[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 153 (2007), Part 8]
[Senate]
[Pages 11778-11785]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




          STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS

      By Mr. KYL (for himself and Mr. McCain):

[[Page 11779]]

  S. 1341. A bill to provide for the exchange of certain Bureau of Land 
Management land in Pima County, Arizona, and for other purposes; to the 
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
  Mr. KYL. Mr. President, today I am pleased to be joined by Senator 
McCain to introduce the Las Cienegas Enhancement and Saguaro National 
Park Boundary Adjustment Act of 2007. This legislation directs a land 
exchange between the Bureau of Land Management, BLM, and the Las 
Cienegas Conservation, LLC in southeastern Arizona. A similar bill was 
introduced last year, and it passed the House of Representatives. 
Unfortunately, the Senate was unable to pass it before the session 
ended.
  We can turn this disappointment into a success. The bill we introduce 
today adds to the exchange a highly sought after private parcel, the 
``Bloom Property.'' The Bloom Property would be added to Saguaro 
National Park. State and local officials, conservationists, and other 
stakeholders have worked together to include the Bloom Property in this 
bill and to structure an exchange that is fair and in the public 
interest.
  Let me explain the details of the exchange. The land to be 
transferred out of Federal ownership, approximately 1,280 acres, is 
referred to as the ``Sahuarita property.'' This property is BLM-managed 
land south of Tucson near Corona de Tucson. The land is low-lying 
Sonoran desert and has been identified for disposal by the BLM through 
its land-use planning process.
  The private land to be brought into Federal ownership consists of two 
parcels. The first parcel is approximately 2,392 acres of land referred 
to as the ``Empirita-Simonson property.'' This property lies north of 
the Las Cienegas National Conservation Area managed by the BLM. The 
Empirita-Simonson property lies within the ``Sonoita Valley Acquisition 
Planning District'' established by Public Law 106-538, which designated 
the Las Cienegas National Conservation Area. The act directed the 
Department of the Interior to acquire lands from willing sellers within 
the planning district for inclusion within the conservation area. The 
idea was to further protect lands with important resource values for 
which the national conservation area was designated.
  The second parcel, the Bloom Property, is approximately 160 acres of 
land that was identified for inclusion in the Saguaro National Park 
during a boundary study conducted by the National Park Service in 1993. 
In 1994, using the data from the study, Congress enacted legislation 
expanding the park and changed Saguaro's designation from monument to 
park. At that time, the Bloom Property did not have a willing seller. I 
am pleased to say circumstances have changed, and we are able to 
include it in this exchange. The Bloom Property, which lies just south 
of the Sweetwater Trail in Saguaro Park West, is a prime example of 
Sonoran desert important to maintain corridors for wildlife like the 
mountain lion.
  Although this bill is centered on the land exchange I just described, 
it also accomplishes two other important objectives: addressing water 
withdrawals at Cienegas Creek and providing road access to a popular 
recreation destination, the Whetstone Mountains controlled by the 
Forest Service.
  Let's talk about water. Arizonans understand that protecting our 
water supply is crucial to the State's future. For this reason, we 
continually seek ways to promote responsible use of our limited water 
supply. This bill promotes responsible use. There is a prior claim to a 
well site on the private land that will be exchanged. That prior claim 
would allow a developer to withdraw 1,600 acre-feet of water a year. 
Pima County and the community at large are concerned about the future 
of Cienegas Creek and the entire riparian area if these water 
withdrawals occur.
  To address this concern, the land exchange is conditioned on Las 
Cienegas Conservation, LLC conveying the well site to Pima County and 
relinquishing those water rights it controls. The net result is a water 
savings of 1,050 acre-feet per year. This is a significant benefit to 
this riparian area.
  Overall, this bill allows us to accomplish important environmental 
and conservation objectives while managing our development. It is a 
bill with broad support that includes Pima County, the city of Tucson, 
and many others. I urge my colleagues to work with me to approve this 
legislation at the earliest possible date.
                                 ______
                                 
      By Mrs. CLINTON (for herself and Ms. Collins)
  S. 1343. A bill to amend the Public Health Service Act with respect 
to prevention and treatment of diabetes, and for other purposes; to the 
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
  Mrs. CLINTON. Mr. President, today, Senator Collins and I will be 
introducing the Diabetes Treatment and Prevention Act, legislation to 
help our Federal, State and local governments address the growing 
epidemic of diabetes across our Nation.
  According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC, the 
number of Americans with diagnosed diabetes has doubled over the past 
15 years. Over 20 million Americans are currently living with this 
disease, but 6 million of them have not yet been diagnosed. Another 54 
million are classified as ``pre-diabetic,'' with a high risk of 
developing this condition. Diabetes accounts for over $92 billion in 
direct medical costs every year, and these numbers are only likely to 
increase.
  Last year, the New York Times published an insightful series on 
diabetes that highlighted the obstacles faced by health care providers 
and institutions seeking to prevent complications from diabetes. The 
system will pay tens of thousands of dollars for amputations, but not a 
low-cost visit to the podiatrist that could have saved the foot. 
Hospitals struggle to provide preventive treatment and rehabilitation 
in the Byzantine system of reimbursements. The incentives inside our 
health care system are backwards, and the payment system is upside-
down: too often paying for costly and debilitating treatment but not 
for low-cost prevention.
  We know what works. The landmark Diabetes Prevention Program, a 
government funded clinical trial, found that moderate diet and exercise 
interventions helped to delay and prevent the onset of type 2 diabetes 
in persons at high risk for developing the condition. Indeed, the study 
was so successful that it was ended a year earlier than planned. Yet 
despite the success of this study, we still haven't found a way to 
implement these interventions in our communities.
  The Diabetes Treatment and Prevention Act would provide additional 
support for the Federal, State and local programs that are working to 
fight this epidemic. Our legislation would codify the Division of 
Diabetes Translation at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 
CDC, giving them definitive authority to carry out activities in 
diabetes surveillance, translational research, and education efforts. 
It would direct the CDC to continue its work in coordinating the 
National Diabetes Education Program, in conjunction with the National 
Institutes of Health, NIH, and would increase support for its diabetes 
control and prevention efforts at the State level.
  This bill would also establish several demonstration projects. One 
would help to translate the interventions identified as effective by 
the Diabetes Prevention Program into clinical interventions that can be 
replicated at the State, local and provider level. Another would allow 
academic centers, in conjunction with state and local health 
departments, to examine ways to improve overall health outcomes in 
people living with diabetes and other co-occurring chronic conditions, 
such as heart disease, mental illness, or HIV. Finally, the bill would 
support efforts to increase surveillance and education at the State and 
local level.
  The epidemic of diabetes has the potential to place great burdens on 
our health care system, but it doesn't have to. We can prevent 
diabetes, we can manage diabetes, and we can reduce the health care 
costs associated with

