[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 158 (2012), Part 6]
[House]
[Pages 8322-8350]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




 ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT AND RELATED AGENCIES APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 
                                  2013

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Berg). Pursuant to House Resolution 667 
and rule XVIII, the Chair declares the House in the Committee of the 
Whole House on the state of the Union for the further consideration of 
the bill, H.R. 5325.
  Will the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Poe) kindly resume the chair.

                              {time}  1936


                     In the Committee of the Whole

  Accordingly, the House resolved itself into the Committee of the 
Whole House on the state of the Union for the further consideration of 
the bill (H.R. 5325) making appropriations for energy and water 
development and related agencies for the fiscal year ending September 
30, 2013, and for other purposes, with Mr. Poe of Texas (Acting Chair) 
in the chair.
  The Clerk read the title of the bill.
  The Acting CHAIR. When the Committee of the Whole rose earlier today, 
an amendment offered by the gentleman from Utah (Mr. Matheson) had been 
disposed of and the bill had been read through page 56, line 24.


                    Amendment Offered by Ms. Kaptur

  Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Chairman, I rise to offer an amendment as the 
designee of Congressman McIntyre of North Carolina.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill, before the short title, insert the 
     following:
       Sec. ___. None of the funds made available under this Act 
     may be used to plan for the termination of periodic 
     nourishment for any water resource development project 
     described in section 156 of the Water Resources Development 
     Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-587), as amended by the Water 
     Resources Development Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-662).

  Ms. KAPTUR (during the reading). Mr. Chairman, I ask unanimous 
consent that the amendment be considered as read.
  The Acting CHAIR. Is there objection to the request of the 
gentlewoman from Ohio?
  There was no objection.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentlewoman from Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Ohio.
  Ms. KAPTUR. I rise today on behalf of the esteemed gentleman from 
North Carolina, Representative Mike McIntyre, who represents a district 
inclusive of the southeastern coast of North Carolina. Congressman 
McIntyre is, unfortunately, unable to come to the floor tonight, so I 
rise on his behalf to offer the following amendment.
  This amendment will prevent the Army Corps of Engineers from using 
funds to terminate or plan to terminate any 50-year coastal storm 
damage reduction project. The language in this amendment will give 
Congress and the Corps needed time to determine proper evaluation 
procedures.
  Coastal storm damage reduction projects were created by Congress to 
keep coastal communities safe and, over time, to save taxpayer dollars 
from repeated damage costs. These projects involve Federal-State 
partnerships where the communities assume the Federal Government will 
meet the commitment we have established through the Army Corps of 
Engineers.
  Obviously, coastal regions across our country have varying needs. The 
Seventh Congressional District of North Carolina is coastally different 
than Ohio's Ninth Congressional District along Lake Erie, which I 
represent. But the more than 100 miles of Ohio coastline that are in 
the Ninth District have seen important improvements for flood 
protection and shoreline improvement installations over the years that 
have proven themselves to be cost effective. In particular, two of 
these in Point Place and Maumee Bay have both performed better than 
even the Army Corps of Engineers analysis originally predicted. As a 
result of these completed projects, coastal communities in our region 
have been protected from costly and previously unmanageable storm water 
damage.
  In today's energy and water legislation, I ask on behalf of Mr. 
McIntyre and myself that Congress give communities affected by this 
amendment the same chance. On behalf of Congressman McIntyre, I 
appreciate the respected chairman and ranking member of the Energy and 
Water Subcommittee, Mr. Frelinghuysen and Mr. Visclosky, for their 
willingness to work collaboratively on these issues. These projects are 
proven successes, and the demonstrated need warrants a continuation of 
these cost-conscious investments that improve the safety of our coastal 
communities.
  I yield back the balance of my time.

                              {time}  1940

  The Acting CHAIR. Does any Member seek time in opposition?

[[Page 8323]]

  The question is on the amendment offered by the gentlewoman from Ohio 
(Ms. Kaptur).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                Amendment Offered by Mr. Young of Alaska

  Mr. YOUNG of Alaska. Mr. Chairman, I offer an amendment on behalf of 
the gentleman from California (Mr. Denham).
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill, before the short title, insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used to implement section 10011(b) of Public Law 111-11.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Alaska (Mr. Young) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Alaska.
  Mr. YOUNG of Alaska. This amendment has been adopted by the House 
twice unanimously, and so I urge the passage of the amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I support the amendment, and I yield back the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chair, I do rise today in opposition to the 
amendment offered by my colleague from Alaska on behalf of the 
gentleman from California.
  In 2009, the Congress ratified the San Joaquin Settlement Act, which 
ended 18 years of litigation in the Central Valley of California over 
water. The agreement was supported by the Bush administration and 
California's then-Republican Governor Schwarzenegger. The Federal 
authorizing legislation was initially cosponsored by Congressman Pombo 
in the House and Senator Feinstein in the Senate.
  If the amendment that has been offered were adopted, I believe we 
would be undermining the San Joaquin River agreement, which, if it were 
to stand, would land this case back in court. If the court is forced to 
take over river restoration, the Friant water users would be at risk of 
losing the 20 years of water supply certainty provided by the 
settlement.
  By blocking funding for efforts to restore salmon, the Denham 
amendment offered by Mr. Young would potentially end the broadly 
supported and bipartisan effort to restore the San Joaquin River while 
also improving water supply management, flood protections, and water 
quality. Therefore, I do insist on objecting to the gentleman's 
amendment, and I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Alaska (Mr. Young).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                   Amendment Offered by Mr. Kucinich

  Mr. KUCINICH. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available under this Act 
     may be used to provide new loan guarantees under section 1703 
     of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (42 U.S.C. 16513), and the 
     amount otherwise appropriated by this Act for ``Title 17 
     Innovative Technology Loan Guarantee Program'' is hereby 
     reduced by $33,000,000.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Kucinich) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Ohio.
  Mr. KUCINICH. My amendment would put a moratorium for fiscal year 
2013 on any new loan guarantees under what is now known as the section 
1703 loan guarantee program. To offset the loss of administrative 
revenue that would no longer come to the Department of Energy if the 
amendment passes, the amendment cuts $33 million from administrative 
costs that will not be necessary if the program is suspended. This 
program, originated in the Energy Policy Act of 2005, offers a 
guarantee for the loans that finance an energy project. With that kind 
of guarantee, the risk for the loaning entity is considered lower, 
which means they can charge a lower interest rate to the people 
initiating the energy project. In other words, it saves the project 
money. But it also puts the taxpayers on the hook if the project 
defaults.
  Section 1703 projects cover nuclear, coal, and even renewable energy. 
The closer we look at the guarantees, the less they seem like a 
worthwhile investment for the American taxpayer. Let me give you an 
example.
  Some of the biggest guarantees are for nuclear power. One of the 
first and biggest loans the Department of Energy is considering is one 
that is not necessary. That's not my assessment; it's the assessment of 
Kevin Marsh, the president of South Carolina Electric & Gas Company, 
which is attempting to build a new nuclear power plant. He said on a 
call to analysts and investors:
  We're confident in our ability to finance this project without a loan 
guarantee.
  This program stands to give him and his project, which could be in 
the $8 billion to $11 billion range, a preemptive bailout that is not 
even needed.
  Here's another example. A loan guarantee that is most likely to be 
awarded is for a new nuclear plant called Vogtle. That loan guarantee 
is for $8.3 billion. For those of you who displayed a great deal of 
concern about Solyndra's loan guarantee, this one is 15 times the size. 
With a project that big, it makes sense to look closely at the odds of 
this project going into default, leaving the taxpayers with the price 
tag. Well, Vogtle already has $913 million in cost overruns, and their 
SEC filings indicate more overruns can be expected. That, of course, is 
not at all unusual for a nuclear power plant project. Construction cost 
overruns are the rule, not the exception.
  Maybe that's why the CBO had this to say about nuclear loan 
guarantees:
  CBO considers the risk of default on such a loan guarantee to be very 
high--well above 50 percent.
  Or maybe they said that because there is another reason to expect 
nuclear power plants will continue to struggle financially: that reason 
is the low cost of natural gas that makes it far more attractive than 
taking multiple risks by going with nuclear power. Dale Klein, a former 
chairman of the NRC, cautioned that nuclear plants will not move off 
the blackboard and into construction, not as long as natural gas 
remains as cheap and plentiful as it is today.
  Nuclear power is not the only recipient of government largess under 
the section 1703 loan guarantee. Even if you are a nuclear power plant 
supporter, there are plenty of other boondoggles that are covered by 
this program that I don't have time to go into. That's why Members of 
Congress on both sides of the aisle can get behind this amendment, 
which is supported by a bipartisan coalition of groups, including 
Taxpayers for Common Sense, Friends of the Earth, National Taxpayers 
Union, and Physicians for Social Responsibility. It is for those who 
are concerned about wasteful government spending. This program alone 
will cost the taxpayers over $500 million--not including any defaults 
the taxpayers may have to cover. This amendment is for those who have 
concerns about deficit spending. It's for those with free market 
concerns about an energy technology that is not financially viable even 
after tens of billions of dollars in subsidies and decades of 
opportunities to mature to the point where subsidies are not needed. It 
is for those who are concerned about the effects of these energy 
technologies on our drinking water, on clean air, on healthy soil, and 
on climate change. It is for those who have concerns as ratepayers that 
they'll get stuck holding the bill when an energy project fails and 
their electricity rates go up. It is for those who found the Solyndra 
default to be outrageous.
  There's a little something for everyone with this amendment. I urge 
my

[[Page 8324]]

colleagues to support it, and I yield back the balance of my time.
  My amendment would put a moratorium for fiscal year 2013 on any new 
loan guarantees under what is known as the Section 1703 loan guarantee 
program. To offset the loss of administrative revenue that would no 
longer come to the Department of Energy if the amendment passes, the 
amendment cuts $33 million from administrative costs that will not be 
necessary if the program is suspended. This program, originated in the 
Energy Policy Act of 2005, offers a guarantee for the loans that 
finance an energy project. With that kind of guarantee, the risk for 
the loaning entity is considered lower, which means they can charge a 
lower interest rate to the people initiating the energy project. In 
other words, it saves the project money. But it also puts taxpayers on 
the hook if the project defaults.
  Section 1703 projects cover nuclear, coal, and even renewable energy. 
The closer we look at the guarantees, the less they seem like a 
worthwhile investment for the American taxpayer. Let me give you an 
example.
  Some of the biggest guarantees are for nuclear power. One of the 
first and biggest loans the Department of Energy is considering is one 
that is not necessary. That is not my assessment. That is the 
assessment of Kevin B. Marsh, the President of South Carolina Electric 
& Gas Company, which is attempting to build a new nuclear power plant. 
He said on a call to analysts and investors, ``[W]e are confident in 
our ability to finance this project without loan guarantee . . .'' This 
program stands to give him and his project, which could be in the 8-11 
billion dollar range, a preemptive bailout that is not even needed.
  Here's another example. A loan guarantee that is most likely to be 
awarded is for a new nuclear power plant called Vogtle. That loan 
guarantee is for 8.33 billion dollars. For those of you who displayed a 
great deal of concern about Solyndra's loan guarantee, this one is 15 
times as big. With a project that big, it makes sense to look closely 
at the odds of this project going into default, leaving you and me with 
the price tag. Well, Vogtle already has $913 million in cost overruns 
and their SEC filings indicate more overruns can be expected. That, of 
course, is not at all unusual for a nuclear power plant project. 
Construction cost overruns are the rule, not the exception.
  Maybe that is why the Congressional Budget Office had this to say 
about nuclear loan guarantees; ``CBO considers the risk of default on 
such a loan guarantee to be very high--well above 50 percent.'' Or 
maybe they said that because there is another reason to expect nuclear 
power plants will continue to struggle financially; that reason is the 
low cost of natural gas that makes it far more attractive than taking 
multiple risks by going with nuclear power. Dale Klein, a former 
chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, cautioned that nuclear 
plants will not ``move off the blackboard and into construction . . . . 
Not as long as natural gas remains as cheap and plentiful as it is 
today.''
  Nuclear power is not the only recipient of government largesse under 
the section 1703 loan guarantee program. Even if you are a nuclear 
power supporter, there are plenty of other boondoggles covered by this 
program that I don't have time to go into.
  That is why Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle can get 
behind this amendment, which is supported by a bipartisan coalition of 
groups including Taxpayers for Common Sense, Friends of the Earth, 
National Taxpayers Union, and Physicians for Social Responsibility. It 
is for those who are concerned about wasteful government spending. This 
program alone will cost the taxpayers over 500 million dollars--not 
including any defaults the taxpayers may have to cover. This amendment 
is for those who have concerns about deficit spending. It is for those 
with free market concerns about an energy technology that is not 
financially viable even after tens of billions of dollars of subsidies 
and decades of opportunities to mature to the point where subsidies are 
not needed. It is for those who are concerned about the effects of 
these energy technologies on our drinking water, on clean air, on 
healthy soil, and on climate change. It is for those who have concerns 
as ratepayers that they will also get stuck holding the bill when an 
energy project fails and their electricity rates go up. It is for those 
who found the Solyndra default to be outrageous.
  There is a little something for everyone here. I urge my colleagues 
to support the Kucinich amendment.


                          Potential Questions

  You are targeting nuclear loan guarantees. This is an anti-nuclear 
amendment.
  The Section 1703 loan guarantees will be awarded to a range of energy 
projects, including some which I wholeheartedly support like renewable 
energy. I firmly believe that renewables deserve to have aggressive 
subsidies to help them compete with the fuels of yesterday that have 
been so heavily subsidized for decades. But I am looking at the big 
picture here. This program, on balance, is bad policy.
  It is bad for our energy portfolio, bad for taxpayers, bad for clean 
air and water, and bad fiscal policy. Many of my friends on the other 
side of the aisle have voiced concerns over government picking winners 
and losers. This qualifies. They have expressed concern about 
government spending. This is a half billion program at a minimum, 
probably many times that. They have expressed concern about deficit 
spending. This is it. They have expressed concern that the free market 
should reign. This program does the opposite.
  This is an anti-renewable amendment,
  This is a 32 billion dollar loan guarantee program, of which only 
between 1.2 billion and 4 billion dollars is dedicated to renewables. 
The rest goes to unsustainable energy. Still, I don't take the 
renewable money lightly. I am a major supporter of the solar industry. 
In fact, I think the rapid and full throated deployment of solar energy 
should be one of our top priorities in Congress. But I am looking at 
the big picture here. This program, on balance, is bad policy.
  It is bad for our energy portfolio, bad for taxpayers, bad for clean 
air and water, and bad fiscal policy. Many of my friends on the other 
side of the aisle have voiced concerns over government picking winners 
and losers. This qualifies. They have expressed concern about 
government spending. This is a half billion program at a minimum, 
probably many times that. They have expressed concern about deficit 
spending. This is it. They have expressed concern that the free market 
should reign. This program does the opposite.
  This is a limitation amendment so you will not save a half billion 
dollars.
  We will not save the half billion all in one year. But if we hit the 
pause button on this program to consider it a little more carefully, we 
won't spend any of that money this year.
  Nuclear is viable/a good investment/financially sustainable.
  In reaction to Southern Company's investment in new nuclear reactors 
in 2010, Moody's downgraded its rating of Southern Company's.
  The Economist magazine declared in its March 10th issue that nuclear 
power is ``the dream that failed'': the plants are too costly and 
uncompetitive with alternatives.
  How will this amendment work?
  The CBO determined that budget authority would be increased by this 
amendment because administrative revenue from the loan guarantee 
recipients to the Department of Energy would be foregone. CBO estimated 
that amount to be $33 million. My amendment offsets that cost to the 
federal government by cutting administrative expenses dedicated to 
running the program this amendment would suspend.
  What kind of energy is covered in the loan guarantees?
  $18.5 billion for nuclear power plants.
  $4 billion for uranium enrichment plants.
  $8 billion for non-nuclear technologies; probably coal.
  $2 billion for unspecified projects.
  $1.183--$3.0 billion for renewable energy and energy efficiency.

                             Taxpayers for Commonsense Action,

                                                     June 5, 2012.
       Dear Representative: Together we urge you support the 
     amendment offered by Reps. Kucinich (D OH) and McClintock (R 
     CA) amendment to stop the Department of Energy (DOE) Loan 
     Guarantee Program from issuing any new loan guarantees in FY 
     2013. Created in Title 17 of the 2005 Energy Policy Act, the 
     DOE Loan Guarantee Program has received increased scrutiny 
     with the recent default of a loan guarantee to the solar 
     start-up company, Solyndra. Taxpayers stand to lose $500 
     million on the failed solar project and billions more could 
     be lost if the program continues in its current form.
       The Government Accountability Office (GAO), the DOE 
     Inspector General, and many others have been critical of the 
     existing loan guarantee effort. Recently the GAO found that 
     DOE could not even provide comprehensive information on the 
     current loan guarantee applicants and commitments, and a 
     recent review commissioned by the White House found the 
     program was not proactively protecting the taxpayer or 
     providing for a reasonable prospect of repayment.
       A recent audit of the Loan Guarantee Program by the Office 
     of the Inspector General found that the program, ``could not 
     always readily demonstrate . . . how it resolved or mitigated 
     relevant risks prior to granting loan guarantees.'' This 
     creates serious concern for taxpayers that the financial 
     terms of the loans are not being judiciously decided. 
     Furthermore, loan guarantees provided under Title 17 
     guarantee 100% of a loan for up to 80% of the project cost--
     leaving taxpayers to shoulder far too much of the project 
     risk. Adding insult to injury, the little protection 
     taxpayers did have in the

[[Page 8325]]

     event of project default was undermined in 2009 when DOE 
     weakened the original statute.
       With hundreds of billions in bailouts already on the 
     shoulders of US taxpayers, the country cannot afford to 
     continue a program that could easily become a black hole for 
     tens of billions in new defaults. We urge you to support the 
     Kucinich-McClintock amendment to stop new loan guarantees 
     from the troubled DOE Loan Guarantee Program!
           Sincerely,
     Taxpayers for CommonSense Action,
     National Taxpayers Union,
     Americans for Prosperity,
     Friends of the Earth,
     Nonproliferation Policy Education Center,
     Competitive Enterprise Institute,
     Freedom Action,
     Physicians for Social Responsibility.

  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I rise to claim time in opposition 
to the amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.

                              {time}  1950

  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I strongly oppose this amendment. It 
would put in jeopardy thousands of jobs in our energy sector. The types 
of projects it would jeopardize are entirely different than Solyndra. 
If the Member wants to reduce the risk of losing taxpayers' dollars, he 
should look towards the 1705 program, which has already lost over half 
a billion dollars to risky loans.
  This may be a convenient attempt to paint some of these potential 
loan guarantees with a Solyndra brush, but it just doesn't wash. The 
companies requesting these loan guarantees are not startups with shaky 
financial records, but neither are they large enough to have enough 
capital to fully pay for such massive projects. The loan guarantees 
help them leverage their capital in a reasonable manner to ensure that 
the benefits of these technologies can be shared by millions of 
Americans.
  I urge Members to vote ``no'' on this amendment, and I yield back the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I would simply also state my objection 
to the gentleman's amendment.
  I appreciate the concerns he expressed, especially for those projects 
that may not make economic sense. If in those cases the gentleman is 
correct, there should be no loan guarantee offered. Having said that, 
for those programs that are in the queue that are under consideration 
that make sense and move our energy policy forward, we ought not to 
prohibit them from doing so by passing this amendment this evening.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Kucinich).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes 
appeared to have it.
  Mr. KUCINICH. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from Ohio will be 
postponed.


