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[Congressional Record: November 15, 2002 (Senate)]
[Page S11169-S11198]
From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:cr15no02-122]
HOMELAND SECURITY ACT OF 2002
Pending:
Thompson (for Gramm) Amendment No. 4901, in the nature of a
substitute.
Lieberman/McCain Amendment No. 4902 (to Amendment No.
4901), to establish within the legislative branch the
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United
States.
Dodd Amendment No. 4951 (to Amendment No. 4902), to provide
for workforce enhancement grants to fire departments.
Cloture Motion
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, pursuant to rule
XXII, the Chair lays before the Senate the pending cloture motion,
which the clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
Cloture Motion
We, the undersigned Senators, in accordance with the
provisions of rule XXII of the Standing Rules of the Senate,
hereby move to bring to a close debate on the substitute
amendment No. 4901 to H.R. 5005, the Homeland Security
legislation.
John Breaux, Ben Nelson of Nebraska, Larry E. Craig, Jon
Kyl, Mike DeWine, Don Nickles, Craig Thomas, Rick Santorum,
Trent Lott, Fred Thompson, Phil Gramm, Pete Domenici, Richard
G. Lugar, Olympia J. Snowe, Mitch McConnell.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. By unanimous consent, the mandatory quorum
call under the rule is waived.
The question is, Is it the sense of the Senate that debate on the
Thompson amendment, No. 4901, for H.R. 5005, an act to establish the
Department of Homeland Security and for other purposes, shall be
brought to a close? The yeas and nays are required under the rule. The
clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. REID. I announce that the Senator from Hawaii (Mr. Inouye), the
Senator from Maine (Mr. Kennedy), the Senator from Maine (Mr. Kerry),
and the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Torricelli) are necessarily
absent.
Mr. NICKLES. I announce that the Senator from North Carolina (Mr.
Helms) and the Senator from Colorado (Mr. Campbell) are necessarily
absent.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Dayton). Are there any other Senators in
the Chamber desiring to vote?
The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 65, nays 29, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 244 Leg.]
YEAS--65
Allard
Allen
Barkley
Bayh
Bennett
Bingaman
Bond
Breaux
Brownback
Bunning
Burns
Cantwell
Carnahan
Chafee
Cleland
Cochran
Collins
Craig
Crapo
Daschle
DeWine
Domenici
Edwards
Ensign
Enzi
Feinstein
Fitzgerald
Frist
Graham
Gramm
Grassley
Gregg
Hagel
Hatch
Hollings
Hutchinson
Hutchison
Inhofe
Johnson
Kyl
Landrieu
Lieberman
Lincoln
Lott
Lugar
McCain
McConnell
Miller
Murkowski
Nelson (NE)
Nickles
Roberts
Santorum
Sessions
Shelby
Smith (NH)
Smith (OR)
Snowe
Specter
Stevens
Thomas
Thompson
Thurmond
Voinovich
Warner
NAYS--29
Akaka
Baucus
Biden
Boxer
Byrd
Carper
Clinton
Conrad
Corzine
Dayton
Dodd
Dorgan
Durbin
Feingold
Harkin
Jeffords
Kohl
Leahy
Levin
Mikulski
Murray
Nelson (FL)
Reed
Reid
Rockefeller
Sarbanes
Schumer
Stabenow
Wyden
NOT VOTING--6
Campbell
Helms
Inouye
Kennedy
Kerry
Torricelli
The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 65, the nays are
29. Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn having voted in
the affirmative, the motion is agreed to.
The majority leader.
Amendment No. 4902
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the
Lieberman amendment No. 4902 be in order.
Mr. GRAMM. Mr. President, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The majority leader.
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I very regretfully make a point of order
that amendment No. 4902 is not germane.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair sustains the point of order. The
amendment falls.
Amendment No. 4911 To Amendment No. 4901
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 4911.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, what is happening? What was the request?
What has happened?
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I have called up amendment No. 4911. I
would like it read.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, parliamentary inquiry. Parliamentary
inquiry.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator will state his inquiry.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, what was the request agreed to; what
happened? What was the decision of the Senate?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. A unanimous consent request that the pending
first-degree amendment be in order was objected to. Objection was
heard. A point of order was then made against the amendment on the
grounds that it was not germane. The Chair sustained
[[Page S11170]]
the point of order, and that amendment fell.
Mr. BYRD. I thank the Chair. There was so much noise in the Chamber
that many of us could not hear what was going on.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from South Dakota [Mr. Daschle], for Mr.
Lieberman, proposes an amendment numbered 4911 to amendment
No. 4901.
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of
the amendment be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The amendment is as follows:
(Purpose: To provide that certain provisions of the Act shall not take
effect, and for other purposes)
At the end, add the following:
TITLE XVIII--NONEFFECTIVE PROVISIONS
SEC. 1801. NONEFFECTIVE PROVISIONS.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
this Act, (including any effective date provision of this
Act) the following provisions of this Act shall not take
effect:
(1) Section 308(b)(2)(B) (i) through (xiv).
(2) Section 311(i).
(3) Subtitle G of title VIII.
(4) Section 871.
(5) Section 890.
(6) Section 1707.
(7) Sections 1714, 1715, 1716, and 1717.
(b) Application of Federal Advisory Committee Act.--
Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of section
232, any advisory group described under that paragraph shall
not be exempt from the provisions of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.).
(c) Waiver.--Notwithstanding section 835(d), the Secretary
shall waive subsection (a) of that section, only if the
Secretary determines that the waiver is required in the
interest of homeland security.
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
Mr. GRAMM. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I retain the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
In the opinion of the Chair, there is not a sufficient second.
Mr. DASCHLE. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is a sufficient second.
The yeas and nays were ordered.
Amendment No. 4953 to Amendment No. 4911
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 4953.
Mr. GRAMM. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I hold the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from South Dakota [Mr. Daschle], for Mr.
Lieberman, proposes an amendment No. 4953 to amendment No.
4911.
Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of
the amendment be dispensed with.
Mr. NICKLES. I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The clerk will continue the reading of the amendment.
The legislative clerk continued the reading of the amendment, as
follows:
Strike all after the first word and insert the following:
TITLE XVIII--NONEFFECTIVE PROVISIONS
SEC. 1801. NONEFFECTIVE PROVISIONS.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
this Act, (including any effective date provision of this
Act) the following provisions of this Act shall not take
effect:
(1) Section 308(b)(2)(B) (i) through (xiv).
(2) Section 311(i).
(3) Subtitle G of title VIII.
(4) Section 871.
(5) Section 890.
(6) Section 1707.
(7) Sections 1714, 1715, 1716, and 1717.
(b) Application of Federal Advisory Committee Act.--
Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of section
232, any advisory group described under that paragraph shall
not be exempt from the provisions of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.).
(c) Waiver.--Notwithstanding section 835(d), the Secretary
shall waive subsection (a) of that section, only if the
Secretary determines that the waiver is required in the
interest of homeland security.
(d) The amendment made by subsection (a)(1) of this section
shall be effective one day after enactment.
Mr. NICKLES. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent that during the next 90 minutes--
that is until 1:30 today--there be no action, other than debate, on the
matter now before the Senate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Without objection, it is
so ordered.
The Senator from Texas.
Mr. GRAMM. Mr. President, I do not want to give a lengthy speech, but
briefly I will talk about where we are and then talk about the
amendment that is pending. We have now invoked cloture on the pending
substitute, and so we are in a very tightly scripted 30-hour period.
The Democrat majority leader put into place two amendments, and in the
process no amendment now is in order. This produces a situation where
at some point, at the end of 30 hours, there will be a vote on the
pending Lieberman amendment.
The pending Lieberman amendment is the amendment I will discuss. It
is clear these amendments will not be dealt with until the 30 hours
expires. So we will have one vote on the Lieberman amendment and then
we will move to vote on final passage. I want to address the Lieberman
amendment because what tends to happen in these cases, where things are
done at the last minute, is that it is sort of easy to confuse people
as to what has been done. I want people to understand where the
provisions came from and why they are important. One can agree with
them or disagree with them, but I want my colleagues to basically know
where they came from.
Over the weekend, we had a series of negotiations. I want to go back
to the point that the President could have said, after the election,
that he had a mandate, that this Congress could go home, that we would
then have a new Congress and he would write the homeland security bill
the way he wanted it written, or he would have Congress write it that
way. I think it tells us a lot about our President that he decided not
to do that.
In fact, after having gotten a strong electoral mandate, the
President actually negotiated further and made additional changes in
his bill.
The substitute that is before us is basically the Gramm-Miller
amendment, which is well-known, which we debated for 6 weeks--few
amendments have ever been debated that long in my 18-year career in the
Senate--with two sets of changes. One, the agreements that the
President reached with three Democrat Senators and an Independent
Senator in negotiations over the weekend, whereby the following changes
were made: Workers in the Federal sector and unions that represent them
were given a greater voice in expressing their views about how the new
Department is organized, and they were given more clearly defined due
process. They were not given veto power, but they were given a
guaranteed input under a specific time period. That is the significant
change that was made. That represents a compromise from the original
Gramm-Miller amendment.
The second change that was made was recognized that the House had
passed its own bill. So realizing that we were coming to the end of the
Senate, one of the things we did over the weekend is we met with the
House to try to make changes in our substitute to assure that at the
end of the session we would not have to do a conference once we had
passed the bill. Quite frankly, the Democrats who have been supportive
of this effort felt strongly that they did not want to negotiate with
us and then end up negotiating with other Republicans in conference.
That makes sense. When a deal is cut, one wants it to be a deal. So we
brought in the House. As a result, we took 95 percent of our
provisions, took about 5 percent of the House provisions, and that now
is the bill before us. This bill has been adopted by the House, which
has now left town. They will be here in pro forma session on Monday,
but practically the House has adjourned.
I will address the generic issue about add-on provisions and then I
want to talk about something else. I hope nobody is offended by this,
but I have to
[[Page S11171]]
say I have probably been as strong in speaking out against add-on
provisions as anybody. I remind my colleagues that many times at
midnight or 2 in the morning we have had seemingly noncontroversial
amendments that did all kinds of special projects that we were going to
accept. In fact, earlier this Congress I sat in that very room and went
through a list of amendments. One amendment would have the Federal
Government absorb a billion dollars of liability for a project in one
State. Now that is pretty targeted. I am not going to mention the
State, and it does not matter.
Any time we negotiate with the House, with 435 Members focused on a
very small congressional district, they are going to put in provisions
that relate to their district. That has been the nature of the body
from the very beginning. It started with the first Congress. It will
end with the last Congress. It will never go away.
For the people who say there are extraneous matters in this bill, of
all the major bills I have looked at that have been agreed to by the
House and Senate, there are probably fewer extraneous matters in this
bill than any major bill I have looked at in a very long time. I would
like go down the list of amendments being discussed and explain where
they came from and why they make sense.
The first one has to do with vaccines. We had a provision in our bill
related to vaccines and related to the production of items to be used
in the war on terrorism. In every war we have ever fought we have had
some form of indemnification for people who produce things used in that
war. The provision we had in the Senate bill was a taxpayer
indemnification. I did not like that provision, but I had Republican
colleagues who were for it. We were trying to get 51 votes. So I took
it.
The House had a far better procedure. That was a limit on liability.
We did not take all the limits on liability they had in the compromise
because we were afraid that might offend powerful special interest
groups. But what we did in three of the six items mentioned is we
simply applied the principle that has been applied to every war this
Nation has ever fought: if you are producing a new vaccine or new
weapon or new system for use in that effort, there are some liability
limits involved. That is where the item of vaccines came from and where
the item of airport screening came from and the item on manufacturers
came from.
To suggest this is some special interest sweetheart deal makes good
political rhetoric, but the bottom line is it is not true. Not only do
the provisions fit, not only are they part of the fabric of the bill,
but we had a provision to have the taxpayer pay for the liability risk,
and we picked a better, preferable approach, which is to limit
liability when we introduce new technology like airport screening and
new vaccines. We always had some limit on vaccines because they are
risky, but the threat is now serious. It has never been relevant to a
war effort before because we have not viewed smallpox as being a
weapon. We do now.
In three areas our colleagues have singled out as being special
interests--vaccines, airport screening, and manufacturing of items used
in the war on terrorism--those items were in the Senate substitute, but
they were in it in the form where the taxpayer would have paid. We put
in simple limits that make sense and that have been part of every war
we ever fought of any significance in American history.
The next item viewed as being extraneous is a change made to the
Wellstone amendment. Senator Wellstone introduced an amendment adopted
by a voice vote because it was clear it would pass and nobody wanted to
vote on it. It said if any company has ever been domiciled in America,
throughout American history, and that company is now domiciled
somewhere else, that company cannot bid on contracts related to the war
on terrorism.
The change made in the amendment is a good government change. It is
not an extraneous special interest provision. It is simply a provision
that says the President, for national security reasons, has a right to
waive this requirement. Why would he do it? First, there might be only
one supplier. Second, there might be no competitor if it is not waived,
in which case you could end up paying an exorbitant price. Finally, it
might actually be better from America's point of view if the company
has substantial production in America, even though its home office is
somewhere else, for us to buy from that company for national security
reasons, for job reasons, and for economic reasons. That provision is
hardly an add-on provision. It is, in fact, a good government
provision.