[[Page 11780]]

care and treatment for this condition. The Diabetes Treatment and 
Prevention Act will help us take necessary steps to supporting our 
public health infrastructure in dealing with this crisis, and I would 
urge all of my colleagues to cosponsor this legislation.
                                 ______
                                 
      By Mrs. MURRAY:
  S. 1344. A bill to designate the Department of Veterans Affairs 
outpatient clinic in Wenatchee, Washington, as the Elwood ``Bud'' Link 
Department of Veterans Affairs Outpatient Clinic; to the Committee on 
Veterans' Affairs.
  Mrs. MURRAY. Mr. President, I rise today to speak about legislation 
that my colleague from Washington, Congressman Doc Hastings, and I are 
introducing to name the soon-to-be-opened Community-Based Outpatient 
Clinic in Wenatchee, WA, after Elwood ``Bud'' Link. Bud provided both 
the inspiration and the energy necessary to make this project a 
reality, thereby fulfilling a longstanding and serious need for his 
community.
  Bud, a World War II veteran and an active member of Veterans of 
Foreign Wars Post 10445, recognized the need for better, more 
accessible veteran medical services for those veterans living in north 
central Washington. Like countless others, Bud suffered from health 
problems attributed to his service in the Navy, where he bravely served 
aboard the USS Tracy escorting convoys throughout the South Pacific and 
protecting medical personnel after the deployment of the atomic bomb.
  When Bud returned to the States, he, like so many other veterans, 
relied on the VA for health care. In order to receive the necessary 
treatment from the VA, however, Bud was forced to make a 3-hour drive 
in each direction to the VA medical center nearest to his home.
  Realizing that this was the case for veterans all over his community, 
Bud, his wife of over 50 years, Helen, and his fellow VFW Post 10445 
members, helped by the American Legion and other veteran service 
organizations, mobilized the community to work toward the creation of a 
new, more accessible outpatient veteran center.
  I was proud to contribute to this effort. After several years of hard 
work, I stood with Congressman Doc Hastings at the Cashmere VFW hall on 
March 20, 2006 to announce the VA's final decision to create the 
Community-Based Outpatient Clinic in Wenatchee, WA.
  Although Bud sadly passed away before this exciting announcement was 
made, the creation of this facility in Wenatchee represents the 
culmination of Bud and his fellow veterans' efforts to make veterans' 
medical care more accessible and, in turn, to hold the Federal 
Government accountable for fulfilling its promises to the veteran 
community.
  Bud dedicated his time and energy to addressing this and other 
veteran needs as an advocate, a leader, and a concerned citizen. Due in 
large part to Bud's work, the new CBOC, set to serve six counties in 
north central Washington, is likely to make over 25,000 visits by 
veterans more accessible next year.
  Bud's life of service and activism, coupled with this final victory, 
reaffirms a valuable lesson for all Americans: even a single citizen 
can see a problem and fix it.
  Bud Link dedicated his time and energy to helping other veterans, and 
now that the clinic he fought for is going to open, we have a chance to 
honor his lifetime of service. My bill will ensure that Bud's efforts 
and good example will not be forgotten, but rather, that the new CBOC 
will carry on Bud's legacy.
  I ask my colleagues to join me in honoring the work that Bud Link and 
his fellow veterans have done to make this new CBOC a reality.
                                 ______
                                 