                  Amendment Offered by Mrs. Blackburn

  Mrs. BLACKBURN. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title) insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available under this Act 
     may be used to provide new loan guarantees or loan guarantee 
     commitments under section 1705 of the Energy Policy Act of 
     2005 (42 U.S.C. 16515).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentlewoman from Tennessee (Mrs. Blackburn) and a Member opposed each 
will control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Tennessee.
  Mrs. BLACKBURN. Mr. Chairman, since 2009, the Department of Energy 
has used title 17, and specifically 1705--section 1705--to create a 
government-run venture capital firm using taxpayers' hard-earned funds. 
Unfortunately, in this zero-sum game being played and led by this 
administration, American taxpayers have continually ended up on the 
short end of the stick as we have watched companies like Solyndra, 
Beacon Power, and others lose hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars.
  Through section 1705, DOE has closed transactions that guarantee 
approximately $16.15 billion of loans for renewable-energy projects 
through a policy of acceleration implemented by Secretary Chu.
  With 82 percent of all funding within section 1705 going to solar 
projects, it appears that even in the field of renewable energy this 
administration has a very aggressive policy of picking winners and 
losers.
  Throughout the program, there have been countless red flags raised by 
career DOE staff about the financial viability of firms looking for 
taxpayer funding, as was the case with Solyndra. Many of us have been 
around solar power for years. We have watched it go through many stages 
of development; And while many of these companies have great ideas, 
they are just not ready for prime time.
  The high level of frustration with the loan guarantee program is not 
only being felt by taxpayers, but by companies who have also tried to 
go through the loan guarantee process. This amendment should send a 
clear signal to the Senate, to DOE, and to the administration that we 
have truly grown ill and fatigued with the mismanagement of the loan 
guarantee program and that we do not want any funding put into section 
1705 in fiscal year 2013 through the appropriations or through any 
other vehicle.
  I ask my colleagues for their support as we close the door on the 
Solyndra debacle.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Will the gentlewoman yield?
  Mrs. BLACKBURN. I yield to the gentleman from New Jersey.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. We are prepared to accept her amendment.
  Mrs. BLACKBURN. I thank the chairman for the acceptance, and I yield 
back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentlewoman from Tennessee (Mrs. Blackburn).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                  Amendment Offered by Mrs. Blackburn

  Mrs. BLACKBURN. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  Each amount made available by this Act (other 
     than an amount required to be made available by a provision 
     of law) is hereby reduced by 1 percent.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentlewoman from Tennessee (Mrs. Blackburn) and a Member opposed each 
will control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Tennessee.
  Mrs. BLACKBURN. I want to thank the committee for its hard work in 
identifying ways to cut spending in this appropriations. The fiscal 
year 2013 proposed funding level is $32.1 billion. Now, that is $965 
million below the President's budget request. But, Mr. Chairman, there 
is a lot more that can be done; and thereby I again am making the 
request that we make an additional 1 percent across-the-board spending 
reduction which will save taxpayers an additional $321 million.
  Now, I am fully aware that as I come with these amendments for each 
of our appropriations bills, I hear about how these cuts are too deep, 
they are going to have too far of a reach, they are damaging our 
national security, they are going to cut things that are important to 
our life and our property. And imagine that--we are asking the 
bureaucracy to go in and shave one penny out of a dollar--one 
additional penny out of a dollar--in order to help put our Nation back 
on a track to fiscal sanity.
  As I've said before, across-the-board spending cuts effectively 
control the

[[Page 8326]]

growth and the cost of the Federal Government. They not only give 
agencies flexibility to determine which expenses are necessary; but, 
more importantly, they do not pick winners and losers. Not only do I 
support the use of across-the-board spending cuts, but so does former 
Governor Mitt Romney, Governor Chris Christie, Governor Rick Perry, 
Governor Mitch Daniels, Governor Brian Schweitzer, and Governor 
Christine Gregoire, just to name a few of the Nation's chief executives 
of their States.
  In the chairman's own State of New Jersey, I would like to point out 
Governor Christie's statement. Now, this was November 7, 2010 on ``Meet 
the Press.'' Governor Christie said:

       In New Jersey what we did was we cut spending in every 
     department, a 9 percent cut in real spending, not projected 
     spending, real spending year over year.

  That is because these work. And Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels took 
the State's 2-year budget. He enacted that budget in June, and he cut 
most agency spending by 10 percent from the previous budget.

                              {time}  2000

  And we hear about Indiana being on the road to fiscal health.
  Then former Governor Mitt Romney has said, as President, Mitt Romney 
will send Congress a bill on day one that cuts nonsecurity 
discretionary spending by 5 percent across the board.
  Governor Rick Perry, starting in January 2010, we asked them to 
identify 5 percent savings in the 2010 11 biennium, and 10 percent for 
the '12 and '13 biennium. The point, Mr. Chairman, it works. Across-
the-board cuts work. We know that. The Governors know it.
  The American people have really grown so tired of this wasteful 
Washington out-of-control spending. They want to see cuts made. Let's 
do this for our children and grandchildren. Let's cut one penny out of 
every dollar and have the bureaucracy do exactly what our small 
businesses are doing every single day--sitting down, making cuts, 
figuring out how they're going to handle very difficult economic times.
  I ask for the support.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I rise to seek time in opposition, Mr. Chairman.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I rise in strong opposition to this 
amendment. Our bill already cuts $1 billion from the President's 
request. We're below 2009 levels. While difficult trade-offs had to be 
made, the bill, in its current form, balances our needs. We prioritize 
funding for essential activities and cut out new spending on poorly 
performing programs. Yet the gentlelady's amendment proposes an across-
the-board cut on every one of these programs.
  With all due respect, and she's extremely knowledgeable, that's not 
the way that Governor Christie does it in New Jersey. He takes a look 
at each program, considers its merit, considers whether it's a proper 
investment in infrastructure, whether it will promote jobs.
  And yet unlike, perhaps, the State budget, we're responsible for 
nuclear security, for our nuclear stockpile, national security needs.
  This is not the way to approach budget cutting. I urge the committee 
and the House to reject this amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I want to add my voice to the chairman's in 
opposition.
  The gentlewoman talked about a 1 percent cut. I would point out that 
several years ago this Nation spent more money on water projects in one 
city than we did on every water project in the United States of 
America. The city was New Orleans, because we didn't make the proper 
investment up front.
  I don't think we should risk losing one life. And I would acknowledge 
that we have already reduced the Corps' budget from existing year level 
by $216 million.
  We have at least a third of the harbors in this Nation that are not 
dredged to depth. Every time a ship comes in or leaves that is not 
fully loaded, there is a job that is lost, one job or more. There is $1 
of profit for that shipper, for that company, or more that is lost. 
Those are the numbers I'm worried about.
  I strongly oppose the gentlewoman's amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentlewoman from Tennessee (Mrs. Blackburn).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes 
appeared to have it.
  Mrs. BLACKBURN. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentlewoman from Tennessee 
will be postponed.


             Amendment Offered by Ms. Jackson Lee of Texas

  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the 
desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       Page 56, after line 24, insert the following new section:
       Sec. 510.  None of the funds made available by this Act for 
     ``Department of Energy; Energy Programs; Science'' may be 
     used in contravention of the Department of Energy 
     Organization Act (42 U.S.C. 7101 et seq.).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Texas.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I hope that my appreciation 
to the ranking member and the chairman is evidenced by hoping to offer 
an amendment that is a reflection of the time that I served on the 
Science Committee for 12 years, and now almost a decade plus on 
Homeland Security.
  When we speak about jobs, we understand that jobs are equated to 
education, and the education that is the key of today in the 21st 
century is science, technology, engineering, and math.
  I had the privilege of participating in one of the largest robotic 
competitions among students from around the world, hosted in Houston, 
Texas, sponsored by the Harmony School. It was amazing, Mr. Chairman, 
to see the outstanding and talented young people, particularly from the 
United States, but hosting individuals from around the world. The 
camaraderie, the collegiality around not war but peace and how to use 
science, technology, engineering, and math to improve the quality of 
life of all who live in this world was amazing.
  But more importantly, as we look to America and the creation of jobs, 
we must create a new generation of inventors knowledgeable about 
science, technology, engineering, and math similar to what NASA did in 
inspiring young people to go into physics, biology, chemistry, and a 
variety of sciences, all desiring be to be astronauts, many of whom 
became medical doctors.
  Now, as we begin to look at regaining our manufacturing prowess, 
science, technology, engineering, and math are key. The United States 
economic base has shifted from the manufacturing of durable goods to 
processing and analyzing information.
  In this information-driven economy, the most valuable assets are 
human resources in science, technology, engineering, and math. But, in 
addition, manufacturing can be bolstered by science, technology, 
engineering, and math. It is so important, then, to ensure that we 
prepare the next generation.
  This amendment is simply a restatement and an affirmation of the 
importance of the fact of the Department of Energy energy programs, 
science, and that we reinforce the value of these programs. I have seen 
it firsthand. I am promoting, and many Members as well, science, 
technology, engineering, and math in their particular communities.
  The National Assessment of Educational Progress, the Nation's 
education report card, shows that fewer

[[Page 8327]]

than 40 percent of students at every grade level tested are proficient 
in math and science. In 2006, only 4.5 percent of college graduates in 
the United States received a diploma in engineering.
  So I ask my colleagues to just reinforce our commitment to job 
creation; to science, technology, engineering, and math; to 
inventiveness; to world peace; to the collaboration of young people in 
this generation moving forward to make a better quality of life for all 
who are in this world.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Will the gentlewoman yield?
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I would be happy to yield to the gentleman.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. We are prepared to accept your amendment.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I thank the gentleman very much, and I 
thank the committee for its work.
  I ask my colleagues to support the amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. Chair, I rise today to offer an amendment to H.R. 5325, the 
``Energy and Water Appropriations Development Act, FY 2013.'' My 
amendment will protect funds provided for Science under Title III of 
the Department of Energy's Energy Programs. This amendment addresses 
the need to increase programs that educate minorities in science, 
technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), as well as, the need to 
train teachers and scientists in advanced scientific and technical 
practices.
  As a former Member of the Committee on Science, Space, and 
Technology, I recognize the importance of developing a highly skilled 
technical workforce. Over the last 50 years, there have been major 
changes in the United States in terms of both the economy and the 
population.
  The economic base has shifted from the manufacturing of durable goods 
to processing and analyzing information. In this information-driven 
economy, the most valuable assets are human resources. Therefore, in 
order to compete successfully in the global economy, the U.S. needs 
citizens who are literate in terms of science and mathematics, and a 
STEM workforce that is well educated and well trained (Friedman 2005, 
National Academy of Sciences 2005, Pearson 2005). Consequently, we 
cannot--literally or figuratively--afford to squander its human 
resources; it is imperative that we develop and nurture the talent of 
all its citizens.
  The jobs of tomorrow will require workers who possess strong advanced 
science, engineering and math backgrounds. Other countries are training 
and educating their citizens in these areas and we must do the same. By 
investing in the scientific advancement of our workforce and our youth, 
we are investing in our future . . . we are investing in job creation . 
. . we are investing in greater job opportunities for Americans. This 
investment is the only way to address the increasing knowledge gap 
between our nation's workforce and those of our international 
counterparts. We must invest in our citizens. My amendment will ensure 
the funds that have been made available will be utilized for that 
purpose.


    PROGRAM 1: WORK FORCE AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS FOR TEACHERS AND 
                               SCIENTISTS

  The work force and development program for teachers and scientists is 
vital to ensure that we have an adequate amount of properly educated 
and trained teachers and scientists. Under H.R. 2354, workforce 
development for teachers and scientists is funded at $17,849,000, which 
is $4,751,000 below the fiscal year 2011 level, which is a devastating 
$17,751,000 below the President's requested amount. This is a draconian 
cut which will have drastic effects on an already struggling workforce. 
My amendment would ensure that the amount provided to this program 
would remain intact.
  The workforce development program for teachers and scientists 
provides funding to graduate fellowship programs which train and 
develop our Nation's top scientists, engineers, and teachers. These 
individuals go on to become researchers and innovators--contributing to 
American business and, moreover, the U.S. economy. Fellowship programs 
like these are exactly what our country needs in order to develop a 
highly skilled technical workforce.
  As we have heard time and time again in many different contexts, our 
country suffers from a shortage of scientists and engineers. Moreover, 
our country is dealing with a lack of qualified instructors, at all 
levels--elementary, secondary, and post-secondary--to teach STEM 
subjects--science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.
  The United States faces a critical shortage of highly qualified 
mathematics and science teachers, we will need an additional 283,000 
teachers in secondary school settings by 2015 to meet the needs of our 
Nation's students. This qualified teacher shortage is particularly 
pronounced in low-income, urban school districts. As BHEF reported in A 
Commitment to America's Future: Responding to the Crisis in Mathematics 
and Science Education, high teacher turnover in conjunction with 
increasing student enrollment and lower student-to-teacher ratios will 
cause annual increases in the mathematics and science teacher shortage 
culminating in a 283,000-person shortage by 2015.
  Fewer American students than ever are graduating from college with 
math and science degrees. In 2006 only 4.5 percent of college graduates 
in the United States received a diploma in engineering, compared with 
25.4 percent in South Korea, 33.3 percent in China, and 39.1 percent in 
Singapore.
  The problem is systemic. According to the National Center for 
Education Statistics, about 30% of fourth graders and 20% of eighth 
graders cannot perform basic mathematical computations. Today, American 
students rank 21st out of 30 in science literacy among students from 
developed countries and 25th out of 30 in math literacy. If this trend 
continues, there will be dire consequence for our children and our 
economy.
  To be sure, in order to train and develop the amount of scientists, 
educators, and teachers of STEM subjects that our country needs, we 
would really need more of these graduate fellowship programs. As 
reflected in the budgetary request, which H.R. 5325 fails to meet, an 
increased number of graduate fellowships would be ideal to invest in 
our future.
  At the very least, we would want to keep the same amount of graduate 
fellowships available. Unfortunately, the proposed amount appropriated 
to these programs under H.R. 2354 ignores the current shortage of 
scientists and teachers, and irresponsibly ignores our future by 
providing for a lesser amount of graduate fellowships.


  PROGRAM 2: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, AND MATHEMATICS (STEM)

  I have long recognized the need to improve the participation and 
performance of America's students in Science, Technology, and 
Engineering and Math (STEM) fields.
  Traditionally, our Nation recruited its STEM workforce from a 
relatively homogenous talent pool consisting largely of non-Hispanic 
White males. However, this pool has decreased significantly due not 
only to comprising an increasingly smaller proportion of the total U.S. 
population but also to declining interest among this group in pursuing 
careers in STEM.
  It is important to note that the need to improve the participation of 
underrepresented groups--especially underrepresented racial/ethnic 
groups--in STEM is not solely driven by demographics and supply-side 
considerations; an even more important driver is that STEM workers from 
a variety of backgrounds improve and enhance the quality of science 
insofar as they are likely to bring a variety of new perspectives to 
bear on the STEM enterprise--in terms of both research and application 
(Best 2004; Jackson 2003; Leggon and Malcom 1994).
  The current state of STEM education is deplorable. In 2006 only 4.5 
percent of college graduates in the United States received a diploma in 
engineering, compared with 25.4 percent in South Korea, 33.3 percent in 
China, and 39.1 percent in Singapore. Today, American students rank 
21st out of 30 in science literacy among students from developed 
countries and 25th out of 30 in math literacy. If this trend continues, 
there will be dire consequence for our children and our economy.
  These numbers are discouraging, but the statistics on minority 
students in the STEM fields are even more alarming. In 2004, African 
American and Hispanic students were among the least likely groups to 
take advanced math and science courses in high school. Even as African 
Americans, Hispanics, and Native Americans comprise an increasingly 
large portion on the population, they continue to be underrepresented 
in the science and engineering disciplines. Together, these three 
groups account for over 25% of the population, but only earn 16.2% of 
bachelor's degrees, 10.7% of master's degrees, and 5.4% of doctorate 
degrees in the science, math and engineering fields. This fact directly 
contributes to the unacceptable underrepresentation of African American 
and Hispanics in the STEM workforce. If we choose to continue to ignore 
this problem, we are not only shortchanging our students' success, we 
will be giving up on our nation's future.
  Many school districts across the nation have begun to recognize this 
problem and work towards a strategic solution. In my home district for 
example, several public schools and charter schools have started to 
allocate funds towards programs aimed at increasing STEM performance.

[[Page 8328]]

  For example the Harmony Science Academy in Houston devotes an 
impressive amount of time and resources towards educating the city's 
youth in the sciences. Small class sizes, high expectations for 
students, and well-qualified teachers helped this school make it to 
Newsweek magazine's list of best high schools in America. Harmony 
Science Academy is a success story we can all be proud of. 
Unfortunately, schools like this are the exception and not the rule.
  In many school districts there simply are not enough resources 
available to make our children science and math literate. There is a 
shortage of qualified teachers, many classes are woefully overcrowded 
and some schools just cannot afford the materials and books that 
students need in order to master basic math and science concepts. I 
cannot stand idly by while we fail to give our children the educational 
tools they need to succeed in life and gain employment.
  This amendment recognizes the importance of equipping young minds 
with the technological and scientific knowledge necessary to compete in 
a globalized economy. Further, within the context of globalization, I 
strongly believe that this country's ability to achieve and maintain a 
high standard of living is dependent on the extent to which it can 
harness science and technology. Thus, in order to enhance the 
international competitiveness of the country, it is critical for us to 
promote and support students pursuing careers in STEM fields.
  Mr. Chair, it is essential that we invest in a workforce ready for 
global competition by creating a new generation of innovators and make 
a sustained commitment to federal research and development. We need to 
spur and expand affordable access to broadband, achieve energy 
independence, and provide small business with tools to encourage 
entrepreneurial innovation.
  The establishment and maintenance of a capable scientific and 
technological workforce remains an important facet of U.S. efforts to 
maintain economic competitiveness. Pre-college instruction in 
mathematics and scientific fields is crucial to the development of U.S. 
scientific and technological personnel, as well as our overall 
scientific literacy as a nation. The value of education in science and 
mathematics is not limited to those students pursuing a degree in one 
of these fields, and even students pursuing nonscientific and 
nonmathematical fields are likely to require basic knowledge in these 
subjects.
  Mr. Chair, the United States has a great history of scientific 
innovation. From Ben Franklin to NASA to Silicon Valley, the success 
and competitiveness of America has always depended on the knowledge and 
skills in the STEM fields. Funding my amendment today will help ensure 
that the American legacies of intelligence, innovation, and invention 
continue. Today I urge my colleagues to support this amendment and 
invest in America's future.


                FAST FACTS ON STEM--LIMITATION AMENDMENT

  The Importance of STEM fields to the U.S. economy:
  The U.S. economic base has shifted from the manufacturing of durable 
goods to processing and analyzing information. In this information-
driven economy, the most valuable assets are human resources in 
science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields.
  In 2005, the National Academy of Sciences published a report entitled 
``Rising Above the Gathering Storm,'' which estimated that in the 
United States innovations generated by the Science, Technology, 
Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields account for nearly half of 
the growth in gross domestic product.
  More than 3 million job openings in STEM related fields will be 
created by 2018 that will require a bachelor's degree or higher 
(Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce).
  The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that science and engineering 
occupations are projected to grow by 21.4% from 2004 to 2014, which is 
significantly higher than the projected growth of 13% in all other 
occupations during the same time period.
  The Crisis in STEM education:
  The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)--the Nation's 
education report card--shows that fewer than forty percent of students, 
at every grade level tested, are proficient in math and science.
  In 2006, only 4.5 percent of college graduates in the United States 
received a diploma in engineering, compared with 25.4 percent in South 
Korea, 33.3 percent in China, and 39.1 percent in Singapore.
  Today, American students rank 21st out of 30 in science literacy 
among students from developed countries and 25th out of 30 in math 
literacy.
  At our current rate, the United States falls short of project 
workforce needs in the STEM fields by more than a million workers 
(National Science Foundation).
  Underrepresentation of Minorities and Women in STEM fields:
  Recent statistics provided by the Engineering Workforce Commission 
indicate a large disparity in STEM education between men and women, and 
between minorities and Caucasians.
  African American and Hispanic students were among the least likely 
groups to take advanced math and science courses in high school.
  Together, these three groups account for over 25% of the total U.S. 
population, but only earn 16.2% of bachelor's degrees, 10.7% of 
master's degrees, and 5.4% of doctorate degrees in the science, math 
and engineering fields.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                  Amendment Offered by Mr. Luetkemeyer

  Mr. LUETKEMEYER. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill, before the short title, insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available in this Act may 
     be used to continue the study conducted by the Army Corps of 
     Engineers pursuant to section 5018(a)(1) of the Water 
     Resources Development Act of 2007.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Luetkemeyer) and a Member opposed each 
will control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Missouri.
  Mr. LUETKEMEYER. Mr. Chairman, last year the United States was 
pummeled by severe weather that destroyed land, homes, businesses, and 
even lives. Families living along the Missouri River endured another 
year of significant flooding that left them physically and economically 
underwater.
  In the first half of 2012 alone, millions of American tax dollars 
have gone toward environmental restoration and recovery programs, while 
maintenance of our Nation's infrastructure has been neglected.
  President Obama, in his fiscal year 2013 budget, requested more than 
$90 million for the Missouri River Recovery Program, which would 
primarily go toward the funding of environmental restoration studies 
and projects.

                              {time}  2010

  This figure should alarm all of my colleagues.
  In fiscal year 2012, the President requested $70 million for this 
program. These are staggering increases from the $50 million request 
that was seen in fiscal year 2008, and the Corps has little to show for 
its increased spending. Moreover, the fiscal year 2013 request dwarfs 
the insufficient $7.8 million requested for the entire Bank 
Stabilization and Navigation Program from Sioux City to the mouth of 
the Missouri.
  I do not take for granted the importance of river ecosystems. I grew 
up along the Missouri River, as did so many of the people I represent. 
Yet, we have reached a point in our Nation at which we value the 
welfare of fish and birds more than the welfare of our fellow human 
beings. Our priorities are backwards, Mr. Chairman.
  This exact amendment passed by voice vote during the fiscal year 2012 
appropriations consideration. It is supported by the American Waterways 
Operators, the Coalition to Protect the Missouri River, the Missouri 
and Illinois Farm Bureaus, and the Missouri and Iowa Corn Growers 
Associations, which propose a prohibition of funding for the Missouri 
River Ecosystem Restoration Plan, or MRERP.
  By the way, the end of the study will in no way jeopardize the Corps' 
ability to meet the requirements of the Endangered Species Act. MRERP 
is one of no fewer than 70 environmental and ecological studies focused 
on the Missouri River. The people who have had to foot the bill for 
these studies, many which take years to complete and are ultimately 
inconclusive, are the very people who last year lost their farms, their 
businesses, and their homes.
  This amendment will eliminate a study that has become little more 
than

[[Page 8329]]

a tool of the administration's and environmentalists for the promotion 
of the return of the river to its most natural state with little regard 
for flood control, navigation, trade, power generation, or the people 
who depend on the Missouri River for their livelihoods.
  Our vote today will also show our constituents that this Congress is 
aware of the gross disparity between the funding for environmental 
efforts and the funding for the protection of our citizens. During the 
debate on fiscal year 2012 appropriations, the House passed by voice 
vote this exact language, which was ultimately signed into law by 
President Obama.
  It is time for Congress to take a serious look at water development 
funding priorities, and it is time to send a message to the Federal 
entities that manage our waterways. I urge my colleagues to support 
this amendment and to support our Nation's river communities.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I rise in opposition to the gentleman's amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, the WRDA bill 2007, which was passed 
with much bipartisan support, so much so that it overcame a 
Presidential veto, authorized the Corps to undertake the Missouri River 
Ecosystem Restoration Plan and to develop the Missouri River Recovery 
Implementation Committee to consult on the study. This authority 
provided a venue for collaboration between the 70 stakeholder groups of 
tribes, States, public interest groups, and Federal agencies to develop 
a shared vision and comprehensive plan for the restoration of the 
Missouri River ecosystem.
  At this time, by prohibiting the Corps from expending any 2013 funds 
on the study and the committee, we would continue to delay that start. 
I believe this would be very shortsighted and would lead to a further 
erosion of trust in the delicate partnership in the basin. While the 
Corps will continue to comply with Endangered Species' requirements 
through other activities, I believe there is a role for a long-term 
plan for this basin. Again, I would urge my colleagues to oppose the 
amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Luetkemeyer).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the ayes 
appeared to have it.
  Mr. BERG. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from Missouri 
will be postponed.


