and bonuses over that 
period of time, which is nearly 8 times the salary paid to the Governor 
of Iowa.
  Obviously, these levels of compensation are exorbitant and 
outrageous. What happened at CIETC is a scandalous abuse of the public 
funds and of the public trust. It is also scandalous that these 
inflated salaries, technically speaking, may not be illegal under 
current law. The law states that executives in workforce enactment 
programs will be paid a ``reasonable'' salary. Unfortunately, that is a 
very elastic definition. There will always be a few bad apples, people 
who will stretch that definition in ways that are clearly unethical and 
wrong, even if not technically illegal.
  On that score, CIETC is the only abuse that has come to light so far, 
to my knowledge. It is sort of the one bad apple in a program with an 
otherwise outstanding track record. Even one case of abuse is one too 
many. My amendment will ensure that there is no repetition of this very 
unfortunate incident.
  To that end, my amendment encourages States to set maximum 
compensation levels for individuals employed by programs funded under 
the Workforce Investment Act, taking into account factors such as the 
State's cost of living, compensation levels for comparable State or 
local government employees, and the size of a State's job training 
program. In cases where a State fails to set a maximum salary, my 
amendment would impose a nationwide maximum equal to the Federal 
executive level of salary.
  After the State audit of the Central Iowa Employment and Training 
Consortium was released on March 31, I urged the U.S. Department of 
Labor inspector general to launch a thorough investigation, and that 
investigation is now in progress. In addition, Iowa's State government 
is conducting a parallel investigation. I asked both the Federal and 
State investigators to report back to me with recommendations for 
preventing a repeat of the abuse that has occurred at CIETC. However, 
we can and should act now to fix the glaring problem here, which is the 
absence of any fixed ceiling on executive compensation in Workforce 
Investment Act programs.
  Again, my preference, and the way the amendment is structured, would 
be for each State to set their compensation level. In cases where 
States fail to act, my amendment would set a maximum executive salary 
level across the Nation at executive level 2, which would be $165,000 a 
year maximum; that is salary and bonuses, total compensation. As I 
said, that is equivalent to the Federal level 2 compensation.
  Now, why did we pick that? Because that is the same maximum level 
that was set a few years ago for salaries in the Head Start Program 
when we uncovered a similar kind of abuse that was going on in the Head 
Start Program. So that is the level there. There had been several 
isolated incidents of exorbitant salaries in the Head Start Program and 
they have stopped, thanks to that salary cap.
  Clearly, $165,000 a year is a very substantial salary, but it might 
be appropriate in certain circumstances; for example, in the case of an 
executive who is administering a very large Workforce Investment Act 
program, or one that is located in a high-cost city or State.
  We need to establish executive compensation caps in the WIA-funded 
programs. As a ranking member of the Senate subcommittee that funds job 
training, I find it hard to get that funding. I fight hard because I 
know that quality job training provides a ladder or ramp of opportunity 
to many thousands of hard-pressed Americans, including individuals with 
disabilities and people who are laid off due to plant closings.
  Workforce Investment Act programs have proved themselves to be 
enormously effective. They have earned broad bipartisan support.
  There are four core programs under title I of the act:
  No. 1, assistance to disadvantaged adults, including people with 
disabilities, to assist them in entering the workforce;
  No. 2, assistance to dislocated workers;
  No. 3, training and placement services for job seekers; and
  No. 4, assistance to low-income youths under the age of 21, including 
tutoring, dropout prevention, job training, and adult mentoring.
  Funding for Workforce Investment Act programs is chronically scarce 
and inadequate. On the one hand, we want the discretion to pay salaries 
that will attract talented administrators, and we need to keep in mind 
local cost of living considerations. But it is unacceptable--it is a 
betrayal of the public trust--when unethical individuals use scarce WIA 
funds to pay themselves inflated and totally unjustified salaries and 
bonuses. Current law creates an opening that makes this kind of abuse 
possible. But by setting a nationwide compensation cap that would 
include not only salaries but bonuses, we can prevent future abuse.
  That is the purpose of my amendment. I think it is urgently needed. I 
had a conversation a little bit ago with Senator Ensign, who has been 
working on the Workforce Investment Act reauthorization bill. My staff 
is working together with his at this time to make sure that what we are 
trying to do corresponds. Now, you might say maybe we should wait until 
WIA is reauthorized. I hope it is, but the year is clicking by and we 
have a lot on our plate. It is a short work year. I am not sure if we 
are going to get it done. I might add that in the Job Corps Program 
there is also a compensation cap, and that is a level 1. Head Start was 
level 2. So we thought for Workforce Investment Act job training 
programs it ought to be probably at about level 2, maximum. Keep in 
mind, States can set it lower than that. It is based upon the size of 
the job and the cost of living factors and other factors. But they 
cannot go over that. That is what happened in Iowa. Unethical people 
were paying themselves, in one case, up to $800,000 per annum in 
salaries and bonuses, which is 8 times what the Governor makes.
  So I intend to offer this amendment at some point later on when the 
Gregg amendment is disposed of in some fashion or another. I hope I can 
have the support of my colleagues in adopting this salary cap on 
Workforce Investment Act programs.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, 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. DORGAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, we are on the supplemental appropriations 
bill, I understand. I heard the presentations by the chairman of the 
Appropriations Committee and the ranking member earlier today. I would 
be remiss if I didn't first compliment both of them. This is not an 
easy job. It is difficult putting together legislation such as this and 
bringing it to the floor of the Senate. I compliment Senator Cochran 
and Senator Byrd for their diligent work.
  I know that others will speak at some length about various pieces of 
this bill. I know the bill itself is controversial. I know there will 
be amendments perhaps to strip provisions that are in the bill. I wish 
to speak specifically about legislation that I added, along with 
Senator Burns and others on the Appropriations Committee, dealing with 
agricultural disasters. I wish to do that because I think there is a 
feeling by some that somehow this extra money that is a part of this 
legislation to try to respond to agricultural disasters or disasters 
faced by family farmers is something called pork, as some would put it, 
or is unnecessary, is extraneous, is unworthy. I wish to talk about 
that.

[[Page 5876]]

  There is not a lot of talk on the floor of the Senate about family 
farming because I think, with the exception of perhaps one person here, 
we are not farmers. We don't get up in the morning on the farm. We 
don't milk cows in the morning. We don't check the cattle at night. We 
are Senators. We work here on the floor of the Senate. We give 
speeches, go to committee hearings, and travel back and forth on 
weekends, but we don't run a family farm.
  Family farmers in this country by their very nature are risk takers. 
They don't know what is ahead. They are going to plant a seed and hope 
it grows. They plant a seed in the spring, and they hope that somehow 
they will harvest in the fall. They hope that after they plant that 
seed, they will get enough rain but, they hope, not too much rain. They 
hope they don't face a drought. If they get just enough rain, then they 
get a crop. Then they hope when they get the crop that between when the 
rains come and the crops are ready to harvest, they don't have bugs, 
they don't have grasshoppers, they don't have disease on that crop. And 
then if, by chance, they are able to harvest that grain, they truck it 
to the elevator, and they are told by the elevator: This is the price. 
This is what the world price is. This is what the market price is. This 
is what the posted price is. If it is not what you expect, if it is 
below what it cost you to produce it, that is tough luck, that is the 
price.
  So farmers take all those risks. Because they are substantial, we 
have decided for many decades in this country to build a bridge across 
those price valleys, to say to farmers: When times get tough, you are 
not alone. You are living out there on the land, under the yard light 
all by yourself taking those risks, and we want you to know when times 
get tough, this country wants to keep farmers on the farm. That is why 
we have a farm program.
  The farm program used to have a disaster title. It doesn't any 
longer. I wish it did. I think it should, but it doesn't. We have had 
to do disaster programs now on an ad hoc basis. So we added a disaster 
provision to this supplemental appropriations bill. We do that because 
we have had weather-related disasters all around the country. In the 
Gulf Coast we had a devastating disaster, perhaps the worst natural 
disaster in the history of this country, called Hurricane Katrina. I 
can't pretend to know what it did to the Gulf of Mexico, to the people 
who live in the Gulf Coast region, in Louisiana and Mississippi and 
elsewhere. But my heart goes out to them, and I have wanted to be a 
part of everything that is done here in the Congress to extend our hand 
to them to say: You are not alone. This country wants to help. This 
country insists on helping in a time of need.
  Family farmers in the gulf, I understand, got hit hard as well and, 
in many cases, lost their entire crops, just gone. We should and we 
will, and with this legislation, we did provide help to them. With this 
legislation, we say: If you planted a crop or if you couldn't plant a 
crop and your crop was destroyed, we are going to help you with a 
disaster plan. Our point was that there are farmers in the gulf who 
desperately need help, and there are farmers in other parts of the 
country who need help as well.
  I want to show you a couple of pictures. This is of a little town 
called Souris, ND. This town called Souris, ND, as you can see, was 
inundated with water in June of 2005, with torrential rains that were 
just devastating, torrential rains that came to this area and several 
other areas of my State. The result was over 1 million acres--over 1 
million acres--couldn't even be planted. Those farmers who had those 
acres, they didn't have a crop. They had a building and a family and a 
yard light, but they had nothing to harvest because they couldn't get 
anything planted. Another nearly 1 million acres was planted and then 
washed away by these torrential rains.
  Another scene in Souris, ND. I could show many pictures of exactly 
the same circumstance in parts of my State that suffered devastating 
flooding. These farmers need help. Other farmers in States such as 
Illinois, for example, where they had the third driest year last year 
since 1895, are facing a drought. They too need help.
  Last December, I offered a disaster amendment to the Defense 
Appropriations bill when we were in conference. The Senate conferees 
accepted it, and the House conferees rejected it. That is what brought 
us to this position on this emergency supplemental of offering another 
disaster bill. The support in bringing that package to the floor of the 
Senate by Senator Cochran, who has always been a very strong advocate 
and supporter of family farming and American agriculture, and the 
support by Senator Byrd and others when we offered this in the Senate 
Appropriations Committee, was very heartening. It was approved 
unanimously in the Appropriations Committee. So it now exists on the 
floor of the Senate. It is, in many cases, the distance between being 
able to continue farming and being forced off the land for a good many 
families in this country.
  We have a fellow in North Dakota named Rodney Nelson who writes. He 
is a farmer and a rancher in Elmont, ND. He wrote a question once. He 
wrote a question on a piece of paper, and then asked this. He said: 
What is it worth?
  He was talking about farming. He said: What is it worth? What is it 
worth for a kid to know how to weld a seam? What is it worth for a kid 
to know how to build a lean-to? What is it worth for a kid to know how 
to drive a tractor, grease a combine? What is it worth for a kid to 
know how to butcher a hog? What is it worth for a kid to know all of 
these things? What is it worth for a kid to know how to teach a calf to 
suck milk from a pail? What is that worth? What is it worth to have a 
kid know how to plum a door? What is that worth?
  We know what it was worth in the Second World War. This country sent 
millions of young men, particularly off America's farms, all around the 
world to fight. They could do anything. They could fix machinery, they 
could overhaul an engine, they could do anything. They knew how to 
weld, they knew how to build, they could do anything. There is only one 
university in America where they teach that, and that is the American 
family farm. It is the only place where you get that education. And the 
question is, What is it worth? What is it worth to a country?
  That is the question I ask when we offer legislation to say that when 
family farmers get hit by torrential rains or drought, when family 
farmers get hit by devastating occurrences of weather that destroy 
their crops, destroy their ability to make a living, the question then 
is, Will Congress want to help? Should Congress help?
  The answer, in my judgment, is yes. It is important not just for 
those families living out on the farm; it is important for the 
character of this country.
  There was a wonderful author who wrote some remarkable books about 
small towns and family farms, and he talked about the seedbed of family 
values in America, in American history coming from family farms. And 
that seedbed of family values that comes from family farms and rolls on 
to small towns and big cities and nurtures and refreshes the character 
of this country is something that is very important to that which we 
call America. That is why the desire that I and my colleagues, 
Republicans and Democrats alike, have to offer a disaster piece on this 
emergency supplemental bill is so important. This isn't about words; it 
is about saying to families who were devastated by weather disasters, 
who are living out on the farm, far from town, under a yard light, 
struggling to try to make a living, raising a family, to say to them: 
We understand what you are facing. You are not alone, and we want to 
help. That is why this piece is in this legislation.
  Again, I compliment the chairman and I compliment the ranking member 
for their work.
  Let me mention one additional piece. A number of my colleagues today 
have mentioned the energy issue, particularly with respect to the price 
of gas and oil and the price of fuel. There isn't anybody hurt much 
more than family farmers with what is happening to the price of energy, 
and the price of gas and diesel, especially. Family farmers are heavy 
users of fuel. It is