      By Mr. AKAKA (for himself, Mr. Lieberman, Ms. Collins, Mr. Levin, 
        Mr. Leahy, Mr. Feingold, and Mrs. Clinton):
  S. 1345. A bill to affirm that Federal employees are protected from 
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and to repudiate any 
assertion to the contrary; to the Committee on Homeland Security and 
Governmental Affairs.
  Mr. AKAKA. Mr. President, as we celebrate Public Service Recognition 
Week and the dedication and professionalism of Federal employees, I 
rise today to introduce legislation to reassert protections for Federal 
employees and applicants for Federal employment against discrimination 
based on one's sexual orientation. The Clarification of Federal 
Employment Protection Act will spell out the protections that Federal 
employees currently have but have been denied by the Office of Special 
Counsel, OSC. I am pleased that Senators Lieberman, Collins, Levin, 
Leahy, Feingold, and Clinton are cosponsoring this important 
legislation and that Representative Henry Waxman, Chairman of the House 
Oversight and Government Reform Committee, is introducing a companion 
bill in the House.
  When Congress passed the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, it 
established a list of prohibited personnel practices, personnel actions 
that were clearly not in line with the Merit System Principles and were 
subject to prosecution by OSC. Examples include personnel actions, such 
as hiring, firing, and changes in pay, against employees based on a 
whistleblower disclosure, nepotism, or off-duty conduct.
  The prohibition on personnel action based on off-duty conduct, found 
in section 2302(b)(10) of title 5, United States Code, has been 
interpreted for years to prohibit the taking of personnel actions 
against employees and applicants for employment based on their sexual 
orientation. In 1980, Mr. Alan Campbell, Director of the Office of 
Personnel Management, OPM, at the time, wrote a memorandum to the heads 
of all executive branch agencies advising that, under 5 U.S.C. 
2302(b)(10), employees and applicants were to be protected against 
inquiries into or actions based upon non job-related conduct, including 
religious or community affiliations, or sexual orientation. The 
position by OPM has been reaffirmed time and again, most recently by 
the current OPM Director, Linda Springer, in her responses to questions 
posed by the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee in 
relation to her nomination for the position. In fact, to this day, 
OPM's website contains a guide to Federal employee rights which states 
that section 2302(b)(10) has been interpreted by OPM to prohibit 
discrimination based upon sexual orientation.
  OPM is not alone in this interpretation. The previous Special Counsel 
also interpreted 2302(b)(10) to protect against discrimination based on 
an individual's sexual orientation. For example, in 2003, OSC secured 
corrective and disciplinary action against a Federal supervisor who 
discriminated against Federal job applicant because he was gay in 
violation of section 2302(b)(10). In 2004, following the debate spurred 
by OSC over the interpretation of this provision, White House spokesman 
Trent Duffy said the president ``believes that no Federal employee 
should be subject to unlawful discrimination, and Federal agencies will 
fully enforce the law against discrimination, including discrimination 
based on sexual orientation.''
  Upon the nomination of Scott Bloch to be the new Special Counsel, I 
asked the nominee about his interpretation of the laws protecting 
Federal employees and applicants against sexual orientation 
discrimination. When asked if he would support the interpretation of 
2302(b)(10) by OPM and OSC, he said that he would not fail to enforce a 
claim of sexual orientation discrimination before OSC that shows 
through the evidence that the statute has been violated.
  Nonetheless, after being in office for only a few months, Special 
Counsel Bloch conducted a review of the discrimination statute and 
claimed that section 2302(b)(10) only provides protection against 
discrimination based on conduct, including sexual conduct, but not 
one's sexual orientation. Instead, Mr. Bloch claims that for 
discrimination based on status, referring to sexual orientation, it 
would have to be listed under section 2302(b)(1), which protects 
employees from discrimination based on race, gender, religion, or 
marital status. This departure from the long-standing interpretation of

[[Page 11781]]

(b)(10) by OSC and OPM is illogical. When a supervisor who dislikes 
gays or lesbians refuses to hire an applicant who the supervisor 
believes is gay or lesbian, it follows that the supervisor is basing 
the personnel action on disapproval of the applicant's presumed sexual 
conduct. In other words, in the context of sexual orientation 
discrimination, status implies conduct.
  I believe that Congress must act to guarantee the protections it has 
provided to Federal employees and applicants for Federal employment. We 
cannot allow one administration official's opinion to undermine the 
merit system or the rights and protections Federal workers. The 
legislation I am introducing today would affirm that sexual orientation 
is protected by section 2302(b)(10) but also make it a clear protected 
status under section (b)(1). I ask unanimous consent that the text of 
the bill be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the text of the bill was ordered to be 
printed in the Record, as follows:

                                S. 1345

       Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of 
     the United States of America in Congress assembled,

     SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

       This Act may be cited as the ``Clarification of Federal 
     Employment Protections Act''.

     SEC. 2. DISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF SEXUAL ORIENTATION 
                   PROHIBITED.

       (a) Repudiation.--In order to dispel any public confusion, 
     Congress repudiates any assertion that Federal employees are 
     not protected from discrimination on the basis of sexual 
     orientation.
       (b) Affirmation.--It is the sense of Congress that, in the 
     absence of the amendment made by subsection (c), 
     discrimination against Federal employees and applicants for 
     Federal employment on the basis of sexual orientation is 
     prohibited by section 2302(b)(10) of title 5, United States 
     Code.
       (c) Amendment.--Section 2302(b)(1) of title 5, United 
     States Code, is amended--
       (1) by striking ``or'' at the end of subparagraph (D);
       (2) by inserting ``or'' at the end of subparagraph (E); and
       (3) by adding at the end the following:
       ``(F) on the basis of sexual orientation.''.
                                 ______
                                 