             Amendment Offered by Ms. Jackson Lee of Texas

  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the 
desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  For an additional amount for ``Department of 
     Energy--Energy Programs--Energy Efficiency and Renewable 
     Energy'', as authorized by sections 131(c)(4), 131(d)(4), 
     135(j), 207(c), 229(d), 244(f), 246(d), 321(g)(2), 422(f), 
     439(e), 452(f)(1)(E), 495(d), 625(e), 641(p), 652(d), 655(k), 
     656(j), 703(b), 705(b)(4), 803(c), 805(e)(6), 807(c)(2), and 
     1303(c) of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, 
     sections 712(c) and 1008(f)(7)(A) of the Energy Policy Act of 
     2005, and section 399A(i) of the Energy Policy and 
     Conservation Act, there is appropriated, and the amount 
     otherwise made available for ``Atomic Energy Defense 
     Activities--National Nuclear Security Administration--Weapons 
     Activities'' is hereby reduced by, $10,000,000.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Texas.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. For a number of years, Mr. Chairman--and to 
my colleagues, again, I thank the chairman and ranking member--I 
practiced energy law in the State of Texas.
  For a number of years, I worked with advocacy groups that were crying 
out for an energy policy in this Nation, one that would respect the 
assets that we've been blessed with in this country. Texas is blessed 
with a number of assets, particularly wind and solar, as it has fossil 
fuel, shale--opportunities to ensure that America remains independent 
in the quest for energy independence.
  My amendment recognizes the holistic approach to energy. In 
recognizing the various resources that our State has and many other 
States, it is a very, very small contribution, but an important 
contribution, for the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy program.
  Whenever you speak to the multinationals, I will assure you that all 
of them have within their companies an emphasis or a section on the 
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy program. This is an essential 
office that invests in clean energy technologies, an office that is 
created to strengthen our economy and protect our environment. It works 
well simultaneously along with the other very important programs in the 
U.S. Department of Energy.
  Under H.R. 5325, this development program fosters research, providing 
to innovators the funds and resources they need to develop energy-
efficient equipment that can be used at home, by the construction 
industry, and in the transportation market. The main concept is that 
this can create jobs, that partnerships can create jobs. This program 
is designed to develop cost-efficient methods through the use of 
renewable energy practices for the home. Financial incentives are 
provided to builders that utilize methods that result in the reduction 
of energy use during construction, as well as to manufacturers within 
the transportation industry who research and design energy-efficient 
vehicles.
  I have had the privilege of going through energy-constructed homes. 
What a unique difference. Builders across America are crying out for 
the opportunity to experiment with these very special, unique tools. I 
would ask my colleagues to consider the job creation aspect of 
renewable energy and the role that it plays in a holistic energy 
policy. I ask my colleagues to support this amendment.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Will the gentlelady yield?
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I yield to the gentleman from Indiana.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I simply would voice my support for her amendment.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I thank the gentleman very much.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I rise in opposition to the amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, this amendment would risk our 
nuclear security activities in order to add unnecessary funding to 
energy efficiency and renewable energy programs.
  Our bill preserves the funding for that account's highest priorities 
and those accounts that help advance American manufacturing and that 
help our companies compete globally and address soaring gas prices. 
Additional funding for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy is 
unwarranted, especially when it comes at the expense of national 
security. So I strongly urge my colleagues to vote against the 
gentlewoman's amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, how much time do I have 
remaining?
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentlewoman has 2\1/2\ minutes remaining.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I respect and thank the gentleman from 
Indiana very much, the ranking member, for his support of the 
amendment, and I thank him for his leadership.
  I appreciate the chairman's commentary, but that is why I attempted 
to be very responsible and balanced.

                              {time}  2020

  This is a mere--though I take that word seriously--$10 million. And 
let me tell you why it is enormously important. The U.S. Department of 
Energy report found that wind energy could

[[Page 8330]]

supply 20 percent of the Nation's electricity by 2030. We're fast 
approaching that, which could entail 300,000 megawatts of new wind-
generating capacity.
  There are States throughout the United States that would have a great 
opportunity for increased job creation and businesses around wind 
capacity. Again, a holistic approach to energy. Nearly $20 billion will 
be saved if the energy efficiency of commercial and industrial 
buildings improved by 10 percent.
  As a member of the Homeland Security Committee overseeing the 
Homeland Security Department, I know we look at all aspects to secure 
our Nation. Energy independence, in spite of the fact of our diversity 
in resources, is extremely important. That's why I believe a holistic 
approach is crucial. This helps the holistic approach. As we continue 
in States that deal with fossil fuel, this is equally important. Thirty 
percent of energy in buildings is used inefficiently or unnecessarily. 
Ethanol is a clean renewable energy. It is helping to reduce our 
Nation's dependence on oil and offers a variety of economic, 
environment benefits.
  Again, I'm not too unappreciative, if you will, of the diversity of 
energy in this country not to look at all aspects of it. And I do hope 
that we can have a holistic approach. I think this contributes to that 
holistic approach, taking into account all aspects of energy in a 
unified energy policy.
  I ask my colleagues to support this amendment, and I yield back the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. Chair, I rise today to offer an amendment to H.R. 5325, the 
``Energy and Water Appropriations Development Act, FY 2013.'' My 
amendment provides to increase funds by $10,000,000 for the Energy 
Efficiency and Renewable Energy Program.
  The Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Program is an essential 
office that invests in clean energy technologies created to strengthen 
our economy and protect our environment.
  Under H.R. 5325, this development program fosters research providing 
funds to innovators with the resource they need to develop energy 
efficient equipment that can be used at home, by the construction 
industry and in the transportation market.
  This program is designed to develop cost efficient methods through 
the use of renewable energy practices for the home. Financial 
incentives are provided to builders who utilize methods that results in 
the reduction of energy use during construction, as well as, 
manufactures within the transportation industry who research and design 
energy efficient vehicles.
  Providing additional funding to this program today only advances 
research that may one day result in a significant decrease in our 
dependence on energy from foreign sources that are hostile to U.S. 
interest. In addition, this program will positively impact rising fuel 
prices affecting Americans across the country.
  It is this research which will ultimately contribute to sustaining 
our economy by looking for domestic solutions to energy concerns thus 
reducing foreign dependency on highly consumed substances such as oil. 
Likewise it provides incentives to businesses taking initiatives to 
conserving energy by creating tools directly effecting solar, wind and 
water energy. Programs like these are vital to the Americans, in order 
to develop a highly skilled technical workforce to address current 
energy issues that have generational effects on our families and our 
land.


                               fast facts

  The U.S. Department of Energy's Building Technologies Program reduced 
energy costs for consumers and businesses by billions of dollars, as 
well as associated energy use and emissions, through setting minimum 
energy performance standards for appliances and commercial equipment.
  To date, every Federal dollar spent has resulted in an average of 
$650 in net savings, and has also helped spur product innovation. As of 
2010, consumers and businesses have saved $15 billion per year, and 
this annual amount is expected to nearly double by 2025.
  Buildings use more energy than any other sector of the U.S. economy, 
consuming more than 70 percent of electricity and over 50 percent of 
natural gas.
  A U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) report found that the wind energy 
could supply 20 percent of the Nation's electricity by 2030, which 
would entail 300,000 megawatts (MW) of new wind generating capacity.
  Nearly $20 billion would be saved if the energy efficiency of 
commercial and industrial buildings improved by 10 percent.
  Thirty percent of energy in buildings is used inefficiently or 
unnecessarily.
  Ethanol is a clean, renewable fuel. It is helping to reduce our 
Nation's dependence on oil and offers a variety of economic and 
environmental benefits. Today, on a life cycle basis, ethanol produced 
from corn results in about a 20 percent reduction in GHG emissions 
relative to gasoline. With improved efficiency and use of renewable 
energy, this reduction could be as much as 52 percent.
  One hundred ten (110) manufacturers joining the Better Buildings, 
Better Plants Program to gain recognition and technical support from 
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Demonstrated their commitment to 
energy savings by signing a voluntary pledge to reduce energy intensity 
by 25 percent over 10 years. These companies are implementing cost-
effective energy efficiency improvements that reduce their bottom lines 
while enhancing U.S. competitiveness.
  Household vehicle ownership has changed over the last six decades. In 
1960, over 20 percent of households did not own a vehicle, but by 2010, 
that number fell to less than 10 percent. The number of households with 
three or more vehicles grew from 2 percent in 1960 to nearly 20 percent 
in 2010. Before 1990, the most common number of vehicles per household 
was one, but since 1990, the most common number of vehicles is two.
  Starting in 1980, more than 50 percent of American households owned 
two or more vehicles.
  The typical U.S. family spends at least $2,000 a year on home utility 
bills. This amount can be lowered by up to 25 percent by engaging in 
more efficient methods to save energy within the home.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes 
appeared to have it.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentlewoman from Texas will 
be postponed.


                  Amendment Offered by Mr. Luetkemeyer

  Mr. LUETKEMEYER. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None the funds made available by this Act may be 
     used for the study of the Missouri River Projects authorized 
     in section 108 of the Energy and Water Development and 
     Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2009 (division C of 
     Public Law 111-8).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Luetkemeyer) and a Member opposed each 
will control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Missouri.
  Mr. LUETKEMEYER. Mr. Chairman, last year, parts of the Missouri River 
basin faced some of the worst flooding in history. This devastation, 
combined with our dire financial climate and the aging waterways 
infrastructure, means that now, more than ever, we must be 
deliberative, focused, and responsible with taxpayer-funded projects 
and studies.
  My amendment would prohibit funding for the duplicative Missouri 
River Authorized Purposes Study, also known as MRAPS. This amendment 
was passed by the House during both fiscal year 2011 and 2012 debates. 
MRAPS is a $25 million earmark study that comes on the heels of a 
comprehensive $35 million 17-year study completed in 2004.
  Some may say that we need MRAPS to examine the causes and impacts of 
the 2011 flooding. That simply isn't the case. First and foremost, 
every member of the Missouri River basin is on record as supporting 
flood control as the most important authorized purpose. It's something 
that we take very seriously. The last thing we need is another 17-year, 
highly litigious study to tell us that flood control is important.
  Thousands of Missouri River basin residents who lost their homes and 
businesses deserve action, not distraction. What we need to do is take 
legitimate steps that focus on protecting life and property and 
improving the safety and soundness of our flood-control system. It is 
also important to note that

[[Page 8331]]

there are many commercial advantages provided by our inland waterway 
system. The Missouri River plays an integral part in both domestic and 
international trade. MRAPS puts the uses of the Missouri and 
Mississippi Rivers in jeopardy, which could result in devastating 
consequences for navigation along both. That's why the Missouri 
waterways operators, the Coalition to Protect the Missouri River, the 
Missouri and Iowa Corn Growers Associations, and the Missouri and 
Illinois Farm Bureaus support this amendment.
  This study is duplicative and wasteful of taxpayer dollars. On this 
exact issue, we've already spent 17 years and $35 million on hundreds 
of public meetings and extensive litigation. Again, I offered identical 
language to the fiscal year 2011 continuing resolution. That amendment 
passed by a vote of 245 to 176. In the fiscal year 2012 debate, this 
exact amendment passed by a voice vote and was ultimately included in a 
package signed by the President. I appreciate my colleagues who offered 
their support and hope to have their support once again.
  Mr. Chairman, there is no doubt in my mind that water resources 
receive too little funding. It is time for the Federal Government to 
refocus and reprioritize to create safer, more efficient infrastructure 
for our inland waterways and stop spending hard-earned taxpayer dollars 
unnecessarily.
  I ask for my colleagues' support of this amendment, and I yield back 
the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, my understanding is there is no money in 
the bill for this project, so I do not know why the gentleman is 
offering it. But I have no objection to it, and I yield back the 
balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Luetkemeyer).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the ayes 
appeared to have it.
  Mr. BERG. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from Missouri 
will be postponed.


                Amendment No. 17 Offered by Mr. Cravaack

  Mr. CRAVAACK. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
  The text of the amendment is as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title) insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used by the Department of Energy to require grant 
     recipients to replace any lighting that does not meet or 
     exceed the energy efficiency standard set forth in section 
     325 of the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (42 U.S.C. 
     6295).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Cravaack) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Minnesota.
  Mr. CRAVAACK. Mr. Chairman, I rise to offer an amendment that would 
protect universities, nonprofits, and businesses who receive Federal 
grants from having to implement the light bulb ban. Even though the 
Department of Energy has been prohibited from carrying out the light 
bulb ban by last year's Energy and Water appropriations bill, and will 
in this bill as well in section 316 of FY12 omnibus appropriations 
bill, it however included a requirement that recipients of all 
Department of Energy grants in excess of $1 million certify that they 
will replace all light bulbs in their facilities that do not meet the 
energy-efficiency standards instituted by the 2007 energy bill.
  This requirement was driven by the Senate. The House passed a DOE 
spending bill that did not include a similar provision or debate and 
vote on this significant requirement. This is a particularly burdensome 
provision that in some ways goes well beyond the actual light bulb ban 
that prohibits manufacture and sale of 100 watt bulbs, and beginning in 
July 2013, 75 watt bulbs.
  Rather than allowing the DOE grantees to replace bulbs as they burn 
out, this requirement forces small businesses and universities across 
the country to immediately replace existing light bulbs. This makes 
absolutely no sense. This forces extra costs on grant recipients and 
effectively means funds otherwise intended for actual research 
activities must instead be dedicated to purchasing new light bulbs to 
replace perfectly functional ones. This amendment allows the House to 
explicitly go on record opposing this unnecessary and burdensome 
requirement.
  I encourage my colleagues to support this commonsense amendment.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Will the gentleman yield?
  Mr. CRAVAACK. I yield to the gentleman from New Jersey.

                              {time}  2030

  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I am pleased to support the gentleman's amendment.
  Mr. CRAVAACK. I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I firmly believe that the issues that 
inspire Congress to enact energy efficiency standards in the Energy 
Policy and Conservation Act of 2007 have not changed and, if anything, 
they have gotten worse. Families continue to struggle every day to meet 
rising energy bills, and there are real savings to be had by moving to 
more efficient illumination.
  However, if this bill is going to carry a provision prohibiting the 
Department of Energy from implementing and enforcing the light bulb 
efficiency standards, then it does not make much sense to hold DOE 
grant recipients to the standard.
  I surmise that most recipients of DOE grants who tend to be pretty 
energy savvy have already made the transition to light bulbs and are 
enjoying their energy savings as we in the House rehash and debate the 
exaggerated doubt of the incandescent light bulb. However, I do not 
oppose the amendment of the gentleman from Minnesota.
  I yield back the balance of my time
  Mr. CRAVAACK. Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR (Mr. Chaffetz). The question is on the amendment 
offered by the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Cravaack).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                   Amendment Offered by Mr. Cravaack

  Mr. CRAVAACK. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available in this Act may 
     be used to develop or submit a proposal to expand the 
     authorized uses of the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund 
     described in section 9505(c) of the Internal Revenue Code of 
     1986 (26 U.S.C. 9505(c)).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Cravaack) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Minnesota.
  Mr. CRAVAACK. Mr. Chairman, in the Transportation and Infrastructure 
Committee last year, Jo-Ellen Darcy, Assistant Secretary of the Army 
for Civil Works, testified that the administration was preparing to 
expand the scope of projects eligible to receive Harbor Trust Fund 
monies. She alluded to the administration's interest in using the 
Harbor Trust Fund for port security, among other things.
  While I support the funding of port security through appropriations, 
I oppose repurposing the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund while our 
Nation's maritime infrastructure is in a state of disrepair. Eight out 
of 10 of the Nation's largest harbors are not dredged their authorized 
depths and widths.
  Mr. Chairman, make no mistake: This has direct impact on American job

[[Page 8332]]

creation and prosperity. When American ships have to light load to 
clear the shallowest channel, American economic productivity is lost.
  For instance, every inch silted in the American Laker Fleet 
collectively, per voyage, leaves 8,000 tons of Minnesota iron ore on 
the docks in Duluth. That's enough to produce over 6,000 cars.
  Moreover, light loading causes increased transportation costs for our 
exports and decreases our national economic competitiveness. Every 
billion dollars in exports, Mr. Chairman, translates into 15,000 jobs.
  We must, Mr. Chairman, ensure that the monies intended for dredging 
are not siphoned off for other programs. My amendment will prohibit 
monies from being used by the administration to develop a plan or draft 
legislation to expand the scope of projects eligible to receive Harbor 
Maintenance Trust Fund monies. American shippers are taxed specifically 
to maintain the channels they and our Nation depend on. It is 
imperative that we ensure that the Harbor Trust Fund monies be spent as 
they were intended, thereby ensuring American competitiveness and 
proliferation of American jobs.
  I am thankful that the administration has dropped this misguided 
proposal in their budget proposal this year, but the only way to ensure 
that this doesn't return in a midnight rule is to prohibit the funding 
in this bill. I ask my colleagues to join me in supporting this 
amendment.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, while I agree with the gentleman from 
Minnesota that the moneys from the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund should 
not be diverted from their intended purpose of dredging, I do think it 
is an overreach for the legislative branch to prohibit the executive 
branch from even discussing the topic. I do think we are in a position 
where looking forward we ought to let other branches of government talk 
about ideas and concepts so that they can be debated by this body.
  Additionally, though, we all know that any proposal put together by 
the executive branch to expand eligible activities under the Harbor 
Maintenance Trust Fund without first addressing the surplus and 
addressing backlog issues would not be considered in either House of 
Congress.
  Again, I do not believe particularly that the amendment is necessary. 
That being said, I do not oppose its inclusion in the bill.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. CRAVAACK. Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Cravaack).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                 Amendment No. 18 Offered by Mr. Harris

  Mr. HARRIS. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
  The text of the amendment is as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title) insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available under this Act 
     may be used to fund any portion of the International program 
     activities at the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable 
     Energy of the Department of Energy with the exception of the 
     activities authorized in section 917 of the Energy 
     Independence and Security Act of 2007 (42 U.S.C. 17337).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Maryland (Mr. Harris) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Maryland.
  Mr. HARRIS. Mr. Chairman, this amendment would prohibit the use of 
funds for many of the international projects in the Office of Energy 
Efficiency and Renewable Energy--that's EERE--including the President's 
plan to spend $600,000 on ``sustainable cities'' projects in China and 
India. My amendment is identical to one I offered last year that was 
successfully adopted by this Chamber.
  I would also like to congratulate the chairman of the committee for 
his own action regarding this issue. The chairman's bill reduces 
funding for EERE by $428 million from last year's level. He makes the 
hard choices required to address our country's deficit and spending 
problems.
  This amendment supports language in the report that accompanied the 
FY 2012 appropriations bill. In that report, the chairman was able to 
retain much of last year's amendment by directing the DOE to only fund 
projects that directly benefit the United States, such as increasing 
American energy self-sufficiency, furthering United States research 
efforts or reducing domestic pollution.
  Unfortunately, the Department of Energy is failing to follow these 
clear instructions. Instead, they are choosing to spend money in China 
and India on foreign sustainable cities projects, even as we borrow 
money from China to pay our national debt.
  Mr. Chairman, we must take great care how we spend our constituents' 
paychecks. I don't believe these projects make the best use of hard-
earned taxpayer money. There are greater needs that remain unmet and a 
massive Federal debt and annual deficit that continues to drag down our 
entire economy, as was demonstrated in today's Congressional Budget 
Office report. I urge adoption of the amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I rise in opposition to the amendment 
offered by my colleague from Maryland. The amendment would essentially 
create an energy renewable program for the U.S.-Israel program by 
restricting the EERE international program from dealing with any other 
country.
  I certainly am a supporter of the country of Israel, and Israel has a 
vibrant and cutting-edge clean energy industry, but I do not believe 
that we ought to limit this program to one country out of many, and 
think that it would be a mistake to put all of our international 
program eggs into a single basket.
  This program, which directly supports the mission of the Department 
to advance the development and deployment of clean energy technologies, 
needs to be able to establish relationships with multiple partner 
countries in order to be effective.