[[Page 5877]]

the way they plant their crop in the spring, and it is the way they 
take their crop out in the fall, with the heavy use of fuel and the 
heavy use of nitrogen and fertilizer. So there is nobody that is hurt 
more by what is happening with the price of gas and oil than family 
farmers. It is devastating to them.
  This legislation also includes a partial offset with respect to a 
percent of direct payment that farmers receive as a result of what is 
happening on energy prices. But with respect to that, I want to make 
another point. We hear these days that what is happening with respect 
to the price of gas and oil is the function of the market. There is no 
market price that is a fair market price for oil. First, you have OPEC 
ministers that sit around a table from OPEC countries and talk about 
how much we should produce and how much we expect to get for it. That 
is No. 1. That is called a cartel; that is not a free market.
  Second, we have oil companies. They used to have one name, now two 
names, and sometimes three names. Why? Because they all got married, 
decided to merge; big, blockbuster mega mergers, bigger and stronger, 
with more raw muscle in the marketplace.
  Third is the futures market which is supposed to be a market that 
establishes pricing strategies, but the fact is it has become an orgy 
of speculation. It is an unbelievable orgy of speculation.
  So you have three things: The OPEC ministers, the bigger oil 
companies, bigger by merger, and then a massive amount of speculation 
on the futures market. Then we are told: Here is the price of oil, it 
is $73. If you don't like it, tough luck. If you don't like it, you do 
not understand; it is the free market. That is total baloney. There is 
no free market here. All the pain is on the side of the consumers who 
pay 50 bucks or 60 bucks for a tank of gas, and it is like hooking a 
hose right up to the pocketbook of the American people to suck money 
right into the treasury of Exxon. That is what this is about. I am not 
anti-oil. We produce oil in our State. We also are heavy users of 
energy in our State. But what I am feeling strongly about is not about 
profits, it is about profiteering.
  When companies decide they are going to ride this price in a way that 
injures the American people--and I believe what is happening today does 
do injury to the American people and is unfair and is not part of the 
so-called capitalistic market system--then I think Congress has a 
responsibility to act.
  The President said this morning the Federal Trade Commission should 
do an investigation. I and a couple of my colleagues wrote a piece of 
legislation last year that became law as part of the Energy bill that 
requires the Federal Trade Commission to do the investigation. If the 
President had called the FTC, he would have understood that they have 
been doing an investigation and will report sometime toward the end of 
May.
  I have to confess, however, that I believe the Federal Trade 
Commission has been dead largely from the neck up for some long while. 
I don't expect great results at the end of May, but, nonetheless, they 
are required and will be reporting the results of an investigation 
sometime in mid to late May.
  I believe there should be investigations. I believe the issue of 
market manipulation is real. When you have market manipulation or 
potential price gouging, the way the system works in this country, 
there ought to be a mechanism by which you investigate it and take 
action if necessary. But I believe in the meantime, when the price of 
oil goes where it has gone, and where, with the historical circumstance 
that in 2004, at $40 a barrel average price, the oil industry had the 
highest profits in their history; and now with the price of oil at $65 
and $70 and $72 a barrel, we have profits far in excess of that, 
despite the fact that the oil companies haven't done anything to 
generate those profits. They have just come. I believe those profits 
above the $40-a-barrel pricetag is a windfall.
  The oil companies say: Well, we need all those profits because we are 
sinking that back into the ground to look for more energy. If they were 
doing that, I wouldn't be here talking. But that is not what they are 
doing. They are buying back their own stock. They are drilling for oil 
on Wall Street. And, oh, by the way, there is no oil on Wall Street. 
That doesn't come from me, that comes from Business Week: Drilling for 
oil on Wall Street, and that is all about using the capital on Wall 
Street to become bigger through mergers, buying back stock, drilling 
for oil on Wall Street, or paying a retired CEO, according to press 
reports, up to $400 million for a retirement package. That is not a 
golden parachute, that is a platinum parachute, one that I have not 
heard of before.
  Does that anger the American people? It sure does, and they have a 
right to be angry. Something is wrong with this system.
  My colleague, Senator Dodd, and I offered an amendment last year that 
would have imposed a windfall profits rebate on profits above $40 a 
barrel at which price the oil companies have the largest profits in 
their entire history, and then we said this: But if those profits are 
used to sink back into the ground for additional exploration or to 
build refineries above ground, if those profits are invested back to 
expand the supply of energy which will inevitably, hopefully, reduce 
the price of energy, the price of gasoline, then they will not be 
subject to the windfall rebate. If the oil companies, in short, are 
doing what they say they are doing, then they will not be affected. If 
they are not, if they are buying back their stock and drilling for oil 
on Wall Street and paying executives $400 million for a retirement 
package, then they get hit with a windfall profits rebate. All of the 
money will be sent back to the American consumer as a rebate. All of 
it.
  It is not a revenue-raising measure. It is not designed for the 
purpose of raising money for the Government. It is designed for the 
purpose of righting a wrong: Taking the windfall profits and sending it 
back to the consumers as rebates from whence it came.
  We expect to offer that again. We didn't succeed last fall. I suppose 
someone could make the point that you didn't succeed because it wasn't 
a very good idea. I would disagree strongly. I think it is the right 
idea. My hope would be that when we offer it again on this supplemental 
that we will be successful. One way or another, I think the American 
people want this Congress and this President to stand for their 
interests.
  I know we have larger energy problems, longer term energy problems; I 
understand all that. We have price-gouging legislation, and we have all 
kinds of issues that we need to deal with. A good start would have been 
in early 2001 with the meetings for which we still have not received 
public information. Notwithstanding that, we are where we are today and 
we need to find our way out of this. The point I was trying to make is 
that no industry, no group of people are hurt more, in my judgment, 
than family farmers. All Americans are facing pretty stiff penalties 
with these prices, but family farmers are devastated by these gas and 
diesel prices. For that reason, I think it is ever more important for 
us to support the disaster package that has come as a part of this 
emergency legislation brought to the floor of the Senate today.
  Again, I will speak at another time on the floor about a couple of 
other pieces of this legislation. I am enormously proud to be a part of 
the Appropriations Committee. I think we have a great committee. We 
work well together. It is a bipartisan committee. I think the 
legislation we have brought to the floor, while not perfect, and while 
we might alter it in one way or another, I don't know, but I think 
given the President's request, this Senate is responding.
  Let me make this final point. One of the responses with this 
legislation is to replenish the accounts in the Department of Defense 
with respect to what we are asking our men and women to do in the 
service of our country. I think each time we have done that, the 
chairman and ranking member and every member of the Appropriations 
Committee has indicated that when we ask men and women to wear 
America's

[[Page 5878]]

uniform and go abroad and serve in harm's way, we are going to do 
everything conceivable, everything possible to fund that which is 
necessary for them to do their job. That is at least a part, a 
significant part, of this legislation as well.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, with the concurrence and approval of my 
chairman of the Appropriations Committee, I ask unanimous consent to 
set the pending amendment aside.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 3600

  Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, I send an amendment to the desk on behalf 
of myself and Senator Grassley.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows.

       The Senator from Iowa [Mr. Harkin], for himself and Mr. 
     Grassley, proposes an amendment numbered 3600.