      By Mrs. FEINSTEIN:
  S. 1347. A bill to amend the Omnibus Indian Advancement Act to modify 
the date as of which certain tribal land of the Lytton Rancheria of 
California is deemed to be held in trust and to provide for the conduct 
of certain activities on the land; to the Committee on Indian Affairs.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I rise today to introduce the Lytton 
Gaming Oversight Act of 2007, a bill seeking to ensure that Native 
American tribes follow the regular process under Federal law prior to 
establishing and operating gaming facilities.
  I believe this approach provides a good step forward as it has the 
support of both the local community and the Lytton tribe.
  I am pleased to have worked closely with representatives of the local 
community, such as California Assemblymember Loni Hancock, D-Berkeley, 
as well as my colleague Senator Specter in crafting this piece of 
legislation.
  I introduced similar legislation in the 108th and 109th Congresses, 
but these bills would have effectively required closure of the casino 
operations, until a point when and if the Lytton successfully completed 
the two-part determination process.
  This legislation, however, stalled. The legislation introduced today 
breaks that stalemate and seeks to prevent a massive expansion of 
gaming in the Bay Area.
  The bill requires that the Lytton Band of Pomo Indians follow 
critical oversight guidelines laid out in Section 20 of the Indian 
Gaming Regulatory Act, IGRA, before engaging in Class III gaming.
  This legislation would amend language inserted into the Omnibus 
Indian Advancement Act of 2000.
  That language mandated that the Secretary of Interior take a card 
club and adjacent parking lot in the San Francisco Bay Area into trust 
for the Lytton tribe as their reservation and backdate the acquisition 
to October 17, 1988, or pre-IGRA.
  This backdating was done expressly with the goal of allowing the 
Lytton tribe to circumvent IGRA's ``two-part determination'' process, 
an important step that requires both Secretarial and Gubernatorial 
approval, in addition to consultation with nearby tribes and the local 
community and its representatives.
  The legislation that I have introduced would simply return the Lytton 
tribe to the same status as all other tribes seeking to pursue Class 
III, or Nevada-style gaming, on lands acquired after the passage of 
IGRA in 1988.
  It would allow the tribe to continue operating its Class II gaming 
facility provided it follows all IGRA regulations regarding gaming on 
newly acquired lands going forward.
  Finally, it would also preclude any expansion of the facility used by 
the Lytton for Class II gaming.
  I would like to emphasize what the bill would not do. It would not: 
Remove the tribe's recognition status; Alter the trust status of the 
new reservation; or take away the tribe's ability to conduct gaming 
through the normal IGRA process.
  This legislation was solely crafted to restore IGRA's rightful 
oversight of the gaming process, just as Congress intended.
  Section 20 of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act provides clear 
guidelines for addressing the issue of gaming on so-called ``newly-
acquired'' lands, or lands that have been taken into trust since the 
enactment of IGRA in 1988.
  Most importantly, in my opinion, IGRA's ``two-part determination'' 
process provides for both Federal and State approval, while protecting 
the rights of nearby tribes and local communities.
  Circumventing this process creates a variety of serious and critical 
multi-jurisdictional issues, issues which can negatively affect the 
lives of ordinary citizens and deprive local and tribal governments of 
their ability to effectively represent their communities.
  Without passage of this bill, the Lytton could take the former card 
club and the adjacent parking lot that is now their reservation and 
turn it into a large gambling complex outside the regulations set up by 
the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. In fact, this is exactly what was 
proposed in the summer of 2004.
  While the tribe announced that it was dropping its pursuit of a 
sizable casino, it could reverse these plans at any time and proceed 
with Class III gaming without first going through the regular process.
  Allowing this to happen would set a dangerous precedent not only for 
California, but every State where tribal gaming is permitted.
  I do not think it is asking too much to require that the Lytton be 
subject to the regulatory and approval processes applicable to all 
other tribes by the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act.
  This bill would do just that.
  I ask unanimous consent that the text of the bill be printed in the 
Record.
  There being no objection, the text of the bill was ordered to be 
printed in the Record, as follows:

                                S. 1347

       Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of 
     the United States of America in Congress assembled,

     SECTION 1. LYTTON RANCHERIA OF CALIFORNIA.

       Section 819 of the Omnibus Indian Advancement Act (Public 
     Law 106-568; 114 Stat. 2919) is amended--
       (1) in the first sentence, by striking ``Notwithstanding'' 
     and inserting the following:
       ``(a) Acceptance of Land.--Notwithstanding'';
       (2) in the second sentence, by striking ``The Secretary'' 
     and inserting the following:
       ``(b) Declaration.--The Secretary''; and
       (3) by striking the third sentence and inserting the 
     following:
       ``(c) Treatment of Land for Purposes of Class II Gaming.--
       ``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), 
     notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Lytton 
     Rancheria of California may conduct activities for class II 
     gaming (as defined in section 4 of the Indian Gaming 
     Regulatory Act (25 U.S.C. 2703)) on the land taken into trust 
     under this section.
       ``(2) Requirement.--The Lytton Rancheria of California 
     shall not expand the exterior physical measurements of any 
     facility on the Lytton Rancheria in use for class II gaming 
     activities on the date of enactment of this paragraph.
       ``(d) Treatment of Land for Purposes of Class III Gaming.--
     Notwithstanding subsection (a), for purposes of class III 
     gaming (as defined in section 4 of the Indian Gaming 
     Regulatory Act (25 U.S.C. 2703)), the land taken into trust 
     under this section shall be

[[Page 11782]]

     treated, for purposes of section 20 of the Indian Gaming 
     Regulatory Act (25 U.S.C. 2719), as if the land was acquired 
     on October 9, 2003, the date on which the Secretary took the 
     land into trust.''.
                                 ______
                                 