                              {time}  2040

  The program's technical assistance activities help to prime markets 
for us for clean technologies in major emerging economies. The program 
can bring home lessons learned from others' experiences to share with 
national, State, and local authorities. The program can also promote 
U.S. national security and potentially reduce price volatility of 
fossil energy resources by decreasing the influence of oil-exporting 
countries and mitigating world demand for oil.
  Again, this is an excellent program. I do not believe it ought to be 
simply limited to one country. I am opposed to the gentleman's 
amendment, and I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Maryland (Mr. Harris).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                Amendment No. 10 Offered by Mr. Burgess

  Mr. BURGESS. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
  The text of the amendment is as follows:

       At the end of the bill, before the short title, insert the 
     following new section:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available in this Act may 
     be used--
       (1) to implement or enforce section 430.32(x) of title 10, 
     Code of Federal Regulations; or
       (2) to implement or enforce the standards established by 
     the tables contained in section 325(i)(1)(B) of the Energy 
     Policy and Conservation Act (42 U.S.C. 6295(i)(1)(B)) with 
     respect to BPAR incandescent reflector lamps, BR incandescent 
     reflector lamps, and ER incandescent reflector lamps.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Burgess) and

[[Page 8333]]

a Member opposed each will control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Texas.
  Mr. BURGESS. The passage in this House back in 2007 of the Energy 
Independence and Security Act was something that has caused a great 
deal of difficulty across the country. I have heard from tens of 
thousands of my constituents on how that language will affect their 
lives and take away consumer choice for what kind of light bulbs they 
will use in their home. Mr. Chairman, they are exactly right.
  When the government passed energy efficiency standards in other 
realms over the years, they never went as far as they did this time. 
They lowered standards drastically. It's now to a point where the 
technology is, honestly, years off in making light bulbs that are 
compliant with the law and actually affordable by the consumer.
  Light bulb companies have talked about their new bulbs that are 
compliant with the existing law and that are available now, but at what 
price? A four-pack of 100-watt incandescent bulbs in my district cost 
$2.97 at a hardware store last December 31. Now a single bulb will cost 
$20, $30, $40--even $50.
  Opponents to my amendment say that the 2007 language does not ban the 
incandescent bulb. Well, that's partly true, but it bans the sale of 
the 100-watt incandescent bulb, and soon the 60-watt and 45-watt bulbs 
will follow suit because they cannot meet the energy standards supplied 
in the underlying legislation. The replacement bulbs are far from 
economically efficient, if indeed they are energy efficient.
  But here's the deal. We shouldn't be making these decisions for the 
American people. Let them decide how much energy they want to consume 
and how many dollars they want to spend on kilowatt hours every month, 
not the Federal Government. A family living paycheck-to-paycheck can't 
afford to replace every bulb in their house at $25 a pop, even if it 
will last them 20 years.
  This exact amendment was passed last year on this appropriations bill 
by a voice vote. It was signed into law by President Obama. It allows 
consumers to continue to have a choice and a say as to what they put in 
their homes. It's common sense. Let's give some relief to American 
families, at least until replacement light bulbs can be marketed at a 
price that is reasonable.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I rise in opposition to the gentleman's 
amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I would point out to my colleagues that this debate is 
not about choice--or energy efficiency, for that matter. It is about, 
from my perspective, endangering American jobs and, specifically, 
American manufacturing jobs.
  We have a significant trade imbalance in this country. Given that 
American manufacturers have committed to following the law regardless 
of whether or not it is enforced, the only benefit to this amendment is 
to allow foreign manufacturers who may not feel a similar obligation to 
export noncompliant light bulbs that will not only harm the investments 
made by U.S. companies but place at risk U.S. manufacturing jobs 
associated with making compliant bulbs.
  Further, I believe they represent a tax increase. It represents an 
equivalent of a $100 tax on every American family--$16 billion across 
the Nation--through increased energy costs.
  The performance standards for light bulbs were established in the 
Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. At that time, the bill, 
as I pointed out in an earlier portion of this debate, enjoyed such 
strong bipartisan support that we were able to override a Presidential 
veto of that act. As far as I'm aware, the issues that inspire this 
standard have not changed, and I would argue have gotten worse.
  It is a common misunderstanding that the Energy Independence and 
Security Act bans the incandescent light bulb and requires people to 
have the limited choice of only a compact florescent bulb. This is not 
true. It simply requires that they be more efficient. And I do not see 
what the harm is in that.
  Further, while claiming that the incandescent bulb is dead makes for 
a great sound bite, it does not reflect reality.
  I am opposed to the gentleman's amendment, and I yield back the 
balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Burgess).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                    Amendment Offered by Mr. Tipton

  Mr. TIPTON. I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The text of the amendment is as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used to conduct a survey in which money is included or 
     provided for the benefit of the responder.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Colorado (Mr. Tipton) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Colorado.
  Mr. TIPTON. Mr. Chairman, I rise today to offer an amendment aimed at 
ending an egregious practice of wasting taxpayer dollars in this time 
of mounting Federal debt. This amendment specifically aims to eliminate 
the Federal Government's recent practice of sending out cash to 
encourage survey responses favorable to agency goals. I wholeheartedly 
agree with the general need for public input in our government, but the 
practice of sending out American taxpayer dollars to encourage public 
participation, or worse, to buy public support where it might otherwise 
be lacking, is a symbol of the lack of accountability and how out of 
touch our Federal Government has become.
  For generations, the Bureau of Reclamation has served the Western 
United States well. Its dams, reservoirs, canals, and hydro-powered 
turbines have formed the backbone of our communities and provided 
abundant water and emission-free energy. This was all based on 
ratepayers paying for almost every cent of these projects at no expense 
to the taxpayers. Yet that mission is changing, and this couldn't be a 
better example of just how out of touch the agency has become under 
this administration.
  At issue here is the so-called survey aimed at soliciting local, 
regional, and national input on the societal need to remove four 
privately owned dams on the Klamath River. The survey was mailed to 
1,000 households in California, Oregon, and selected households in the 
rest of the Nation. Each of these households received a postcard 
telling them that the survey was coming. Then a large packet with the 
survey arrived. In each packet a cover letter, a postage paid return 
envelope, a survey, and a $2 bill was included to entice the people to 
respond. That's $22,000 of American taxpayers' money being spent.
  To those who did not respond but kept the $2 bill anyway, a Federal 
Express or priority mail package was sent out. This was sent to 1,245 
people, out of which 286 responded.

                              {time}  2050

  Each of these 286 respondents was then given $20, which means that 
$5,720 of additional taxpayer dollars was spent, not including the cost 
of the FedEx or Priority Mail. Only the Federal Government would 
further reward people for not responding the first time.
  Let's take a look at some of the responses that the Bureau of 
Reclamation published in a report earlier this year:
  ``Another waste of taxpayer money,'' one said.
  ``No wonder the U.S. is having money problems if the government has 
extra $2 bills to mail out randomly,'' said another.
  ``Wow, what a waste of time. I have neither the time or interest in 
something I have not a clue about happening clear across the country. 
Sorry.

[[Page 8334]]

P.S. Thanks for the 2 bucks,'' yet another wrote.
  In all fairness, there were some positive responses. But, I think 
this comment says it best:
  ``Send me no more. Thank you.''
  And that's what this amendment does, Mr. Chairman. It simply 
prohibits the Bureau of Reclamation and other agencies covered under 
the legislation from funding a survey in which money is included or 
provided for the benefit of the responder. It doesn't say that the 
Federal Government can't have public input or send out surveys, which 
is necessary to the process. It simply says no more giving away 
taxpayer dollars.
  The above amounts may not seem a lot in this day of trillion-dollar 
budgets, but it is symbolic of the waste and abuse going on here.
  To make matters worse, the Bureau of Reclamation has yet to fully 
answer and comply with a request made months ago by Natural Resources 
Chairman Doc Hastings and the Water and Power Subcommittee Chairman Tom 
McClintock that is aimed at answering the rationale about the survey, 
the overall cost of this survey, and why taxpayer dollars were 
included. The American people deserve answers. They deserve 
transparency that apparently this administration will not give. In the 
interim, however, they deserve to know that their government will not 
be sending out their hard-earned tax dollars on a dam removal survey by 
an organization that was once dedicated to building dams.
  I urge my colleagues to end this blatant waste of taxpayer fraud and 
abuse by supporting this amendment, and I yield back the balance of my 
time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chair, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I am happy to accept the gentleman's amendment, and I 
yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Colorado (Mr. Tipton).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the ayes 
appeared to have it.
  Mr. TIPTON. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from Colorado 
will be postponed.


             Amendment Offered by Ms. Jackson Lee of Texas

  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the 
desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  The amounts otherwise provided by this Act are 
     revised by reducing the amount made available for ``Atomic 
     Energy Defense Activities--National Nuclear Security 
     Administration--Weapons Activities'', and increasing the 
     amount made available for ``Corps of Engineers-Civil--
     Department of the Army--Operation and Maintenance'', by 
     $52,000,000.

  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I reserve a point of order.
  The Acting CHAIR. A point of order is reserved.
  Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the gentlewoman from 
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) and a Member opposed each will control 5 
minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Texas.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I again ask my colleagues to 
support this amendment because anyone who has lived near a port 
understands what the Army Corps of Engineers is going through. We spend 
our time working with the Corps on this issue of dredging. In every 
port in the United States, millions of dollars are lost because of the 
inability of access and the difficulty of making sure that our Nation's 
ports are ready for the increase in business.
  The Transportation Institute Center for Ports and Waterways 
indicated, analyzing the direct economic effects of channel 
restrictions and the loss of 1 foot of draft from the Houston ship 
channel, as an example, and the data was collected from the years 2008 
and 2009, the study determined that a direct economic impact of the 
loss of 1 foot over 2 years amounts to $373 million. This, in fact, is 
an account that has been authorized, as evidenced by the Army Corps, 
which deals in particular with the Department of Army Operations and 
Maintenance. This infusion is to assist in making sure that jobs are 
saved and jobs are created.
  The study does not consider other effects that are very real but are 
extremely difficult to measure, but they can measure what the lack of 
dredging can bring about. I would make the argument that in ports that 
are competing with world ports, accessibility is crucial.
  I ask my colleagues to be reminded that we are in the business of 
creating jobs. It seems ridiculous that we cannot add to an existing 
account to create jobs, to assist in one of the largest ports in the 
Nation, ports along the west coast, ports along the gulf, and ports 
along the east coast, all ports that are engaged in receiving large 
vessels that are bringing in goods and large vessels going out with 
manufactured and other goods from the United States of America.
  I ask my colleagues to support this amendment, and I reserve the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I rise to claim time in opposition.
  The Acting CHAIR. Does the gentleman continue to reserve his point of 
order?
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Yes, I do.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman reserves.
  The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I rise to oppose the gentlewoman's amendment.
  As I've said many times, I, too, am concerned about sufficiently 
maintaining our waterways. These waterways contribute significantly to 
our national economy by providing a means of cost-efficient cargo 
transportation. To this end, our bill funds the operations and 
maintenance account at $2.5 billion, an increase of $109 million above 
the President's budget request and $95 million above fiscal year 2012.
  I would remind the gentlewoman that under the earmark ban, the final 
bill cannot include funding to a specific project in an amount above 
the President's budget request.
  Instead of increasing funding for specific projects, our bill 
includes additional funding for categories of ongoing projects--
including an additional $189 million for navigation dredging--with 
final project-specification allocations to be made by the 
administration. The project my colleague is interested in would be 
eligible to compete for this additional funding.
  As an offset, this amendment strikes funding for the modernization of 
our nuclear weapons stockpile and its supporting infrastructure. 
Ensuring adequate funding to maintain our nuclear weapons is my highest 
priority for our bill. The increases provided in this bill for nuclear 
security have received strong bipartisan support.
  This amendment unacceptably strikes funding for both of these 
priority investments, which are both urgent and overdue. I strongly 
urge my colleagues to make defense a priority and vote ``no'' on this 
amendment, and I yield back the balance of my time.


                             Point of Order

  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I raise a point of order against the 
amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman may state his point of order.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. The amendment proposes to increase an 
appropriation not authorized by law, and therefore is in violation of 
clause 2(a) of rule XXI.
  Although the original account funding for the Corps of Engineers--
Civil--Department of Army--Operations and Maintenance is unauthorized, 
it was permitted to remain in the bill pursuant to the provisions of 
the rule that provided for the consideration of this bill. When an 
unauthorized appropriation is permitted to remain in a general 
appropriations bill, an amendment merely changing that amount is in 
order, but the rules of the House apply

[[Page 8335]]

a ``merely perfecting standard'' to the items permitted to remain and 
do not allow the insertion of a new paragraph--not part of the original 
text permitted to remain--to increase a figure permitted to remain.
  I would further say the account contains funding for projects not 
entirely authorized.
  The amendment cannot be construed as merely perfecting, and 
therefore, Mr. Chairman, I ask that the Chair rule the amendment out of 
order.
  The Acting CHAIR. Does any other Member wish to be heard on the point 
of order?
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I do.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentlewoman is recognized on the point of 
order.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I thank the gentleman from New Jersey for 
his expression. What I would argue is: What are Members here to do?
  I would vigorously disagree this is an earmark. I believe there is 
authorization, in particular under operation and maintenance. But the 
dilemma that the gentleman is making an argument on is whether or not 
you can increase it versus reducing it. And so what my argument is is 
that this is a general increase to operation and maintenance with no 
specific tie to indicate that it is an earmark.

                              {time}  2100

  There is no monetary benefit to me as a Member of Congress, publicly 
stated on the floor of the House. Therefore, this is to increase 
millions of jobs in America, in ports around America, for an issue that 
is devastating to ports and that the Army Corps of Engineers is being 
overwhelmed, that is, the requirement of dredging. Dredging equals 
allowing the quality of vessel to increase by tonnage, to bring in and 
take out goods that Americans have manufactured and goods that 
Americans are seeking to import with our allies and trading partners.
  It is to increase jobs. Therefore, I'd make the argument that we are 
bound by rules that have nothing to do with earmarks if you are, in 
essence, placing funding into existing accounts to help Americans--all 
of America--and to build our ports--all of our ports--making them more 
secure and making them more accessible so that the goods of Americans 
can go to and fro, and that jobs can multiply.
  If one port alone, by one foot of inaccessibility, lack of dredging, 
loses $373 million, multiply that by the number of major ports in the 
United States from the East to the southern coastline to the west 
coast. I make the argument that this is an amendment that can stand on 
its own and should not be subject to a point of order.
  I ask my colleagues to support the amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. Does any other Member wish to be heard on the point 
of order? If not, the Chair is prepared to rule.
  The proponent of an item of appropriation carries the burden of 
persuasion on the question whether it is supported by an authorization 
in law. Having reviewed the amendment and entertained argument on the 
point of order, the Chair is unable to conclude that the item of 
appropriation in question is authorized in law. For example, the 
manager has stated that the account contains funding for unauthorized 
projects and the Chair would note that some items appropriated in the 
Operation and Maintenance account are not modified by the phrase ``as 
authorized by law.''
  Under the precedents of July 12, 1995, and July 16, 1997, an 
amendment adding matter at the pending portion of the bill to effect an 
indirect increase in an unauthorized amount permitted to remain in a 
portion of the bill already passed in the reading is not ``merely 
perfecting'' for purposes of clause 2(a) of rule XXI. The Chair is 
therefore constrained to sustain the point of order under clause 2(a) 
of rule XXI.


                  Amendment Offered by Mr. Rohrabacher

  Mr. ROHRABACHER. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title) insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available under this Act 
     may be used for the U.S. China Clean Energy Research Center.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from California (Mr. Rohrabacher) and a Member opposed each 
will control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from California.
  Mr. ROHRABACHER. Mr. Chairman, my amendment would prevent any funds 
in this bill from being spent on the U.S.-China Clean Energy Research 
Center.
  Our Department of Energy is using our taxpayer dollars to help China 
to develop their energy systems. This specific expenditure is $37.5 
million over 5 years. China should be spending their own money for 
developing their own energy systems.
  With the miserable shape of our budget and our economy, the last 
thing we should be doing is depleting our resources to help the Chinese 
become more efficient and thus more competitive. We are borrowing money 
from Communist China, paying interest on that money, and then turning 
around and subsidizing the development of a high-tech manufacturing 
sector in China that will take away more American jobs. This is as 
nutty as it gets.
  The Department of Energy is helping the Communist Chinese to build 
electric vehicles. Over the next 20 years, the electric vehicle 
industry may well be creating 130,000 up to maybe 350,000 American 
jobs. As of 2010, 30,000 Americans are already working in the electric 
vehicle and advanced battery industries. Tesla Motors in my State is 
already doing it. Why are we spending our tax dollars to put these jobs 
in jeopardy by improving the Chinese ability to build such cars? Why 
does our government want to ship jobs to China and subsidize the 
effort?
  The Clean Energy Research Center also shares American know-how with 
China in advanced coal technology. The global value of electricity 
generated using clean coal technologies was $63 billion in 2010 and by 
2020 will reach $85 billion. U.S. companies have the potential to 
capture the global market and can sell American-designed and -built 
technology to China, but if we give the Chinese access to our research 
now, our lead in this area will be undercut. Why are we undercutting 
ourselves?
  Last month, the U.S. Department of Commerce announced anti-dumping 
tariffs on Chinese companies for unfair trade practices regarding solar 
panels. Sixty-six Chinese producers were named, which suggests this is 
a concerted effort to undermine the United States market.
  In 2011, the U.S. imported over $3 billion worth in Chinese panels, 
and since 2001 our share of the global market in these panels has 
shrunk from 27 percent to just 5 percent. Over 100,000 American jobs 
depend directly or indirectly on the success of the U.S. solar 
industry. Why are we subsidizing the Chinese development of this 
technology?
  China is not playing by the same rules that we're playing by. The 
Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive released a report 
last year which states:

       Chinese actors are the world's most active and persistent 
     perpetrators of economic espionage.

  Among the technologies which they have the greatest interest in is 
stealing. And what they're interested in stealing is the cutting-edge 
energy technologies that we are developing with our expertise.
  Let's stop paying the Chinese to give them access to our best 
scientists, research centers, and technology. They are already stealing 
enough intellectual property to enhance their own economic and military 
power. They are robbing us blind, but we are not blind. This is 
happening right in front of our face. America's high-tech industry--
whether in energy, aerospace, or any other kind of manufacturing--
should be way out in front of the competition. Why are we helping China 
close that gap?
  This amendment would put a stop to over $7 million annually that is 
being used to bolster the efforts of our Chinese adversary. 
Transferring technology or funds to help develop that

[[Page 8336]]

technology to a strategic rival makes no sense whatsoever. I urge my 
colleagues to support my amendment and put an end to it.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I rise in opposition to the 
gentleman's amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I certainly share some of my 
colleague's concerns. We should not be sending Department of Energy 
funding overseas if it doesn't benefit our citizens or it undermines 
our own competitiveness. But we cannot assume that all international 
cooperation is objectionable. The research the gentleman's amendment 
would eliminate is both a proper role for Federal funds and directly 
benefits America.
  Let me first point out these research centers are not a donation to 
China. They are funded in equal parts by China and the United States. 
They actually support three consortia centered at West Virginia 
University, the University of Michigan, and Lawrence Berkeley National 
Lab in his own home State. They fund research at seven American 
national laboratories, five American universities, and 40 American 
companies, institutes, and other organizations. There's nothing nutty 
about that, Mr. Chairman.
  I certainly share the concerns that we keep intellectual property and 
manufacturing here at home. To address these concerns, these research 
centers signed agreements to protect American intellectual property 
while allowing us to take advantage of new joint discoveries. 
Eliminating these centers altogether would harm American researchers, 
American scientists, American innovation, and American job creation.
  I oppose his amendment, and I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. ROHRABACHER. Mr. Chairman, how much time is remaining?
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from California has 30 seconds 
remaining.
  Mr. ROHRABACHER. Well, I'll make this very quick.
  We're not talking about all cooperation. I'm not opposed to all 
cooperation. I'm opposed to cooperation with the Adolf Hitlers of our 
day--the people who are murdering Christians and other religious people 
as we speak. No, we should not be cooperating with that government in 
developing their technologies, whether it's energy or otherwise.