Now, let me discuss transportation security rules. We know the
provisions and deadlines we mandated for air travel security are so
strenuous they cannot be met. Occasionally, we get into these
situations where we are debating some deadline and we know the deadline
cannot be met and will not be met, no matter what we write into law.
What this bill does in a careful and reasoned way is set out a new
deadline for meeting them, a deadline that can be met and that is
reasonable. Instead of creating a farce in law where we say something
will be done by December 31--and we know very well it cannot and will
not be done and, as a result, you get no pressure to do it on time--we
set a realistic deadline.
Next we have these advisory committees. If there is anything more
useless than an advisory committee, I don't know what it is. I am not
saying advisory committees cannot be valuable. I am not saying there
are not some that are valuable. But we use them so often they become
irrelevant. The striking or not striking of these advisory committees
has no import, no significance to this bill. If, however, by striking
the committee we change the bill and end up killing homeland security
because the House has adjourned, then it becomes very significant.
Those are five of the six items that have been listed. The final item
is the designation that a university be involved in the process. It is
one item where there is an earmark. Seldom do we see a major piece of
legislation that we do not have several dozen earmarks.
We are down to a simple question, and I will conclude on this. This
is hardly an unknown amendment. We have debated it for several weeks. I
know there are strong feelings on the issue, but we had an election,
and if anybody got a mandate out of that election on any issue, the
President got a mandate: Pass homeland security.
The House passed a bill. They negotiated with us in good faith. Was
everyone involved in the negotiations? No. But I didn't help write the
Lieberman amendment, either, because it was his amendment. We have
bipartisan effort. We have a majority vote. We are down, now, to where
an amendment has been proposed that would strike six provisions. I
believe if the amendment is adopted, it will jeopardize the bill. The
House passed the bill, they have gone home, and they are only going to
be back in pro forma session. Five of the six provisions represent
important elements in the bill.
To suggest trying to protect and encourage the production and
distribution of smallpox vaccine is a special interest favor to a drug
company is taking politics beyond the realm of reason.
On airport screening and manufacturer protection, this liability
protection is something we have done in every war we fought. This is
either a war or it is not a war. Should we start to buy from foreign
companies over companies that are producing products in America but the
headquarters was here in 1804 and it is now in London? I think we take
this Buy America stuff too far. We should buy the best product at the
lowest possible price that conforms with our national security. But to
give the power to waive it when our national security interest is
involved is hardly unreasonable.
Changing the deadline on airport security--every Member of the Senate
knows we are not going to meet the deadline. Why not change it?
Finally, advisory committees--who cares? You could strip all of them
out and I wouldn't care. But by stripping them out you are risking
killing the bill.
So, in the end, this amendment really comes down to a threat to the
passage of homeland security. Five of the six provisions are totally
defensible. The sixth one is important only if appropriations occur and
we are going to pass the appropriations later, so we are not committing
to anything.
Contrary to the criticism that there are extraneous materials in this
bill, there are fewer extraneous matters in
[[Page S11172]]
this bill than any major bill I have seen in many years. When you reach
an agreement between the two Houses, you are always going to have
extraneous material.
So, we will have a vote at 5 o'clock on Monday. First of all, I think
it is bad policy to strike these six provisions. I think no legitimate
case can be made against four of them. I think one of them is
irrelevant--whether we have advisory committees or not. I think the
other one is a small item in a big bill and I do not think it is worth
risking this bill to make that change. Nor do I believe this issue
would ever have been raised, that this amendment would ever have been
offered, had this not been an extraordinarily controversial bill to
begin with.
So I just have to say, in the big picture, I feel totally comfortable
in defending the great majority of these six provisions. I think we
need them. On substantive grounds, we should limit liability for new
vaccines that may save American lives; for airport screening equipment
that may keep our children, our spouses, or ourselves from being killed
on airplanes; and from new manufactured items and new weapons we need
in the war on terrorism. Those items should not be stricken.
I know special interest groups like the plaintiffs' attorneys are
opposed to these provisions. But they are limited, they are narrow,
they are reasonable, and the alternative, which we had in the Senate
amendment, was to have the taxpayer pay all these damages. So this
seems preferable to me.
I urge my colleagues when we vote on Monday to vote against this
amendment and, in the process, let us pass this bill in the form it
passed the House and, to the maximum extent possible, guarantee that we
are successful in seeing this bill become law.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Leahy). The senior Senator from West
Virginia.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that my name may be
added as a cosponsor of the pending Daschle-Lieberman amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The
Senator's name is added as cosponsor.
The Senator from North Dakota.
Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, it is a very special moment on the floor
of the Senate to hear my colleague from Texas defend special provisions
being put in legislation--actually to hear him describe the
negotiations at the end of the process that result in these special
provisions. Because he has been a tireless opponent of provisions that
are put in pieces of legislation that in most cases or many cases have
nothing to do with the underlying bill. So it is a real treat today to
hear my colleague from Texas justify and support and ask Members of the
Senate to support these special provisions that were put in the
homeland security bill which, in most cases, had nothing at all to do
with homeland security.
I must say, with respect to the issues of childhood vaccines
liability protection, manufacturer liability protection, transportation
security--I would wonder whether these have had hearings. Because we so
often hear our colleagues, especially my colleague from Texas, say: You
know, someone has put a provision in the bill. There has been no
hearing on the bill. I am wondering whether these provisions have had
hearings and discussion, and if there were negotiations, as was
represented earlier by my colleague, were the parents of autistic
children part of the negotiations? Where were the negotiations? Was it
late at night? Early in the morning? Was it at the White House, as
Congressman Armey would have us believe? I don't know the answer to
that. But my hope is our colleagues will vote to strip these provisions
from the bill.
Homeland security, that is what this legislation is about. Frankly,
the way this legislation has been created, it was not under normal
circumstances, where you have committee exploration in some detail and
some depth of all of these provisions. What has happened is at the
eleventh hour a piece of legislation is written and it is placed on
desks. It has a rubber band around it. It is four-hundred-and-some
pages and I know of very few Members of the Senate who would have read
all of it at this point.
But having heard my colleague from Texas, for whom I have great
fondness, describe his support for special provisions, especially at
the end of his career here in the Senate, I must say that this is a
very unusual moment. We will, of course, miss him for a lot of reasons.
Among other things, I will miss him because at the end of most bills,
he will be the one counted on to stand up and say: I object to these
special provisions.
But he seems to have hit a speed bump here at the end of the road, on
special provisions. I hope my colleagues will decide they want to vote
to strip these provisions out of this bill.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, will the distinguished Senator yield?
Mr. DORGAN. I will, of course, yield.
Mr. BYRD. I will only be a moment. The distinguished Senator from
North Dakota, Mr. Dorgan, has referred to the distinguished Senator
from Texas, Mr. Gramm. May I interpose this observation.
Diogenes went about the streets of Athens with a lantern, saying that
he was looking--in broad daylight--he was looking for a man, he was
seeking a man.
Plato, upon going to Syracuse, was asked by Hieron the--I wouldn't
say he was a beneficent dictator. But he was asked why he came to
Syracuse.
He said: I came seeking an honest man.
I rarely make the observation as a premise to what I am about to
say--I believe the Senator from Texas is not only a man, but is also an
honest man. He is very frank and open. He doesn't have to come to the
floor with written speeches as I often do. He speaks from the heart and
from the head and is very up front. He has always been that way. He
explains his reasons. He doesn't hide his reasons. And he will answer
your questions and he will answer honestly.
So I pay tribute to the Senator from Texas in that regard. I am glad
the distinguished Senator from North Dakota has given me the platform
for a moment to say that. We may not agree with the distinguished
Senator from Texas. I certainly don't agree with the request for some
of the special interest provisions here in this bill. But I do say here
is an honest man, as far as I am concerned. He is aboveboard. He will
answer your questions. He doesn't need a written speech to do it.
So I say I wish we had more Phil Gramms in the Senate. Excuse me for
taking this time. I will say no more, except to thank him for the good
relations.
Mr. GRAMM. Will the Senator yield for just 30 seconds? It is said, in
the old Confederate Army, that they didn't give medals.
So the single honor was to be mentioned in Robert E. Lee's
communiques to Richmond.
Having the distinguished Senator from West Virginia say something
about me and to pronounce me a honest man I take in the same way that
any private in Hood's brigade would have taken in the mention of their
name in one of those communiques.
I love the Senator from West Virginia, as he knows. I think he serves
a great purpose in the Senate. In my opinion, he is not always right,
but right is not always easy to find. I think it is the give and take
that ultimately produces it. Senator Wellstone, in my opinion, was not
always right, he did speak honestly and with clarity. And he knew where
he was coming from, and you could be for it or against it. I do think
that is important to the Senate.
I thank the Senator.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Dakota.
Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, the comment that not always right but
never in doubt may well apply to every Senator. I must say to my
colleague from Texas that I intend for a few moments on Monday to say a
word about the Senator from Texas, and my colleagues from South
Carolina and North Carolina, and others who are leaving the Senate. I
don't know if Senator Byrd indicated that he wished there were more
such as the Senator from Texas, and he is, indeed, an extraordinarily
bright and talented Senator. There are times at midnight when he is
objecting to all kinds of provisions that I suspect the Senator from
West Virginia and a few others would not wish that we had 25 more
exactly in the same mood at midnight on important pieces of
legislation. But he and so
[[Page S11173]]
many others contribute in very significant ways to this body.
This body produces for the American people best when it achieves the
best ideas that everyone has to offer. There are times when we end up
with the worst rather than the best. I have always thought that
politics and our political system is not who is the worst; it is who is
the best, who has the best ideas, and who can best manifest those ideas
in public debate to achieve a result for this country.
Regrettably, too much of American politics--especially if you are
coming off recent campaigns--is not at all about who is the best but
rather who is the worst. That, in my judgment, becomes an anvil on the
body politic. John F. Kennedy used to say with some beautiful prose
that mother kind of hopes her child might grow up to be President, as
long as they don't have to become active in politics. But, of course,
politics is the way we make decisions in America.
I am enormously proud of this political system of the participation
by Republicans, Democrats, Conservatives, Liberals, Independents, and
moderates. I think all bring a great deal to the public debate and
discussion, and strengthen our country.
Having said that, on Monday I will say a few words about our
colleagues who will be leaving us--Senator Cleland, Senator Carnahan,
and others who have been mentioned on the Republican side. I believe
that it is a great privilege to serve with each and every one of them,
even though we from time to time have our differences. It is a
remarkable privilege to be here and to serve with them.
I wish to make a point about homeland security that is not a part of
this bill but I think a part of something that is very important. To
underscore how important it is, I would note that we have been told by
the head of the CIA that the threat of attack by al-Qaida and other
terrorists now is as high as it was the day before September 11.
On October 25 of this year, a task force headed by former Senators
Warren Rudman and Gary Hart issued a report on America's homeland
security. That report was entitled ``America Still Unprepared, America
Still In Danger.'' It was a bipartisan task force sponsored by the
Council on Foreign Relations, which included former Secretaries of
State, Warren Christopher, George Shultz, ADM William Crow, Retired,
former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
They found that 1 year after the September 11 attacks America remains
dangerously unprepared for another terrorist attack.
I specifically wish to talk about one of their concerns raised in
this report that I read, which gave me great personal concern.
In the report, the task force concluded that the 650,000 local and
State law enforcement officials around the country ``continue to
operate in a virtual intelligence vacuum without access to the
terrorist watch list provided by the U.S. Department of State to
Immigration and consular officials.''
Our government has a watchlist to identify foreign nationals
suspected of ties to terrorist organizations. That watch list is at the
State Department. It is provided to the Immigration Department and to
consular officials. It sets out the names of people whom we ought to
watch because they are known terrorists. They are people who associate
with terrorists; they are a terrorist threat to this country.
Guess what. That watch list is unavailable to state and local law
enforcement officials around this country.
Thirty-six hours before the September 11 attack, one of the hijackers
was pulled over by a Maryland State police trooper for driving 90 miles
an hour on Interstate 95. The hijacker's name was Ziad Jarrah. He was a
26-year-old Lebanese national. He was one of the key organizers of the
al-Qaida terrorist cell formed in Germany 3 years ago. He shared an
apartment with Mohammed Atta. And he was at the controls of flight 93
when it crashed in a rural area of Pennsylvania.
When that hijacker--or at that point the potential hijacker--was
pulled over by the Maryland trooper, he was driving a car rented under
his own name.
There are a couple of things with respect to this issue that are
interesting.
No. 1, his name was not on the watch list.
No. 2, had it been on the watch list, it wouldn't have mattered
because a highway patrolman or a city police officer has no access to
that watch list. The officer can run the name of an individual through
the NCIC computer and find out if that individual has an outstanding
warrant, or if there are law enforcement warnings about him but the
officer has no way of knowing if the individual is on the State
Department terrorism watch list.
The State Department watch list has the names of 80,000 terrorists or
suspected terrorists on it. And 2,000 names are being added each and
every month. The watch list is drawn from a good many area intelligence
agencies. And as we speak, there is no way for law enforcement
authorities to access the database.