  Mr. HARKIN. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose: To limit the compensation of employees funded through the 
                Employment and Training Administration)

       At the end of page 248, line 22, insert the following:
       Sec.   . None of the funds appropriated in Public Law 109-
     149 under the heading Employment and Training Administration 
     shall be used to pay the compensation of an individual, 
     either as direct costs or any proration as an indirect cost, 
     at a rate in excess of Executive Level II. Where Employment 
     and Training Administration funds appropriated in Public Law 
     109-149 are used for compensation of an individual, the total 
     federal funding that may go to compensation of that 
     individual shall not exceed a rate in excess of Executive 
     Level II. States may establish a lower limit of total 
     compensation for those receiving compensation from Employment 
     and Training Administration funding employed in that state, 
     taking into account factors including the relative cost-of-
     living in the state, the compensation levels for comparable 
     state or local government employees, and the size of the 
     organizations that administer federal programs involved 
     including Employment and Training Administration programs.

  Mr. HARKIN. Mr. President, this is the amendment about which I spoke 
a little while ago on the Senate floor regarding setting a maximum 
national cap on salaries and bonuses for people employed in the 
Workforce Investment Act programs across the United States. As I said 
earlier, States can set lower, but this would at least set a maximum 
which anyone could be paid in salaries and bonuses in any of those 
programs.
  I thank the chairman of the committee for being willing to let me set 
aside the amendment and offer this amendment.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington.


                                 Energy

  Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I come to the floor and join my 
colleagues on both sides of the aisle who have been here for the better 
part of today, discussing the President's comments this morning about 
energy legislation and about price gouging and about the Department of 
Justice and Federal Trade Commission investigation of energy prices.
  Many of my colleagues here in this body know how important this is, 
and how important it is that we move forward. Yet I think we have 
actually been investigating for months. The fact remains that we need 
to do a more aggressive job in looking at the issue of price gouging. 
Fifty-seven Senators here supported legislation in November of last 
year, giving the tools to the FTC, the attorneys general, and to 
individuals who are responsible at the Department of Justice to 
investigate price gouging. It is that same legislation that I think 
would help us in moving forward today, giving consumers confidence as 
they head into the summer driving season that we are doing everything 
in our power to get serious about a Federal price gouging ban and that 
we are going to make it a Federal crime.
  This legislation would create a new ban on price gouging during 
national energy emergencies, giving the President authority to declare 
that emergency. It would give the Federal Trade Commission and State 
AGs and the Department of Justice the ability to levy civil and 
criminal penalties for proven price gouging up to $3 million and 5 
years in jail. And, on an ongoing basis, it would put in place a new 
ban on market manipulation and giving false information to the FTC or 
the Department of Justice.
  If you think about it, it is similar to some of the requirements for 
those involved with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the 
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and the standards they are 
required to meet. This bill also gives the FTC the authority to levy 
fines up to $1 million for each violation of market manipulation, that 
is the market manipulation and false information prohibitions in this 
legislation.
  Some people would say $1 million for price gouging doesn't sound like 
a lot of penalties, but this is $1 million for each violation of the 
market manipulation ban. If you think about it, in the context of the 
market manipulation that is being discussed right now in the Enron 
trials, on an ongoing basis there were probably hundreds of instances 
of market manipulation related to Enron.
  My colleagues and I offered this price gouging legislation on the 
floor and it received 57 votes, so I think it is time the Senate comes 
together on a very aggressive approach to tell consumers that we will 
protect them this summer. The reason I say it is imperative we do this 
now is because for the last 5 years in the West we have suffered 
through the aftershocks of the western energy crisis. That is, we have 
suffered the consequences in my State of the market manipulation that 
Enron engaged in. And five years later, really, we have gotten very 
little relief from Federal regulators on that issue.
  What happens during periods of dysfunctional markets, where there is 
a lack of transparency, is that many people are hurt. Businesses are 
hurt, individual consumers are hurt, even school districts are hurt. We 
had one school district in Washington state that basically had to pay 
$2 million in additional energy costs because of Enron and manipulated 
energy prices, and thereby ended up not hiring teachers or buying 
books.
  All this leads to a simple and inescapable conclusion. And that is, 
when it comes to energy commodities that power our economy, we have to 
be very aggressive at protecting consumers. We need to do everything in 
our power right now at the Federal level to put us on the right course 
and to fashion legislation that will help protect consumers now.
  If you think about the President's request, he is saying the 
Department of Justice and the FTC should investigate. We do not even 
have the authorities and remedies in current law that would help in 
pursuing these cases and bring these individuals or corporations to 
justice if market manipulation is found. So I encourage my colleagues 
to move quickly on legislation that would give the Federal government 
the true tools we need to investigate market manipulation and to pursue 
remedies on behalf of consumers. Let's not wait several months into the 
summer season, as consumers are already being hurt at the pump, to come 
to this conclusion.
  Since we have already had 57 Senators, a majority of the Senate, 
support this legislation, why not pass it out of the Senate and give 
consumers the confidence that, as they hear the earnings reports from 
oil companies in which they are making billions in profits, we are not 
going to give them a pat on the back. Instead, we are going to give a 
helping hand, to protect American consumers at the pump this summer, as 
these prices are expected to continue to rise.


                   Unanimous Consent Request--S. 1735

  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the Commerce Committee be 
discharged from further consideration of S. 1735 and that the Senate 
proceed to immediate consideration of that legislation, that the 
Cantwell amendment which I am sending to the desk be considered and 
agreed to and the motion to reconsider be laid on the table, that the 
bill be read three times and passed, the motion to reconsider be laid 
on the

[[Page 5879]]

table, without intervening action or debate.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I hope my colleagues will consider this. 
This Senator will continue to be vocal on passing Federal legislation 
to make price gouging a crime. I hope this is legislation that we can 
take up in the next several days, or at least in the next weeks, so we 
are giving consumers before the Memorial Day recess the confidence that 
we have serious teeth in Federal legislation to protect them at the 
pump.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, by way of explanation, the objection was 
lodged because we are currently considering a supplemental 
appropriations bill on the floor of the Senate to appropriate funds to 
the Department of Defense, Department of State, and assist gulf states 
in recovery from the devastation cautioned by Hurricanes Rita and 
Katrina. The request posed by the distinguished Senator would have not 
only required the Senate to turn immediately to the consideration of 
the bill she is offering, but that it be considered read, the debate 
concluded, no amendments be in order, and that it be passed and the 
motion to reconsider be laid upon the table.
  It is the judgment of the managers of the bill that the thing to do 
now in the Senate is to complete action on this supplemental 
appropriations bill. Over $100 billion is being requested, approved by 
the Senate Appropriations Committee, to fund these needed activities, 
many of which are designed to protect our Nation's security. So under 
those circumstances I felt compelled to object.
  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. THOMAS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Thune). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  Mr. THOMAS. Mr. President, I will comment generally on the issue 
before the Senate, the issue of supplemental emergency spending.
  Obviously, these last number of years we have had some emergency 
activities. Whether they be the war on terror or Katrina, they are 
unusual expenditures. From time to time, everyone experiences that, 
whether in your personal life or in business. After unusual 
expenditures, we have to make some effort to make up for that special 
spending so we can get back within our budget, we can get back to 
holding down the deficit to do something about the financial situation 
caused by the unusual expenditures. That is tough. Nevertheless, it 
seems to me that is a principle which is very important.
  I will react a little bit to what seems to be the case in the Senate. 
We are talking about emergency spending. The bill we are debating today 
is expected to be about emergency spending. It is important we give a 
little thought to what that means and not be inclined to use this 
opportunity to make expenditures that would be very hard to entitle 
``emergency spending.''
  By definition, emergency spending is a supplement that breaks the 
caps and authorizes spending we did not account for or do not account 
for in the budget. Some expenditures are hard to justify. We have the 
``emergency'' regarding the war on terror; however, we have been in 
this for 4 years. We have known about it for some time. It did not 
happen instantly. Hurricane recovery ended almost 5 months ago. It is a 
little of a stretch to say these are emergencies we did not know about. 
We did know about them, and we passed our budget resolution without 
including them. In that sense, there was no reason to exclude them from 
the regular budget process.
  I understand that--hopefully--these are temporary expenditures. I 
will concede that a supplemental measure may be a more appropriate way 
to add the funds to the baseline budget. That said, the bill that 
resulted from emergency requests is then used to go beyond that scope, 
in some instances. Instead of narrowly controlling spending, this has 
become an overall opportunity for projects that have very little, if 
anything, to do with hurricane recovery or the war on terror but 
instead is used for a number of other items.
  Mr. President, $92.4 billion in additional spending was requested. We 
are now considering a bill of $106 billion. That is a substantial 
increase. That is a substantial excess of what could be termed 
``emergency spending.'' We ought to give it some consideration.
  The original request was far from pocket change, of course. It was a 
very large request in the beginning. Yet we apparently felt compelled 
to add significant new spending regardless of the size of that. Almost 
all spending can have an argument made for it. There is an endless 
need. We have to follow a procedure that puts some limits on what we 
do.
  I don't think there is any Member who does not believe that spending 
has gotten a bit out of control. If we look at the percentage of 
spending in our budgets over the last several years, it has gone up. 
There are many factors, including the consideration of the role of the 
Federal Government with respect to the State government and local 
government. Do we just continue to spend as if there is no end? I think 
not. Certainly, when we take a look at the deficit we have created, it 
has to be resolved.
  As I said, I am sure everything included involves a need of some 
kind. However, we have to set priorities. It seems to me we have a 
responsibility to the taxpayers to try to reconcile these unusual 
expenses we have had over the last several years and deal with those 
expenses so we get back to where we are with the budget, get back to 
where we are with a programmed movement toward reducing the deficit.
  I cannot think of anything that is more important than to be fiscally 
responsible for what we are doing. There is no end to requests for 
spending. I understand there are needs out there. However, I have come 
to the point where we have to take a look at where we are, what we are 
doing, what our constraints are, what they should be, and begin to 
exercise a little more constraint and responsibility. I am very 
uncomfortable moving entirely over to emergency spending on these big 
items and then coming up with the request for emergency spending and 
adding another $15 billion, or whatever the amount is, on top of that 
and putting it out there to deal with.
  I hope we do have discussions on these items. Quite frankly, I hope 
we can return to where we were so we can at least hold it to that 
amount requested for what is called emergency spending. If needed, we 
may have to offset something. I may offer an amendment that strikes 
altogether the spending earmarks that exceed the President's request. 
We ought to talk about that in terms not only of each individual 
expenditure, which we always do, but talk about it in terms of the 
policy, in terms of the overall direction we are taking and how we are 
going to resolve this issue of increasing spending and deficits. It is 
time to come to the hitching post and take a look at how we are going 
to do that. I look forward to the debate that will take place.
  I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. BIDEN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. BIDEN. Mr. President, as I understand the state of play on the 
floor--I have been at meetings--it is that I should withhold offering 
any amendment now. But I am going to speak to an amendment I will be 
offering during the debate on the emergency supplemental bill.
  When we last debated budget matters here on the floor, I came to the 
floor to