                              {time}  2110

  All of these different groups that are cooperating with them, this is 
part of a group that also has research going on throughout our 
universities of the United States. That makes it even worse because you 
have Chinese nationals there who are taking as much of the information 
as they can and taking it back to China from our universities.
  We should be opposed to this. Let's stand up for the American worker 
and what's right.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from California (Mr. Rohrabacher).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes 
appeared to have it.
  Mr. ROHRABACHER. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from California 
will be postponed.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I ask unanimous consent that the 
request for a recorded vote on the first amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Luetkemeyer) be withdrawn, to the end that 
the Chair put the question de novo.
  The Acting CHAIR. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman 
from New Jersey?
  There was no objection.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Luetkemeyer).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                     Amendment Offered by Mr. Engel

  Mr. ENGEL. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used by the Department of Energy or any other Federal 
     agency to lease or purchase new light duty vehicles, for any 
     executive fleet, or for an agency's fleet inventory, except 
     in accordance with Presidential Memorandum-Federal Fleet 
     Performance, dated May 24, 2011.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from New York (Mr. Engel) and a Member opposed each will 
control 10 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New York.
  Mr. ENGEL. Mr. Chairman, on May 24, 2011, President Obama issued a 
memorandum on Federal Fleet Performance that requires all new light 
duty vehicles in the Federal fleet to be alternate fuel vehicles, such 
as hybrid, electric, natural gas or biofuel, by December 31, 2015.
  My amendment echoes the Presidential Memorandum by prohibiting funds 
in the Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations 
Act from being used to lease or purchase new light duty vehicles except 
in accord with the President's Memorandum.
  I've introduced a similar amendment to five different appropriations 
bills in the past, including last year's Energy and Water 
Appropriations Bill, and each time my amendment was accepted and passed 
by voice vote. My amendments have also been accepted to the Commerce, 
Justice and Science appropriations bill for FY 2013, and the 
Agriculture, Defense and Homeland Security appropriations bills for FY 
2012.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Will the gentleman yield?
  Mr. ENGEL. I yield to the gentleman.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. We're prepared to accept your amendment again.
  Mr. ENGEL. Thank you very, very much.
  I just want to say, before I sit down, that this is truly a 
bipartisan effort. And I want to pay tribute to my good friend, the 
gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Shimkus) who has been working with me on 
this open fuel standard. We've introduced a bill, H.R. 1687, which 
requires 50 percent of new automobiles in 2014, 80 percent in 2016 and 
95 percent in 2017, to be warranted to operate on nonpetroleum fuels in 
addition to or instead of petroleum-based fuels.
  I want to just say that compliance possibilities include the full 
array of existing technologies, including flex fuel, natural gas, 
hydrogen, biodiesel, plug-in electric drive and fuel cell, and a catch-
all for new technologies.
  So I thank the gentleman from New Jersey for accepting this.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from New York (Mr. Engel).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                    Amendment Offered by Mr. Stearns

  Mr. STEARNS. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used by the Department of Energy to subordinate any loan 
     obligation to other financing in violation of section 1702 of 
     the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (42 U.S.C. 16512) or to 
     subordinate any Guaranteed Obligation to any loan or other 
     debt obligations in violation of section 609.10 of title 10 
     of the Code of Federal Regulations.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Florida (Mr. Stearns) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Florida.
  Mr. STEARNS. I rise to offer an amendment on behalf of myself, Mr. 
Scalise of Louisiana, Mrs. Adams of Florida and Mr. Broun of Georgia.
  My colleagues, this simple amendment will prohibit the Department of 
Energy from using any funds included

[[Page 8337]]

in this bill to subordinate any loan obligation to other financing in 
violation of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. That was the original 
intent of Congress.
  As chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on 
Oversight and Investigation, I've led the investigation into the 
administration's rushed decision to loan Solyndra, a California-based 
solar panel manufacturing company, $535 million in taxpayers' money 
that was ultimately lost.
  During this investigation, it was uncovered that, shockingly, the 
Department of Energy knew as early as August 2009 that Solyndra would 
go bankrupt in September of 2011, but simply proceeded to risk more 
taxpayers' funds throughout that time.
  The investigation also discovered that following meetings with 
outside investors, DOE made the unprecedented decision on December 10, 
2010, to subordinate $75 million of taxpayer money so more private 
capital could be injected into Solyndra.
  Subordination gave private investors' money priority over taxpayers' 
money, meaning that, in the event of bankruptcy, private investors 
would be paid back before the taxpayers. But Secretary Chu wasn't 
allowed to subordinate the taxpayers' money.
  As I mentioned earlier, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 states that DOE 
loan guarantees are not to be subordinated to other financing, and it 
was clear what the intent of Congress was.
  In fact, DOE went out of its way to violate the will of Congress and 
sought the opinion of outside counsel on the legality of the 
subordination. And based upon this opinion, they made a decision to 
subordinate. And it all hinged on the word ``is,'' the meaning of the 
word ``is.''
  In a 17-page draft memo obtained by the Energy and Commerce 
Committee, DOE's private attorneys, they seem to acknowledge that the 
law prohibits the subordination of Department-guaranteed funds. 
However, this draft memo was never finalized. Instead, an email was 
sent by a lawyer at the law firm stating that DOE's rationale for 
subordination was, ``it makes the best possible case based on a 
reasonable interpretation supported by restructuring policy 
arguments.''
  Now, Secretary Chu also ignored important parts of the law. The law 
required the Energy Secretary to notify the Attorney General in the 
event of a default on a loan guarantee. In a December 13, 2010 letter 
to Solyndra, Jonathan Silver, then-executive director of the DOE's loan 
program, notified Solyndra it was in default. However, Secretary Chu 
did not alert the Attorney General, as required by law.
  In addition, Treasury and OMB officials' emails clearly indicate they 
believed DOE's legal justification for placing taxpayers at the back of 
the line was inconsistent with their interpretation of the law, and 
advised DOE to seek a legal opinion from the Justice Department.

                              {time}  2120

  In an August 17, 2011, email, Department of the Treasury Assistant 
Secretary for Financial Markets Mary Miller sent an email to Jeffery 
Zients, Deputy Director of OMB, in which she stated:

       Our legal counsel believes that the statute and the DOE 
     regulations both require that the guaranteed loan should not 
     be subordinate to any loan or other debt obligation.

  It is clear, Mr. Chairman, that every step of the way the Department 
of Energy ignored the law and did whatever it wished in order to push 
through the subordination.
  Our investigation continues. I and my colleagues on Energy and 
Commerce are working on a permanent legislation solution to ensure that 
taxpayers are never, ever again stuck paying hundreds of millions of 
dollars because of the Obama administration's risky bets and decisions 
to put taxpayers at the back of the line. I encourage all of my 
colleagues to support this amendment.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Will the gentleman yield?
  Mr. STEARNS. How much time, Mr. Chairman, do I have left?
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman has 30 seconds remaining.
  Mr. STEARNS. I yield to the gentleman from New Jersey.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I am pleased to support the 
amendment. I commend the gentleman for his investigations and his 
conclusion.
  Mr. STEARNS. I yield the balance of my time to my colleague from 
Florida (Mrs. Adams).
  Mrs. ADAMS. Mr. Chairman, I rise this evening in support of the 
Adams-Stearns-Scalise-Broun amendment, which ensures the protection of 
taxpayer dollars at the Department of Energy. American taxpayers were 
left out in the cold when President Obama's administration went through 
with this loan when the now-defunct bankrupt Solyndra was restructured.
  In the restructuring agreement, the Department of Energy ensured 
investors and special interests would recover their money first, before 
the American taxpayers. This is unacceptable.
  Although the Department of Energy continues to argue that it has the 
power under Federal law to put the needs of the American taxpayer at 
the back of the line in a financial crisis, this amendment makes it 
absolutely clear the Department shall not do it again.
  This amendment will ensure that if the taxpayers take a risk, they 
will be protected when the loan goes bad. I thank Chairman Stearns, and 
Representatives Scalise and Broun for their leadership on this issue 
and I urge support of this amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Florida (Mr. Stearns).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the ayes 
appeared to have it.
  Mr. STEARNS. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from Florida will 
be postponed.


             Amendment Offered by Ms. Jackson Lee of Texas

  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the 
desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:

       Sec. __.  The amounts otherwise provided by this Act are 
     revised by reducing the amount made available for ``Atomic 
     Energy Defense Activities--National Nuclear Security 
     Administration--Weapons Activities'', and increasing the 
     amount made available for ``Corps of Engineers-Civil--
     Department of the Army--Construction'', by $10,000,000.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Texas.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, this is my ``can we all get 
along'' amendment. I thank, again, the chairman and ranking member for 
their work on this bill.
  My amendment would be helpful to the Army Corps of Engineers and 
their work on our east coast, on our gulf, and on our west coast 
because it deals specifically with restoration. It sends a strong 
message to the importance of restoration and its issue of national 
importance. It talks about the economic well-being of the regions along 
the Nation's coastlines, and it provides an opportunity for 
restoration.
  There is no doubt that over the years our coastlines have 
deteriorated and that wetlands have not been protected. We've 
experienced a devastating spill on the gulf coastline, and so many 
along that coastline, from Florida to Alabama to Louisiana to Texas and 
in between, have experienced a negative impact on their wetlands and 
their coastline. This takes a mere $10 million--again, I say it with 
respect--to assist the Nation in providing aid and improvement to the 
Nation's coastlines, which, again, produce opportunities of economic 
development, tourism, and various protections for a coastline that has 
suffered under neglect.
  The United States Army Corps of Engineers estimates that 60 percent 
of the coastline along the gulf is eroding. The coast loses up to 10 
feet of shoreline a

[[Page 8338]]

year, with 225 acres of topsoil washing into the gulf coast. Funds are 
needed to preserve the gulf coast as well as other coasts. This will, 
in turn, protect the economic stability of that region.
  Just a few months ago, I introduced H.R. 3710, which would provide 
for the added opportunity of protecting the coastline as well as for 
deficit reduction through an energy security fund. The legislation 
would provide funds for programs to help with the restoration as it 
establishes grants for States along our coastal areas--a coastal and 
disaster grant program and a national grant program--to address coastal 
and ocean disasters and the restoration, protection, and maintenance of 
the coastal areas and oceans, including research and programs in 
coordination with State and local agencies.
  I look forward to the hearing and passage of that legislation, but 
today I rise to support the Nation's coastal region and to provide 
these resources. With that, I ask my colleagues to support this 
amendment.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I rise in opposition to the 
amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I share the gentlewoman's support for smart 
investments in our Nation's water resources infrastructure. I well 
understand the economic benefits of spending money on these needs.
  I would remind the gentlewoman, under the earmark ban, the final bill 
cannot include funding to a specific project in an amount above the 
President's budget request. Instead, the bill includes additional funds 
for categories of projects with final project-specific allocations to 
be made by the administration. As an offset, this amendment strikes the 
funding for the modernization of our nuclear weapons stockpile and its 
supporting infrastructure.
  For that reason alone, I oppose the bill, and I urge my colleagues to 
do so as well.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I would make the point that 
this is included in this bill on page 3, under ``Construction.'' I 
don't view this in particular as an earmark as much as I do as putting 
in resources necessary for the protection of our coastline. Again, it 
is not excessive. It does not undermine the atomic program. What it 
does is to help millions of Americans along the coastline and 
particularly those who have experienced deterioration going from the 
east coast to the west coast.
  Certainly, I believe this is one on which we can join together and 
support. It is constructive; it is productive; it creates jobs; it 
creates an economic engine; and it protects one of our most valued 
resources, and that is the Nation's coastline, wetlands included. It is 
compatible with those who are fishing, with those who are exploring, 
and with those who are enjoying.
  I think it is crucial that this amendment be passed by this House in 
a constructive way in order to create jobs, to move this Nation 
forward, and to preserve the bounty of the environment that we've been 
given to protect. I ask my colleagues to support the Jackson Lee 
amendment, which deals with the restoration of our coastline.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. Chair, I rise today to offer an amendment to H.R. 5325, the 
``Energy and Water Appropriations Development Act, FY 2013.'' My 
amendment would increase the Army Corps of Engineers Construction 
Account by $10 million for Texas Coastal Restoration and reduce the 
Atomic Energy Defense Account by the same amount.
  My amendment sends a strong message that gulf restoration is of 
national importance. In addition to all the Gulf Coast States, Texas 
plays a crucial role in the Gulf Coast's economic well-being and 
deserves funds for its restoration as well.


                 The Importance of the Texas Gulf Coast

  Texas boasts a 370 mile long coastline that plays a major role in the 
state and the nation's economy.
  The state hosts three of the country's top ten ports and is ranked 
number one in the nation in the total value of waterborne commerce, 
most of which is dependent on the Gulf ports.
  The Texas Gulf Coast also plays a major role in the tourism industry. 
Texas gets over $445 million a year from cruise ships and earns a 
quarter of the coast's travel dollars. The state also accounts for 37 
percent of the Gulf of Mexico's tourism and recreational employment.
  In 2008, the Gulf's oil and gas development generated about $26 
billion in wages.
  Erosion is steadily threatening to destroy the Texas coast's success. 
The United States Army Corps of Engineers estimates that 60 percent of 
the Texas coastline is eroding.
  The coast loses up to 10 feet of shoreline a year with 225 acres of 
topsoil washing into the Gulf Coast.
  Funds are needed to help preserve the Texas Gulf Coast which will in 
turn protect the economic stability of the gulf coast region.
  This Congress I introduced a bill which is also designed to help 
restore our Gulf Coast. H.R. 3710, ``The Deficit Reduction, Job 
Creation and Energy Security Act.''
  My bill directs the Secretary of Interior to increase the 5-year oil 
and gas leasing program of lease sales designed to best meet the 
Nation's energy needs by 10 percent of the total acreage contained in 
the OCS Lands Act.
  This 10 percent added acreage shall be known as the Deficit Reduction 
Energy Security Fund. For 15 years after issuance of the first lease or 
receipt of the first payment coming from the Deficit Reduction Energy 
Security Fund, all proceeds shall be deposited into an interest bearing 
account for a period of 2 years.
  Upon expiration of the 2-year period, these proceeds shall be 
distributed as follows: The interest gained during 2-year period shall 
be placed in the Coastal and Ocean Sustainability and Health Fund; and 
the principle from the Deficit Reduction Energy Security Fund shall be 
applied directly toward deficit reduction.
  My bill, H.R. 3710, not only increases access to oil and gas leases 
it also funds programs to help with Gulf Restoration as it establishes 
grants for states (Coastal and Disaster Grant Program and a National 
Grant Program) for addressing coastal and ocean disasters, restoration, 
protection, and maintenance of coastal areas and oceans, including 
research and programs in coordination with state and local agencies.
  I firmly believe that we must continue to support Gulf Restoration 
which is why I offered the bill H.R. 3710 and why I propose the 
amendment today. I urge my colleagues to support my amendment which is 
intended to restore our nation's Gulf Coast.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes 
appeared to have it.
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentlewoman from Texas will 
be postponed.


                   Amendment Offered by Mr. Mulvaney

  Mr. MULVANEY. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __. (a) Each amount made available by this Act (other 
     than an amount required to be made available by a provision 
     of law) is hereby reduced by 24 percent.
       (b) The reduction in subsection (a) shall not apply to the 
     following accounts:
       (1) ``Corps of Engineers--Civil--Department of the Army''.
       (2) ``Department of Energy--Energy Programs--Nuclear 
     Energy''.
       (3) ``Department of Energy--Energy Programs--Non-Defense 
     Environmental Cleanup''.
       (4) ``Department of Energy--Energy Programs--Nuclear Waste 
     Disposal''.
       (5) ``Department of Energy--Atomic Energy Defense 
     Activities--National Nuclear Security Administration--Weapons 
     Activities''. 
       (6) ``Department of Energy--Atomic Energy Defense 
     Activities--National Nuclear Security Administration--Defense 
     Nuclear Nonproliferation''.
       (7) ``Department of Energy--Atomic Energy Defense 
     Activities--National Nuclear Security Administration--Naval 
     Reactors''.
       (8) ``Department of Energy--Atomic Energy Defense 
     Activities--National Nuclear Security Administration--Office 
     of the Administrator''.
       (9) ``Department of Energy--Environmental and Other Defense 
     Activities--Defense Environmental Cleanup''.
       (10) ``Department of Energy--Environmental and Other 
     Defense Activities--Other Defense Activities''.

[[Page 8339]]

       (11) ``Independent Agencies--Defense Nuclear Facilities 
     Safety Board''.
       (12) ``Independent Agencies--Nuclear Regulatory 
     Commission--Salaries and Expenses''.
       (13) ``Independent Agencies--Nuclear Regulatory 
     Commission--Office of the Inspector General''.
       (14) ``Independent Agencies--Nuclear Waste Technical Review 
     Board''.

  Mr. MULVANEY (during the reading). Mr. Chairman, I ask unanimous 
consent to dispense with the reading.
  The Acting CHAIR. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman 
from South Carolina?
  There was no objection.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from South Carolina (Mr. Mulvaney) and a Member opposed each 
will control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from South Carolina.
  Mr. MULVANEY. When I was campaigning for this job 2 years ago, one of 
the things that I told folks back home I would do if I ever got here 
was to try and roll back discretionary spending to 2008 levels. One of 
the things I've done since I've been here is work on the Republican 
Study Committee budgets--we've done two of them now--which try and make 
an effort to really get our spending addiction under control and lower 
our deficits and balance our budget in a reasonable amount of time.

                              {time}  2130

  As encouraging as this bill is and as much work as the Committee has 
done on this particular bill, it doesn't accomplish those things. 
That's why I'm here. I also draw attention to the fact that this bill, 
as much as an improvement as it has made over previous bills, still 
spends more money than we did last year.
  The amendment, Mr. Chairman, is fairly simple. I seek to cut $3.1 
billion from this expenditure. That represents 9\1/2\, roughly 10 
percent of the overall bill. However, it only represents about one-half 
of 1 percent of all the discretionary spending. We're spending over a 
trillion dollars in the discretionary budget this year. More 
importantly--and what I think the folks back home would like to know--
is that it's only one-sixth of 1 percent of the overall Federal 
expenditures. It's only one penny out of every $6 that we spend. It is 
our effort to try and bring some sanity to the spending side of the 
equation. It is not an across-the-board cut.
  We have tried, Mr. Chairman, to be smart and sensible where we've cut 
these funds, and for that reason we do not cut the U.S. Army Corps of 
Engineer accounts. We do not cut the NNSA accounts. We do not cut the 
environmental and other defense activities, non-defense, environmental, 
nuclear waste disposal, Nuclear Regulatory Commission. What we've cut, 
Mr. Chairman, are things that need to be cut.
  We've cut Federal research on energy efficiency and renewable energy. 
We propose to cut fossil energy research and development. Yes, a 
Republican is actually here, Mr. Chairman, arguing that we should get 
rid of what my colleagues across the aisle would call subsidies for Big 
Oil. We're trying to get rid of all the subsidies. Imagine that, a 
world where the Federal Government doesn't actually subsidize energy 
production in any fashion, but the market takes care of the supply, the 
demand, and the prices for those products.
  We also cut spending on the Appalachian Regional Commission, the 
Delta Regional Authority Commission, the Denali Commission, the 
Northern Border Regional Commission, and the Southeast Crescent 
Regional Commission. Yes, sir, some of those probably are in my 
district, but goodness gracious, we probably have enough commissions in 
this government already.
  Mr. Chairman, this is a reasoned and a sensible approach to try and 
cut as much spending as we possibly can, especially in light of today's 
CBO report that says the debt situation, the debt difficulties that we 
face are even worse than we've been talking about for the last 18 
months in this Congress. For that reason, Mr. Chairman, I ask for 
support for this amendment, and I ask that my colleagues vote ``yea.''
  With that, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, I rise in opposition to the 
amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Chairman, our bill already cuts nearly $1 
billion from the President's request. We're below 2009 levels. We're 
actually pretty close to 2008 levels. And the last time I checked, 
we're in the year 2012.
  Spending levels for non-security-related accounts are brought down by 
more than $800 million from last year's level. And while difficult 
trade-offs had to be made to get to that level, our bill did the hard 
work to balance our highest priorities and serve the Nation's most 
pressing needs. Unfortunately, the amendment proposes an across-the-
board cut on many programs, not all programs as the gentleman from 
South Carolina states, but on many programs that actually serve 
pressing needs.
  Our bill cuts energy efficiency and renewable energy by 24 percent 
but preserves programs that can address gas prices and help keep 
manufacturing jobs here at home. That's the focus of the bill: lower 
gas prices of the future; keep jobs here at home. This amendment would 
jeopardize those objectives.
  Our bill funds fossil energy research that ensures a secure domestic 
supply of electric and lower gas prices in the future. The amendment 
indiscriminately cuts many of the activities, many programs.
  Our bill funds science research, which is a key component of keeping 
America competitive. The amendment would do harm to that program. The 
amendment even cuts funds to the operation of our Strategic Petroleum 
Reserve, severely curtailing our government's ability to respond to 
real emergencies.
  These are not acceptable cuts, and I strongly oppose the amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I appreciate the recognition and rise in 
strong opposition to the gentleman's amendment.
  The gentleman, during his debate, mentioned a penny of savings out of 
a significant sum of monies. I would point out in conjunction with the 
chairman's remark that the non-security programs in this bill for 
fiscal year 2013 are $188 million below current year level spending 
because the subcommittee and the full committee made discreet decisions 
account by account.
  Dependent upon nomenclature--and I don't want to get into a semantic 
argument--there may be some of these cuts that the gentleman proposes 
that touch what nominally would be considered defense accounts, but he 
also makes a point that he is going after non-defense discretionary 
spending. I assume because he has left defense harmless that he has 
never read an inspector general's report relative to any defense 
program in the United States. And he mentioned a penny in his remarks, 
and I find it curious that he could not find 1 cent of savings out of 1 
dollar spent in a defense account.
  For that reason among many, I am strongly opposed to the gentleman's 
amendment. If we are going to, in fact, make an investment in this 
country and if we are, in fact, going to address our budgetary 
problems, everybody has got to be on the table with no exceptions.
  The gentleman's amendment, from my perspective, is a mistake, and I 
yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. MULVANEY. Very briefly, Mr. Chairman, I appreciate the gentleman 
from Indiana's words. I would point out to him, Mr. Chairman, that 
there are those of us on this side of the aisle that have encouraged us 
to look at defense spending as ways to cut not just a penny, but to 
find significant savings.
  I'd be curious to know, Mr. Chairman, how the gentleman from Indiana 
voted last year on my amendment to do exactly that, to freeze military 
spending at 2011 levels, but that is a discussion for another day.
  So with that, I yield back the balance of my time.