Let me read in detail an excerpt from the Hart-Rudman report:
`With just fifty-six field offices around the nation, the
burden of identifying and intercepting terrorists in our
midst is a task well beyond the scope of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation. This burden could and should be shared with
650,000 local, county, and state law enforcement officers,
but they clearly cannot lend a hand in a counterterrorism
information void. When it comes to combating terrorism, the
police officers on the beat are effectively operating deaf,
dumb, and blind. Terrorist watch lists provided by the U.S.
Department of State to immigration and consular officials are
still out of bounds for state and local police. In the
interim period as information sharing issues get worked out,
known terrorists will be free to move about to plan and
execute their attack.'
This comes from the report of former Senators Hart and Rudman,
entitled ``America Still Unprepared, America Still In Danger.''
I asked my staff--after I read this in the Report--to contact the
task force. The task force, through my staff, has told me that they are
not aware of any administration initiative to fix the problem. This,
despite the fact that this is a top recommendation of a blue-ribbon
task force.
So I asked the Congressional Research Service to contact the White
House Office of Homeland Security, the Department of State, and the
Department of Justice. They have done this in recent days.
My understanding is that after I made these inquiries the White House
convened a meeting with State and Justice officials, and they are now
apparently looking into ways to integrate the State Department
terrorist watch list--called the ``Tipoff'' database--with the National
Crime Information Center, which is accessible by State and local law
enforcement authorities.
This effort must be expedited. Let me quote from the article in the
Washington Post of just yesterday:
U.S. intelligence officials, increasingly confident that al
Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is the speaker on a new
audiotape released this week, said yesterday that the message
was part of a disturbing pattern indicating that terrorist
groups may be planning a new wave of attacks on Western
targets.
Even before the purported bin Laden tape surfaced on the
al-Jazeera satellite network on Tuesday, the CIA, FBI and
National Security Agency had detected a significant spike in
intelligence ``chatter'' over the previous 10 days that
strongly indicated new assaults are being planned, officials
in U.S. intelligence agencies said.
That is from the Washington Post.
They continue to say:
The amount of alarming information was approaching the
volume seen in the weeks before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks
in Washington and New York, and again in the middle of last
month following a wave of attacks on overseas targets, some
sources said.
The point is this: Homeland security and homeland protection rests,
yes, with our intelligence-gathering agencies, yes, with the FBI, the
CIA, and all of the officials who are working very hard, spending a lot
of hours doing the best job they can to make it work. But beyond that,
it also rests with cooperation with all of the local responders,
especially local law enforcement officials across this country. There
are 650,000 of them.
If, today, a terrorist drives through a rural county in North Dakota
this afternoon, or a rural county in Vermont, or Kentucky, or in the
middle of New York City, and is picked up for a traffic violation, and
is a known terrorist on a watch list--guess what--
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that highway patrolman, that city police officer is going to run that
terrorist's name through the database at the NCIC, and they are going
to get no warning that what they have on their hands is a terrorist in
the car in front of them. There would be no warning at all because they
cannot access the watch list.
If we have a watch list in which we have identified the names of
terrorists and suspected terrorists, it makes no sense at all to
withhold that information from law enforcement officers, who every
single day climb out of bed and go protect this country on America's
streets, on our highways. They are our eyes and ears. They are also
watching out for the security of this country. They ought to have
access to that watch list.
Again, let me say, this was the No. 1 recommendation in the report
offered by former Senator Rudman and former Senator Hart. The report,
which I would urge everyone to read, is entitled: ``America Still
Unprepared--America Still in Danger.'' These are former Secretaries of
State, former Senators, Republicans, Democrats, evaluating what needs
to be done to protect this country for this country's security.
I want to go back to read just a portion of the report. The task
force had this to say:
With just fifty-six field offices around the nation, the
burden of identifying and intercepting terrorists in our
midst is a task well beyond the scope of the FBI. The burden
could and should be shared with 650,000 local, county, and
state law enforcement officers, but they clearly cannot lend
a hand in a counterterrorism information void.
Yesterday, I was on the phone with a community in North Dakota, and
the county sheriff was there in the room, and we talked by conference
phone. We talked about this issue. He is not too far from the Canadian
border. If one of his deputies or that county's sheriff stops a car on
a rural highway, and it turns out to be a terrorist driving a rented
car, he is not going to know because he does not have access to the
watch list, he does not have access to the information. The FBI will
not know, the CIA will not know, no one will know that terrorist was
driving a car on that rural road because the person who apprehended
him--the county sheriff, the city police officer--had no access to the
information the State Department has, the consular officials have, the
CIA has. It is not that the information does not exist, it is that it
is not shared with local law enforcement officers across this country
for the purpose of securing this country's homeland.
So this was the task force's top recommendation. This was not No. 5
or No. 10, it was the top recommendation of this group, a group that
included several former Secretaries of State under Republican and
Democratic administrations, Republican and Democratic former Senators,
and others.
So I implore the President and the folks who are apparently now
working on this to do everything they can in this regard. When a
trooper stops someone for speeding tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow,
or the day after that, and the individual that was pulled over is a
terrorist, I want that trooper to realize who he has in that car--for
the trooper's protection, and for the protection of this country.
Let me talk briefly about one other piece of homeland security, and
we addressed part of it yesterday.
I have told my colleagues previously, I was recently at a port in
Seattle. I don't know much about ports because I come from a landlocked
State. I don't come from a State near an ocean. So I went down to see
how the ports worked. They showed me all these ships that come in with
all these containers.
I asked: What is in all these containers? They said: We have all
these bills of lading and invoices, so we know what is in them. I
asked: Can I see? And they showed me some containers they were opening.
They showed me a container from Poland that had frozen broccoli in it
in 100-pound bags. They pulled out a bag of frozen broccoli and cut it
open. Sure enough, it was frozen broccoli. I asked: What is in the
middle of the container? I know what is in this bag. And they said:
Well, we just know what's on the invoice.
We are spending $7 to $8 billion to see if we can stop an incoming
missile because we are very afraid a terrorist group might get hold of
an ICBM. But it is more likely a terrorist group might put a weapon of
mass destruction in a container on a container ship that comes in at 3
miles an hour pulling up to a dock in New York City or Los Angeles.
We have 5.7 million containers every year coming into our ports. So
5.7 million containers every single year; 100,000 are inspected, 5.6
million are not. Is that a matter of homeland security? You bet your
life it is.
A fellow in the Middle East--many of you read about this fellow--
decided he was going to ship himself to Toronto and then come into this
country. He had a GPS, a computer, a toilet, fresh water, a cot, all in
a container loaded on a container ship, shipping himself to Toronto,
Canada, with the intention, apparently, of coming into this country.
Do we need to be concerned about these things? You better believe it.
And many of these issues, even if we passed a homeland security bill,
will not be resolved.
The first issue I mentioned today is not resolved, and will not be
resolved with the passage Monday of this bill: The fact that 650,000
local law enforcement authorities have no ability to access a watch
list to determine who is a terrorist and who isn't. And 5.6 million
uninspected containers coming into our ports will not be inspected next
Tuesday when the homeland security bill is passed.
So my point is, there is much left to be done for those of us--and I
am sure that is all of us--who care deeply about homeland security in
this country.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York was on his feet. I
know the Senator from Tennessee is waiting.
Mr. SCHUMER. If the Senator will yield, I was waiting behind the
Senator from North Dakota, Mr. Dorgan. If we are going back and forth--
I only want to speak for about 10 minutes.
Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I sought recognition first.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is not a particular order. The custom is
usually to go back and forth from side to side. I am wondering if we
might recognize the Senator from Tennessee, to follow the normal
custom.
Mr. FRIST. Normal procedure would be to turn to me?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. I am sorry. I heard the Senator from New York,
but if the Senator from Tennessee says he sought recognition earlier,
then I will apologize for not hearing him.
Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I would be happy to yield, although I felt
I was--
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair recognizes the Senator from
Tennessee.
Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I will yield 10 minutes to the Senator from
New York. Is that enough time?
Mr. SCHUMER. I appreciate it. I don't want to break the protocol.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. I am prepared to recognize the Senator from
Tennessee.
The Senator from New York.
Mr. SCHUMER. I thank the Senator from Tennessee.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. I thank both my colleagues for helping the
Chair out of a difficult situation.
Mr. SCHUMER. Let us hope and pray that is the Chair's most difficult
situation in the upcoming months.
I thank the Senator from Tennessee for allowing me to speak. I will
try to be brief. I would like to talk about two related subjects in
this bill: What is in the bill and what is not in the bill.
What is in the bill, aside from the original homeland security
provisions which we have been debating for a very long time, are little
pieces of legislation unrelated to homeland security, none of which
could stand the scrutiny of individual debate. In other words, if any
of these little provisions were put in separate legislation and brought
to the floor of the Senate, my guess is they would be overwhelmingly
defeated.
For those to be in homeland security right now, for those pieces of
pork, for those rifleshot pieces of legislation that benefit one
company to be in this bill, particularly after the President made such
a fuss about keeping this bill the way he wanted it without any other
provisions in it, is very wrong.
[[Page S11175]]
I hope we will support the Lieberman amendment. There are a few that
are particularly galling to me. Probably the worst is a provision in
this bill that was in the original bill that the House just took out
that said, if you go overseas to avoid paying taxes, the original
provision said, you can't bid on homeland security contracts. This
takes it out. It says to companies that move overseas that they can
benefit from the homeland security issues. I find that very troubling.
There is a provision that exempts one company, Eli Lilly, from any
liability against a drug that is already subject to many lawsuits
because of its mercury levels. That kind of provision would never pass
standing on its own, and it was slipped in in the dark of night by the
other body. We should not countenance it here.
There are provisions that redebate the tort law. We will have plenty
of debates about tort law next year; I am sure of that. But to put them
in this legislation with no debate would make the Founding Fathers gag.
We should stop doing these things, but particularly in a homeland
security bill that was so subject, in the election, to a debate that
the President wanted it his way or no way and led, at least if you
believe some of the pundits, to some of our colleagues losing their
elections because they wanted it a slightly different way. Now to put
these sometimes pork, sometimes lard, sometimes extraneous provisions
in this legislation is unfair, is wrong. We should support the
Lieberman amendment.
I also would like to talk about what is not in the bill. This bill is
a reorganization of agencies. All things being equal, it is better than
not having it. But anyone who thinks, as my colleague from North Dakota
has outlined, that this is going to make us safer, this is going to do
the job, is sadly mistaken. I will support the legislation because it
is a little bit better than the present situation. But I am worried
that then we will think we have done all we can on homeland security.
This administration is letting our Nation down on domestic security--
not by design but by effect--when they say that nothing can be added to
homeland security that costs money. I don't get it. We are willing to
spend $80 billion on a war in Iraq which I have supported, but we are
not willing to spend $250 million to prevent nuclear weapons from being
smuggled into our country. Where is the logic there?
Does anyone think that rearranging agencies is going to get the INS
to have better computers or the Coast Guard to better defend our
borders? No. And this administration is going to run up against a
serious problem if it continues to have the view that we cannot spend a
nickel on domestic security. The analogy, the comparison is stark. The
military gets all the money it needs--it should--but our domestic
agencies, both Federal and State and local, that deal with homeland
security get virtually no dollars at all.
I was told that my provision, which had bipartisan support--Senator
Lieberman, Senator Thompson, Senator McCain, Senator Hollings--that
would have enabled us to have nuclear detection devices attached to the
cranes that load and unload containers and could detect a nuclear
weapon that would be smuggled in, had to be out of the bill because it
cost money. I find that to be sad. I find that to be troubling in the
sense that we are letting our national guard down. If we were under
such spending constraints when it came to the rest of the parts of the
war on terrorism, I would say OK. But I don't understand why we can
spend all the money we want overseas but when we come to the water's
edge, even carefully thought out small amounts of money are not
allowed.
This bill is problematic for what was just added in and what was not
put in. It is a little bit better than nothing. It is a baby step in
the direction of better homeland security because our agencies do have
to be reorganized. But I hope and pray that not only we take out the
extraneous provisions that should be debated another day, but that we
don't make the mistake that this reorganization bill is doing what we
need for homeland security.
With that, I yield the remainder of my time and once again thank my
colleague from Tennessee for his graciousness in allowing me to speak.
I will now exit for the shuttle to New York.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The distinguished Senator from Tennessee is
recognized.
Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I rise to speak in opposition to the
Lieberman amendment and will spend a little bit of time over the next
probably 30 minutes going to the substance of what this amendment does,
talking policy, but also talking to the impact that passing the
Lieberman amendment would have on our homeland security.
The bottom line is that I believe striking the provisions, which is
what the Lieberman amendment does--it pulls out certain provisions from
the underlying bill--will put the people of our Nation at greater risk,
when we are talking about homeland security and safety and protection
of individuals, of families, of children. That is a broad statement. It
is a bold statement for me to make. But over the next several minutes I
want to give you the substance of it.
A lot of people have said these provisions having to do with vaccines
and smallpox are one-company provisions. The second argument is that in
some way these provisions cut off the rights of individuals to go to
court. We have heard statements by the proponents that one agent, one
preservative, causes autism and thus in some way the underlying bill
will hurt families with children with autism.