[[Page 5880]]

indicate I was going to attempt to repeal the $2.6 billion in tax 
breaks the Energy bill afforded the oil industry. I want to give my 
colleagues the context in which I raised it then, raise it now, and 
will raise it again.
  It is very easy, I understand--I have been here a long while--to 
demagog the oil prices and oil industries and big companies, and, when 
things get tough, to talk about blaming everybody's problems on profits 
of companies.
  Well, the President, today, spoke, as many of us have up to now, on 
the need to investigate and determine whether there is any gouging 
going on with energy prices today by American oil companies. But that 
is not why I am here at this moment.
  Senator Specter, the chairman of our Judiciary Committee, held a 
hearing in the Judiciary Committee a couple weeks ago, before the 
Easter recess, where he summoned, if I am not mistaken, the CEOs of the 
six largest oil companies. It may have been only four oil companies and 
one gas company and one energy company. But I think it was six. I will 
get for the Record exactly how many. But he included the chairman of 
the board of Exxon and other major oil companies. And the issue was 
whether there was some form of price fixing or gouging going on.
  It came my turn to question. There had been a good deal of discussion 
about how much money in annual profits and quarterly profits companies 
were making. At that time, it was reported that ExxonMobil reported the 
highest annual profits, $36 billion, of any corporation in American 
history. That was not a surprise in the sense that they have had a 
great windfall with oil prices.
  We were at our conference lunch today and someone said: Oil is going 
to go to $4 a gallon. And Senator Boxer, sitting next to me, said: It's 
already at $4 a gallon in my hometown in California.
  Well, it is well over $3 a gallon in most of our constituencies, and 
we are paying that money, in my view, because we lack an energy policy. 
We lack an energy policy. And the one that has been written has been 
written basically to benefit big oil and big gas.
  Since President Bush took office, oil prices have doubled, with at 
least a 100-percent increase, and high gas prices, that make us uneasy 
at the pump, have been very good for major oil companies. They are more 
flush than they have been anytime in history. Prices went up during 
Katrina. Six months later, we learned that all three oil companies made 
record profits of a total of $111 billion.
  So why am I on the Senate floor about this? Everybody knows this. I 
am stating the obvious. When it came my turn to question in the 
Judiciary Committee, I asked the question of the chairman of the board 
of Exxon--and Senator Specter had sworn all of the witnesses in, so 
they were testifying under oath. And I said: May I ask you a question, 
Mr. Chairman--the chairman of Exxon. Then I went down the line to the 
rest.
  I said: Are you aware of the incentives in the Energy bill we passed 
last year--that I voted against--which provided over $2.6 billion in 
incentives to oil companies in order for them to go out and find, 
invest, drill, and seek new resources and increase their capability to 
deliver to the market?
  He said: Yes, I'm aware of that.
  I said: Do you need that? In light of a $35 billion profit, is there 
anything you can tell me that would justify us giving the industry, 
including you, an extra $2.6 billion in incentives?
  I might add, so we put this in proportion, for $1.4 billion, we could 
put portals at every single major port in the world that could detect 
whether a cargo container had a radioactive device and/or a 
radiological device or a nuclear device in that cargo container. But it 
would cost $1.4 billion. We are not doing that right now, in large part 
because of cost.
  So just to put this in perspective, $2.6 billion to incentivize the 
oil industry now, could be used for a whole lot of other things. I am 
sure other of my colleagues would suggest there are other ways to use 
that money, not the least of which would be to reduce the deficit. But 
there are other ways to do it. So it was not an idle question. We are 
not just talking about a little bit of money.
  I do not think the chairman of ExxonMobil liked my asking the 
question. But he indicated that, reluctantly, when I reminded him he--
well, in fairness, I probably did not have to remind him he was under 
oath--but he indicated, no, he did not think that his company or the 
industry needed that incentive in light of their economic circumstance.
  Then I went down the line. And I will submit for the Record the names 
of each of the companies represented and the names of each of the CEOs 
sitting in the witness chair. Every one of them answered the exact same 
way. They all said: No, we do not need this $2.6 billion. We don't need 
any incentive in order to be able to proceed to maximize productivity, 
to maximize discovery, to maximize product now.
  And then I went back to the chairman of Exxon--I worked my way down 
again--and I said: Would you support an amendment I would offer 
repealing that incentive? And even more reluctantly, he said: Yes.
  I then went and asked that question to all these oil company 
executives, and they all said: Yes.
  So not only do they all acknowledge it is not needed, they all 
indicated, from the best of my recollection--and, again, I will submit 
for the Record their exact statements--I may be wrong about one or two 
of them, but not on whether they needed it but whether they supported 
the repeal. I think they all supported it.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that relevant testimony before 
the Judiciary Committee be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

       Senator BIDEN. Well, I mean, that is like saying--anyway, I 
     do not have time because of the 5-minute rule here. Let me 
     ask you, do any of you need, to be able to do what you are 
     doing now, $2.8 billion in incentives the Federal Government 
     is having other taxpayers pay for?
       Mr. TILLERSON. Well, Senator, we did not lobby for any----
       Senator BIDEN. I did not say you did. I am just asking, do 
     you need it?
       Mr. TILLERSON. No.
       Senator BIDEN. Because you all point out we have to find 
     alternative energy. It seems to me we should take the $2.8 
     billion that you all are getting, and we should put it into 
     encouraging alternative energy. We should go out and do--
     right? What do you think?
       Mr. MULVA. Senator, most of those incentives are directed 
     towards energy in total, which is not necessarily the oil and 
     gas business.
       Senator BIDEN. Oh, it is mostly you guys.
       Mr. MULVA. And second, it goes to independent producers, 
     which are primarily the bedrock of most of our----
       Senator BIDEN. But your company will not be upset if we 
     take those away, right?
       Mr. MULVA. Correct.
       Senator BIDEN. None of you will object to us taking away 
     those $2.8 billion of incentives as they apply to you, is 
     that right?
       I note for the record, everyone is saying okay.
       Mr. KLESSE. Senator, excuse me.
       Senator BIDEN. Do it quickly, I only have 24 seconds.
       Mr. KLESSE. Okay. Valero, we were interested in the 
     incentives to expand refining capacity. That's our business, 
     and we were interested in it.
       Senator BIDEN. Do you still need it?
       Mr. KLESSE. Do we need it?
       Senator BIDEN. Do you need them to expand?
       Mr. KLESSE. No.
       Senator BIDEN. Good, okay, that is all I need. So they are 
     all for my bill. I want the record to show no one thought it 
     would be any problem withdrawing it for all of them. Even 
     though I only have 2 seconds left, I yield.

  Mr. BIDEN. I have a simple proposition I am going to present to the 
floor. Although on a supplemental we cannot change tax policy--we all 
know the blue slip rule, and to use the jargon my friend, the chairman 
of the committee, understands better than anybody here, I cannot, we 
cannot, legislate tax policy on this bill that does not originate in 
the House, and so on--what I do want to do is, I want to get the Senate 
on record with a sense of the Senate that the Senate Finance Committee 
report back within 90 days a piece of legislation repealing--
repealing--this $2.6 billion in incentives provided to the oil 
companies.

[[Page 5881]]

  Now, the fact is, there are going to be some on this floor--and I am 
prepared to listen to the argument because when I raised this before, 
some argued: Well, smaller companies, companies producing less than 
500,000 barrels a year maybe need this incentive, that they may need 
this incentive to maximize their capability of producing oil. I do not 
think that is accurate, but I am prepared to listen to that. I am 
prepared to listen to that.
  But for the time being, I want to put my colleagues on notice that 
the last group in the world that needs a tax break now is the oil 
companies--the absolute last--not because they are bad guys, not 
because of anything else. I do not even know if they asked for it.
  I often say to my friends on this side of the aisle that sometimes 
folks on my side make a mistake. They don't realize that rich folks are 
just as patriotic as poor folks. When you are handed windfalls, even 
poor folks would not turn their nose up at them. I don't know whether 
the oil companies insisted on this being in the Energy bill or not, but 
I know they think it is not needed. I do know they say they would 
support its repeal. So if there is anything--to use the phrase of a 
former head of the Intelligence Committee--that has been a slam dunk in 
my 33 years as a U.S. Senator, this should be it. We can reallocate 
$2.6 billion to needed, worthwhile initiatives and/or reduction of the 
national debt or deficit, and we can do it with the very recipients of 
that $2.6 billion saying they don't need it, they don't want it, and 
they support us taking it away.
  So I cannot think of anything at all that can justify us keeping in 
the law a tax break for a group of folks who do not need a tax break at 
all. The American people need a break from these incredibly high 
prices. It seems to me that this is nonpartisan, and it is a no-
brainer.
  In a speech today, the President finally stated that these companies 
don't need these tax breaks. Senator Wyden has a provision currently in 
conference that would accomplish some of this. Senators Feinstein and 
Sununu have tried to remove some unnecessary tax breaks for these 
companies as well, which are already rolling in profits. Numerous 
groups have agreed, from the League of Conservation Voters, National 
Environmental Trust, Public Citizens, Taxpayers for Common Sense, and 
the oil companies--they all agree these incentives are not needed.
  We are not talking about $100,000 or $500,000 or a half billion 
dollars; we are talking about $2.6 billion. You can do an awful lot 
with $2.6 billion. So I think we should take the first step in taking 
control of our national energy policy and show the oil companies that 
we are listening. They say they don't need it. They say they would 
support it being repealed. Let's not let them down. Let's, for one 
time, vote on something that everybody, including the recipients, seems 
to be in agreement with--everybody from the President, to the Senator 
from Delaware, to the chairman of the board of ExxonMobil, to the 
National Environmental Trust.
  I will withhold doing it now, but I tell the chairman that at some 
point, I will be here to introduce that amendment, which will call for 
the sense of the Senate that the tax committee, the Senate Finance 
Committee, the committee of jurisdiction, report back to the Senate 
within 90 days a repeal of these incentives.
  I thank my colleague from Mississippi for listening and the Chair for 
giving me the floor. Unless somebody else seeks the floor, I suggest 
the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendment be set aside.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Without objection, it is 
so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 3598

  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I have an amendment at the desk and ask 
for its consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from New Jersey [Mr. Menendez] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 3598.