      By Mr. DURBIN (for himself, Mr. Warner, Mrs. Murray, Mr. Obama, 
        Mr. Graham, Mr. Webb, and Ms. Cantwell):
  S. 1349. A bill to ensure that the Department of Defense and the 
Department of Veterans Affairs provide to members of the Armed Forces 
and veterans with traumatic brain injury the services that best meet 
their individual needs, and for other purposes; to the Committee on 
Armed Services.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, traumatic brain injury is the signature 
injury of the Iraq war. The widespread use of Improvised Explosive 
Devices, IEDs, has taken a terrible toll. Even those who have walked 
off the battlefield without visible scars often find they have suffered 
the internal trauma of a traumatic brain injury.
  Today, I am introducing legislation, along with Senators Warner, 
Murray, Graham, Obama, Webb, and Cantwell, to create a Traumatic Brain 
Injury Program, operated jointly by the Department of Defense and the 
Department of Veterans Affairs, to ensure that those servicemembers who 
suffer a brain injury receive all the services they need. The 
legislation establishes a standard of care for each individual found to 
have suffered a brain injury, improves the coordination of care, 
strengthen the rights of brain injury patients, and expands brain 
injury research in the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs.
  This legislation will reduce the number of our wounded soldiers who 
fall through the cracks and are left to fend for themselves as they 
struggle to recover from a traumatic brain injury. I am pleased to have 
the support of Veterans for America for this legislative effort.
  We have made tremendous progress in battlefield medical care. During 
Vietnam, one in three servicemembers who were injured died. In Iraq and 
Afghanistan, 1 in 16 who are injured die. But with the changes in 
warfare and in medical technology, more of our servicemembers are 
coming home with serious brain injuries from Iraq and Afghanistan than 
from any other recent conflicts we've known.
  For some of these wounded warriors, the greatest battle comes at home 
when they seek care. Many of these returning troops need long-term 
treatment and rehabilitation long after their discharge from active 
duty, as they fight to overcome the severe disabilities that a 
traumatic brain injury can cause.
  For others, there is a different story. Some servicemembers don't 
even realize they suffered a traumatic brain injury until long after 
their discharge, because we don't do a very good job of identifying and 
treating those who may have suffered a brain injury.
  Fortunately, many of those who suffer a brain injury are able to 
recover fairly quickly. But for some, the experience is life-altering, 
even life-shattering. We must not fail them in their time of need.
  Consider the case of Sgt. Eric Edmundson. Eric left my home state of 
Illinois to serve in Iraq. In October 2005, he suffered a severe head 
concussion when a roadside bomb exploded near him. He was cared for at 
Walter Reed Hospital, then was transferred to a VA facility where he 
and his family felt he was not receiving the kind of treatment that 
would allow him to continue to make progress in rehabilitation.
  He would have been stuck there if the family had not found a creative 
way to obtain the care he needed. The family found a way to ensure that 
Eric could receive treatment and rehabilitation at one of the premiere 
rehabilitation hospitals in the nation: the Rehabilitation Institute of 
Chicago. He is making great progress there and hopes to walk out of the 
hospital some day soon.
  We need to use private hospitals more. In fact, we should use them 
whenever they are the best option for our returning soldiers who are 
wounded. In the case of traumatic brain injury, they often have the 
special expertise needed, because the leading facilities in this field 
deal with brain injuries day in and day out as a result of construction 
accidents and car crashes.
  Now consider the case of Sgt. Garrett Anderson of Champaign, 
Illinois. Garrett went to Iraq with the Illinois National Guard. After 
4 months there, an IED exploded next to his armored Humvee in Baghdad. 
The blast tore off his right arm below the elbow, shattered his jaw, 
severed part of his tongue, damaged his hearing, and punctured his body 
with shrapnel.
  He spent 7 months at Walter Reed, where he received excellent care in 
Ward 57, the famous amputee ward. However, the outpatient care that 
followed has been filled with paperwork and red tape. It was months 
before the VA recognized that Garrett had suffered a traumatic brain 
injury. He has not received the kind of treatment for brain injury that 
could make a significant difference in the trajectory of his 
rehabilitation.
  We need to change the way we handle patients with traumatic brain 
injury, so that they receive the care they need at the time they need 
it.
  The legislation I am introducing takes a comprehensive approach to 
dealing with the traumatic brain injuries that plague our troops and 
veterans.
  First, this legislation would establish a Traumatic Brain Injury 
Program, run by DOD and the VA, to provide treatment and rehabilitation 
to servicemembers and veterans who have suffered a service-connected 
traumatic brain injury.
  Second, this bill would establish a standard of care for the 
participants in the TBI Program. Specifically, each individual in the 
program shall be provided ``the highest quality of care possible based 
on the medical judgment of qualified medical professionals in 
facilities that most appropriately meet the specific needs of the 
individual. ``And they shall be rehabilitated to the fullest extent 
possible using the most up-to-date medical technology, medical 
rehabilitation practices, and medical expertise available.''
  That's the standard of care we should provide to these injured troops 
who gave so much of themselves for us. They should receive the best we 
have to give.
  Third, the measure would direct the Defense Department to develop and 
administer a standardized cognitive pre-test, which would be 
administered to all military personnel prior to deployment and again 
upon return from deployment to determine if they have suffered a brain 
injury.
  It also would require DOD and the VA to refer any servicemember or 
veteran for TBI screening if it is found, in the course of later 
treatment or contacts, that the servicemember or veteran may have 
suffered a service-connected brain injury.
  Anyone found to have suffered a traumatic brain injury would be 
enrolled in the TBI program and receive the care they need.
  One of the things the families of TBI patients complain most about is 
the confusion that surrounds their efforts to ensure that their loved 
one received all needed care. The fourth thing this measure would do is 
to direct DOD and the VA to assign each patient a lead case manager to 
ease the stress on the patient and family, facilitate navigation 
through the DOD and VA systems, ensure proper care, present options for 
care outside of DOD and the VA, and ensure consistent guidance. 
Additionally, DOD and the VA would assign to each patient a lead 
primary care physician to coordinate and oversee the care provided to 
the patient, including all treatment, rehabilitation, and medications.
  Another complaint of families and TBI patients is that they are 
sometimes blocked from receiving the care they need due to their status 
as either a veteran or an active duty member. DOD and the VA have 
different health benefit options. In some cases, servicemembers have 
found that, because they accepted a discharge, they lost access to 
benefits that would help them.
  Our bill addresses this problem by establishing, for these TBI 
patients, a temporary overlap of benefits. The participants in the TBI 
Program will be

[[Page 11783]]