As a scientist, as a physician, as someone who is very familiar with
the provisions that were placed in the homeland security bill, I have a
certain obligation to walk my colleagues and the American people who
are listening through what the Lieberman provision would do by
stripping out the smallpox provisions, by stripping out the vaccine
provisions.
Let me begin by saying we are a nation at risk. We are at risk from
nuclear weapons and from chemical weapons; we know. But when it really
comes to what could potentially happen to our homeland--remember this
is homeland defense that we are talking about--I would argue that the
greatest risk for a weapon of mass destruction to be microorganisms, to
be anthrax, which terrorized the Nation, when we don't even think, we
don't know, we don't think it was used by a State, or the introduction
of smallpox, which we know is a weapon of mass destruction, if
introduced into a population that is unprepared, that has not been
vaccinated. Vaccine is the front line for people at risk from anthrax.
It is the front line for people at risk from smallpox. That means your
children. That means your spouse. That means your grandparents. That
means your family.
So we must not do anything and the Lieberman amendment would do
this--to increase the barrier for you to be protected.
Iraq has been mentioned. Most of my colleagues know that Iraq had one
of the most robust biological weapons programs in the history of the
world. It loaded anthrax, it loaded botulism toxin on missiles during
the gulf war, inserted it into the warheads of these missiles. We don't
know about smallpox. We didn't know that refrigerators had been found
in Iraq that said ``smallpox'' across them, but we do know this robust
biological weapons program is the foundation for a program of weapons
of mass destruction.
The interesting thing about these microorganisms, these viruses,
these bacteria, is that you don't have to have a big ship out there to
send in a missile. We know that once you put smallpox in a society, it
will travel through our schools, it will travel through our businesses
and through our homes, and the only defense we have--the only defense,
in terms of a medical treatment, is that vaccine. That is why, when we
talk vaccines and when we talk smallpox, it is incumbent upon us to
have those provisions in this bill.
I will begin with smallpox because it is the one that, a week from
now, can be a problem. What about right now, or tomorrow morning, if we
hear of three or four smallpox cases in the country? What actually
happens at that standpoint? Smallpox is a disease that is one of the
most deadly infectious diseases. There is a 30-percent chance, to
anybody who gets it, that they are going to die. If three people are
here, one of those three will die if they get smallpox.
What is the treatment? The only treatment--real treatment--is to get
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that vaccine on your arm within 3 days. Some people say 4 days. I
personally think it is 3. Some say 5 to 10, but if your child has
smallpox, not from when the manifestations start appearing but from the
time of actual contact, and that entails having a vaccine out there--
say 300 million doses, because we know smallpox in an unprotected
population, which we are, knows no barriers. Right now, if I had
smallpox lesions within my mouth, people around these four or five
desks probably would already be infected. The only protection is the
vaccine itself. The only treatment for smallpox--and this isn't true
with all biological agents, but the only treatment is the vaccine
within 3 days.
The administration has a policy, that I agree with, that basically
is, if there is an outbreak, or a case, you can inoculate people in
that area. That is a great policy. We don't need to mass-vaccinate
everybody. What about right now?
People listening, saying we are a nation at risk--Iraq has had
biological weapons programs. We know Saddam Hussein is a mass killer, a
serial killer, who kills his own people and other people. He hates the
United States. We know the most powerful weapon of mass destruction is
smallpox, and we know there is a refrigerator sitting there that has
``smallpox'' written on it.
What if I wanted to get the vaccine now, just in case? Right now, you
cannot get it. I argue that you should be able to get it. But that is
not yet the policy of the United States. I think with informed consent,
knowing the side effects and knowing what the advantages could be--
lifesaving--weighing the relative risk--what about if a case breaks out
in the Northwest, say Oregon, tomorrow? If you wanted to get the
vaccine and you live in Nashville, TN, you could not get it. We ought
to change that. That is not what we are talking about today, but you
see that vaccines are a front line for homeland security.
I don't know what is going to happen in Iraq; none of us knows. If we
come back and deal with this 6 months from now, or a year from now, or
2 years from now, we are inadequately protecting the American people. I
don't want to overstate it, but that is my belief.
If smallpox hits here, right now, we are inadequately protected. The
Lieberman legislation would strip out a provision, within 2 days or 3
days or 4 days, that would make us more adequately protected as a
nation.
The threat of liability--this is where the other vaccine provisions
are important--should not become a barrier to the protection of the
American people. I will repeat that. The threat of liability should not
become a barrier to the protection of the American people.
Then you go back to the question, What is this threat of liability? I
will boil it down and use smallpox as an example. Smallpox can hit here
tomorrow or in 30 days or in 60 days from now or in 90 days or maybe
never. We all pray it never hits. We have 300 million doses of vaccine.
It is not all licensed yet, but it is good vaccine and I have utmost
confidence in it. It is a risky vaccine. The childhood vaccines we use,
which we are inoculated with--even the anthrax vaccine that potentially
has certain side effects--if you look at these, I put smallpox among
the most risky because we know the side effects are that about 1 in a
million people would die. If you vaccinated 300 million people, about
300 would die. Ten times that number would have serious side effects--
maybe encephalitis or many others that are life threatening. As a
matter of fact, probably 30, 40 times that many would have a bad rash,
many of which would cause hospitalization. So it is a vaccine, in
medical terms, with more potential side effects than others.
What would you say if there were an outbreak tomorrow? You would call
in nurses and public health officials, and pediatricians and other
doctors, and you would say, as part of the American response to
bioterrorism and the use of bioterrorist agents or microorganisms as
weapons of mass destruction, you need to get this vaccine to as many
people as you can within 3 days. It could be maybe 100 or maybe 1,000,
or 10,000; and in a city such as New York, it could be a million easily
within 3 days. Okay, you have the vaccine. You have willing health care
providers. I think of myself as a physician. Everybody could be
mobilized to do that. You are basically saying, as American policy: You
need to give that vaccine. It has side effects, but we are not going to
protect you in the event there is a side effect--death or encephalitis.
We are not going to protect you in any shape or form, although you are
fulfilling the mandate and the policy, the emergency response of the
American people.
Why would they not do that? Because of the lack of protection from
skyrocketing lawsuits. I have a great fear--and I don't want to say I
know for sure, but I have a fear in talking to health care providers
and to the nurses who recognize, given that vaccine is important to
life saving, but at the same time is subjected to these unlimited
lawsuits with punitive damages--they just might say: I cannot subject
myself to giving a thousand of those doses, even looking at the
statistics. That is the problem, that is why the smallpox provision has
to be in there.
We have had so many people make all these statements, but nobody has
been to the substance. The bill extends the Federal Tort Claims Act--
the FTCA--protection to any person, such as a doctor, or a
pediatrician, or a nurse, or somebody who is qualified to be giving
that inoculation, lifesaving inoculation, in your arm. It provides them
a protection of the Federal Tort Claims Act.
What is important there--people say if that is the case, you cannot
sue. Well, that is simply not true. It basically says that the Federal
Government is going to be on your side and will defend you in any
lawsuit and the Federal Government will pay the damages. It does not
deny adequate, just, fair compensation if there is a side effect, but
what it does do is you are going to have somebody behind you; namely,
the Federal Government, to pay you damages. It does say you go to
Federal court. People say Federal courts cannot do this. In truth, we
all know Federal courts can do that.
It is important to point out that in Federal court, the rules that
are actually used are going to be applicable to that State or according
to State law.
Thus, you can still sue, but the Federal Government pays. A lot of
people say you should be able to punish anybody--punish that nurse who
put that vaccine in your arm--so let's have punitive damages on top of
compensation. The underlying bill says you get adequate, just, fair
compensation. You are defended by the Federal Government and they will
pay you, but there is no punitive damages component, which makes sense
because, remember, that nurse is putting that inoculation on your arm
to save your life under a plan put forward by our Government, probably
in response to an emergency.
Over time, I think we need much more balance in terms of the overall
provisions. It was not my idea, although I support these provisions
strongly, to take these specific provisions out and to put them into
the bill. So over time, we need to develop a more comprehensive policy
to make sure we have both a full range of vaccines developed, that we
have appropriate countermeasures, and if somebody is harmed by a
vaccine, there is fair compensation.
We need to come back and visit this in a more comprehensive way as we
go forward. I will add, though, there is some sense of urgency to this
given the threats today.
The issue of what is front line is important because the use of
germs, microorganisms, and bacteria is new to the American people as
weapons of mass destruction. It is causing us to say we understand
nuclear weapons, gas, but what about these organisms that can wind
their way through a society? What is the front line?
That is why vaccines are absolutely important because they become the
front line, and that is why we address vaccines in the homeland
security bill, especially since we are at risk today. One cannot turn
on a television or read a newspaper without learning of this enhanced
risk, this higher risk.
Let me back out of this broader issue of vaccine. Smallpox is one
case. It happens to be a virus. What about the plague which wiped out a
third of Europe? What about anthrax? We have an old vaccine. The
vaccine has to be administered over and over, so we need newer vaccine
developed for anthrax.
[[Page S11177]]
What about Ebola? About 3 months ago, the National Institutes of
Health said in their response to bioterrorism that one of its major
priorities is going to be the development of a vaccine for the Ebola
virus. That makes sense because we know that other states in their
offensive biological weapons programs--and there are 12 offensive
biological weapons programs outside the United States; people need to
know that--there has been a linkage of smallpox with the Ebola virus.
We know Ebola has a 90-percent mortality rate; smallpox has a 30-
percent mortality rate. We should at least be thinking of a front line
there which means a new vaccine. NIH said 4 months ago--and most people
do not even know it--has as one of their major initiatives development
of an Ebola vaccine. Why? Because intelligence tell us people have
attempted to link viruses. Thus, we need to have an effective response
system in terms of the development of vaccine.
Research is good. NIH is doing research. But unless we have
manufacturers in the field manufacturing vaccines, we can have the
greatest research in the world and know how to do it, but unless we can
produce it and produce it quickly, the know-how does not do us any good
because we are not going to be able to develop the vaccine to put on
your arm and protect you from the Ebola virus.
There are provisions in this bill that provide smallpox as a
microcosm, but in the macro sense, there are other vaccines. Every
year--and the distinguished Presiding Officer knows this--we hear about
these shortages of vaccines about every 6 months. People ask: Why are
there these shortages? It is multifactorial, and we have to address
that.
One of the issues we know is this unlimited liability. Think back to
the smallpox vaccine. It is put on your arm, and you have a bad side
effect. Somebody is going to sue for that side effect. There are no
protections today. In the same sense, the manufacturers, the
pharmaceutical companies, which is very popular for people to beat upon
aggressively these days, the manufacturing companies, the
pharmaceutical companies are the only ones that can make the smallpox
vaccine, the front line for that weapon of mass destruction, for the
Ebola virus.
We can, through NIH, promote the research, but only a manufacturing
firm, a pharmaceutical firm can make the Ebola vaccine. There used to
be in the eighties 12 pharmaceutical companies making vaccines. Then it
dwindled to 10, then to 8, then to 7, then to 6, then to 5, and there
are now only 4 vaccine manufacturers licensed to sell vaccines in the
United States, and only two of these are American companies.
Why is that the case? Why would they stand out totally exposed for
making a medicine that is lifesaving, yes, but one that with one
lawsuit can wipe out their whole development process, their whole
manufacturing process today?
That is an issue that has to be developed, and the urgency of it is
the fact we are a nation at risk from biological agents, and there are
12 states that have offensive biological weapons programs, and we are
today unprotected.
On the liability issue, people have said one preservative causes
autism. They mentioned this on the floor. That is just wrong. The
Institute of Medicine has made it very clear that there is no
established causal relationship between that preservative and autism. I
will and others need to go back and look at the data, but the Institute
of Medicine has basically said that to date. We need more research.
I was one of the primary authors of the autism research bill. We need
to look at it again. I want to assure families in the country that
those statements made on the floor of the Senate are wrong. There is
nothing in the underlying bill that slows down research for autism or
just compensation, if there is an association between autism and a
certain preservative.
It is interesting, with these vaccines being sort of inherently
risky, with the risk of liability costs driven up so high because it is
easy--it is not easy, but we can have lawyers coming in and starting
these lawsuits.
In the 1980s, this body started the Vaccine Injury Compensation
Program. They did this through the National Children's Vaccine Injury
Act. It was passed in 1986, I believe. The whole purpose of this
program is to provide injured patients compensation while attempting to
control litigation, based on the recognition that vaccines will always
be an easy target because they have inherent side effects and everybody
gets vaccines--everybody in this body has been vaccinated. Everybody
listening hopefully has been vaccinated. We all depend on those
vaccines. That at the end of the day, since everybody gets it and there
are certain side effects, that if you want to make a lot of money you
can go out and start getting these people and start creating these
lawsuits. That is why in the mid-1980s we said we have to put all of
this together and look at it in a reasoned way, a way that is
efficient, a way that is fair to people broadly. The vaccine injury
compensation program is essentially a no-fault alternative to the
traditional tort system in this whole area of vaccines. It has been a
key component of stabilizing the vaccine market, of not driving even
those last four companies--or the last two in this country--out of
making vaccines. It has a streamlined process. It puts down a less
adversarial alternative so not everybody is going to court and spending
weeks, months, and in some cases years trying to have their cases
actually looked at.