[[Page 8340]]

  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from South Carolina (Mr. Mulvaney).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes 
appeared to have it.
  Mr. MULVANEY. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from South 
Carolina will be postponed.


                 Amendment Offered by Mr. King of Iowa

  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. 519.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used to implement, administer, or enforce the requirements 
     in subchapter IV of chapter 31 of title 40, United States 
     Code (commonly referred to as the Davis-Bacon Act).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Iowa (Mr. King) and a Member opposed each will control 5 
minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Iowa.
  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Chairman, this is the Davis-Bacon Act 
amendment. And for everyone's information, Mr. Chairman, it's this:
  The Davis-Bacon Act was an act that was signed into law on or about 
1932. It was generated in New York to lock the African Americans out of 
the construction trades in New York. It is the last remaining vestige 
of Jim Crow laws in America. It's a union protection law. What it says 
is that any Federal construction project with 2,000 or more dollars 
involved in it must meet these Federal prevailing wage standards.
  We know--and I've spent 28-plus years as a founder and owner of a 
construction company and a number of years prior to that. I'm over 30 
years in the construction business, Mr. Chairman. We know this amounts 
to a union-imposed wage scale and federally controlled wage prices. 
What it does is it increases the cost of our construction projects.
  Our records over the years show that someplace between 8 percent and 
35 percent is the increase with the Davis-Bacon wage scale as opposed 
to competition setting those wages. Some of the charts here that I'm 
looking at show between 9 percent and 37 percent. I just use the number 
20 percent more. Our project costs us 20 percent more because of this 
federally imposed wage scale that's unnecessary, and it cuts out 
competition.
  You can make the decision, then, on whether we want to build 4 miles 
of road or 5, whether we want to build, Mr. Chairman, four bridges or 
five, or whether we're going to create and have these construction 
jobs. Are there going to be four jobs or are there going to be five?

                              {time}  2140

  In many cases if we repeal the Davis-Bacon wage scale, you would have 
minorities, in fact, you would have a majority of those that would fill 
those jobs would be minorities.
  It takes the Department of Labor 2.3 years just to issue a ruling on 
whatever the wages might be. I have seen them vary 40, 50 or 60 percent 
just across the road. That's how far off it is.
  What this bill does is it prohibits any funds from being used to 
enforce or implement the Davis-Bacon wage scale, and it gets us a lot 
more bang for our buck. It gets us the quality that we have always had, 
and it puts America back into competition. That's what's built this 
country.
  I urge its adoption, and I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I rise in opposition to the gentleman's amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I would note at the beginning of my 
remarks that Davis-Bacon is a very simple concept and is a very fair 
one.
  The law requires that workers on federally funded construction 
projects be paid no less than the wages in the community in which the 
work is being performed for similar work.
  Large Federal projects can disrupt local markets if cheap imported 
labor is used. Davis-Bacon requirements ensure that local workers, 
citizens, Americans, have a fair chance at bidding for Federal 
contracts in their own individual communities.
  Additionally, prevailing wage protections are not the reason we have 
deficits. Doing away with them will not result in savings to the 
Federal Government. Davis-Bacon does not add to a project's total cost. 
A 2011 study of highway construction projects in the State of Colorado 
proved this point as it found no statistical significance between the 
cost of highway projects in the States which were subject to Davis-
Bacon and the cost of State highway projects which were not subject to 
Davis-Bacon.
  Davis-Bacon has not led to extravagant wages for affected workers. I 
would point out at this date, 2012, from 2000 and 2008, the real hourly 
wage rate for construction workers, carpenters, electricians, iron 
workers, plumbers, steelworkers, declined--declined--despite a small 
increase in the hourly wage rate.
  I would point out when my mentor, Congressman Adam Benjamin, Jr., 
walked into this room in 1977, the real hourly wage for 1 hour's worth 
of a human being's work in the United States of America--it could have 
been laying brick, it could be pushing papers in Congress, it could be 
waiting on tables at a diner in the middle of the night--was more for 1 
hour's worth of a human being's labor in the United States of America 
than it was in 2010, and we're here trying to slam down that wage.
  You want to save money on contracts, why don't we look at the 
executive compensation for these construction firms? Why don't we look 
there for some as opposed to going to the lowest common denominators.
  Opponents claim that Davis-Bacon requirements are a union giveaway. 
However, more than 75 percent, three-quarters of Davis-Bacon wage 
determinations, are not based solely on union wages. There are issues 
about the quality of work. Get it done efficiently, get it done right, 
do not do it a second time. That is crucial to these communities 
depending upon them.
  When local workers are hired, they are duly accountable to their 
employers and to the communities in which they reside. If the work is 
shoddy and therefore is delayed or needs to be redone, their families, 
their friends, their communities, have to live with the consequences. 
This is a throwback, and I am strongly opposed to the gentleman's 
amendment.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Chairman, may I inquire as to how much time I 
have remaining?
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Iowa has 3 minutes remaining.
  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Chairman, I appreciate the gentleman's work in 
putting the statement together, but as someone who has lived this 30 
years, I don't accept this statement on its face, and I can tell you 
that my hands-on experience tells me something entirely different. The 
statement that was made that says that three-quarters of these 
decisions are not based solely on union scale. It might be based on 
union scale in a union contract or sitting down in a room to make an 
agreement with the Department of Labor.
  I don't know how these deals are made. It is union scale, and they 
sit there and decide we can drive up the costs of these public 
projects, and we can make sure that we can pay more in wages and 
benefits to anybody else and cut out the competition so that the 
entrepreneurs, the people that are founding businesses that are trying 
to get into this market, are locked out of the market. Davis-Bacon 
locks people out of the market. It locks minorities out of the market.
  If you look around and you hear that expression, ``people doing work 
that Americans won't do''--well, if you look around, the unions have 
been locking minorities out ever since 1932. That was the purpose of 
this bill.

[[Page 8341]]

  By the way it was a couple of misguided Republicans that passed the 
Davis-Bacon Act and got that started. I'm embarrassed about that. One 
day we will have to fix this because Davis-Bacon is the last vestige of 
the Jim Crow laws in the United States of America.
  It does drive up the costs an average of 20 percent, somewhere 
between 9 and 37 percent for these costs. It cannot be said either that 
there's a reduction in quality when we put competition in. Competition 
increases the quality, it increases the efficiency. It brings about the 
skills in the workforce, and it allows contractors to bring people in 
at a scale where they can be trained. So we have more competition for 
the labor. We get better bang for our dollar. We build four bridges 
instead of five, 4 miles of road instead of 5 under Davis-Bacon. We can 
do it the other way around and reverse it.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I would simply mention that if the gentleman from Iowa 
is suggesting that labor organizations in this country today are 
discriminating on a racial basis, he has not attended many union 
meetings lately.
  I yield the remainder of my time to the gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. 
Jackson Lee).
  Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. I thank the gentleman very much.
  If my good friend from Iowa was joining and trying to make sure that 
Federally funded construction jobs went to companies that were based 
here in the United States, I would be celebrating with him to avoid the 
incident that happened with the bridge in California, where it was 
built by a Chinese company with Chinese nationals who had come over to 
the United States.
  But in this instance, I would like to ask the gentleman where he 
finds this present-day discrimination.
  In fact, as he well knows, opportunities for minority contractors 
have come about because of Members of this Congress who have fought for 
what we call--not set asides--but MWBE opportunities. We have seen the 
increase in construction companies. We need more. More importantly, 
unions have engaged in apprenticeship programs.
  Prevailing wages are nothing but giving a hard day's work and a 
decent-paying wage. It is to construction what we were trying to do 
with paycheck fairness. I disagree with the gentleman that in this day 
and time we're not making extensive efforts to make sure that there are 
diverse populations working and being trained under the union label and 
umbrella, and that there are young men and women who are benefiting 
from these training programs. More importantly, MWBEs, and if the 
gentleman would want to work with me on ensuring that these small 
contractors can work on Federal projects, he would have me aligned with 
him today. But not to deny us the Davis-Bacon and prevailing wages.
  I ask my colleagues to oppose the amendment in the name of fairness 
and in the name of the betterment of the working person.
  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Chairman, in response to that I would say again 
I have worked in this trade for a lifetime, I have been in the room. I 
know how this works. This is union scale imposed through the Department 
of Labor. It is not prevailing wage.
  There is a study I have in front of me that shows that if we repeal 
Davis-Bacon there would be approximately 25,000 more minorities working 
in the construction business. In some trades there are many, some 
trades there are few. It's not something that's balanced across the 
countryside.
  But what you don't have is competition coming into the marketplace. 
You do not have efficiency in your work. You don't get the bang for the 
buck because you have got a federally mandated wage scale, and it cuts 
down on the efficiency because you have people on the projects that are 
looking for the highest-paid scale that's there. And so they will climb 
on the finish motor grader and drive up and down the road rather than 
the rough bulldozer to get the production work done. They won't pick up 
the shovel because it pays less than it does holding the grade stake.

                              {time}  2150

  You cannot get willful efficiency out of people when you have the 
Federal Government deciding what they're going to pay. Additionally, we 
have some studies also that show when they audited the reports, 100 
percent of those wage reports were wrong, Mr. Chairman.
  So I would urge its adoption, and I yield back the balance of my 
time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. At this time I yield to my colleague from 
Massachusetts (Mr. Lynch).
  Mr. LYNCH. I would like to refute the gentleman's last point, 
especially. I worked for 18 years as an ironworker. I've worked not 
only in the Massachusetts area, but New York, New Mexico, Louisiana. I 
worked in Indiana. I worked at a lot of the steel mills. I worked a lot 
of jobs where Davis-Bacon has been in effect.
  What Davis-Bacon does--and the gentleman's amendment would provide--
that none of the funds made available to this bill will be available to 
administer the wage rate requirements of chapter 31 of title 40, which 
is the Davis-Bacon Act. What Davis-Bacon was meant to do is to prevent 
the wages in any area of the country and every area of the country from 
being depressed by bringing in low-wage workers. This was the practice 
back before the prevailing wage, before Davis-Bacon was in effect. You 
would have large construction projects, but you'd have unscrupulous 
contractors who would pay very low wages to their employees, and they 
would move into an area where the cost of living required those workers 
to get a decent wage.
  And what will happen now if we repeal Davis-Bacon, which is a very, 
very bad idea, not only for the gentleman's district but every State in 
the Union, is we will get one group of very low-paid workers, and they 
will be like locusts. They will go into areas, whether it be Houston, 
whether it be down in Texas or Louisiana or in the Northeast, we will 
have low-wage workers go in there and undercut the wages of the workers 
in those areas. This prevented that practice of undermining the wages 
of local workers.
  The Davis-Bacon wage is established by a study in the gentleman's 
area. Specifically, they look at the wages for the construction trades. 
I was an ironworker. They look it at for plumbers, electricians--what 
is the area wage for that individual worker.
  Now I'm sure we can find some workers over in Mexico that will come 
in and work for less money. That's supported by a lot of people in this 
body, unbelievably so. Davis-Bacon prevents that from happening. The 
contractor has to pay the wage for Houston, the wage for Tucson, the 
wage for New York, the wage for Boston. Those wages are different for 
each area because of the standard of living and the cost of living in 
those areas.
  This protects workers, whether they're union workers or nonunion 
workers. And I've worked on Davis-Bacon jobs where there have been 
nonunion working across from me. I worked at the Shell Oil refinery 
down in Norco, Louisiana. Half the job was union, half the job was 
nonunion, because that was the deal. That's how they got enough workers 
to cover that job.
  And I've worked 18 years. I strapped on the work boots every single 
day for 18 years. I've been a foreman. I've been a general foreman. 
I've worked on Davis-Bacon jobs. I've worked on many, many jobs. I've 
seen how this works, and I know the history here and why this law was 
put into place. This is a good law. It prevents piracy. It prevents 
undermining the workers in every State in this Union. If you strap on a 
pair of work boots, I don't care if you're union or nonunion, this is a 
good bill for you. This protects you.
  They tried to repeal it after Katrina in the areas where Katrina 
affected Mississippi and Louisiana, and the President suspended it for 
a short while. You know what he had to do? He had to reinstate it 
because they

[[Page 8342]]

couldn't get enough workers to come in because the wages were so low 
they could not get workers in there. So President George Bush repealed 
his own executive order suspending Davis-Bacon. And when they lifted 
that, the workers came in and worked. Workers from Louisiana, workers 
from Mississippi took those jobs.
  This is another attack on the working people. This is just blue-
collar jobs. If we don't support apprenticeship programs and decent 
wages and a set of skills in our workers, shame on us, shame on us, 
shame on us.
  Mr. Chair, I rise in strong opposition to the King amendment.
  The King amendment seeks to ensure that none of the funds made 
available through this bill may be made available to administer the 
wage-rate requirements of subchapter IV of Chapter 31 of title 40, 
United States Code, more commonly referred to as the Davis-Bacon Act.
  The Davis-Bacon Act, enacted in 1931, requires Federal contractors to 
pay workers the local ``prevailing wage'' on construction projects. Its 
goal was to outlaw wage exploitation, since public contracts go to the 
lowest bidder.
  We've come a long way since 1931 in terms of workers' rights and 
workplace safety. But, I believe, if general contractors on Federal 
jobs have an opportunity to pay a lower wage to their workers and 
increase their own profit margin, they're going to do it. It doesn't 
make them bad people, they're businessmen concerned primarily about the 
bottom line.
  In these difficult economic times, when so many workers are 
unemployed or barely hanging on, it sets a dangerous precedent to waive 
these important worker protections.
  Through the underlying bill the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will 
build dams, shore up vulnerable coastlines and maintain our navigable 
waterways. And this range of efforts will create good jobs. It's hard 
work, but good work for a lot of men and women across the country.
  But because more than 20 percent of our construction tradespeople are 
out of work, there will be opportunity for some of the less scrupulous 
contractors to exploit this workforce, so desperate to get back on the 
job.
  And waiving Davis-Bacon removes critical worker protections, 
compromising the work quality on these projects.
  American workers deserve the kind of fair wage rates that Davis-Bacon 
provides, a wage that will lift up their circumstances, provide hope, 
and get them and our economy back on track. To deprive our workforce of 
these protections, of these opportunities, is an egregious abrogation 
of our responsibility as elected leaders.
  I urge my colleagues to join me in opposition to this amendment.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I would simply say this is not a Davis-Bacon attempt 
to increase wages. It is protecting those who labor in this country 
from having their wages undercut.
  I am adamantly opposed to the gentleman's amendment, and I yield back 
the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Iowa (Mr. King).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes 
appeared to have it.
  Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from Iowa will be 
postponed.


                    Amendment Offered by Mr. Jordan

  Mr. JORDAN. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act for 
     the Title 17 Innovative Technology Loan Guarantee Program may 
     be used by the Department of Energy to issue or administer 
     new loan guarantees for renewable energy systems, electric 
     power transmission systems, or leading edge biofuel projects 
     as defined by section 1705 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Jordan) and a Member opposed each will control 
5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Ohio.
  Mr. JORDAN. Mr. Chairman, let me just say this complements the 
amendment that was done earlier by Mrs. Blackburn from Tennessee. This 
is the no-more-Solyndras amendment. We're all familiar with that 
situation. As the Clerk read, this amendment would prohibit any new 
loan guarantees for renewable energy, electricity systems, and biofuels 
as defined in section 1705 of title 17 and, as I said before, 
complements what the House agreed to and passed earlier.
  Let me just quickly tell you about this program. This is a $15 
billion program. Twenty-six projects got your tax dollars. Of those 26 
projects that got American tax money, 22 of those 26--three-fourths of 
those--were rated double B-minus junk status. In other words, no 
private capital would go there, but it was okay to put your tax dollars 
into these projects.
  And what have we got for this? Everyone knows the story of Solyndra. 
They received $535 million, fired a thousands workers, and went 
bankrupt. But we also have Beacon Power, which received $43 million of 
your tax dollars and went bankrupt as well. First Solar got $3 billion 
in loan guarantees. It's now fired half of its workers. Its stock has 
plummeted. And Abound Solar--just to name four--$400 million loan 
guarantee and has fired 180 workers.
  So here's what's going on with this program. The 1705 program was 
funded by the stimulus program. That is now expired. But in this 
continuing resolution that was passed last year, in that bill there was 
language to allow the 1703 program to continue to do what was 
previously done in 1705.
  And so my amendment says, Enough of that. We've had enough taxpayer 
dollars wasted. We don't need any more. Our committee that I get the 
privilege of sitting on, the Oversight Committee, has had several 
hearings on this. We don't need the Department of Energy handing out 
more of your money to companies with double B-minus ratings and junk 
ratings and lower. We don't need that anymore. This says: enough is 
enough. We're in debt. This is at least one place we can start to save 
some taxpayer dollars.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I rise in opposition to the gentleman's amendment.
  The title 17 loan program has had its share of publicized problems, 
but I do believe that the Department of Energy has implemented changes 
to the program that will strengthen the management of it going forward. 
And while it is impossible to ensure the success of a loan guarantee, 
these reforms, I believe, will significantly reduce the risk borne by 
the Department.
  This amendment is specifically targeted at renewable energy projects 
pending approval under the 1705 Innovative Loan Guarantee program. Some 
of these projects are eligible to have their credit subsidy costs 
covered by the Department. Generally, given the current capital markets 
and project structure, it is difficult for renewable projects to raise 
sufficient revenue to use loan authority. Because we have several 
promising projects that remain in the pipeline and the companies behind 
these applications have invested a significant amount of time and 
financial resources to advance them, I do not believe that this 
amendment is fruitful.

                              {time}  2200

  The amendment would make these efforts multiyear for naught and 
further exacerbate the uncertain business environment facing innovative 
energy companies at this time. Therefore, I would be opposed to the 
gentleman's amendment, and I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. JORDAN. Mr. Chairman, I would just respond that the gentleman 
talked about--a ``couple of problems'' I think was the language he used 
referring to this program. It's hard to see when you have companies 
going bankrupt with taxpayer money, and 22 out of 26 of the projects 
that were funded were rated below investment grade credit quality--in 
other words junk status--it's hard to see how you can say ``a couple

[[Page 8343]]

of problems'' when that's the history of this program. At some point, 
we're going to have to cut some spending.
  One of my favorite movies, and some of you may have seen the movie 
``1776.'' It's a musical. It's when they draft the Declaration of 
Independence, and there's a great scene, a great line--there are many 
great scenes, but one of the ones that I remember, where they're going 
through the declaration that Jefferson has just written. They're 
marking it up, they're editing it. And as they go through it, there are 
Members of that Congress who say, Well, we don't want to say this 
because that might really offend King George. And if we say this, 
Parliament may not like that. And what about deep sea fishing rights? 
They go through this whole thing. Finally, John Adams stands up and 
says: It's a revolution, dammit; we're going to have to offend 
somebody.
  And at some point we've got to say we're so in debt we're going to 
have to cut something. Why not focus on a program that completely 
doesn't work? A program we all know has failed.
  So if the other party can't even cut a program where 22 of the 26 
projects are junk status, no one will give them money, they gave your 
taxpayer dollars to them and they went bankrupt--if we can't even stop 
that program, how in the heck are we ever going to deal with a $16 
trillion debt larger than our entire economy?
  So this is as simple as it gets. This is the low hanging fruit here, 
guys. And this party over here won't even go there. Unbelievable. The 
program speaks for itself. It's a failure. We should end it. We should 
save taxpayer dollars and take that initial first step in bringing some 
sanity back to our fiscal situation.
  I yield back the balance of my time and urge a yes vote on the 
amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Jordan).
  The amendment was agreed to.