allowed, for 2 years, to receive any of the benefits available to 
veterans and to active duty members, regardless of their active duty 
status. This will help ensure they receive the best care and 
rehabilitation available, wherever it may be.
  Our bill would spell out some other rights that are important for the 
rehabilitation of TBI patients. First, DOD and the VA would be required 
to provide a referral to a medical professional outside of DOD and the 
VA when requested by a TBI patient. This will allow patients to 
determine whether there is better care in the private sector that is 
not being provided to that patient. They would also have a right to an 
appeals process to challenge any failure to provide the standard of 
care required in the TBI Program.
  In some cases, undiagnosed traumatic brain injuries may contribute to 
behavior resulting in other than honorable discharges. Upon the request 
of a servicemember who served since 2001 and was discharged under other 
than honorable conditions, the DOD would be directed to review the 
discharge to determine whether a brain injury might be the root cause 
of the actions that precipitated the adverse discharge, with fair 
reconsideration of the discharge if such evidence is found.
  Similarly, the VA would be required to make available, upon request, 
an appeals process to update the disability rating of a veteran who is 
found to have suffered a traumatic brain injury.
  Finally, this measure authorizes additional funding for research 
related to traumatic brain injury both in DOD and in the VA, to improve 
screening, diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation for traumatic brain 
injury.
  This is a comprehensive effort to improve the treatment of our 
Nation's wounded servicemembers who have suffered a traumatic brain 
injury. I can't imagine the anguish that must be associated with such 
an injury, but I can imagine the kind of medical system I would like to 
have in place if it were my son or daughter struggling to recover from 
such an injury. This legislation reflects that vision.
  I thank my cosponsors, Senators Warner, Murray, Graham, Obama, Webb, 
and Cantwell, and I urge all of my colleagues to support this measure.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the text of the bill be 
printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the text of the bill was ordered to be 
printed in the Record, as follows:

                                S. 1349

       Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of 
     the United States of America in Congress assembled,

     SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

       This Act may be cited as the ``Military and Veterans 
     Traumatic Brain Injury Treatment Act''.

     SEC. 2. PROGRAM OF SERVICES FOR TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY FOR 
                   MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES AND VETERANS.

       (a) Traumatic Brain Injury Program Required.--The Secretary 
     of Defense and the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall 
     jointly establish a program meeting the requirements of 
     subsections (c) through (f) under which each member of the 
     Armed Forces or veteran who incurs a traumatic brain injury 
     during service in the Armed Forces--
       (1) is enrolled in the program; and
       (2) receives, under the program, treatment and 
     rehabilitation meeting the standard of care specified in 
     subsection (b).
       (b) Standard of Care.--The standard of care for treatment 
     and rehabilitation specified in this subsection is that each 
     individual who is a member of the Armed Forces or veteran who 
     qualifies for care under the program established under 
     subsection (a) shall--
       (1) be provided the highest quality of care possible based 
     on the medical judgment of qualified medical professionals in 
     facilities that most appropriately meet the specific needs of 
     the individual; and
       (2) be rehabilitated to the fullest extent possible using 
     the most up-to-date medical technology, medical 
     rehabilitation practices, and medical expertise available.
       (c) Referrals.--
       (1) In general.--If a member of the Armed Forces or a 
     veteran participating in the program established under 
     subsection (a) determines that care provided to such 
     participant by the Department of Defense or the Department of 
     Veterans Affairs, as the case may be, does not meet the 
     standard of care specified in subsection (b), the Secretary 
     of Defense or the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, as the case 
     may be, shall, upon request of the participant, provide to 
     such participant a referral to a public or private provider 
     of medical or rehabilitative care for consultation regarding 
     the care that would meet the standard of care specified in 
     subsection (b).
       (2) Limitation on referrals.--The Department of Defense 
     shall bear the cost of referrals under paragraph (1), except 
     that the Secretary of Defense shall not be required to pay 
     for more than one referral for each participant in any 
     consecutive three month period.
       (d) Screening for Traumatic Brain Injury.--
       (1) Protocols for detection and diagnosis of traumatic 
     brain injury.--
       (A) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall, in 
     cooperation with the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, establish 
     protocols for the detection and diagnosis of traumatic brain 
     injury, including the use of various types of screening tools 
     as appropriate.
       (B) Frequency.--The protocol required by subparagraph (A) 
     shall provide that examinations shall be administered at 
     least once to each member of the Armed Forces--
       (i) before deployment to a combat theater; and
       (ii) during the period beginning on the 30th day after the 
     member returns from such deployment and ending on the 90th 
     day after the date on which such member returns to the 
     member's permanent duty station after such deployment.
       (C) Protocol for determination of baseline cognitive 
     functioning.--The protocols required by subparagraph (A) 
     shall include a protocol--
       (i) for the assessment and documentation of the cognitive 
     functioning of each member of the Armed Forces before each 
     such member is deployed in a combat theater, in order to 
     facilitate the detection and diagnosis of traumatic brain 
     injury of such member upon return from such deployment; and
       (ii) for the comparison of the cognitive functioning 
     determined under clause (i) with the cognitive functioning of 
     the member upon return from deployment.
       (D) Administration of computer-based examinations.--The 
     protocol required by subparagraph (C) shall include the 
     administration of computer-based examinations to members of 
     the Armed Forces.
       (2) Incidental detection.--If, while delivering health care 
     services to a member of the Armed Forces or a veteran who is 
     not a participant in the program established under subsection 
     (a), the Secretary of Defense or the Secretary of Veterans 
     Affairs, as the case may be, discovers that such member or 
     veteran may have incurred a service-connected traumatic brain 
     injury, the Secretary concerned shall test such member or 
     veteran for traumatic brain injury.
       (3) Referrals.--If the Secretary of Defense or the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs receives a referral for the 
     testing of a member of the Armed Forces or a veteran for 
     traumatic brain injury, the Secretary concerned shall test 
     such member or veteran for traumatic brain injury 
     expeditiously.
       (4) Enrollment.--If a member of the Armed Forces or a 
     veteran is diagnosed under this subsection with a traumatic 
     brain injury that was incurred during service in the Armed 
     Forces, such member or veteran shall be enrolled in the 
     program required by subsection (a).
       (e) Outreach.--
       (1) Outreach to members of the armed forces and veterans.--
     The Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Veterans 
     Affairs shall conduct a program of outreach to members of the 
     Armed Forces and veterans to inform such members and veterans 
     of--
       (A) the program required by subsection (a);
       (B) the availability of screening for the diagnosis of 
     traumatic brain injury under subsection (d);
       (C) the consequences, with regard to the treatment and care 
     of traumatic brain injury, of separation, discharge, and 
     retirement from the Armed Forces; and
       (D) the rights of such members or veterans described in 
     subsection (f).
       (2) Joint manual of benefits.--As part of the program of 
     outreach under paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense and 
     the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall annually and jointly 
     publish and distribute a manual explaining the benefits 
     available to participants in the program required by 
     subsection (a) and their families.
       (f) Rights of Members of the Armed Forces and Veterans With 
     Traumatic Brain Injury.--The Secretary of Defense and the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall inform members of the 
     Armed Forces and veterans with traumatic brain injury and 
     their families of their rights with respect to the following:
       (1) The receipt of medical care from the Department of 
     Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
       (2) The options available to such members and veterans for 
     treatment of traumatic brain injury.
       (3) The options available to such members and veterans for 
     rehabilitation.
       (4) Referrals under subsection (c)(1).
       (5) The right to any administrative or judicial appeal of 
     any agency decision with respect to the program established 
     under subsection (a).
       (6) Reviews of decisions under section 4.