It encourages research and development of new and safer vaccines, and
it provides the appropriate liability protection to that nurse who is
putting that inoculation, that vaccine, in your arm, as well as the
health care providers, the facilities, and the manufacturers.
What is in the underlying bill is a narrow set of provisions that
were actually taken from a bill that I have studied for the last 3
years and that I introduced this Congress, that should eventually be
passed in this comprehensive form, but the provisions have been taken
out and included in the underlying bill I feel strongly about and I
will continue to talk to my colleagues about them individually as they
understand why those provisions were included.
I will say that the provisions that are in the bill are far narrower
than what I think we actually need to do to have this balance in our
liability system so we can continue to develop vaccines to protect our
children, the current generation. In the event there is a bioterror
attack a week from now, a month from now, a year from now, we will be
adequately prepared.
The Lieberman proposal would strike these sections that are in the
underlying bill. And all of them merely restate to some extent what was
intended by Congress. This is a clarification, a restatement. In 1986,
when it passed the bill, the underlying bill called the National
Children's Vaccine Injury Act, what that act did was to create an
administrative mechanism by which those children who have a serious
side effect from a vaccine can receive compensation without ever having
to prove in court a vaccine caused their particular injury. So you do
not have to go to court. You can go to this new administrative body.
There are a handful of people who do not believe in vaccines. They
just say all vaccines are bad. Most know that they are invaluable and
have spared our children from many of the diseases that haunt us. Thus,
when you have that which we all really fully understand today, that
they are a protection for our children, plus this new threat of
bioterror, that is why you link it to homeland security and that is why
it is important in this bill. We know we must preserve that
manufacturing base so with the research that is done, yes, by the
pharmaceutical companies, but also maybe even more importantly by the
NIH, we can actually manufacture those vaccines.
Section 171 clarifies that the components and ingredients of a
vaccine listed in the vaccine's product license application and label
are not contaminants or adulterants. Importantly, the advisory
committee, from which all of this essentially was taken, is an advisory
committee called the Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines. They
unanimously concur with this particular provision.
The next section, section 1716, adds a definition of ``vaccine'' to
the Public Health Service Act since that term was not defined at all in
the initial legislation back in 1986. This section states
[[Page S11178]]
the obvious--that the term ``vaccine'' includes all components and
ingredients listed in the vaccine's product license application and
product label. Again, the Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines
recommended the appropriate modification which is a part of the
underlying homeland security bill, again, which the Lieberman amendment
would strip out.
Sections 1715 and 1716 restate the original intent of the law that a
vaccine is all the ingredients and components in the product which are
approved by the FDA. This is an important one because there have been
some allegations that all this was stuck in for a single company. The
fact is that there are presently more than 150 of these lawsuits
against the four vaccine manufacturers, as well as pediatricians,
children's hospitals, state health departments and other healthcare
providers. From my comments, one can see that it is not a single
company. We are talking about a huge issue that reflects back to the
protection of our families and our Nation.
Section 1714 clarifies that the term ``manufacturer,'' under the
VICP, includes any corporation, organization, or institution that
manufactures, imports, processes or distributes any vaccine on the
vaccine injury table, including any component or ingredient of such
vaccine. The Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines, again, an
independent body making specific recommendations--it is composed, by
the way, of trial lawyers, medical providers, and injured parties--
unanimously supported this provision. This provision restates
Congressional intent to ensure that any lawsuit alleging vaccine-
related injury or death follow the same process and groundrules
regardless of whether it is against the final manufacturer, a physician
or hospital, or a component or ingredient manufacturer and addresses
those lawsuits seeking to circumvent the Vaccine Injury Compensation
Program.
I also want to point out that these provisions are supported by the
American Academy of Pediatrics, and I will talk more about that in a
minute.
I want to run through a couple of other specific ones, again because
nobody has really talked to the substance underlying what this
amendment would mean.
The congressional intent very much was to encompass the manufacturers
of component materials of vaccines in the definition of ``vaccine
manufacturer,'' and these provisions--what they do is clarify this
intent. They restate the congressional intent as part of the Vaccine
Injury Compensation Act. The courts are presently correctly ruling that
these amendments--what they are doing is part of that congressional
intent. The courts have correctly rejected the contention that a
component or ingredient of an FDA-approved vaccine can also be
considered substitute an adulterant or contaminant.
Among these decisions, the court charged with adjudicating the
vaccine injury compensation program recently concluded that the
language and legislative history of the National Children's Vaccine
Injury Act demonstrated that claims relating to components of covered
vaccines are plainly subject to the act. As to the misconceptions that
have been presented on the floor, No. 1, these provisions do not
prevent patients from suing in court. The statement has been made that
it takes away rights. It does not. It does not prevent patients from
suing in court. Instead it merely requires, as is required under
current law, claimants must first go through the compensation program
designed in the 1980s which has worked effectively but does need to be
modified, as is being carried out in these provisions. They maintain
their right to pursue a court case.
One can go through that program itself, the administrative program,
in a timely way. If someone does not agree with the compensation that
they put forward, they can go to court. I will say that without this
clarification, litigation outside the program--and that is what is
happening today--will continue and the supply of vaccines could well be
jeopardized as we have these huge lawsuits.
One lawsuit today is $30 billion. That is what they are looking for
in one lawsuit, $30 billion. The whole vaccine industry is only $5
billion. There are about 150 of these lawsuits out there today. Those
who desire to bring litigation outside the compensation program will
continue to sue the manufacturers of components of vaccines and
ultimately that is going to result in the manufacturers of the products
themselves simply walking away and not making vaccines and getting out
of the vaccine business. Then who is going to make the vaccine for the
Ebola virus, which our Federal Government, through intelligence, has
identified as one of the six agents of which we are at risk, one of the
six agents against which other nations have had offensive biological
weapons programs.
If litigation continues against component manufacturers outside of
the vaccine injury compensation program, those companies that make the
components simply are going to be unnecessary to provide the vaccine or
those people who make FDA-approved components and give them to the
vaccine manufacturers will stop making those components. We saw that in
the mid-1990s when raw material suppliers refused to sell the necessary
components to the medical device manufacturers. People just stopped
making materials there because of this fear of litigation. Ultimately
there it took an act of Congress to protect those component
manufacturers, the people making the pieces that go, for example, into
a pacemaker or, in this case, it would be a component of the vaccine.
It took an act of Congress to prevent a shortage back then of
pacemakers and of other vital medical devices.
These provisions that are in the underlying bill have been
unanimously supported by the Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines.
As I mentioned, that includes injured patients, trial lawyers, and an
expert group of patients as well. They have been endorsed by the
American Academy of Pediatrics.
I ask unanimous consent to have a portion of letters from the
Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines and the American Academy of
Pediatrics printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
Advisory Commission
on Childhood, Vaccines,
Alexandria, VA, June 19, 2002.
Hon. Tommy G. Thompson,
Secretary of Health and Human Services,
Washington, DC
Dear Secretary Thompson: The Advisory Commission on
Childhood Vaccines (ACCV) is authorized under Section 2119 of
the Public Health Service Act to advise the Secretary of
Health and Human Services (the Secretary) on the
implementation of the National Vaccine Injury Compensation
Program (VICP). At the June 6 meeting, the ACCV discussed in
detail the need for urgent modifications of the VICP and the
necessity to ensure the viability of the Vaccine Safety
Datalink Project. Actions are needed to address a variety of
concerns that directly impact the VICP.
Background
As of May 2002, more than 50 individual and class action
lawsuits with millions of plaintiffs alleging potential
thimerosal-related injuries from childhood vaccines have been
filed in state and federal courts. The plaintiffs in these
lawsuits argue that their claims are not governed by the VICP
because they allege that thimerosal is an ``adulterant'' to,
and not a part of the vaccines. These claims have been filed
against vaccine companies and, in some instances, against
health care providers. Thimerosal, as you know, is approved
for use by the Food and Drug Administration and is part of
the vaccine formulation when licensed; hence clarification is
needed to direct these claims to the VICP before tort
remedies can be pursued.
Concurrently, some 500 incomplete cases have been filed as
placeholders with the VICP alleging that thimerosal (mercury)
has caused vaccine-related injuries. The medical records that
the Act requires upon filing do not accompany many VICP
petitions, including these cases. This causes problems
because of the time constraints spelled out in the Act. The
presiding special master must generally resolve a case within
240 days (this period excludes any period of suspension and
any period during which a petition is being remanded). If the
special master fails to issue a decision within such time,
the petitioner may withdraw from the VICP and pursue outside
litigation without affording respondent or the special master
any meaningful opportunity to evaluate the VICP claim.
the ACCV believes this disturbing new mend in civil litigation could
circumvent the Act
We submit the following recommendation for action:
recommendation on certification of completeness of petitions
The ACCV recommends that the Secretary propose legislation
to amend the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986,
as amended, to require special masters to issue a certificate
of completeness once a determination is made that a petition
is complete in accordance with section 2111. The time period
described in sections 2112(g) and 2121(b) of the Public
Health Service Act would begin from the date the special
master issues
[[Page S11179]]
a certification of completeness. This would allow for a
period of 240 days excluding any period of suspension of any
time the petition is on remand) for the parties to consider
all of the evidence and for a decision to be reached. If the
special master fails to issue a decision within this time
period, calculated from the date the certificate of
completeness is issued, the petitioner could withdraw from
the VICP and pursue outside litigation.
senator frist's bill
In addition to the previous request, we also ask that you
consider our recommendations regarding legislation introduced
by Sen. William Frist (R-IN), ``Improved Vaccine
Affordability and Availability Act'' (S. 2053). The ACCV
concentrated on Title II of the bill that has provisions to
ensure that all claims for a vaccine-related injury or death
are first filed with the VICP. The ACCV makes the following
recommendations:
recommendations on the ``improved vaccine affordability and
availability act''
The ACCV unanimously concurs with the following sections of
S. 2053 which are the same as or very similar to proposals
made in the ``Vaccine Injury Compensation Program Amendments
of 1999'' (the 1999 Amendments), which were developed from
recommendations made by the ACCV and sent to Congress as
legislative proposals by the former Secretary:
Section 206, ``Clarification of When Injury is Caused by
Factor Unrelated to Administration of Vaccine'';
Section 208, ``Basis for Calculating Projected Lost
Earnings'';
Section 209, ``Allowing Compensation for Family Counseling
Expenses and Expenses of Establishing Guardianship'';
Section 211, ``Procedure for Paying Attorneys' Fees'';
Section 212, ``Extension of Statute of Limitations'';
Section 213, Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines'';
and
Section 218, ``Conforming Amendment to Trust Fund
Provision.''
The ACCV unanimously concurs with the following sections of
S. 2053:
Section 204, ``Jurisdiction to Dismiss Actions Improperly
Bought'';
Section 215, ``Clarification of Definition of
Manufacturer'';
Section 216, ``Clarification of Definition of Vaccine-
Related Injury or Death'';
Section 217, Clarification of Definition of Vaccine''; and
Section 220, ``Pending Actions''.
The ACCV does not concur with the following sections of S.
2053 and recomends:
Replacing Section 201, ``Administrative Revision of Vaccine
Injury Table'', which changes the public comment period from
180 to 90 days with Section 2, ``Administrative Revision of
Vaccine Injury Table'', of the 1999 Amendments which changes
the public comment period from 180 to 60 days and shortens
from 90 to 60 days the period that the ACCV has to review a
proposed rule;
Modifying Section 202, ``Equitable Relief'', and Section
214, ``Clarification of Standards of Responsibility'' to add
``past or in front of present physical injury''. Some
individuals may have sustained a vaccine-related injury in
the past, but do not have a present physical injury. These
individuals should not be prohibited from obtained relief in
a civil action filed against a vaccine manufacturer or
administrator;
Replacing Section 207, ``Increase in Award in the Case of a
Vaccine-Related Death and for Pain and Suffering'' with the
2001 ACCV recommendation to increase the $250,000 benefit
caps for both death and pain and suffering. These $250,000
benefit caps should be retroactively increased since 1988,
and increased annually, thereafter, to account for inflation
using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Workers (CPI-U)
as envisioned by Congress in the original National Childhood
Vaccine Injury Act of 1986;
Replacing Section 210, ``Allowing Payment of Interim
Costs'' which does not stipulate a timeframe for when the
interim payment is to be made with Section 6, ``Allowing
Payment of Interim Costs of the 1999 Amendments, which states
that the interim payment can only be made after a
determination has been made concerning whether or not the
petitioner is entitled to compensation;
Modifying Section 219, ``Ongoing Review of Childhood
Vaccine Data'' by deleting the phrase, ``together with
recommendation for changes in the Vaccine Injury Table''; and
Replacing Section 221, ``Report'', which this language,
``The ACCV shall provide the Secretary of Health and Human
Services with annual status reports on the Vaccine Injury
Compensation Trust Fund (the Trust Fund), including
recommendations on the allocation of funds from the Trust
Fund.''