           Amendment No. 1 Offered by Mr. Graves of Missouri

  Mr. GRAVES of Missouri. I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
  The text of the amendment is as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. ___.  Of the funds appropriated in title I of this 
     Act, not more than $50,000,000 may be used for the Missouri 
     River Recovery Program.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Graves) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Missouri.
  Mr. GRAVES of Missouri. Mr. Chairman, I rise today in support of my 
amendment, which modestly reduces funding for the Missouri River 
recovery program.
  Since 2006, the Federal Government has spent more than $468 million 
on the Missouri River recovery program. This program is primarily 
intended to improve the ecosystem for the piping plover, the least 
tern, and the pallid sturgeon within the Missouri River basin.
  Projects funded through this program include shallow water habitat 
creation, land acquisition, and emergent sandbar habitat. It also 
supports unknown numbers of positions and departments within the U.S. 
Army Corps of Engineers and the Fish and Wildlife Service, generates 
thousands of pages of documents, and pays for numerous conferences and 
conference calls.
  Many of my constituents along the Missouri River have been flooded 
for the last several years due to mismanagement and misplaced 
priorities in the Federal Government. Congress practically writes a 
blank check for the Missouri River recovery program while providing far 
less than sufficient funds for levee maintenance and repair. This is 
unacceptable.
  It is also important to note that many projects funded by the 
Missouri River recovery program increase the chance of flooding by 
weakening flood protection systems. Further, a recent independent 
review of major initiatives of the Missouri River recovery program 
concludes that the current mitigation strategy does not mitigate losses 
of the pallid sturgeon, the least tern, and the piping plover, or the 
degradation of their habitats. So Congress is essentially spending 
millions of dollars on projects that are unproven. And at the very 
least, these funds are diverted away from critically important and 
proven flood mitigation projects.
  My amendment won't prevent future floods, but it will show those 
located in the Missouri River basin that Congress is serious about 
getting its priorities straight. My amendment does not gut the Missouri 
River recovery program--it's only a small reduction from the amount 
provided in the underlying bill. The underlying bill provides $71 
million and my amendment reduces that to $50 million, which is 
consistent with the level of funding provided in 2008.
  I believe conservation is important, but we should not overlook what 
it is we sometimes sacrifice to achieve conservation. In this case, it 
is the livelihood of businesses, farms, and families. I urge my 
colleagues to support my amendment, and I reserve the balance of my 
time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I rise to express my opposition to the 
amendment offered by the gentleman from Missouri. I would certainly 
agree with him that we are not making sufficient investments in our 
infrastructure, but this amendment would do nothing to resolve that 
problem. But it would introduce a host of other detrimental impacts to 
the basin and will lead to a failure to comply with the requirements of 
the Endangered Species Act.
  The $90 million which was in the President's budget is the Corps' 
best assessment of the minimum required to maintain long term 
biological opinion compliance. There is in the bill a $18.6 million cut 
already which reduces the Corps' ability to maintain required progress 
on emergent sandbar habitat construction, shallow water habitat, 
Yellowstone intake, and real estate acquisition.
  While the gentleman indicates he does not want to gut the program, 
the fact is he would add another $21.4 million worth of cuts, 
essentially representing a 44 percent cut of the President's budget. If 
that's not gutting, it is certainly a significant hindrance.
  Given the extent of existing cuts, the Corps would need to consult 
with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on the potential for reduced 
progress on biological opinion compliance and on potential operational 
adjustments, opening the possibility of a jeopardy determination.
  Further, reducing the amount would have a significant and negative 
impact with regards to maintaining biological opinion compliance for 
the Missouri River, and the Corps may not be in a position to serve all 
eight congressionally authorized purposes.
  Additionally, operational changes may have to be made to avoid 
impacts to listed species that could result in a split navigation 
season, impacts on hydropower production, and impacts on water supply 
and recreation. A split navigation season will further erode the 
ability of farmers and manufacturers to get their products to market or 
to the consumer.
  And given that the power produced by the Missouri River projects 
provides base power loads for the region, reduced production would 
further jeopardize peak power needs in the area.
  The impacts to water supply also potentially could be great. Many 
communities are already having difficulty with the intake 
infrastructure to local water supplies. Without the regulation river 
flow provided by the projects, these communities will have a monumental 
task to extend the intakes for the low flow periods, increasing the 
burden on already cash-strapped local governments.
  For these reasons, I urge my colleagues to oppose the amendment, and 
I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. GRAVES of Missouri. Mr. Chairman, as I stated before, we are not 
gutting this program, we are just reducing

[[Page 8344]]

the funding for it. For that matter, I might add that even if we zeroed 
this program out, it would have absolutely no effect on power intake 
systems, on power generation systems, on navigation whatsoever. But the 
fact of the matter is, and I've seen it, this money is spent to dump 
sand in the river so it can create more sandbars, to try to create more 
sandbars. It's used to buy more land, which takes land out of 
production. The fact of the matter is when we have trillions of dollars 
worth of deficits each year and trillions and trillions of dollars 
worth of debt, the last thing we need to be doing as the Federal 
Government is buying more land and dumping dirt in the Missouri River 
to create habitat. That's the bottom line: it's unacceptable, and this 
program needs to be reduced.
  With that, I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. CARNAHAN. Mr. Chair, rise in opposition to the Graves amendment.
  The Missouri River, the Nation's longest, is an important economic 
tool for not only the state of Missouri but the Nation as a whole. The 
river is critical to the local water supply is home to a diverse 
ecosystem, and also serves residential and recreational roles. Due to 
our dependence on the River, three million acres along the river have 
been distorted or changed, causing natural habitats to disappear. 
Reinvigorating the river and its wildlife will not only benefit those 
who live along the river, but those who depend on its resources as 
well.
  I stand in strong support of the Missouri River Recovery Program, a 
program which serves to revitalize the Missouri River and allow native 
species populations to grow. Missouri needs this program to ensure that 
the future of the Missouri river ecosystem is one that is sustainable 
and affordable to maintain. This amendment does nothing to redirect 
funds for other means of flood control, but instead limits a program 
that is integral to the River's recovery. Without the funding this 
program needs, we risk programs that provide habitats and safety for 
federally listed endangered and threatened species. The maintenance and 
recovery of the Missouri River is vital to the millions of Americans 
impacted by the Missouri River basin. I urge my colleagues to consider 
the economic and environmental impact that a cut to funding for the 
Missouri River Recovery Program would have, and urge my colleagues to 
vote ``no'' on this amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Graves).
  The amendment was agreed to.

                              {time}  2210


                    Amendment Offered by Mr. Landry

  Mr. LANDRY. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. ___.  None of the funds made available in this Act may 
     be used within the borders of the State of Louisiana by the 
     Mississippi Valley Division or the Southwestern Division of 
     the Army Corps of Engineers or any district of the Corps 
     within such divisions to implement or enforce the mitigation 
     methodology, referred to as the ``Modified Charleston 
     Method''.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Louisiana (Mr. Landry) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Louisiana.
  Mr. LANDRY. Mr. Chairman, I have consistently championed the need for 
Louisiana to protect its fragile coast and wetlands. I have offered 
amendments and supported bills that all positively affect the creation 
of new wetlands and starts to turn the tide on the coastal land loss in 
Louisiana. But the New Orleans District Corps of Engineers office is 
going to cripple our ability for Louisiana to protect itself from 
dangerous hurricanes by introducing a standardized method of wetlands 
mitigation. This standardized method is called the Modified Charleston 
Method.
  This method is driving up the State and local mitigation cost of 
hurricane protection in Louisiana by 300 percent. I said only the State 
and local cost because the Corps has exempted itself from its own 
method on Federal projects. This is why the American people are 
frustrated at the Federal Government; it creates a rule, enforces it on 
everybody else, but exempts itself.
  The Corps' new wetland rules are actually halting the creation of 
wetlands. As such, my amendment prevents the enforcement of the 
Modified Charleston Method within the State of Louisiana for 1 year, 
forcing the Corps to take a breath and develop a mitigation system that 
provides for our wetlands without stifling needed hurricane protection 
measures and economic development.
  My amendment impacts only Louisiana. If your Corps districts use the 
MCM and it works for your constituents, great, your Corps districts can 
continue to do so. But the MCM does not work for Louisiana. In fact, 
the State of Louisiana, the Police Jury Association of Louisiana--our 
association of counties--the Association of Levee Boards of Louisiana, 
Vermillion Parish and countless local communities all have severe 
concerns about the MCM.
  Moreover, the MCM does not acknowledge that some construction 
projects actually preserve wetlands. For example, a flood protection 
levee that protects homes also protects wetlands from saltwater 
intrusion and erosion. However, these benefits are not calculated.
  The Corps itself does not follow the MCM. And until it does, local 
parishes, communities, and builders should not be forced to follow it 
as well.
  I urge passage of this amendment and reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Mr. Chairman, I rise in opposition to the gentleman's 
amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I do rise in opposition to the gentleman's amendment. 
While I have some sympathy for the issue that the gentleman has raised, 
I believe that more consistency should be brought to the way we 
evaluate wetland impacts, not less, as this amendment would ensure.
  The Charleston Method has been utilized for two decades in various 
Corps districts. The Charleston Method is a quick, inexpensive, and 
consistent methodology--I think that's very important to note, a 
consistent methodology--for use by the regulated public and the Corps.
  The gentleman suggests that it doesn't work. If it doesn't work, I do 
not know why in 2006 and 2007 the New Orleans District worked with its 
Federal and State partners to modify the Charleston Method so that it 
better reflected the unique conditions found in southern Louisiana 
resulting in the Modified Charleston Method.
  The use of the Modified Charleston Method is longstanding in many 
Corps districts. Many regulatory customers use the tool to assess their 
potential mitigation requirements for their impact site as well as 
credits required at mitigation banks. This transparency in Corps 
mitigation requirements has helped the applicant prepare a complete 
application package and determine mitigation costs up front.
  Suspension of the use of the Modified Charleston Method in Corps 
districts would require that any pending permit applications--section 
404 of the Clean Water Act--and pending mitigation banks would need to 
be reevaluated using a different assessment tool/methodology or, in the 
absence of such, use best professional judgment to determine 
appropriate mitigation requirements for impacts and for available 
credits in mitigation banks, obviously encompassing a great deal of 
delay.
  All approved mitigation banks with available credits that were 
determined by the Charleston Method would be temporarily closed until a 
new methodology could be developed and the bank credits converted to 
the credit system of a new methodology. These banks were established 
utilizing the credit system of the Modified Charleston Method, and 
until a similar credit system can be determined for these projects, it 
would not be possible to correlate the new requirements with the old 
system. We would not have transparency; we would not have consistency. 
We would have delay.
  For these reasons, I do oppose the gentleman's amendment.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. LANDRY. Mr. Chairman, how much time do I have remaining?

[[Page 8345]]

  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Louisiana has 2\1/2\ minutes 
remaining.
  Mr. LANDRY. Mr. Chairman, the only thing consistent about the method 
is that it doesn't work in Louisiana. In fact, the only thing that it 
increases is the amount of land that the mitigation banks can sell.
  We have parishes in Louisiana who understand that the Federal 
Government doesn't have any more money. The residents and citizens of 
those parishes have taxed themselves to protect themselves from storms, 
and yet the formula that the Corps is using is driving the cost of 
these projects to a point where they can't build them anymore. But yet 
some in this body will argue that after hurricanes come in, after 
hurricanes affect Louisiana's coast, they don't want to pour the money 
in to rebuild those communities.
  Those communities are trying to protect themselves at a time when the 
Federal Government has told them ``no'' as a source of funding, and yet 
now the Federal Government is going to change the rules. It just 
doesn't work in Louisiana. And for that, I urge my colleagues to help 
me pass this amendment.
  Mr. Chairman, I yield back the balance of my time.
                                              Parish of Jefferson,


                                      Office of the President,

                                      Jefferson, LA, June 5, 2012.
     Hon. Jeff Landry,
     Cannon House Office Building,
     Washington, DC.
       Dear Representative Landry: I strongly oppose use of the 
     Modified Charleston Method (MCM) to assess wetland habitats 
     and compute compensatory credits for wetland impacts from 
     public safety and economic development projects. The MCM must 
     be revised to provide adequate and defensible compensation 
     calculations for required mitigation.
       Jefferson Parish has serious concern that the MCM, in its 
     current form and with its current factor value(s), may cause 
     unnecessarily high and impractical compensatory mitigation 
     values. Section 404 of the Clean Water Act requires that 
     compensatory mitigation be practicable. The MCM offers the 
     very real possibility of quantifying compensatory mitigation 
     calculations that are unworkable and in direct violation of 
     both the letter and the spirit of the Clean Water Act.
       The Parish is also concerned that the MCM may have a 
     negative influence on important public works projects that 
     are tied directly to public safety. It is the Parish's belief 
     that the MCM will have a direct negative impact on important 
     public safety projects by requiring an inordinate amount of 
     compensatory mitigation for wetland impacts associated with 
     these projects. The communities of southeastern Louisiana 
     have little choice, in most cases, than the construction of 
     the necessary flood protection structures in areas which 
     trigger wetland mitigation requirements, if they are to 
     provide adequate safety for these communities. Ultimately, 
     the utilization of the MCM for assessing the wetland impacts 
     for these important projects may lead to loss of property, 
     livelihood, life, and result in local, state and federal 
     legal liabilities.
       In addition, the Parish is concerned that the MCM may also 
     have a negative influence on critical infrastructure projects 
     such as roadways/hurricane evacuation routes, ports, 
     hurricane protection features, etc. Most of this 
     infrastructure also provides crucial access that is required 
     for the maintenance and growth of the petroleum and chemical 
     industry, which supports this state, the region and the rest 
     of the nation.
       Accordingly. I vehemently oppose use of the Modified 
     Charleston Method and would like to offer my support of your 
     proposed amendment to H.R. 5325,
           Sincerely,
                                               John F. Young, Jr.,
     Jefferson Parish President.
                                  ____



                                   St. Mary Parish Government,

                                       Franklin, LA, June 4, 2012.
     Hon. Jeff Landry,
     House of Representatives, Cannon House Office Building, 
         Washington, DC.
       Dear Representative Landry: The St. Mary Parish government 
     is supportive of your efforts to craft legislation in the 
     form of an amendment to the FY 2013 House Energy and Water 
     Appropriations bill. St. Mary Parish supports the Landry 
     Amendment that would prohibit any funds be used within the 
     borders of the State of Louisiana by the Mississippi Valley 
     Division or the Southwestern Division of the Army Corps of 
     Engineers (Corps) to implement or enforce the Modified 
     Charleston Method (MCM).
       We feel that this is an appropriate step that shows the 
     Corps that a variation is needed from the current MCM. Our 
     community cannot afford the every growing expense that this 
     methodology has put on the backs of our locals.
       St. Mary Parish has repeatedly asked the Corps to revisit 
     the MCM as in current form it is unreasonably burdensome on 
     our local economy. Our community is already experience 
     negative impacts of the MCM. While we agree that wetland 
     mitigation is necessary, our figures indicate that under the 
     MCM projects cost three times more than they were before this 
     methodology was implemented.
       Your leadership on this issue is appreciated. I look 
     forward to working with you on these and other issues 
     important to St. Mary Parish.
           Sincerely,
                                              Paul P. Naquin, Jr.,
                                                 Parish President.

  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Louisiana (Mr. Landry).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                    Amendment Offered by Mr. Landry

  Mr. LANDRY. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title) insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available under this Act 
     may be used to carry out section 801 of Energy Independence 
     and Security Act of 2007 (42 U.S.C. 17281).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Louisiana (Mr. Landry) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Louisiana.
  Mr. LANDRY. Mr. Chairman, in 2007, Congress passed the Energy 
Independence and Security Act of 2007. Section 801 of this act 
authorizes the Department of Energy to create a national media campaign 
to promote alternative green technologies and wean Americans off of 
fossil fuels. My amendment defunds this media campaign.
  Our government must get out of the business of picking winners and 
losers. The American public knows far better than any government 
bureaucrat what energy sources work best for them, their families, and 
their businesses. Instead, private green energy firms should use their 
own advertising campaign funds on behalf of the energy sources they 
sell. Why are government dollars needed?
  I urge my colleagues to support this amendment and to defund this 
taxpayer media campaign.
  I yield back the balance of my time.

                              {time}  2220

  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Louisiana (Mr. Landry).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                    Amendment Offered by Mr. Brooks

  Mr. BROOKS. Mr. Chairman, as the designee of the gentleman from 
Georgia (Mr. Broun), I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title) insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available under this Act 
     for the Advanced Research Projects Agency--Energy may be used 
     for unallowable costs related to advertising or promoting the 
     sale of products or services in contravention of the 
     requirements of section 31.205-1, or for unallowable 
     expenditures related to raising capital in contravention of 
     the requirements of 31.205-27, of title 48 of the Code of 
     Federal Regulations.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Alabama (Mr. Brooks) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Alabama.
  Mr. BROOKS. Mr. Chairman, I offer this amendment to address a 
shortcoming in the manner in which ARPA-E, the Department of Energy's 
Advanced Research Projects Agency for Energy, spends taxpayer dollars.
  In August 2011, the Department of Energy Inspector General released 
an audit report that disputed costs incurred by ARPA-E award 
recipients. For clarity, an ARPA-E award recipient is a private company 
or entity that seeks operational cost reimbursement from Federal 
taxpayers.
  The Inspector General disputes that private company expenses for 
``meetings with bankers to raise capital'' and ``a fee to appear on a 
local television

[[Page 8346]]

program'' are reimbursable costs that Federal taxpayers should pay for. 
The Inspector General report found that such spending violates Federal 
acquisition regulation subpart 31.2.
  ARPA-E disputed the Inspector General's finding and argued that such 
costs are allowable under ARPA-E's statutory authority to fund 
technology transfer and outreach activities.
  In February 2011, ARPA-E finalized Technology Transfer and Outreach 
guidance for awardees that explicitly encourages ARPA-E private company 
awardees to engage in and seek taxpayer reimbursement for these 
questionable expenditures.
  More specifically, the policy states that acceptable taxpayer 
reimbursement activities by private companies include:

       Marketing and other expenditures related to promoting an 
     ARPA-E funded technology;
       Consulting and other expenditures related to developing 
     ARPA-E-funded technologies, building business and identifying 
     potential users, markets and customers, e.g., business plan 
     development, market research, and
       Presentation and other expenditures relating to seeking 
     additional funding from the private sector and government 
     agencies.

  ARPA-E guidance suggests the inappropriate spending identified by the 
Inspector General may be significantly widespread. At a January 2012 
hearing, the Science, Space and Technology Committee's Subcommittee on 
Investigations and Oversight examined ARPA-E guidance in spending.
  One day prior to the hearing, ARPA-E delivered to the committee an 
updated policy that omits mention of these questionable spending 
activities. Hence, ARPA-E's revision adds confusion, not clarity, to 
the pending question. In the absence of more explicit guidance 
consistent with the Inspector General's spending concerns, there is a 
significant risk to American taxpayers that ARPA-E private company 
awardees will incur costs that violate Federal regulations, yet which 
ARPA-E reimburses out of taxpayer funds.
  On February 10, Subcommittee on Investigation and Oversight Chairman 
Paul Broun asked ARPA-E Director Majumdar to clarify in writing whether 
ARPA-E considers the activities mentioned in the original ARPA-E policy 
as allowable spending. Responses to these questions were due on 
February 24, 2012, but the Department of Energy refused to provide a 
response, a response which is now well over 3 months past the deadline.
  This amendment does what ARPA-E should have already done, make it 
explicitly clear that the spending concerns identified by the Inspector 
General using taxpayer funds to raise private capital and using tax 
dollars to market, advertise, and promote private company-funded 
technologies are not allowable.
  ARPA-E tax dollars should not go to private company advertising, 
marketing and ``meetings with bankers to raise capital.''
  Stated differently, in this era of deficits and accumulated debt that 
threaten America with insolvency and bankruptcy, American tax dollars 
should not be used to pay for the operational costs of private sector 
companies, particularly when the Inspector General has already 
determined they are improper.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Will the gentleman from Alabama yield?
  Mr. BROOKS. I yield to the gentleman.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I think we're prepared to accept your amendment.
  Mr. BROOKS. I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Alabama (Mr. Brooks).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                  Amendment Offered by Mr. Schweikert

  Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used to enforce part 429 or 430 of title 10, Code of 
     Federal Regulations, with respect to showerheads (as that 
     term is defined in section 430.2 of such title).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Schweikert) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Arizona.
  Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Mr. Chairman, this is one of those sort of occasions 
I'm going to refer to this almost as the law of unintended 
consequences.
  About 6 months ago, I was visiting one of my favorite places in life, 
a Starbucks in Scottsdale, and a gentleman walks up to me, just 
bouncing off the walls, and apparently it wasn't from a bunch of 
espressos. He had just been given a $447,000 fine for his tiny little 
business that made custom shower heads, made specialty shower heads, 
because apparently the water restrictor ring inside was too easy to pry 
out.
  Now, I need to disclose something here, in all honesty. I've actually 
changed the shower heads in my house. And guess what the first thing 
I've always done is. I take a screwdriver and stick it in there and 
pull that little water-restricting ring out of there because I have 
this bad habit; I actually like to get wet when I shower. I know it's a 
novel concept, but it's something I like to do.
  But think of this: the Department of Energy is out there enforcing, 
and here's the standards they live by. If it takes more or less than 8 
pounds of pressure to remove the water restrictor after they take apart 
the shower head, they come and fine you.
  But the creepy part of this story is they demanded a list of everyone 
who had purchased one of these shower heads. So now the Department of 
Energy is putting together the database of the people that bought 
shower heads that the water-restricting O ring inside is too easy to 
remove.
  Have we lost our minds?
  I'm not thrilled coming to the floor and doing a limitation amendment 
on something like this, but this is the type of thing the American 
people are absolutely livid about. And this actually affects our daily 
lives.
  With that, Madam Chairwoman, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I rise to claim time in opposition to the gentleman's 
amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR (Ms. Foxx). The gentleman from Indiana is recognized 
for 5 minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I appreciate the recognition and do rise to oppose the 
gentleman's amendment.
  The standards the gentleman is very exercised about were contained in 
the EPA Act of 1992 and have been in effect for more than a decade. And 
they, in fact, do save energy and they do save water. A number of 
States are starting to adopt tighter standards on these products, 
including the State of Georgia, because they do save energy.
  There is no part of the country, including mine that borders the 
Great Lakes, the largest body of fresh water on the planet, that does 
not have water supply concerns. In California, there has been a 
tremendous public investment to encourage and incentivize homeowners to 
replace their utilities with models that require less water.