[[Page 11784]]

       (g) Coordination of Case Management and Health Care 
     Services for Program Participants.--
       (1) Lead case managers.--The Secretary of Defense and the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall assign a qualified lead 
     case manager to each member of the Armed Forces or veteran, 
     as the case may be, that participates in the program required 
     by subsection (a). Each lead case manager shall, with respect 
     to a participant in the program under subsection (a) to whom 
     the lead case manager has been assigned--
       (A) coordinate the work of any other case managers 
     associated with such participant;
       (B) help the participant and the family of such participant 
     manage the stress associated with receiving treatment and 
     rehabilitative services for traumatic brain injury;
       (C) present the participant with options for the receipt of 
     medical and rehabilitative care, including options for such 
     care outside the Department of Defense and the Department of 
     Veterans Affairs, that meet the standard of care specified in 
     subsection (b);
       (D) help the participant find and receive the care, 
     including care from outside the Department of Defense and the 
     Department of Veterans Affairs, to which the participant is 
     entitled under subsection (a); and
       (E) ensure that providers of care to participants in the 
     program required by subsection (a) provide consistent 
     guidance to such participants.
       (2) Primary care physicians.--The Secretary of Defense and 
     the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall assign a lead primary 
     care physician to each member of the Armed Forces or veteran, 
     as the case may be, who participates in the program required 
     by subsection (a). Such lead primary care physician shall 
     coordinate and oversee the care provided to the participant, 
     including all treatment, rehabilitation, and medications.
       (3) Report.--Not later than 6 months after the date of the 
     enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense and the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall report to Congress on the 
     steps taken to coordinate care, as required by this 
     subsection, along with recommendations, if any, for 
     legislation to improve such coordination.
       (h) Resources.--
       (1) Facilities.--The Secretary of Defense and the Secretary 
     of Veterans Affairs may provide treatment and rehabilitation 
     in accordance with subsection (a) in any of the facilities as 
     follows:
       (A) Facilities of the Department of Defense.
       (B) Facilities of the Department of Veterans Affairs.
       (C) Public or private medical facilities accredited or 
     otherwise qualified to provide treatment and rehabilitation.
       (2) Access to equipment.--The Secretary of Defense and the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall ensure, by procurement, 
     contract, or agreement, that the program established under 
     subsection (a) has access to all specialized programs, 
     services, equipment, and medical expertise required to ensure 
     that each participant receives the standard of care specified 
     in subsection (b).
       (3) Cooperative agreements, contracts, or partnerships with 
     private and public medical centers.--The Secretary of Defense 
     and the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall, separately or 
     jointly, enter into cooperative agreements, contracts, or 
     partnerships with private or public medical centers with 
     expertise in the treatment or rehabilitation of individuals 
     with traumatic brain injury to provide consultation, 
     treatment, or rehabilitation to members of the Armed Forces 
     or veterans as required by subsection (a).
       (4) Training program.--The Secretary of Defense and the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall, separately or jointly, 
     provide grants to, or enter into contracts or agreements 
     with, private or public medical centers with expertise in the 
     treatment or rehabilitation of individuals with traumatic 
     brain injury to provide training, education, or other 
     assistance to personnel of the Department of Defense and the 
     Department of Veterans Affairs to ensure that such personnel 
     are consistently using the most up-to-date and best practices 
     and procedures for the screening, treatment, and 
     rehabilitation of members of the Armed Forces and veterans 
     with traumatic brain injury.
       (5) Overlap of benefits.--
       (A) In general.--During the 24-month period beginning on 
     the date that a member of the Armed Forces or a veteran is 
     enrolled in the program required by subsection (a), the 
     member or veteran shall be entitled to all of the benefits 
     otherwise available to a veteran (in the case of a member) or 
     member (in the case of a veteran), including participation in 
     the TRICARE program under chapter 55 of title 10, United 
     States Code, and care provided in a facility of the 
     Department of Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, or 
     other public or private facility, regardless of the active 
     duty status of such member or veteran.
       (B) Allocation of costs.--Costs associated with the 
     provision of care under subparagraph (A) shall be borne by 
     the Department of Defense.

     SEC. 3. FACILITATION OF CONTINUITY OF CARE FROM DEPARTMENT OF 
                   DEFENSE TO DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS.

       The Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Veterans 
     Affairs shall establish protocols to ensure that members of 
     the Armed Forces receive, with regard to health care benefits 
     and services from the Department of Veterans Affairs and 
     otherwise, a continuity of care and assistance during and 
     after the transition from military service to civilian life, 
     including protocols for the following:
       (1) The expeditious transfer of medical records from the 
     Department of Defense to the Department of Veterans Affairs.
       (2) Continuity of health care services, treatment, and 
     coverage for members of the Armed Forces who are 
     transitioning to civilian life, with particular emphasis on 
     providing continued health care to participants in the 
     program required by section 2.
       (3) The development of a specific, individualized 
     transition plan for each member, prior to discharge or 
     release from the Armed Forces, outlining the member's 
     seamless continuity of care.