With regard to Section 203, ``Parent Petitions for
Compensation'', the ACCV believes that the language in this
section must be modified. The issue of compensating parents
and third parties was raised when the original Act was
drafted, but the focus remained on the need for an adequate
compensation package that would cover the life of the injured
child. Over the years, a few parent or third party petitions
for compensation have been filed in state and federal courts.
However, many of the class action suits contain parent
petition, which prompted ACCV to revisit the issue. ACCV
strongly believes that parent or third party petitions for
compensation are more appropriately managed and
adjudicated through the VICP rather than through outside
litigation. Because of our concern for the well being of
the child, the ACCV recommends that the award to the
vaccine-injured child be separate from any award offered
to the parent. At your request, the ACCV will develop
options for such an award. In addition, this Section, as
is currently drafted, raises serious constitutional
concerns. The ACCV recognizes that the proposed provision,
as drafted, may need to be supplemented to: (1) address
potential constitutional concerns; and (2) assure that
such parents or third parties claims may be properly
administered by the VICP. Moreover, the ACCV believes that
further consideration should be given to review of whether
a third party's claim should be tied to the injured
party's claim in civil actions.
Section 205, ``Application'', is a conforming charge to
Section 203, and therefore, the ACCV does not concur with
this Section until the language in Section 203 is
sufficiently modified.
background on the vaccine safety datalink project
In order to enhance the understanding of rare adverse
effects of vaccines, CDC developed the Vaccine Safety
Datalink (VSD) project in 1990. This project is a
collaborative effort, which utilizes the databases of eight
large health maintenance organizations (HMOs). The database
contains comprehensive medical and immunization histories of
approximately 7.5 million children and adults. The VSD
enables vaccine safety research studies comparing prevalence
of health problems between unvaccinated and vaccinated
people. Over the past decade, the VSD has been used to answer
many vaccine-related questions, and has been used to support
policy changes that have reduced adverse effects from
vaccines.
Rep. Dan Burton, (R-IN), Chairman of the Committee on
Government Reform, requested any and all records collected
under the VSD and was prepared to subpoena the records if he
was not given access. The CDC and HMOs, understandably, do
not want to give this data to Rep. Burton because these
records include confidential patient information. For now,
Rep. Burton agreed to a compromise with CDC which would allow
an independent researcher to replicate or conduct a modified
analysis of a previous VSD study, while maintaining the
confidential nature of the data, but Rep. Burton has not
rescinded his threat of the subpoena. Therefore, the ACCV
makes the following recommendation:
recommendation on the vaccine safety datalink project
The Vaccine Safety Datalink Project (VSD) is a critical
component of our vaccine safety infrastructure. Participation
by health maintenance organizations in the VSD is predicated
on confidentiality of patient identifiers. In order to assure
the continued viability of the VSD, the privacy of individual
patient data must be protected. Therefore, the ACCV
recommends that the Secretary of Health and Human Services
take all steps necessary to protect the privacy of patient
data in order to ensure the continued support and viability
of this important project.
In conclusion, Mr. Secretary, we believe that the VICP
plays a critical role in our nation's childhood immunization
program, and we urge your immediate attention to our
concerns. The ACCV greatly appreciates your continued
support, and looks forward to your timely reply.
Sincerely,
Elizabeth J. Noyes,
Chair, ACCV.
Mr. FRIST. In part it says:
These claims have been filed against vaccine companies and,
in some instances, against health care providers. Thimerosal,
as you know, is approved for use by the Food and Drug
Administration and is part of the vaccine formulation when
licensed; hence clarification is needed to direct these
claims to the VICP before tort remedies can be pursued.
That is what the underlying bill does. That is what the Lieberman
amendment strips out.
The American Academy of Pediatrics also wrote in support of this.
I'll quote a final sentence from this letter of June 19, 2002:
The AAP has reviewed S. 2053 and has the following comments
beginning first and foremost with our strong support that all
claims for vaccine-related injury or death first must be
filed with the VICP.
In addition, we concur with the ACCV's most recent
recommendations in support of sections 204, 215, 216, 217 and
220.
I ask unanimous consent to print the letter in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
American Academy of Pediatrics,
Washington, DC, July 19, 2002.
Hon. Bill Frist,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Dear Senator Frist: The American Academy of Pediatrics
(AAP), and the 57,000 pediatricians we represent, greatly
appreciates your leadership and support of the various
[[Page S11180]]
immunization provisions outlined in your bill, S. 2053, the
Improved Vaccine Affordability and Availability Act. This
legislation addresses several issues of critical importance
to the Academy.
vaccine injury compensation program
Enacted in the late 1980's, with the support and guidance
of the AAP, the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program
(VICP) has helped to stabilize what was then and appears to
be again a fragile vaccine market. For the past 14 years,
this program has been successful in its efforts to ensure an
adequate supply of childhood vaccines, promote more research
and development of even safer and better vaccines and most
importantly to provide for a fair and just compensation
program for those that suffer vaccine-related injuries.
However, over time, as reflected in your legislative
proposal, some modifications are necessary to ensure that the
VICP is working at it full potential.
The AAP has reviewed S. 2053 and has the following comments
beginning first and foremost with our strong support that all
claims for vaccine-related injury or death first must be
filed with the VICP.
The Academy concurs with several sections of the bill, some
of which were previously proposed in 1999 by the Advisory
Committee on Vaccine Compensation (ACCV) and you have
incorporated in S. 2053. These include: Sections 206, 208,
209, 211, 212, 213 and 218. In addition, we concur with the
ACCV's most recent recommendations in support of sections
204, 215, 216, 217, and 220. The AAP is particularly pleased
that S. 2053 includes language that allows compensation for
family counseling, ongoing review of childhood vaccine data
and clarifies the definition of vaccines, manufacturers, and
vaccine-related injury or death.
The AAP, however, does have specific concerns about Section
203, ``Parent Petitions for Compensation,'' as currently
drafted. The AAP believes that petitions for compensation by
parents or third parties must be adjudicated through the VICP
and not through the judicial system. Moreover, in addition to
potential constitutional issues that this provision may
pose, we contend that such claims by parents should be
separate and apart from awards to the vaccine-injured
child. Although the issue of the compensation of parents
and third parties was initially raised during the drafting
of the VICP in the 1980's, it was rejected to maintain the
focus of the Act on providing appropriate and just
compensation that covers the life of the vaccine-injured
child. We believed then, as well as now, that this
approach is in the best interest of the child. The AAP
would suggest that consideration could be given to
providing, within the scope of the VICP, a provision for
the loss of consorrum that would be separate from the
award to the vaccine-injured child.
The AAP agrees with your identification in Section 207, of
the need for an adjustment to the award for a vaccine-related
death and for pain and suffering. However, we recommend a
modification to this section as written. Use of the Consumer
Price Index (CPI) to account for annual inflation in
providing these benefit awards had been the original intent
of Congress in drafting the VICP. The AAP encourages your
adoption of this approach that was also recommended in 2001
by the ACCV. In 2002 dollars, such an award would be the
equivalent of an award of over $300,000.
meningitis and influenza vaccines
The AAP supports your recommendation in Section 103 to
provide information to a variety of entities concerning
bacterial meningitis. We are ready to work with you to
implement these efforts.
This past June, the Advisory Committee of Immunization
Practices (ACIP) made the decision to expand the Vaccine for
Children (VFC) program coverage of the influenza vaccine to
all healthy children aged 6 to 23 months. This will take
effect March 1, 2003. As physicians, we are both aware that
this age group has a high likelihood of hospitalization if
they get the flu, therefore the availability of an adequate
supply of the influenza vaccine is critical. In addition,
this expanded recommendation means that adequate funding--
both public and private--is essential. The estimated first-
year costs of influenza vaccination of children, according to
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, are $11.5
million in the VFC program, $2.6 million in Section 317
funds, and $1.42 million in state funds. This assumes
vaccination of 20% of children aged 6 to 23 months (most
requiring two doses), 15% of high-risk children aged 2 to 18
years, and 5% of children living with high-risk household
contacts. These costs dramatically increase as we assume
higher vaccination coverage rates for these populations of
children. We applaud your support of increasing the supply of
the influenza vaccine (Section 101) and encourage your
proactive support to ensure sufficient public and private
funding to meet the need and demand of the pediatric
population. We should expect nothing less than, at a minimum,
coverage by the Medicaid program for our youngest citizens as
is received under Medicare for our senior citizens.
immunization rates
The AAP appreciates the recognition of increasing
immunization rates and data collection especially for
adolescents as well as adults included in Section 102 of S.
2053. However, as pediatricians dedicated to the health,
safety and well being of infants, children, adolescents and
young adults we would be remiss if we also did not encourage
the inclusion of all infants and children in the collection
of data and in efforts to increase immunization rates. We
have made remarkable progress. Presently, the rates of
immunizations for children may well be at an all time high.
But we still have significant disparities and pockets of need
among rates of immunization for racial and ethnic groups.
This is further exacerbated by the potential impact that
vaccine shortages may have on the rates of immunizations. We
cannot allow complacency or less vigilance of rates for
infants and children at this critical time.
vaccine supply
Although pediatricians over the years have encountered
brief childhood vaccine shortages nothing compares to the
most recent situation because of both the number of different
vaccines involved and the scarcity of the available supply.
For most of the first half of this year, the shortage of
vaccines included eight of the 11 diseases preventable
through routine vaccination of children. In many instances
these shortages and delays by necessity resulted in temporary
changes to immunization entry requirements for day care and
school. Until just recently the longest-standing significant
shortage was with the Td vaccine that began about a year ago
and affected the ability to give teens the booster Td they
need. Currently, the most serious shortage continues to be
with the new 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7,
Prevnar). The AAP supports and appreciates the recognition in
Section 104 of the need to maintain a sufficient vaccine
supply. Moreover, we also support the discretionary authority
of the Secretary of Health and Human Services to develop a
national vaccine stockpile for a minimum of six months and as
long as 12 months. This stockpile should include all of the
routine recommended childhood vaccines and certain other
vaccines that may be critical to the public's health such as
Hepatitis A and meningococcal.
Thank you for your commitment to an immunization strategy
that promotes the safety, efficacy as well as the adequacy of
the supply of vaccines for the nation. We look forward to
working with you as this legislation moves forward.
Sincerely,
Louis Z. Cooper,
President.
Mr. FRIST. I will read from a statement by Dr. Timothy Doran,
testifying on behalf of AAP, to the Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions Committee earlier this year on behalf of the American Academy
of Pediatrics, relating to these provisions. He testified it was
crucial:
to preserve and strengthen the liability protections for
consumers, manufacturers and physicians through the Vaccine
Injury Compensation Program. The VICP has been an integral
part of maintaining the vaccine market. Enacted in the last
1980's with the support and guidance of the American Academy
of Pediatrics the VICP has helped to stabilize what was then
and appears again to be a fragile vaccine market. We
reiterate our strong support that all claims for vaccine-
related injury or death must be filed first with the VICP. We
appreciate the intent of the legislative proposal put forth
by Sen. Frist and others to craft appropriate modifications
as necessary to ensure that the VICP is working to its full
potential.
Those are the provisions in the underlying bill. That is exactly what
is in the homeland security legislation that would be stripped out by
the Lieberman amendment.
The effect of these provisions in this bill is important because of
the new era of bioterrorism, not knowing the direction the world is
moving, recognizing we are unprotected today from smallpox. We now have
a tremendous initiative by the administration, the private sector, and
the public sector. We have better coordination and better public health
infrastructure, better communication, better coordination. But at the
end of the day, if smallpox is in your community and you know it, you
know where to go, that is good, but unless you have a health care
provider to put it on your arm, you are not protected. We do not know
when it will hit again.
The fact the Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines endorses these
provisions is important. The fact that the American Academy of
Pediatrics endorses these provisions is also important. This shows they
are not just pulled out or from a single company or they have not been
thought through by both trial lawyers and patients and families and
providers. We have heard the claims that these are not relevant to the
underlying bill. But at the end of the day, in this world where we are
at risk from bioterrorism, germs, viruses, I guarantee, based on
everything I know and everything I have read, it is critical we
increase our protection for these agents. That is what the underlying
bill does.
The liability protections are important for health care providers. I
argue,
[[Page S11181]]
also, for the facilities where they are administered and the
manufacturers. If we allow out-of-control lawsuits to drive people out
of the business of making these vaccines, no matter how good our
research is, we will not be able to make vaccines which are critically
important. We started with 12 companies and we are now down to 4
companies in the United States who make the vaccines. We have no
guarantee they will stay in the business. They are unlikely to stay in
the business if the huge lawsuits hit them in a way that simply is not
favorably judged.
The provisions in the underlying bill only restate the original
intent of Congress. They restate current law that individuals claiming
injury for covered vaccines must first file for compensation under the
vaccine injury compensation program, the VICP. These sections state
what really should be obvious. A vaccine itself is the sum total of all
of its parts as determined by our Food and Drug Administration, and
that the manufacturers of vaccines include those who contribute to each
of these various components. We have the vaccine, the components, the
manufacturers who make the vaccine, and also the people who make the
components.
Nothing in this language takes away one's right to sue. These
provisions simply clarify and restate current law which requires all
claims of injury related to a vaccine covered by the compensation
program must first go through the compensation program before a lawsuit
can be filed. There is much more that needs to be done, I believe in a
more comprehensive way, but these provisions take the first step in a
timely way, when time certainly matters.