                              {time}  2230

  I really do not know why we are discussing this issue again. We 
talked about it in the nineties. We talked about it in the last decade, 
and here we are this evening talking about it again. Manufacturers have 
been complying with this provision for, again, a decade. The question 
is: Why are we talking about it today? I am aware of an enforcement 
action recently, but against plumbing manufacturers who have put 
multiple compliant showerheads onto one fixture, obviously trying to 
sidestep the law when you have three efficient showerheads attached to 
one.
  With water shortages across the country, with an energy crisis in 
most of the Mountain and Western States, I would ask my colleagues to 
oppose the gentleman's amendment.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Madam Chairwoman, may I inquire as to my time?
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Arizona has 3 minutes remaining.
  Mr. SCHWEIKERT. This is actually an interesting debate from an 
economic standpoint.

[[Page 8347]]

  Being from the desert, where we actually really, really care about 
our water supply, we've learned something. I'm one of those people who 
lives in a house with rock landscaping and low water this and low water 
landscaping, but I do like to get wet in my shower, as we've already 
stated. If you want to deal with water usage, basic economics says you 
do it through the pricing mechanism, not through trying to manage my 
life with a bunch of laws.
  Madam Chairwoman, I stand in front of you and hope this amendment 
passes because, in many ways, I think this is a great example of what 
drives the American voters, the American people mad in that we try to 
micromanage every aspect of their lives, and we turn huge numbers of 
them functionally into criminals. I would love to do an honest survey 
through this body of how many people have done any remodeling or who 
have put up a new showerhead and who have not monkeyed with that flow 
restrictor that's inside that showerhead.
  Ultimately, I appreciate that in 1992 this somehow passed through 
this body. Maybe it was meant to help, and maybe it was meant to have 
all sorts of good purposes, but this is not the rational methodology 
with which to promote that type of water conservation. Then when you 
turn the Department of Energy into a police force that actually now 
sets standards of--if I can exceed 8 pounds of force, then all of a 
sudden it's perfectly legal, but if it's under 8 pounds of force in 
removing the water restrictor, then I get a $447,000 fine, as my 
constituent received here.
  With that, Madam Chairwoman, I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Madam Chairman, I do not live in a desert. I mentioned 
in my earlier remarks that my congressional district, in fact, borders 
the largest body of freshwater on the planet Earth. I find water very 
precious myself, and I try to explain to my constituents every day we 
should not take it for granted.
  I find the debates that we have engaged in here very interesting 
tonight. A bit earlier today, we had an amendment to suppress the wage 
rates in this country. We have about 13 million people who don't work 
today, but the gentleman suggests the way that we solve our water 
crisis in this country is pricing. His solution is: Let's increase the 
price of water. Let's increase the price of water for those 13 million 
people who aren't working. Let's increase the price of water. Let's use 
pricing for water to conserve it for those people who may not be making 
a living wage because people want to destroy Davis-Bacon in this 
country.
  Maybe we ought to think about the people who are just getting by, 
just grubbing to get the money to pay their water bills. Pricing means 
something to them. In this case, if regulation that had been in place 
for more than a decade will help those people of least means pay their 
water bills, I say that's a good thing and a very sound reason to 
oppose the gentleman's amendment.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Schweikert).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                    Amendment Offered by Mrs. Lummis

  Mrs. LUMMIS. Madam Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title) insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __. None of the funds made available under this Act 
     may be used to plan or undertake sales or any other transfers 
     of natural or low enriched uranium from the Department of 
     Energy that combined exceed 1,917 metric tons of uranium as 
     uranium hexafluoride equivalent in fiscal year 2013.

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentlewoman from Wyoming (Mrs. Lummis) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from Wyoming.
  Mrs. LUMMIS. I first want to thank my colleague, Representative 
Hinojosa from Texas, for joining me in this amendment.
  Now here is an undisputed fact: Today, the United States imports more 
than 90 percent of our uranium from foreign countries. Some of them 
don't like us very much. We have an ample supply of uranium in the West 
and across this country. A lack of supply is not the problem.
  We import that much uranium for two reasons: First, accidents that 
happened decades ago cooled interest in nuclear energy in our country, 
so companies slowed down their production. But here is the second 
reason: Just as our domestic energy began to recover from these 
disasters, our own government started dumping into the market excess 
uranium it has stockpiled.
  DOE uses the stockpile to raise funds for itself for various 
purposes--a fact that this Appropriations subcommittee has been 
concerned about for quite some time. Every time the Federal Government 
dumps its excess stockpile into the market, it depresses the price of 
uranium. Depressed uranium prices halt private investment in domestic 
mining and conversion and hurt American jobs in the West and in the 
Midwest.
  Being reasonable folks, the uranium miners have agreed to accept that 
the Department of Energy can dump into the market up to 10 percent of 
domestic demand for uranium. That has been the consensus approach since 
2008. However, last month, the DOE departed from the consensus and 
announced that it would dump into the market a volume of uranium that 
is overwhelming in its scope--9,000 tons--an amount that is orders of 
magnitude greater than 10 percent of domestic demand.
  That is what my amendment today seeks to end--the price-distorting 
dumping of uranium in the open market above what has been the consensus 
in the uranium industry for years and above a level that can be 
weathered by U.S. companies offering U.S. jobs in uranium mining.
  Now here is where my amendment gets politically sticky. High-profile 
Members of Congress from the Midwest are trying to protect 1,200 jobs 
for 1 year at the United States Enrichment Corporation facility in 
Kentucky. Let me be clear. I don't want jobs lost in Paducah, Kentucky, 
but I also don't want jobs lost in Wyoming and in the West.
  I want my colleagues to understand this. While the actions of the 
Department of Energy may help save 1,200 jobs for 1 year in Kentucky, 
it will also end 1,200 jobs in the West and Midwest for much longer 
than that. So the Department of Energy's dump onto the open market of 
$815 million worth of uranium to further bail out a failing private 
company, USEC, will result in no net savings of jobs. Over $800 million 
to save no net jobs is a stunningly bad investment.
  The good news is that we can protect jobs in Kentucky and in the West 
at the same time. We do not have to choose. Here is how. Vote for this 
bipartisan amendment. If my amendment passes, the DOE will still 
transfer 62 percent of the 9,000 tons of depleted uranium before my 
amendment even takes effect.

                              {time}  2240

  After that, DOE can still continue its transfers, just under a 
reasonable cap that doesn't destroy domestic uranium mining and 
conversion in the process.
  Here are the facts: My amendment does not halt work at any of USEC's 
failing sites; it does not prevent transfers for national security 
purposes; it does not halt the cleanup of sites in Ohio. In fact, my 
amendment provides a way for all of these projects to move forward 
efficiently and fairly.
  The bottom line is this: We do not need to sacrifice jobs in Wyoming 
or Illinois to support jobs in Kentucky. That is a false choice. We can 
do both, and that is exactly what my amendment does.
  I implore my colleagues to give DOE's actions careful thought here. 
DOE's plan is a market distorting government intrusion into the private 
market. We cannot stop it in full, but we can rein it in next year in a 
way that is fair to every single stakeholder in this debate.

[[Page 8348]]

  I ask my colleagues to support my amendment, and I yield back the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Madam Chair, I rise in opposition to the 
gentlelady's amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Madam Chair, I share the gentlelady's concern on 
the Department's continued off-budget use of its uranium transfer 
authority to circumvent the appropriations process and avoid 
congressional oversight. Congressional oversight is essential in order 
to make sure there are adequate protections in place to protect our 
domestic uranium mining and conversion industry. However, this 
amendment is too broad an approach for what is, by most estimates, a 
very complex issue.
  There are several uses for the many uranium transfer authorities 
given to the Secretary of Energy that support ongoing national security 
activities, and there is still a great deal of ambiguity of whether 
this language in this amendment would prohibit funding for a depleted 
uranium tails transfer that will keep the Paducah plant in Kentucky 
operating for another year. That deal would sustain, and there may be a 
question in terms of how many jobs are here, but our estimates say it 
will sustain 2,000 jobs in fiscal year 2013 and provide the needed 
uranium fuel to produce tritium to supply our nuclear weapons 
stockpile.
  I hope we can work together--the gentlelady and I, and members of the 
authorizing committee and the Appropriations Committee on Energy and 
Water--to find a solution that addresses all of these and other 
concerns.
  I urge my colleagues reluctantly to vote ``no'' on this amendment, 
and I yield back the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentlewoman from Wyoming (Mrs. Lummis).
  The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes 
appeared to have it.
  Mrs. LUMMIS. Madam Chair, I demand a recorded vote.
  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further 
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentlewoman from Wyoming 
will be postponed.


                  Amendment Offered by Mr. Fortenberry

  Mr. FORTENBERRY. Madam Chair, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), insert the 
     following:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used to finalize, implement, or enforce the proposed rule 
     entitled ``Energy Conservation Program: Energy Conservation 
     Standards for Battery Chargers and External Power Supplies'' 
     (77 Fed. Reg. 18478 (March 27, 2012)) with respect to product 
     class 7 (as described in such proposed rule).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Nebraska (Mr. Fortenberry) and a Member opposed each 
will control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Nebraska.
  Mr. FORTENBERRY. Madam Chair, I appreciate the opportunity to offer 
this commonsense amendment to protect American jobs and reduce 
regulatory burdens. Quite simply, this amendment would block the 
Department of Energy from implementing unnecessary energy conservation 
standards for golf cart battery chargers.
  Madam Chairman, I recognize that reasonable regulations are necessary 
to protect human health and the environment; however, we must guard 
against costly rules that provide no meaningful benefit to the United 
States but instead encourage this shift of American jobs overseas to 
lower-wage countries where environmental standards are minimal. The 
proposed golf cart battery charger rule is clearly such a regulation. 
The proposed standards would achieve minimal energy savings, and the 
Department of Energy itself acknowledges that they would result in U.S. 
manufacturing jobs being sent overseas.
  While I support the overall goal of promoting energy efficiency, I am 
very concerned about this proposed regulation that directly affects 
more than 100 jobs right where I live.
  Madam Chair, last week's unemployment figures highlight the economic 
challenges we face in our country. Job growth is slowing and 
unemployment is ticking up. In this kind of economic climate, why would 
we want to intentionally force American jobs overseas through increased 
and unnecessary regulation?
  I would also like to emphasize that golf cart battery chargers should 
not even be included in this proposed rule, which is intended to cover 
consumer products. It is my understanding that about 90 percent of new 
golf carts are sold to businesses for fleets, while less than 10 
percent of new golf carts are for personal use by individuals. This 
does not meet the significant standard necessary to be considered a 
consumer product.
  It is clear that the proposed rule would make American manufacturers 
of battery chargers less competitive and it would cost American jobs, 
so we must ask what would we achieve by implementing this rule. 
According to the Department of Energy's calculations, making this 
change would result in energy savings of only about $6 per charger per 
year. That's because these chargers are already very highly efficient.
  With that, Madam Chair, I urge my colleagues to support this 
amendment which will help protect American jobs, and I reserve the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Madam Chair, I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Madam Chair, I will not oppose the gentleman's 
amendment, but I do have some concerns.
  First, I would like to say that I hope that we will not begin to 
legislate every rule coming out of the Department of Energy on this 
particular bill, though I understand the frustration that the 
Department of Energy is capable of causing from time to time. However, 
in this instance, I do understand that the Department is responding to 
the concerns expressed by the gentleman from Nebraska, and it is 
anticipated that a resolution is expected soon.
  On that basis, I do not oppose the amendment as a gentle reminder for 
the Department to address this issue expeditiously.
  With that, I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. FORTENBERRY. I yield back the balance of my time, Madam Chair.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Nebraska (Mr. Fortenberry).
  The amendment was agreed to.


                    Amendment Offered by Mr. Flores

  Mr. FLORES. Madam Chair, I have an amendment at the desk.
  The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will report the amendment.
  The Clerk read as follows:

       At the end of the bill (before the short title), add the 
     following new section:
       Sec. __.  None of the funds made available by this Act may 
     be used to enforce section 526 of the Energy Independence and 
     Security Act of 2007 (Public Law 110-140; 42 U.S.C. 17142).

  The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to the order of the House of today, the 
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Flores) and a Member opposed each will 
control 5 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Texas.
  Mr. FLORES. Madam Chair, I rise to offer an amendment which addresses 
another misguided and restrictive Federal regulation.
  Section 526 of the Energy Independence and Security Act prevents 
Federal agencies from entering into contracts for the procurement of a 
fuel unless its life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions are less than or 
equal to emissions from an equivalent conventional fuel produced from 
conventional petroleum sources.
  In summary, my amendment would stop the government from enforcing 
this ban on all Federal agencies funded by the Energy and Water 
Development appropriations bill.

[[Page 8349]]



                              {time}  2250

  The initial purpose of section 526 was to stop the Defense 
Department's plans to buy and develop coal-based or coal-to-liquids jet 
fuel. This restriction was based on the opinion of some 
environmentalists that coal-based jet fuel might produce more 
greenhouse gas emissions than traditional petroleum. We must ensure 
that our military has adequate fuel resources and that it can rely on 
domestic and more stable sources of fuel. Unfortunately, section 526's 
ban on fuel choice now affects all Federal agencies, not just the 
Defense Department.
  This is why I'm offering this amendment again today to the Energy and 
Water appropriations bill. Federal agencies should not be burdened with 
wasting their time studying fuel restrictions when there is a simple 
fix, and that fix is to not restrict our fuel choices based on extreme 
environmental views, policies, and misguided regulations like those in 
section 526.
  With increasing competition for energy and fuel resources and with 
the continued volatility and instability in the Middle East, it is now 
more important than ever for our country to become more energy 
independent and to further develop and produce all of our domestic 
energy resources.
  Placing limits on Federal agencies' fuel choices is an unacceptable 
precedent to set in regard to America's policy independence and our 
national security. Madam Chair, section 526 makes our Nation more 
dependent on Middle Eastern oil. Stopping the impact of section 526 
will help us to promote American energy, improve the American economy, 
and create American jobs.
  In some circles, there is a misconception that my amendment somehow 
prevents the Federal Government and our military from being able to 
produce and use alternative fuels. Madam Chair, this viewpoint is 
categorically false. All my amendment does is to allow the Federal 
purchasers of these fuels to acquire the fuels that best and most 
efficiently meet their needs. I offered a similar amendment to the CJS 
appropriations bill, and it passed with strong bipartisan support.
  My similar amendment to the MilCon-VA appropriations bill also passed 
by a voice vote. My friend, Mr. Conaway, also had language added to the 
Defense authorization bill to exempt the Defense Department from this 
burdensome regulation.
  Let's remember the following facts about section 526: it increases 
our reliance on Middle Eastern oil; it hurts our military readiness, 
our national security and our energy security. It also prevents a 
potential increased use of some sources of safe, clean, and efficient 
American oil and gas.
  It also increases the cost of American food and energy. It hurts 
American jobs and the American economy. Last, but certainly not least, 
it costs our taxpayers more of their hard-earned dollars. I urge my 
colleagues to support the passage of this commonsense amendment.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I move to strike the last word.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Madam Chair, I rise in support of the amendment by 
the gentleman from Texas. The gentleman's amendment enhances our 
national security by giving the Federal Government alternatives to 
imported petroleum fuels. Gas prices this year are at record highs, and 
the Nation imports nearly half of its oil. Our bill takes a 
comprehensive approach to once and for all reduce gas prices and our 
reliance on imported oil.
  Unfortunately, by declaring some fuel options to be off-limits, off-
limits to Federal fleets, section 526 of the Energy Independence and 
Security Act of 2007 limits our ability to reduce our Nation's 
dependence on oil imports.
  By undoing that law, the amendment puts all the alternatives back on 
the table so the Nation can begin developing and using fuels that are 
made with resources right here in the United States. Energy self-
sufficiency is a national security issue, and this amendment takes a 
step in the right direction by adding to the comprehensive approach in 
our bill. I support the gentleman's amendment, and I am prepared to 
accept it.
  I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Madam Chair, I rise in opposition to the gentleman's 
amendment.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Indiana is recognized for 5 
minutes.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Section 526 is, I believe, a commonsense provision 
that stops Federal agencies from wasting taxpayer dollars on new 
alternative fuels that are dirtier and more polluting than fuels we use 
today.
  Section 526 simply bars agencies from entering into contracts to 
purchase alternative and unconventional fuels that emit more carbon 
pollution than conventional fuels on a life-cycle basis. Section 526 
doesn't prevent the sale of dirty fuels, nor does it prevent the 
Federal agencies from buying these fuels if they need to.
  Instead, it simply prevents the Federal Government from propping up 
the makers of dirty fuels with long-term contracts. Government policy, 
given the problems we face as far as our energy policy, should help 
drive the development of alternative fuels that cut pollution in carbon 
emission, not increase it.
  The effect of this provision has been that it has spurred development 
of advanced biofuels. These fuels are being successfully tested and 
proven today on U.S. Navy planes at supersonic speeds. It is a 
testament to this country's ingenuity.
  Opponents of this section claim that it creates problems for Federal 
agencies, and that is simply not the case. For example, the Department 
of Defense supports section 526, recognizing that tomorrow's soldiers, 
sailors, air personnel, and marines are going to need a greater range 
of energy sources.
  Last July, the Department of Defense stated very clearly, and I 
quote:

       The provision has not hindered the Department from 
     purchasing the fuel we need today, worldwide, to support 
     military missions. But it also sets an important baseline in 
     developing the fuels we need for the future.

  DOD has also said that repealing section 526 could ``complicate the 
Department's efforts to provide better energy options to our 
warfighters and take advantage of the promising developments in home-
grown biofuels.''
  If DOD, the government's largest fuel purchaser, believes that 
section 526 is workable and helpful, that should be true for other 
agencies as well. In fact, the agencies we're addressing today have not 
expressed any concerns that I am aware of about section 526 nor have 
they asked for this provision.
  I believe this amendment could also damage the developing biofuels 
sector at the worst possible time for our economy. It can send a very 
negative signal to America's advanced biofuel industry and could result 
in adverse impacts to U.S. job creation, world development efforts, and 
the export of world-leading technology.
  Developing and bringing advanced low-carbon biofuels to scale is a 
critical step in reducing the Nation's dependence on oil. In this 
section, section 526, is a key part of this process. For these reasons, 
I would certainly be opposed to the gentleman's amendment.
  I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. FLORES. Madam Chair, may I ask how much time I have remaining.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Texas has 1\1/2\ minutes 
remaining.
  Mr. FLORES. I want to make sure that we clear up any misconceptions 
about this bill. This bill does not tell the military that they cannot 
pursue alternative sources of fuel. What it does is it removes all 
restrictions that have been placed on the military and on the Federal 
Government to procure any type of fuel, whether it's based on coal 
technology, whether it's based on the oil sands from a friendly country 
next door in Canada. It contains no restrictions. It takes away the 
restrictions that have manipulated the market and have forced up the 
cost of energy for the Defense Department.
  For instance, the Navy was buying vegetable oil to burn in its ships 
and aircraft in 2010 at a cost of $424 per gallon. Last year, this cost 
was reduced to

[[Page 8350]]

$27 a gallon, yet it's still six times higher than what the cost of 
normal Navy fuel would be.
  What this hurts is our personnel readiness; it hurts the ability to 
buy more tanks, to buy more airplanes, to buy more protective gear for 
our men and women in the military.

                              {time}  2300

  It also hurts our taxpayers. As I said earlier, it keeps the military 
from being able to even buy fuel from Canadian oil sands next door, 
which, hopefully, some day, will be transported through the Keystone XL 
pipeline down to United States refineries.
  I want to also talk about what the Defense Department has said.
  The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman from Texas has expired.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Madam Chair, I would like to move to strike the 
last word and yield some additional time to the gentleman, another 5 
minutes, if he is so inclined.
  The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New Jersey has already used the 
time available to him by striking the last word.
  Mr. VISCLOSKY. Madam Chair, I would be happy to yield the gentleman 
some time, if he needs it, to close.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. I thank the gentleman for yielding, and I in turn 
yield to the gentleman from Texas.
  Mr. FLORES. Thank you. I should be able to do this in a minute.
  A letter from the General Counsel of the Department of Defense to 
Senator Inhofe says:

       The Department of Defense supports Senate 2827, a bill to 
     repeal the requirement with respect to the procurement and 
     acquisition of alternative fuels. The bill would repeal 
     section 526 of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 
     2007. Section 526 has the potential to generate significant 
     problems for the DOD and its procurement of fuels for the 
     national defense. It creates uncertainty about what fuels the 
     DOD can procure and discourage the development of new 
     sources, particularly reliable domestic sources of energy 
     supplies for the Armed Forces.

  Mr. VISCLOSKY. I would simply reiterate my objection to the 
gentleman's amendment so that is clear for the record, and I yield back 
the balance of my time.
  The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the 
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Flores).
  The amendment was agreed to.
  Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Madam Chair, I move that the Committee do now 
rise.
  The motion was agreed to.
  Accordingly, the Committee rose; and the Speaker pro tempore (Mr. 
Womack) having assumed the chair, Ms. Foxx, Acting Chair of the 
Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union, reported that 
that Committee, having had under consideration the bill (H.R. 5325) 
making appropriations for energy and water development and related 
agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2013, and for other 
purposes, had come to no resolution thereon.

                          ____________________