     SEC. 4. REVIEW OF CERTAIN DECISIONS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF 
                   DEFENSE AND THE DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS.

       (a) Review of Other Than Honorable Discharge Status for 
     Former Members of the Armed Forces With Traumatic Brain 
     Injury.--
       (1) Review required.--The Secretary of Defense shall, upon 
     the request of any former member of the Armed Forces who 
     served in the Armed Forces after October 6, 2001, and has 
     been discharged from the Armed Forces under other than 
     honorable conditions, conduct a review (including a medical 
     evaluation) to determine whether a traumatic brain injury was 
     a cause of the actions of the member that precipitated the 
     discharge under other than honorable conditions. Such request 
     may also be made by an authorized representative of the 
     member.
       (2) Reconsideration.--If the Secretary of Defense 
     determines under this subsection that the traumatic brain 
     injury of a member was a cause of the actions of the member 
     that precipitated the discharge under other than honorable 
     conditions, the Secretary shall reconsider the discharge and 
     redesignate the status of such discharge if such action is 
     warranted.
       (b) Review of Decisions of Secretary of Veterans Affairs 
     Affecting Veterans With Traumatic Brain Injury.--Upon the 
     request of any veteran diagnosed with a traumatic brain 
     injury, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall review and 
     adjust as the Secretary considers appropriate, the disability 
     rating of such veteran.

     SEC. 5. TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY RESEARCH.

       (a) Research Required of Department of Defense.--The 
     Secretary of Defense shall conduct research--
       (1) to improve the screening, diagnosis, and treatment of 
     traumatic brain injury;
       (2) to improve rehabilitation of members of the Armed 
     Forces with traumatic brain injury;
       (3) to improve best practices for the activities described 
     in paragraphs (1) and (2); and
       (4) to identify the mechanisms of brain injury and ways to 
     prevent or ameliorate secondary effects of brain injuries.
       (b) Research Required of Department of Veterans Affairs.--
     Section 7303 of title 38, United States Code, is amended--
       (1) in subsection (a)(2), by inserting ``traumatic brain 
     injury research,'' after ``mental illness research,''; and
       (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
       ``(e) Traumatic brain injury research shall include 
     research--
       ``(1) to improve the screening, diagnosis, and treatment of 
     traumatic brain injury;
       ``(2) to improve rehabilitation of veterans with traumatic 
     brain injury;
       ``(3) to improve best practices for the activities 
     described in paragraphs (1) and (2); and
       ``(4) to identify the mechanisms of brain injury and ways 
     to prevent or ameliorate secondary effects of brain 
     injuries.''.
       (c) Grants or Cooperative Agreements.--In conducting the 
     research required by subsection (a) or in accordance with 
     section 7303(e) of title 38, United States Code, the 
     Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Veterans Affairs 
     may provide grants to, or enter into cooperative agreements 
     with, private or public medical centers with expertise in 
     research on traumatic brain injury, including the treatment 
     or rehabilitation of individuals with traumatic brain injury.
       (d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized 
     to be appropriated--
       (1) to the Secretary of Defense, $20,000,000 to carry out 
     the provisions of subsection (a); and
       (2) to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, $20,000,00 to 
     carry out the amendments made by subsection (b).

     SEC. 6. REPORT.

       Not later than December 15 of each year, the Secretary of 
     Defense shall, in conjunction with the Secretary of Veterans 
     Affairs, submit to Congress a report that contains, with 
     respect to the fiscal year ending in the year such report is 
     submitted, the following:
       (1) Descriptions of the activities, accomplishments, and 
     limitations of the program on traumatic brain injury 
     established under section 2.

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       (2) Recommendations of the Secretary of Defense and the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs, if any, for improving the 
     program established under section 2.
       (3) Information on the following:
       (A) The number of members of the Armed Forces and veterans 
     tested for traumatic brain injury by the Department of 
     Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs under section 
     2(d).
       (B) The number of members of the Armed Forces and veterans 
     diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury.
       (C) The number of members of the Armed Forces and veterans 
     enrolled in the program on traumatic brain injury established 
     under section 2.
       (D) The types of treatment and rehabilitation provided as 
     part of the program established under section 2.
       (E) The types of facilities in which services were provided 
     under section 2 and how such facilities were chosen to meet 
     the individual needs of individual patients.
       (F) The mechanisms used by the Department of Defense and 
     the Department of Veterans Affairs to ensure continuity of 
     care for members of the Armed Forces as they transition from 
     receipt of health care services from the Department of 
     Defense to the receipt of such services from the Department 
     of Veterans Affairs.
       (G) The number and nature of any cooperative agreements 
     engaged in under section 2(h).
       (H) The outreach activities carried out under subsections 
     (e) and (f) of section 2.
       (4) A description of the expenditures associated with the 
     outreach, screening, diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation, 
     and other services provided to members of the Armed Forces 
     and veterans under sections 2 and 3.

     SEC. 7. DEFINITION OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY.

       In this Act, the term ``traumatic brain injury'' means an 
     acquired injury to the brain. Such term does not include 
     brain dysfunction caused by congenital or degenerative 
     disorders, nor birth trauma, but may include brain injuries 
     caused by anoxia due to trauma. The Secretary of Defense and 
     the Secretary of Veterans Affairs may jointly revise the 
     definition of such term as the Secretaries determine 
     necessary, after consultation with the following:
       (1) The Secretary of Health and Human Services.
       (2) Representatives of any organization recognized by the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs for the representation of 
     veterans under section 5902 of title 38, United States Code.
       (3) Such public or nonprofit private entities that the 
     Secretary of Defense or the Secretary of Veterans Affairs 
     considers appropriate.

                          ____________________