In the long run, it is critical to expand the vaccine market for a
whole range of microorganisms we are not protected from. We need to
provide greater access to their vaccines. We need to be able to look
the parents in the eye and say, when you take your child to the doctor
or the public health center, those children, as well as all Americans,
are not going to be in some way turned away by a barrier that we failed
to address in the Senate. That is why a vaccine provision is necessary,
is necessary now, is necessary in this homeland security bill.
I yield the floor.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, we have a consent in order for debate only
until 1:30 p.m. There are numerous Senators who wish to speak. I ask
unanimous consent that the order for debate only be extended until 3
o'clock today.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Lincoln.) Without objection, it is so
ordered.
The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. REED. Madam President, I rise to discuss the amendment proposed
by the Senator from Connecticut, Mr. Lieberman. First, I commend the
Senator from Connecticut, Mr. Lieberman, not only for his amendment but
also for his work on this very important legislation. He introduced
this legislation months ago, even before the administration recognized
the need for a homeland security bill. He has brought to the floor a
very well-crafted, well-balanced, thoughtful piece of legislation, a
product of deliberation over many months. It is disheartening at this
moment to see a piece of legislation that has arisen in the last couple
of days, almost 500 pages long, with greater omissions but also
including what I argue in certain cases to be are extraneous
provisions.
One of the provisions at issue is the of curtailing the ongoing
discussion about the scope of the vaccine injury compensation program.
We have a situation where vaccine manufacturers included a
preservative, Thimerosal. This preservative has been alleged to have
caused medical harm; it has not been scientifically proven. The Senator
from Tennessee has indicated the Institute of Medicine has suggested
there is no causal link between Thimerosal and autism or other
childhood diseases. Yet there is ongoing litigation to determine if
this, in fact, is a causal factor.
In a homeland security bill designed to focus our attention on the
most urgent and dramatic threats to the United States, we find a very
transparent attempt by at least one manufacturer to curtail potential
liability because of their products. Frankly, there is no other
rationale for putting this one provision in the legislation. It is
inappropriate to be included in this legislation. It certainly does not
raise the urgency of the issues the Senator from Tennessee discussed in
terms of smallpox protection or potential for a mass casualty crisis
because of the use of a biological agent.
In point of fact, Thimerosal was withdrawn from use in vaccines in
1999. So this is not a situation where we have to act today, in this
very critical legislation, to ensure that manufacturers will continue
to use this material. In fact, quite the contrary, this material,
although no one has established a definitive link to any particular
disease, has been voluntarily withdrawn from inclusion in vaccines.
So what we have is a situation where allegations have been made by
parents of children that this preservative caused a disease in their
child. And as the Senator from Tennessee rightly pointed out, in 1987
Congress enacted the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program as a no-fault
alternative to the tort system for resolving these types of claims. The
procedure for the compensation program is that you must first go
through this system of evaluation of your claim and determination of
award, if any, before you are allowed to pursue your claim in court.
What has occurred in this situation is that families have alleged
that this particular element, Thimerosal, is not covered under the
Vaccine Injury Compensation Program because, even though it is an
ingredient listed on the label, was a contaminant or adulterant and, as
a result, is not included in the scope of the VICP. That is a legal
issue. That legal issue is being decided as we speak.
In fact, the VICP has requested that the Special Master of the U.S.
Court of Federal Claims consider this question, and the Special Master
is currently deliberating the issue, but has not yet ruled.
So here we are, at the 11th hour of this legislative session, trying
to pass a homeland security bill. And what we find, mysteriously and
surprisingly, is a provision in the bill that would short circuit the
ongoing litigation, that would thrust our view on the courts. And,
frankly, I suspect the Special Master has a much more attuned notion of
what are the permutations, what are the consequences, what are the
legal precedents of concluding whether or not Thimerosal is covered
under the VICP, than we have on this floor.
Again, this is reduced quite easily, quite simply, quite
transparently, to an attempt by an industry to insert, within a bill
that is deemed to be absolutely necessary to pass, a provision that
short circuits all of the legal discussion and potentially short
circuits the rights of parents to recover the full compensatory and
other damages that they deserve because of their child's illness.
None of this has been settled in terms of scientific cause and
effect. But procedurally I think we have to, in short, allow the
process to take place. It is not uncommon--in fact, it is quite
common--that there are disputes about the interpretation of a
particular statute, the coverage of a particular statute. But we
seldom--unless of course there are very well connected and influential
proponents--we seldom pick out these items for legislative relief prior
to any type of judicial conclusion. So I suggest, particularly with
regard to this matter--the striking of these specific provisions--is
appropriate.
Indeed, one wonders why we are spending time debating this issue on a
homeland security bill when in fact there are so many other needs that
deserve our attention and deliberation. Many of my colleagues have
suggested that, not just with regard to what is in this bill but,
frankly, the need to support more vigorously those programs and
policies that we already have in place might take precedence over
simply recreating and reshuffling the deck in terms of the organization
of the Federal Government with respect to homeland security.
I urge my colleagues to support Senator Lieberman's efforts, at least
to eliminate these items which are entirely extraneous to the homeland
security bill, and in fact fall far from the urgency that is so
apparent, appropriately, in the homeland security bill.
A final point I should say, and I think my colleague from Tennessee
[[Page S11182]]
said it so well, is that the issue of access to vaccines is a very
critical issue that warrants our close attention. I was fortunate
enough to chair a hearing of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions Committee in which the General Accounting Office testified
about existing obstacles to a dependable and adequate supply of
vaccines for children. The Senator from Tennessee, with his unique
perspective as a physician, not only has been helpful but has taken a
very prominent role, working with others and myself, in developing a
comprehensive approach. That comprehensive approach might require an
examination of the VICP program. It certainly might also require
vaccine stockpiles, notification by manufacturers, if they chose not to
produce a vaccine, so that our public health authorities know prior to
the onset of a particular shortage that you will have one, two, three,
or four manufacturers in the market to meet the demand.
So I would argue that a comprehensive approach to maintaining the
supply of vaccine is important. The Senator from Tennessee has been
working on it. I have been working on it. But that is not what we are
talking about this afternoon. We are not talking about protecting the
American public in a systematic, comprehensive way by ensuring that
vaccines are available. What we are talking about today is a special
interest provision that short circuits ongoing litigation involving a
product that is no longer being used as a preservative. It is not about
what we need to do today to protect ourselves from the very real threat
of bioterrorism. Frankly, my assumption was, when we came to the floor
to talk about the homeland security bill, we would be talking about
what we need to do today to protect this country in the future.
So I urge my colleagues to support Senator Lieberman, to recognize
this bill would be much improved by adopting the provisions he has
suggested.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
Mr. VOINOVICH. Madam President, we have heard hours and weeks of
debate on the Senate floor on this legislation. Among the principal
arguments of some of the opponents of this bill is that President Bush
and his administration cannot be trusted. I think the election last
week proved that many Americans do believe our President can be
trusted. He is a man of character. He is a man of integrity. He says
what he means, and he means what he says.
I think an example of that was--if you recall, there were many people
who were opposed to the passage of the Iraq resolution by the Senate.
Many of the calls I got in opposition to it were from folks who
believed the President, if the resolution passed, would peremptorily go
into Iraq and take out Saddam Hussein.
I think all of us were quite impressed with his patience and the
diplomacy of Secretary of State Powell that somehow was able to get
through a very strong resolution in the Security Council that will
finally enforce Iraq's compliance with those 16 previous resolutions of
the United Nations.
I think we do have a President who can be trusted. I think that is
the basis of this legislation. It is not perfect, but I am confident it
will not be abused. It is not, as some say, an encroachment on
legislative branch prerogatives, as I have heard some contend.
Madam President, I rise today to talk about an issue of critical
importance to our Republic, and that is the urgent need for Federal
civil service reform. I came to this floor earlier this fall to discuss
how civil service reform can improve our ability to secure the
homeland, and I rise again today because this issue remains at the crux
of our renewed debate on the homeland security legislation.
As a member of the Governmental Affairs Committee and chairman and
ranking member of the Oversight of Government Management subcommittee,
I have worked to focus the spotlight on this issue since I came to the
Senate 4 years ago. During the course of 12 hearings and numerous
meetings with national leaders in management and public policy, it
became crystal clear that we were in the midst of a human capital
crisis in the U.S. Government. Moreover, it became clear that this
crisis is growing and will only get worse unless this Congress acts
decisively to address it.
Some people still ask what the human capital crisis is, how serious
is it, and whether it really threatens the operations of the Federal
Government. The human capital crisis is, simply stated, the inability
of the Federal Government to properly manage its workforce. Robust
personnel management includes the ability to recruit the best
candidates, hire people in a timely manner, award performance bonuses
and other motivational tools to provide training and professional
development opportunities and the flexibilities to shape a balanced
workforce. Good management includes the flexibility to act quickly and
to compete as an employer of choice in this fast-paced 21st century
knowledge economy.
Madam President, I believe that if a Federal agency or department is
important enough to receive the hard-earned tax dollars of my
constituents and yours, we have a moral responsibility to see to it
that the people's money is spent wisely. Outdated personnel practices
and lack of training not only put agencies at risk of not being able to
fulfill their mission and providing needed services to the American
people, they also represent wasteful spending. We simply must provide
the flexibility agencies need and give them the right tools to do their
work.
Within 2 years, more than 50 percent of the 1.8 million person
Federal workforce will be eligible for early or regular retirement. It
is virtually impossible to predict accurately the amount of experience
and institutional knowledge that is literally going to walk out the
door by the end of the decade. That is why it is not only right to
focus attention on our human capital crisis, it is essential.
Unfortuantely, until recent months, very few Members of Congress have
paid much attention to this growing set of challenges.
Now, as the Senate is considering legislation designed to reorganize
the Federal Government in a way that will help secure our Nation
against future terrorist attacks, civil service reform is front and
center. This issue, which for years has not been substantively
addressed, is of paramount importance in the consideration of the most
significant government reorganization to take place in our Nation in
half a century. It's about time.
Congress last enacted major civil service legislation for the entire
Federal Government 24 years ago in 1978. To operate effectively, the
Federal Government cannot afford to revise its personnel laws only
every quarter century. So much has changed over the years, and changing
times require new thinking and new laws--policies that allow
flexibility in our Federal government's civil service system.
During the 107th Congress, I have worked with some of the Nation's
premier experts on public management to determine what new
flexibilities are necessary to create a world-class 21st century
Federal workforce. These include: the Council for Excellence in
Government, Partnership for Public Service, Private Sector Council,
Brookings Institution, National Academy of Public Administration, and
the Volcker Commission; Administration officials including OPM Director
Kay James, and former OMB Deputy Director and current NASA
Administrator, Sean O'Keefe; and representatives of federal employee
groups like Bobby Harnage of the American Federation of Government
Employees, Colleen Kelley of the National Treasury Employees Union, and
Carol Bonosaro of the Senior Executives' Association. I am grateful for
the respective and recommendations all of these groups provided and we
drafted our legislation based on their insights.
Our bill, S. 2651, the Federal Workforce Improvement Act of 2002,
which I introduced with Senators Thompson and Cochran, is designed to
get the right people with the right skills in the right jobs at the
right time. It is a consensus package of human capital reforms that I
believe will have a positive impact on the Federal Government's
personnel management.
Working closely with Senator Akaka, I successfully amended key
provisions of this bill to the homeland security legislation during its
consideration by the Governmental Affairs Committee in July. I am
grateful for the support that Senator Akaka provided as we adopted
those important government-
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wide personnel flexibilities. I only wish we had put more of S. 2651 in
the homeland security bill. We need to get it all done.
Next year, I intend to introduce these provisions again, as well as
other human capital legislation that was not enacted this year. For
example S. 1817, which would make Federal student loan forgiveness
benefits tax-free; S. 1913, the Digital Tech Corps Act, which would
establish a public-private exchange program for IT professionals, and
S. 2765, the Federal Law Enforcement Pay Equity and Reform Act, which
would create an employee exchange program between Federal agencies that
perform law enforcement functions and state and local law enforcement
agencies. These bills would strengthen the performance of our Federal
workforce throughout the government.
In the 108th Congress, I also intend to take a closer look at
compensation issues, especially for the Federal law enforcement
community. Serious recruitment and retention challenges have been a
problem at agencies such as the FBI and other law enforcement agencies
for a long time and we simply have to address this issue.
The governmentwide human capital provisions we have already included
in the homeland security legislation will have an impact not only on
the new department, but on all Federal agencies. Our language will help
the Federal Government begin to address its human capital challenges--
challenges that extend far beyond the corridors of the proposed
Department of Homeland Security.
The language does the following:
It creates Chief Human Capital Officers at the Federal Government's
24 largest departments and agencies--officials who will have
responsibility for selecting, developing, training and managing a high-
quality workforce;
And, it establishes an interagency Chief Human Capital Officers
Council, chaired by the OPM Director, to advise and coordinate the
personnel functions of each agency and meet with union representatives
at least annually.
In other words, we are giving human capital a much higher priority in
the Federal Government, just as it is given in most corporations that
are successful.