  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that further 
reading of the amendment be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  (The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of 
Amendments.'')
  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I rise with a series of colleagues to 
offer an amendment that provides much needed, immediate relief for 
America's drivers. My amendment suspends the 18-cent Federal gas tax 
for 60 days and makes up for the lost revenue by getting rid of 
unnecessary tax giveaways to oil and gas companies.
  In 2005, the oil and gas industry made nearly $140 billion in 
profits. The five largest oil companies made over $106 billion. 
ExxonMobil alone made a staggering $36 billion. Put another way, 
ExxonMobil's profit alone last year is more than the Federal Government 
spent on unemployment insurance, more than it spent on medical 
research, and more than it spent on the Nation's highways. Their CEO 
just got a $350 million retirement package. That is about $144,000 a 
day for every day he worked at the company. These record profits and 
gilded bonuses are occurring while the American people struggle to get 
to work, to get home, to pick up their kids from school, to take them 
to a soccer match, or to go to a doctor, all because of record gas 
prices.
  Last year, the big oil companies hiked gas prices and blamed an act 
of God. But it is crystal clear that the current spike in gas prices is 
at least partly due to an act of greed--greed that has been enabled and 
even encouraged by the administration, greed that has been aided by an 
energy bill that put the oil and gas companies first and the American 
people second. The energy companies were already enjoying record 
profits and massive tax breaks when the President signed an energy bill 
that gave them billions more in taxpayer subsidies, plus additional 
relief from having to pay royalties--in essence, the Nation's 
collective patrimony for the oil and gas they produce in our oceans. 
The last thing the oil companies need is more handouts. The first thing 
the American people need is more help.
  My amendment would give them that help by establishing a 60-day 
holiday on the Federal gas tax. As we head into the summer driving 
season and its traditionally higher gas prices, we should not be 
burdening American consumers with additional taxes. Temporarily 
suspending the gas tax will provide $100 million a day in relief to 
America's drivers, America's consumers.
  But we cannot starve the highway trust fund with the crucial money 
needed to fix our Nation's roads. My amendment will repeal three 
unnecessary tax breaks currently enjoyed by the oil and gas companies, 
and it will also eliminate royalty relief and other production 
incentives enacted last year as part of the Energy bill.
  With the price of oil as high as it is and unlikely to drop in the 
foreseeable future, companies don't need more incentive from the 
Federal Government to do their job.
  This amendment, of course, is only a short-term fix. We need a real 
energy policy that takes real steps toward ending our dependence on 
oil, not the lipservice the President has given this issue before and 
gave again this morning.
  I listened to what he had to say. The President talks about wanting 
to end our dependence on foreign oil, but instead of starting a 
Manhattan-type project to lead us to energy independence, we propose 
baby steps. The President's budget for fiscal year 2007 barely brought 
renewable and clean energy research funding back to 2001 levels, and it 
cut energy efficiency programs by 13 percent. In all the President's 
spending, there was only 23 percent of what

[[Page 5882]]

Congress requested in the Energy Policy Act for energy efficiency 
programs and only 1 percent for renewable energy programs.
  The President continues to have the blinders on when it comes to real 
solutions for our energy problems. He said that consumers should buy 
more efficient cars, and we agree. But he remains opposed to higher 
fuel efficiency standards. The most recent CAFE standards will improve 
light truck mileage by only 2.5 miles per gallon. That is simply not 
enough. Passenger cars have the same standards they had in 1985, over 
two decades ago. That is not enough.
  The President also continues to expect the oil companies, out of the 
goodness of their hearts, to spend substantial amounts of money on 
alternative energy technologies. Some of the more forward-thinking 
companies are doing that, but most are not. It is the Government's job 
to invest in these technologies, and the President's budget has shown 
that he is not serious about doing that.
  In short, he suggests and he wants the oil companies and the American 
consumer to do the things he is unwilling to do.
  Last month, I joined Senator Bingaman and the Senate Democratic 
leader and other Democrats in offering an amendment to fully fund 
energy efficiency and renewable energy programs in the fiscal year 2007 
budget. Unfortunately, it was defeated.
  Democrats in both Chambers have been at the forefront of proposing 
real solutions to our energy problems, and we were the first to call 
for the President to investigate price gouging by oil companies, a call 
he appears to finally have heeded.
  This amendment is another idea that this Congress and our President 
need to adopt. It is about providing immediate relief to overburdened 
consumers who cannot afford for us to wait much longer. This morning, 
the President finally appears to be feeling the pressure families have 
been feeling at the pump for quite some time.
  We heard what he had to say. The difference is that he doesn't make a 
commitment. He says we should phase out all of those tax benefits we 
have given the oil companies over the next decade, but he doesn't 
commit it back to America's consumers. Our amendment does that in the 
short term to give immediate relief to America's consumers while still 
maintaining our transportation trust funds, the funds necessary to 
continue to keep America moving.
  That is what this amendment is all about. It is about keeping America 
moving, about keeping America rolling, and about helping the families 
of this country in a very significant way.
  I think putting $6 billion in the hands and in the pockets of 
America's consumers is ultimately giving them real relief at a critical 
time. Obviously, putting that amount of money in their pockets at this 
time as they try to deal with high gas prices will have a ripple effect 
in the economy, as is also realized in the money that will be saved by 
those who bring to market produce which ends up on our tables, and the 
costs of the transportation of products to market across a wide scale 
of different consumer needs are going to be affected as well.
  We see consistently companies adding a fuel surcharge to the cost to 
the consumer. So this will have a ripple effect in many different ways, 
and it is something we have the wherewithal to do and do now and by 
doing so sending at the same time, I hope, a message to the world 
marketplace and certainly to OPEC that we are not hostage to them 
without some options of our own.
  Let's show American families that we are serious about addressing 
today's exorbitant gas prices. Let us adopt this amendment to provide 
real relief now. I urge my colleagues to join me and adopt this 
amendment.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Alexander). The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, under rule XVI, I raise a point of order 
against the amendment. It is legislation on an appropriations bill.
  Mr. MENENDEZ addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The point of order is sustained, and the 
amendment falls.
  The Senator from New Jersey.
  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I tried to seek recognition to speak to 
the point of order. I simply wish to say this is consistent with what 
the President proposed this morning, so I believe we should have a vote 
on the Senate floor. If we don't have a vote today, we are going to 
continue to bring this measure before the body and will eventually get 
a vote.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that notwithstanding the 
points of order which lie against this amendment, the amendment still 
be in order.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  The Senator from South Dakota.
  Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, there is no bigger issue facing the economy 
of the United States of America at the current time than the high cost 
of energy, and it has a ripple effect throughout the entire economy. In 
my State of South Dakota, we have farmers who are getting ready to go 
into the fields to plant. Obviously, agriculture is a very energy-
intensive industry.
  In my State of South Dakota, we rely heavily upon the travel 
industry. People come to our State to see the Black Hills and Mount 
Rushmore, so we are a very energy-intensive State. We have long 
distances to cover. So when gas prices come up and shoot through $3 a 
gallon or near that level in my State, it has a profound impact on the 
economy of our State and on the pocketbooks of all South Dakotans. It 
is important that this issue be addressed.
  We have heard a lot of speechifying on the floor of the Senate today 
and a lot of news conferences held in front of gasoline pumps across 
this country, everybody attacking and pointing fingers and playing the 
blame game as gas prices have steadily crept upward.
  I will be the first one in this Chamber to say that if, in fact, the 
oil companies have profiteered at the expense of hard-working consumers 
in this country, that they should be prosecuted to the full letter of 
the law. If there is manipulation, collusion, price fixing, or any 
other form of anticompetitive behavior for which we have laws in this 
country, then they need to be held accountable under those laws.
  Furthermore, I also happen to believe that if, in fact, they benefit 
from policies that are put in place, economic policies from which they 
can benefit, whether that be a tax incentive in the Tax Code today, 
that they have an accountability to us as Members of Congress to 
explain why, for example, they can pay out $400 million to a retiring 
executive or CEO.
  It seems to me at least that there are some very hard questions that 
need to be asked and some very serious answers that need to be given by 
folks in that industry. They need to be accountable to the American 
public. As I said before, I believe we need that accountability. I 
believe we need to look at those policies in place today from which 
those companies benefit. If, in fact, they are making such enormous 
profits, then perhaps they don't need the support and the tax 
incentives that are given to them by the American taxpayers, by 
Congress. So I am not going to in any way defend what are the 
practices, I believe, of many of the big oil companies in this country.
  Having said that, though, there is also a lot of hand wringing going 
on and self-righteous politicking going on right now about the high 
cost of energy and attempts again to cast aspersions, cast blame, try 
and blame the President, blame the Republicans, and all these efforts 
that are made by people who would rather have a political issue than 
they would have a solution.
  I have to say it seems to me that at the heart of this very issue is 
also what I would call a decade of obstructionism. We have tried for 
many years--I served for three terms as a Member of the House of 
Representatives--to get legislation through that

