[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 159 (2013), Part 12]
[Senate]
[Pages 17710-17711]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




          STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS

      By Mr. KAINE:
  S. 1742. A bill to temporarily suspend the collection of entrance 
fees at units of the National Park System and the National Wildlife 
Refuge System; to the Committee on Finance.
  Mr. KAINE. Mr. President, Ken Burns, paraphrasing Wallace Stegner, 
called the national parks ``America's best idea.'' This is true not 
just for the intrinsic value of these lands, but also for the economic 
impact on rural communities across the country. Countless small 
business owners rely on outdoor recreational visitors for their 
livelihood.
  Unfortunately, last month's government shutdown caused the visitors 
to stop. For 16 days this year, at the peak of the fall color season 
restaurants and hotels were empty. Roadside stands had no passers-by. 
Canoes and kayaks, hiking maps, and bait-and-tackle sat unsold on store 
shelves. One of my favorite places in Virginia, Chincoteague National 
Wildlife Refuge, saw not one but two major events cancelled: the 
reopening ceremony of the historic Assateague Lighthouse and the 
Chincoteague wild pony roundup. These events usually draw thousands of 
visitors. The pony roundup, in particular,

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also serves as a fundraiser for the Chincoteague Volunteer Fire 
Company. Unlike park rangers, the local businesses that rely on 
visitors got no backpay.
  That is why I am introducing this legislation to suspend entrance 
fees at national parks and wildlife refuges for a period of 16 days, 
equal to the duration of the shutdown. The fee suspension leads up to 
National Park Week in April 2014. This will encourage more visitors to 
turn out to the parks and give area establishments time to publicize 
the free days and to drum up more business. The bill is deficit-
neutral, and considering the breadth of the national park presence 
across the nation, I hope it will garner bipartisan support.
  We must negotiate a workable path forward on the federal budget so 
that the American people are never again caught up in the middle of 
battles in Washington. No act of Congress can reimburse the hard-
working business men and women around the nation who got hit by the 
shutdown, but I believe this bill will nudge a few more vacationers out 
of town to take in the natural beauty of our country and support the 
local economies while they're at it. Given the attention that national 
parks got during the shutdown, I also believe the American people 
deserve a larger conversation about the importance of maintaining our 
natural resources for future generations. I hope this bill will spur 
that discussion.
                                 ______
                                 
      By Mr. REED (for himself, Ms. Stabenow, Mr. Harkin, and Mr. 
        Whitehouse):
  S. 1747. A bill to provide for the extension of certain unemployment 
benefits, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Finance.
  Mr. REED. Mr. President, today I am introducing the Emergency 
Unemployment Compensation Extension Act of 2013 to ensure that 1.3 
million unemployed Americans, including 4,900 Rhode Islanders, will not 
lose unemployment insurance at the end of the year.
  Unemployment insurance, UI, is a vital lifeline for individuals and 
the economy. It provides a temporary weekly benefit to those who are 
looking for work and were laid off through no fault of their own.
  Economists across the spectrum agree that maintaining unemployment 
insurance will grow our economy, spur consumer demand, and help 
businesses, States, and job seekers. Alternatively, according to the 
Economic Policy Institute, the failure to renew UI could cost our 
economy 310,000 jobs in 2014.
  Extending unemployment insurance is a key part of keeping our economy 
moving forward. Indeed, continuing UI is part of a broad range of pro-
growth and pro-jobs policies we should be enacting. I am pleased to be 
joined in this effort by Senators Stabenow, Harkin, and Whitehouse, and 
I urge our colleagues to join us in cosponsoring and pressing for 
action on this important legislation.

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