[[Page 5883]]

would allow us to lessen our dependence upon foreign sources of energy, 
to add to the supplies we have in this country, to allow us to take 
advantage of the rich resources we have in America. Every time we have 
tried to do that since I have been here as a member of the majority 
party in the House of Representatives and now in the U.S. Senate, we 
have been blocked. We have been rebuffed by the folks on the other side 
of the aisle. In many cases, those have been tactics employed which 
haven't reflected the majority in the Senate. There have been steps 
taken to create a supermajority, a filibuster threshold over which we 
would have to get in order to get some of these policies put in place.
  I go back to 1995 when, at that time, the Republicans had just taken 
control of the Congress and they passed in the budget that year 
legislation that would authorize exploration on the North Slope of 
Alaska. It passed the House and Senate, went to President Clinton's 
desk, and it was vetoed. We hear this still being debated in the Senate 
today. We get up and talk about the importance of taking advantage of 
the resources we have here in the United States of America, including 
the North Slope of Alaska; we hear the Democrats on the other side get 
up and say: Well, you can't do that. It could take 10 years for us to 
get that production on line. Well, it is 10 years later. That was 1995. 
It is now 2006, and we could have a million more barrels of oil in the 
pipeline today addressing what is a very serious supply problem in this 
country, had that bill been signed into law back in 1995.
  We have tried repeatedly since that time, a number of times as a 
Member of the House of Representatives, where we voted. We voted to 
allow for that development to occur, for that exploration to occur, and 
perhaps eventually production to occur, and, of course, again it was 
blocked and stopped.
  Most recently in December, in the Senate, before we adjourned for the 
Christmas holiday, we had a vote on whether we were going to do 
something to help ourselves in the area of energy independence and to 
develop that rich resource we have, somewhere between 6 billion and 16 
billion barrels of oil on the North Slope of Alaska, or about a million 
barrels a day. We get about a million and a half barrels a day from 
Saudi Arabia. Can you imagine how it would lessen the supply problem if 
we were able to bring that energy on line in this country? Yet again it 
was filibustered. We had 57, 58 votes in the Senate--a clear majority 
for doing something about our supply problem. Yet the other side again 
blocked and now wants to blame, instead of doing what we ought to have 
been doing all along, and that is working in a bipartisan way to 
address what is a very serious crisis in America.
  I remember when I was growing up back in the 1970s, and people who 
were around at that time also remember the gas lines, remember the talk 
at the time about we are way too dependent upon foreign energy; we have 
to do something to lessen our dependence on foreign sources of energy. 
At that time, we were 50 to 55 percent dependent upon foreign sources 
of energy. Here we are some 30 years later, and 60 percent of our 
supply comes from outside the United States. We have had opportunities 
throughout the course of the time that I have been here to do something 
about that. Every time I have voted to develop, explore, and to bring 
on line many of those resources which are available to us for 
development, it has been blocked and stopped by those on the other side 
who insist on having a political issue rather than a solution.
  Just because I was interested in this debate, as a Member of the 
House--and as I said, I voted on energy exploration on the North Slope 
of Alaska, what we know as ANWR--I went up there last year because I 
wanted to find out what the debate was all about because in trying to 
understand these issues, when you come down here on the floor of the 
Senate, I believe it is important that you have a full perspective and 
insight into the arguments that are made by those on the other side. So 
we went to some of the development sites. We went to Prudhoe Bay, we 
went to the Alpine site, we went to Kabarak, and we went to the section 
1002 area, which is the area which was proposed for development by an 
agreement that occurred way back in 1980, I believe between Senator 
Stevens and someone on the other side of the aisle at that time. We 
looked at that area. We took one of those little planes, and we flew 
out there and walked around in that particular area, and we looked at 
the technology that is available today at some of those sites and how 
they, with a very minimal footprint on the surface, are able to access 
enormous amounts of energy below the surface in an environmentally 
sound way. They use ice roads, and then during the summer months when 
everything melts, the roads disappear; they are gone.
  It is a remarkable thing for anybody who wants to see it. You walk 
away from that saying: Hold on just a minute here. I don't understand 
what the big issue is. We have an opportunity to do something about 
what are the most pressing economic issues and one of the most pressing 
national security issues facing our country, and that is energy and 
energy independence, energy security, and we have this vast resource up 
there and we can't get at it because it is consistently filibustered 
here in the Senate even though there is majority support, 57, 58 votes 
in favor of that. Yet after it passed the House and it went through the 
Senate, it got to conference and it came back, and we had an 
opportunity to do something that would allow us finally--finally--to 
explore and hopefully bring on line that incredible resource on the 
North Slope of Alaska.
  For those who are concerned about the impact on the environment, you 
should know that the caribou are doing fine. Caribou numbers have 
actually increased, and they have dramatically over the past 30 years 
in that area.
  My point very simply is this: We as a nation have to do something to 
help ourselves. We cannot continue to be held over a barrel by the 
sheiks and the mullahs in the Middle East or by Venezuela or any of the 
other countries from which we derive the majority or the vast majority 
of our energy supplies in this country. America needs to be energy 
independent.
  I believe that consists of many things. I have been a big proponent 
of renewable fuels. As a Member of the House and now as a Member of the 
Senate, I was delighted that we were able last summer in the Energy 
bill to include in there a renewable fuel standard for the first time. 
As a matter of policy in this country, we have said we are going to 
guarantee a market for renewable fuels. Frankly, why would we not, when 
we have all of these things which we raise and grow, take a bushel of 
corn and be able to convert it into 2\1/2\ gallons of fuel we can use 
to run our economy here in this country, do that? It makes so much 
sense, and it lessens our dependence upon our addiction to oil, which, 
as the President said in his State of the Union Address, and I give him 
great credit for that, is something we need to do, a direction in which 
we need to move. Renewable energy is an important component of that. I 
believe there are a number of things that we need to be doing in the 
area of conservation as well, but I want to see more partnerships 
between manufacturers and retailers and producers of ethanol and 
biodiesel and other renewable energy so that we can begin to get away 
from that enormous amount of dependence we have on oil.
  Even today, we hope to produce in the very near future 7.5 billion 
gallons of ethanol, which is what is called for in the renewable fuel 
standard. I think we are going to have to increase that dramatically 
because we are going to be there very soon. We are already at the 4.5 
billion gallon level, on our way very quickly to 7.5 billion gallons, 
because we have a desperate need in this country, and production is 
coming on line more and more all the time. But even at that level, we 
use about 140 billion gallons of gasoline a year in this country. So 
ethanol represents about 3 percent of what the total demand or total 
consumption in America is for energy today. So it is important in this 
whole debate that we continue to develop those other sources, those 
traditional energy sources until such time

[[Page 5884]]

as we can get where we begin that transition toward renewable energy.
  But in the short term, we have a need. We have a need for oil 
resources. As I said, in places such as Alaska, we have an opportunity 
to do some things offshore in this country. We have a lot of offshore 
resources and reserves that are available, not only of oil but of 
natural gas, which is also a desperate situation which many people in 
my part of the country, in farm country, depend upon because that is 
what fertilizer is made from.
  Every time we have had an opportunity to do something to address the 
long-term issue of supply in this country, we have met the politics of 
obstruction. I mentioned earlier going back to 1995 when Congress 
passed legislation that would authorize exploration of energy in 
Alaska. But if you look more recently than that, going back even to 
2003--when the President took office in 2001, they created an energy 
task force, they made recommendations, they came up with an energy 
plan, and there was an energy bill that was debated up here on Capitol 
Hill, several different permutations of that, and ultimately one 
passed. In 2003, an energy bill passed. It passed the House and Senate, 
and it went into conference. The conference came out with a report that 
passed overwhelmingly in the House, came back to the Senate in November 
of 2003, and it was filibustered.
  It failed by two votes. Fifty-eight votes to shut off a filibuster 
here in the Senate that would have gotten us an energy bill 2 years 
sooner, gotten us down the path toward a renewable fuel standard 2 
years sooner, and addressed some of those supply issues 2 years sooner. 
But no, it was blocked. It was delayed, it was filibustered, and it was 
killed in 2003 by that Congress.
  So to have people getting up now and many of my colleagues on the 
other side going out and holding news conferences and getting up on the 
floor of the Senate and beating their chests and making all these self-
righteous speeches, to me it seems to be the very essence of hypocrisy, 
if you look at a decade-long practice of obstructionism when it comes 
to putting in place sound energy policies that would have lessened our 
dependence upon foreign sources of energy and put us much closer on a 
path toward energy independence.
  So as we get into this, I have a piece of legislation which I have 
introduced along with Senator Obama from Illinois that would provide 
additional incentives for fuel retailers to begin to install pumps that 
would pump E-85, to build the demand and continue to create this 
market, this opportunity to work on the production side. On the retail 
side, again, we need to be working with the manufacturers when it comes 
to these flex fuel-type vehicles. I will continue to press forward on 
renewable fuels. That legislation--it is a bipartisan bill--and I hope 
it is something we can move through this Chamber, along with other 
types of initiatives, including additional supply initiatives.
  Frankly, there is one other issue which I should also mention 
because, there again, we ran into basically party-line resistance in 
the Environment and Public Works Committee. We tried to pass through 
the Environment and Public Works Committee earlier this year 
legislation that would expand our refinery capacity. We have not built 
a refinery since 1976. We had Katrina wipe out much of our refinery 
capacity in the gulf and, as a consequence, we are having a difficult 
time not only with the supply, but we are also having a difficult time 
with refineries. We have what, in my view, we ought to be doing, and 
that is waiving a lot of these requirements on these boutique fuels 
because right now, at this particular time of year, the refineries have 
to go through this exercise of remixing and coming up with all of these 
different types of blends. It seems to me that at a minimum, we ought 
to be able to at least give them some temporary relief from that, but 
we also need to be building more refineries in this country.
  We voted on that in the Environment and Public Works Committee, and 
it went down for all intents and purposes on a party-line vote. There 
was one Republican who voted with the Democrats. The fact is, that is 
true. But we had a wall of opposition from the Democrats on the 
Environment and Public Works Committee to even reporting the bill to 
the floor so that we could engage in a debate so that all Senators have 
an opportunity to participate in that debate about whether we ought to 
do something about the issue of refinery capacity in this country.
  So my point again very simply is this: Since I have been here, in 
three terms in the House and during my time in the Senate, I focused on 
energy because it is important to my State, as I said earlier, and 
because I am a big proponent of increased use of renewable fuels. But 
every time we have had a chance to vote, whether it is ANWR, whether it 
is offshore production, whether it is refineries, whether it is the 
Energy bill in 2003, we run into the same arguments. And you will hear 
the same arguments that we heard in December and that we heard back in 
1995 when we debated at that time the authorization of exploration in 
Alaska, and that is: It will take 10 years. Well, like I said, 10 years 
ago, if President Clinton had signed that bill into law, that 10 years 
would now be up. But the point is, we can't afford to wait another 
decade. We can't allow another decade of obstructionism to prevent us 
from doing what we ought to be doing to make America's energy future 
more secure. It is important that we focus as Senators, and I hope in a 
bipartisan way. But it doesn't help the issue to have all of this 
partisan hand-wringing and politicking. I know it is a year divisible 
by two. Whenever it is a year divisible by two, the rhetoric escalates 
a lot, and when everything gets said and done, a lot more gets said 
than done.
  The reality is, we have an issue on which the American people want 
action. They should have had action 10 years ago. They should have had 
action 6 years ago. They should have had action 4 years ago. They 
should have had action in November of 2003, when that particular Energy 
bill was filibustered by our colleagues on the other side. But it is 
never too late to do the right thing.
  We have an opportunity to do the right thing for the American people. 
If that consists of, as I said earlier, taking on the oil companies if 
there is any evidence whatsoever that there has been collusion or price 
fixing or gouging or any form of anticompetitive activity, then let's 
put the screws to them. Let's prosecute them to the full letter of the 
law. But let's also do something we should have done a long time ago, 
and that is begin to develop the resources that we have in this country 
and do something to help ourselves so 30 years from now, when my kids 
are my age, they are not saying the same thing that I am saying today, 
and that is that we have wasted 30 years and we are still as dependent 
on foreign sources of energy.
  Frankly, I don't think we can wait that long because I do believe 
energy security is a matter of national security, and there is nothing 
that has a more profound impact and effect on the pocketbooks of 
working Americans. It is important that we do something about this. It 
is time to end the obstruction. It is time to end the block-and-blame 
game. It is time to get down to the business of taking care of the 
needs of the American people that they expect us to address.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, for the information of Senators who may 
be interested in knowing what the plan of action is for the remainder 
of today, we have pending before the Senate an amendment offered by the 
distinguished Senator from New Hampshire, Mr. Gregg, relating to border 
security, to strengthen, tighten up the provisions of this bill with 
respect to adequacy of funding to protect the security of our borders.
  It is our understanding that the other side would like to have an 
amendment also offered tonight, with debate on it, as much as whoever 
wants to discuss it would like to engage in, and then enter into some 
kind of agreement on having votes, back-to-back

[[Page 5885]]

votes or close together tomorrow, on the two amendments, the Gregg 
amendment and whatever amendment is offered on the other side.
  That is the situation as I understand it. I am happy to see the 
distinguished Democratic leader on the floor. He may be able to add to 
that or clarify the intentions with respect to another amendment 
tonight.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic leader.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, the manager of the bill is absolutely right. 
We have an amendment that has been laid down by the Senator from New 
Hampshire. We are going to lay one down. Rather than do a second-
degree, we have talked to the floor staff, and it would be more 
appropriate to have two side by side.
  Subject to the approval of your leader, we would have those two votes 
around noon tomorrow. We will debate. Anybody who wants to debate it 
tonight can do so and then we will come in in the morning and divide up 
what time is left over after morning business and have that vote. As I 
indicated, I only briefly talked to the majority leader about this. We 
had a meeting down at the White House, so I didn't talk to him at any 
great length, but this sounds like a fair way to go forward and move 
this bill along a little bit.
  Mr. COCHRAN. I thank the Democratic leader.


                           Amendment No. 3604

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I have an amendment at the desk. I call that 
up.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to setting aside the 
pending amendment?
  Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent to do so.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The clerk 
will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Nevada [Mr. Reid] proposes an amendment 
     numbered 3604.

  Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose: To provide, with an offset, emergency funding for border 
                           security efforts)

                       TITLE __--BORDER SECURITY

       EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR BORDER SECURITY

                    Department of Homeland Security


            office of the secretary and executive management

       For an additional amount for the ``Office of the Secretary 
     and Executive Management'' to provide funds for the Office of 
     Policy, $2,000,000: Provided, That the entire amount is 
     solely for a contract with an independent non-Federal entity 
     to conduct a needs assessment for comprehensive border 
     security: Provided further, That the entire amount is 
     designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 
     402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the concurrent 
     resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.


                office of the chief information officer

       For an additional amount for the ``Office of the Chief 
     Information Officer'' to replace and upgrade law enforcement 
     communications, $50,000,000, to remain available until 
     expended: Provided, That the entire amount is designated as 
     an emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. 
     Res. 95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the 
     budget for fiscal year 2006.


   united states visitor and immigration status indicator technology

       For an additional amount for ``United States Visitor and 
     Immigration Status Indicator Technology'' to accelerate 
     biometric database integration and conversion to 10-print 
     enrollment, $60,000,000, to remain available until expended: 
     Provided, That none of the additional appropriations made 
     available under this heading may be obligated until the 
     Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and the House of 
     Representatives receive and approve a plan for the 
     expenditure of such funds: Provided further, That the entire 
     amount is designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to 
     section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the 
     concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.

                     Customs and Border Protection


                         salaries and expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Salaries and Expenses'', 
     $180,000,000, of which $80,000,000 is for border patrol 
     vehicle replacement and $100,000,000 is for sensor and 
     surveillance technology: Provided, That none of the 
     additional appropriations made available under this heading 
     may be obligated until the Committees on Appropriations of 
     the Senate and the House of Representatives receive and 
     approve a plan for expenditure of these funds: Provided 
     further, That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.


 air and marine interdiction, operations, maintenance, and procurement

       For an additional amount for ``Air and Marine Interdiction, 
     Operations, Maintenance, and Procurement'' to replace air 
     assets and upgrade air operations facilities, $790,000,000, 
     to remain available until expended, of which $40,000,000 is 
     for helicopter replacement and $750,000,000 is for 
     recapitalization of air assets: Provided, That none of the 
     additional appropriations made available under this heading 
     may be obligated until the Committees on Appropriations of 
     the Senate and the House of Representatives receive and 
     approve an expenditure plan for the complete recapitalization 
     of Customs and Border Protection air assets and facilities: 
     Provided further, That the entire amount is designated as an 
     emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 
     95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget 
     for fiscal year 2006.


                              construction

       For an additional amount for ``Construction'', 
     $120,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That none of the additional appropriations made available 
     under this heading may be obligated until the Committees on 
     Appropriations of the Senate and the House of Representatives 
     receive and approve a plan for expenditure for these funds: 
     Provided further, That the entire amount is designated as an 
     emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 
     95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget 
     for fiscal year 2006.

                  Immigration and Customs Enforcement


                         salaries and expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Salaries and Expenses'' to 
     replace vehicles, $80,000,000: Provided, That the entire 
     amount is designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to 
     section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the 
     concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.

                       United States Coast Guard

               acquisition, construction and improvements

       For an additional amount for ``Acquisition, Construction, 
     and Improvements'' for acquisition, construction, renovation, 
     and improvement of vessels, aircraft, and equipment, 
     $600,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.

                Federal Law Enforcement Training Center


     acquisition, construction, improvements, and related expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Acquisition, Construction, 
     Improvements, and Related Expenses'' for construction of the 
     language training facility referenced in the Master Plan and 
     information technology infrastructure improvements, 
     $18,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I am going to briefly talk about this 
amendment tonight and then we will have more time in the morning if 
necessary.
  I had the opportunity 3 weeks ago tomorrow to go to the border, the 
Mexico-California border. We flew. We could see the Arizona border. I 
spent the day there and certainly got an understanding of some of the 
problems that these valiant Border Patrol agents face.
  San Ysidro, CA, is one of the entry points. It is hard to visualize 
this, but think in your mind's eye of 24 lanes of traffic coming into 
America from Mexico. That is what is at San Ysidro, 24 lanes of 
traffic, one way; 24 lanes of traffic, 7 days a week, year round.
  While I was there, the agent showed me some of the things they had 
been able to catch: a little utility truck, and hidden in it was 
narcotics in a secret compartment; a car, a compact car, and they had 
built a canvas drop in it under the back seat. Eight people were 
stuffed into that in the compact car, underneath so you couldn't see 
them, but the dogs and agents were able to pick them up.
  These were only two examples. All day long this goes on. I talked to 
the agents about the walls that have been put up. These people, called 
coyotes--call them whatever you want--these people, who are criminals, 
who take money from Mexicans to bring them into the United States, sit 
up on one

[[Page 5886]]

fence, which is a metal fence. On the other side there is a chain-link 
fence. If they see a Border Patrol agent, they have these powerful 
slingshots that have hospitalized our agents.
  The Border Patrol agents say they can handle most of the traffic of 
people coming across the border. But what they need is protection 
against automobiles coming across the border. That is what they need 
help with. In a few places they have big metal things, about this big, 
that are stacked side by side to keep automobiles from coming across 
the border.
  The only reason I paint this very meager picture of some of the 
things I saw is, as we speak, there is an emergency on the southern 
border. I am happy for the $2 billion. I am happy to put it into border 
security. That is important. I have talked about comprehensive 
immigration reform, and I have done it often and I always start with: 
Let's protect our borders. Then we move into the guest worker program, 
then we move into the path of legalization, and then we move into what 
we are going to do to make sure employer sanctions are meaningful.
  I am in favor of the $2 billion, but I am not in favor of the across-
the-board cut that is in the underlying Gregg amendment. That is not 
right. It is not right because it is robbing Peter to pay Paul. The 
amendment I have offered will secure the border in the same way as the 
Gregg amendment. It is the same amount of money. The difference is, I 
say, on an emergency appropriations bill, which we have before us--if 
there were ever an emergency, this is it--the Gregg amendment makes no 
sense. I have the greatest respect for Senator Gregg. I think he is one 
of the most principled people with whom I have ever dealt. But I say 
this amendment makes no sense. It robs Peter to pay Paul at the end of 
the day by taking vital resources away from who? Our military. And it 
fails to make us more safe. It makes us less safe.
  There are lots and lots of examples of what an across-the-board cut 
would do. In order to pay for border security, it cuts the military 
personnel account, which includes cuts to pay and benefits for our 
Active Duty, our Guard and Reserve serving now in Iraq, Afghanistan, 
and elsewhere around the world. Do we want to have an across-the-board 
cut there? I don't think so. I hope not.
  The underlying amendment, the Gregg amendment, makes cuts to 
operations and maintenance which provide for the body armor, for 
example, and the other day-to-day needs of our troops fighting in Iraq 
and Afghanistan.
  The underlying Gregg amendment makes cuts to the Iraqi security 
forces training. I had the good fortune to be invited to the White 
House today, and on the big TV screen there in the White House we had 
the Ambassador to Iraq from the United States and General Casey telling 
us what is going on in Iraq.
  One of the things General Casey and Khalilzad talked about was what 
is happening with the training of Iraqi forces. We are going to cut 
this money down as a result of border security? I don't think that is a 
good idea.
  If we are going to succeed in Iraq, and that is very questionable at 
this time, but if we are going to succeed in Iraq, and I hope we do, 
one of the key areas of concern is the Iraqi security forces. If we are 
going to bring our troops home, we have to bring them up, and this 
amendment, the Gregg amendment, cuts those moneys.
  The Gregg amendment makes cuts to the Joint Improvised Explosive 
Device Defeat Fund, which aids our troops in eradicating the deadly 
IEDs they confront daily. The reason that is so vitally important is 
when the war started, basically what the terrorists used were garage 
door openers. That is what they used, a garage door opener, basically. 
A vehicle comes by, they planted a bomb, they push that down, it blows 
up.
  We have worked on ways to change that. But the Iraqis have also 
worked to stay ahead of us. That is why we still have these bombs going 
off. It is because we have to continually work with money from the 
Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund to have scientists and other 
technicians decide how we can defeat these explosive devices. The Gregg 
amendment cuts these moneys.
  The Gregg amendment makes cuts to the Defense Health Program which 
provides medical assistance to our troops on the battlefield. One good 
thing about this war--and there are not a lot of good things about this 
war--is the percentage of the soldiers who are wounded who end up dying 
is very much less than in any other war because we have such great 
medical attention on the battlefield and we have protective equipment 
for these soldiers.
  So they are not dying at the rate they did in the first Iraqi war, 
certainly not in Korea, and certainly not in the Second World War and 
certainly not in Vietnam. But the Gregg amendment makes cuts to this 
defense health program which provides medical assistance to our troops 
who are in the battlefield, not after they have come home. And really, 
the senseless nature of this amendment is that it makes cuts to the 
Death Gratuity Fund which assists families of fallen soldiers.
  Also, I think almost every Senator has been to Walter Reed or 
Bethesda. You will see parents there with their wounded sons and 
daughters, husbands and wives. There is a fund that helps bring these 
people here. A lot of it is done through other charitable 
organizations, but we don't want to cut the Defense Health Program. And 
we don't want to cut the Death Gratuity Fund.
  The Gregg amendment forces us to take from our troops to fortify our 
borders. That is a false choice. We do not have to choose between a 
secure border and a secure military, especially at a time when we are 
in a war. We can secure our borders and support our military.
  As I have indicated, I am 100 percent for securing our borders. But 
we can find a better way to do it than cutting necessary resources from 
the men and women who keep us safe. This is an emergency appropriations 
bill. If there were ever an emergency, it is our border with Mexico and 
at times the northern border.
  So I hope we can go forward with these resources but, as with the 
other things in this bill, this is an emergency. Our amendment calls 
for spending the $2 billion, but it would fall in line with the other 
matters in this bill. It would be an emergency.
  I hope Senators will vote for this, what we call a side-by-side that 
I have offered. This is the right way to do this. I don't think anyone 
should have on his or her conscience voting an across-the-board cut on 
a defense bill. This is basically a defense bill, this supplemental. We 
should not have this on our conscience. Border security is an emergency 
without any question in my mind. I hope Senators will agree.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Chambliss). The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, this is a statement of an agreement that 
has been reached between the two leaders regarding the votes on the 
pending amendments.
  I ask unanimous consent that at 12 o'clock on Wednesday, April 26, 
the Senate proceed to a vote on the pending Gregg amendment, as 
modified, to be followed immediately by a vote on amendment No. 3604 on 
the subject of border security offered by Senator Reid; provided 
further that no second-degree amendments be in order to the amendments 
and that when the Senate resumes consideration of the bill on Wednesday 
all debate time until the votes be equally divided between the two 
leaders or their designees.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Without objection, it is 
so ordered.
  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I thank the distinguished Democratic 
leader, and I thank all Senators for their cooperation in the 
consideration of this bill today.

[[Page 5887]]

  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. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                    Amendment No. 3594, As Modified

  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Gregg 
amendment be modified with the changes at the desk.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The 
amendment is so modified.
  The amendment (No. 3594), as modified, is as follows:

       At the appropriate place, insert the following:

                       TITLE __--BORDER SECURITY

       EMERGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR BORDER SECURITY

                    Department of Homeland Security


            office of the secretary and executive management

       For an additional amount for the ``Office of the Secretary 
     and Executive Management'' to provide funds for the Office of 
     Policy, $2,000,000: Provided, That the entire amount is 
     solely for a contract with an independent non-Federal entity 
     to conduct a needs assessment for comprehensive border 
     security: Provided further, That the entire amount is 
     designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to section 
     402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the concurrent 
     resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.


                office of the chief information officer

       For an additional amount for the ``Office of the Chief 
     Information Officer'' to replace and upgrade law enforcement 
     communications, $50,000,000, to remain available until 
     expended: Provided, That the entire amount is designated as 
     an emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. 
     Res. 95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the 
     budget for fiscal year 2006.


   united states visitor and immigration status indicator technology

       For an additional amount for ``United States Visitor and 
     Immigration Status Indicator Technology'' to accelerate 
     biometric database integration and conversion to 10-print 
     enrollment, $60,000,000, to remain available until expended: 
     Provided, That none of the additional appropriations made 
     available under this heading may be obligated until the 
     Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and the House of 
     Representatives receive and approve a plan for the 
     expenditure of such funds: Provided further, That the entire 
     amount is designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to 
     section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the 
     concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.

                     Customs and Border Protection


                         salaries and expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Salaries and Expenses'', 
     $180,000,000, of which $80,000,000 is for border patrol 
     vehicle replacement and $100,000,000 is for sensor and 
     surveillance technology: Provided, That none of the 
     additional appropriations made available under this heading 
     may be obligated until the Committees on Appropriations of 
     the Senate and the House of Representatives receive and 
     approve a plan for expenditure of these funds: Provided 
     further, That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.


 air and marine interdiction, operations, maintenance, and procurement

       For an additional amount for ``Air and Marine Interdiction, 
     Operations, Maintenance, and Procurement'' to replace air 
     assets and upgrade air operations facilities, $790,000,000, 
     to remain available until expended, of which $40,000,000 is 
     for helicopter replacement and $750,000,000 is for 
     recapitalization of air assets: Provided, That none of the 
     additional appropriations made available under this heading 
     may be obligated until the Committees on Appropriations of 
     the Senate and the House of Representatives receive and 
     approve an expenditure plan for the complete recapitalization 
     of Customs and Border Protection air assets and facilities: 
     Provided further, That the entire amount is designated as an 
     emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 
     95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget 
     for fiscal year 2006.


                              construction

       For an additional amount for ``Construction'', 
     $120,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That none of the additional appropriations made available 
     under this heading may be obligated until the Committees on 
     Appropriations of the Senate and the House of Representatives 
     receive and approve a plan for expenditure for these funds: 
     Provided further, That the entire amount is designated as an 
     emergency requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 
     95 (109th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget 
     for fiscal year 2006.

                  Immigration and Customs Enforcement


                         salaries and expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Salaries and Expenses'' to 
     replace vehicles, $80,000,000: Provided, That the entire 
     amount is designated as an emergency requirement pursuant to 
     section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th Congress), the 
     concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2006.

                       United States Coast Guard

               acquisition, construction and improvements

       For an additional amount for ``Acquisition, Construction, 
     and Improvements'' for acquisition, construction, renovation, 
     and improvement of vessels, aircraft, and equipment, 
     $600,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.

                Federal Law Enforcement Training Center


     acquisition, construction, improvements, and related expenses

       For an additional amount for ``Acquisition, Construction, 
     Improvements, and Related Expenses'' for construction of the 
     language training facility referenced in the Master Plan and 
     information technology infrastructure improvements, 
     $18,000,000, to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That the entire amount is designated as an emergency 
     requirement pursuant to section 402 of H. Con. Res. 95 (109th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2006.

                     GENERAL PROVISIONS--THIS TITLE


                          reduction in funding

       Sec. __. The aggregate amount provided by chapter 3 of 
     title I of this Act and chapter 3 of title II of this Act may 
     not exceed $67,062,188,000.

  Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, 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. FRIST. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.

                          ____________________