It requires OPM to design a set of systems, including metrics, for
assessing agencies' human capital management, something that has been
largely ignored;
It reforms the competitive service hiring process, allowing agencies,
consistent with merit principles (including veterans' preference), to
use an alternative category ranking method for selecting new employees
instead of the ``Rule of 3,'' making the process more efficient and
fair--a practice that has been very successful at the Department of
Agriculture for the past decade;
It provides government wide authority for offering voluntary
separation incentive payments and voluntary early retirement
(``buyouts'' and ``early outs'') for the purposes of workforce
reshaping, not downsizing. This authority, which I was able to secure
with legislation three years ago, is currently being used effectively
on a limited basis at the Department of Defense;
It lifts the total annual compensation cap for senior executives,
allowing performance bonuses to be paid in full in a single year;
And, it reduces restrictions on providing academic degree training to
Federal employees, thereby emphasizing the importance of individual
professional development.
All of these things I just talked about are not only going to impact
the homeland security department, but they are governmentwide. All
agencies will be able to take advantage of these provisions in the
homeland security bill.
In light of the fact that there has not been government-wide civil
service reform in a quarter century and, as the Hart-Rudman Commission
noted just last year, personnel is the basis for maintaining national
security, it is absolutely appropriate that this legislation be
included in the bill to create the Department of Homeland Security. In
fact, in testimony before the Subcommittee on Oversight of Government
Management, former Defense Secretary and member of the Commission,
James Schlesinger noted:
. . . it is the Commission's view that fixing the personnel
problem is a precondition for fixing virtually everything
else that needs repair in the institutional edifice of U.S.
national security policy.
If we do not fix the personnel problem, we are not going to be able
to fix anything else that is wrong with the system.
I thank the leadership on both sides of the aisle for including these
important provisions in the compromise language we are considering
today.
The Homeland Security Department is not the first--and not the last--
agency that needs to have greater flexibility. Flexibilities and
reforms, similar to those proposed in the compromise language for the
Department of Homeland Security, which I will describe in a moment, are
needed throughout the executive branch.
I would like to take a few moments now to discuss the personnel
provisions in the compromise language that apply specifically to the
new department. As I said, I have worked with Republicans and Democrats
on these provisions and I believe this language will provide the
Department with the tools it needs to get the job done, and at the same
time will respect the rights of those union workers being transferred
into the new department.
First, the compromise language includes the House-passed language
proposed by Representatives Connie Morella and Chris Shays with an
additional provision that I have recommended. This language would, for
the first time, limit the current authority of the President to exclude
an agency or agency subdivision from participation in a collective
bargaining unit.
Under current law, the President may exclude participation in a
collective bargaining unit upon determining that the entity has as a
primary function intelligence, counterintelligence, investigative or
national security work and that permitting the entity to have
collective bargaining rights would be inconsistent with national
security requirements and considerations.
The compromise language would limit the President's current authority
only with regard to the new department. It would prohibit the President
from using the exclusionary authority unless the mission and
responsibilities of a transferred agency materially change and a
majority of the employees within such an agency have as their primary
duty intelligence, counterintelligence, or investigative work directly
related to terrorism. So in effect, we have limited the President's
authority to exclude employees from union membership.
The language does provide, however, that the President could waive
the above limitations on his authority if he determines in writing that
their use would have a substantial adverse impact on the department's
ability to protect homeland security. If he does this, I presume he
will do it under this provision.
We have also added some language I have proposed requiring that if
the President does not execute his authority under the Morella
language, he must notify Congress at least 10 days prior to the
issuance of his written order. This will bring the light of day into
his decisionmaking process. I don't expect him to do it, but I think
that is one way we can guarantee that such action will not be arbitrary
and capricious.
The second compromise provision in this bill was proposed by
Representatives Jack Quinn and Rob Portman over in the House. I want
everyone to understand this so they can see how much more limited this
bill is than what the President originally sent us.
That initial proposal featured a personnel system that was similar to
the one established last fall for the Transportation Security
Administration, which waived most of title 5. Of course, the Homeland
Security Department, the President realized Congress would flesh out
his proposal, and that is what happened. This legislation we are
considering would create a new agency under title 5, allowing
modifications in only six areas.
The House-passed version is less flexible than what the
administration wanted, but it is designed to deal with the personnel
flexibility sought by the President, and to address the collective
bargaining rights that many of our colleagues seek to protect,
including me.
[[Page S11184]]
This language would preserve employee rights, including hiring and
promotion based on merit and equal pay for equal work, and would
protect employees from improper political influence and reprisal for
whistleblowing. Employees would still be protected from prohibited
personnel practices, such as illegal discrimination, politicized hiring
or promotion processes, and violation of veterans' preference
requirements.
Furthermore, employees would still have the right to organize,
bargain collectively, and participate through labor organizations of
their own choosing in decisions that affect them.
The compromise language requires the new Department collaborate with
unions and other employee organizations in creating its personnel
system. The language also improves the arbitration process by ensuring
both employees and management concerns are fully and publicly vetted.
If a collective bargaining unit disagrees with a management proposal
related to one of the 6 areas subject to modification, the union
representative would have 30 days to consult with agency management on
rule changes and offer recommendations. If agreement is not reached,
the Secretary of Homeland Security could declare an impasse and submit
the dispute to the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, a
process that could last an additional 30 days. At the conclusion of
that period, the Secretary could proceed with the proposed changes,
regardless of the mediator's recommendations.
Again, this is very much like the language I added requiring the
President to make public his decision if he waives the Morella
language. In this case, at the beginning of the 30-day arbitration
period, the differences between collective bargaining unit employees
and management would be established so everyone would know what the
differences are. In other words, if there is a difference of opinion,
it is aired publicly. It is not going to be hidden somewhere. We are
all going to know about it. The American people will know about it, and
Congress will know about it.
After the 30-day period, the differences would be resolved. At the
end of the total of 60 days, it is over.
I would have been open to more robust participation of the Federal
Mediation and Conciliation Service or another third-party mediator in
resolving disagreements over title 5 modifications. However, the system
established by this legislation is a compromise, and I support it.
The real test of this language is going to be how the administration
handles work rule changes, whether or not disputes are handled openly,
and the unions' concerns treated fairly. It will be imperative for the
administration to demonstrate its commitment to an open and fair
process in a spirit of cooperation rather than confrontation with the
unions.
If we do not resolve some of the differences between the
administration and the unions, the chances of this new agency being
successful are remote. And I have encouraged the President to meet with
Bobby Harnage and with Colleen Kelley.
As a mayor and Governor, I went through reorganizations, and I
learned that you cannot get it done unless you have built trust with
your labor union members.
I would like to make one final observation on this bill before us
today. We should not sacrifice the good for the perfect. I recognize
Members on both sides of the aisle have some concerns about certain
provisions. So do I. For example, I disagree with the language that
will transfer the first responder program from its current location in
FEMA to the new Department's Border Security Directorate rather than
the Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate. That does not make
sense to me. Nevertheless, the legislation before us to create a new
Department of Homeland Security, I think, overall, is a good bill, and
I intend to vote for it.
I have been one of the leaders on civil service reform during the
last two sessions of Congress. I believe I have probably dedicated more
time than any other Senator to addressing the Federal Government's
personnel needs. I have tried to raise the profile of this issue, and
then to work in good faith with all interested parties to develop
solutions.
Based on my work, I want my colleagues to know I feel that the
personnel provisions in the compromise language can go a long way
towards putting personnel management in the executive branch back on
track.
I urge the passage of this very important bill. We have to get on
with it. It is going to take time to establish this new department. We
have to secure the homeland. We need to get going.
I thank the Chair.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Corzine). The Senator from West Virginia.
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, I compliment the Senator from Ohio
for his very thoughtful and important comments in which he reached to a
deeper level, which I was going to do, but now I do not feel the need
to because he spoke of the importance for good working relations
between management and those who work with management, particularly in
a field as important as homeland security.
I rise today to lend my support to the Homeland Security Act. I thank
Senator Lieberman for taking really the lead, before anybody else did,
on this issue and for his tireless work to bring the new Department to
the point it is today. I think it is a remarkable feat on his part.
I also would be remiss in not thanking my senior colleague from West
Virginia, with whom I disagree on this important issue, but who has,
nevertheless, led the opposition with clarity, with conviction, and
passion.
In the end, I am glad it now appears we will be able to answer the
President's call to pass this legislation, and to do so before we
adjourn this session.
The tragedies of September 11, and the continuing terrorist threat to
our Nation, demand powerful and decisive action from us and from the
President.
He has asked this Congress, after the leadership of Senator
Lieberman, to support him by creating a new Department of Homeland
Security. I think we should do that. The President believes this
massive reorganization of government, combining our currently
fragmented homeland security functions into a single Cabinet-level
agency, makes sense.
Anybody who thinks we are prepared, no matter what reports you read--
including the most recent ones--that we are prepared to handle attacks
of any sort, is just greatly wrong. In each of our individual States,
as you look at hospitals and police departments, and all the rest, we
know that is the case.
So I think a single Cabinet-level agency is crucial in providing this
Nation and its citizens with the protection they deserve.
I agree this historic reorganization is a bold and necessary step
that we, as lawmakers, must take, quite frankly, in order to be
faithful to our first and foremost duty as lawmakers--I do not think
this is generally understood by the American people--because our first
and foremost duty as lawmakers is the guaranteeing of the safety of
people we represent in our individual States, and also throughout the
country.
I hope all who are present will recognize this is but a first step.
This is going to be an extraordinarily complicated evolution.
When the Aviation Security Act was passed not very long after
September 11, it became the assumption of the American people that all
airport security would be in place, ready to go, with all of the
equipment and people trained, within a matter of months. I said from
the very beginning it was probably a matter of 3 to 4 to 5 years before
we would arrive at a point where we had the kind of aviation security,
the training, personnel, and the equipment that we needed.
People have to understand all of this is going to take time, but you
can't start the clock running unless you pass a bill to get homeland
security going.
I don't think anybody should be under the illusion that this new
Department will solve all of our security problems at home. I hope we
will remember the lessons of the Goldwater-Nichols Act of 1986, which
basically made the largest previous reorganization of Government--that
is, the creation of the Department of Defense in 1947--a working
reality. I strongly believe this new Department of Homeland Security
will be a work in progress; that the public has to understand it is a
work in progress; that you cannot take 170,000 people, meld them
together, create a whole new series of
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layers of intelligence agencies, and expect them all to work very
crisply together, when they don't work crisply together now.
Nevertheless, there needs to be a central point. I believe in that
firmly.
So with the understanding it is a work in progress, we will,
therefore, have to shepherd its ongoing development, and we will.
Although the homeland security act should not be mistaken for the
definitive answer for all of our security woes, I believe it is a
strong piece of legislation with a lot of potential to serve its
purpose and all of us and the people we represent well.
The Department we are creating is strikingly similar to the original
proposals both the White House and Senate introduced last summer. It
has been some time since then.
The new Department will combine the functions of 22 Federal agencies
and subagencies. Again, this will be complicated. There will be all
kinds of problems. We have to assume that. That is not a bad thing.
That is the evolution of anything that large that takes place, whether
it is in business or in government; change, reorganization of that
sort, does not happen quickly.
By placing these agencies and all of their people in one new
Department, we should foster much better communication--it will take
time--eliminate internal redundancies--that will take time--and greatly
improve our ability to detect, respond to, and recover from future
actions from terrorism.
The new Department is intended to be a cooperative environment in
which intelligence from all sources is brought together, analyzed, and
then used more efficiently than in the past, guiding the customers, as
the term is used, which is the President and his National Security
Council, allowing us a much clearer view of all threats from whatever
source against America.
The Department is charged with carefully coordinating with State and
local governments, none of which is prepared at this point to handle
what could very well and probably will be confronting them. As well, I
might say, private industry faces this same challenge. Some have
responded, most have not, partly because they don't know what to do.
Secondly, the economy is not strong, and they don't feel they can do
that now. But their condition will be much worse if they don't. So to
them we have to collect and pass along threat information. They have to
respond. This whole system has to begin to function in a rational way.
This is the most serious subject we could be discussing in the Halls
of this Congress. Border security should be greatly improved under the
new agency. Our ability to prevent chemical and biological and
radiological and nuclear threats may be stronger than ever before. We
have to make sure that is the case.
In the event the horrors of terrorism, in fact, visit our shores
again, as I think they will, the new Department should be better
equipped to respond with disaster relief.
However, we must not forget that many of the assets that we will need
to respond to disaster or terrorism will continue to reside in agencies
which are outside of the homeland security bill. The one that comes to
my mind is, of course, the Veterans' Administration, which is the
largest health care system in this country. That whole system is going
to have to be not incorporated in the bill but incorporated into the
process which I hope this bill will engender of its own force and
momentum.
I have confidence in this act. I nevertheless would like to go on
record as saying that clearly it does not do everything that I and many
of my colleagues, including the Chair, to whom I am particularly
grateful, wanted. I regret that we were unable to work effectively to
create a new Department where dedicated employees are guaranteed the
civil service protection to which they are entitled. However, having
said that, I think that, as the Senator from Ohio said in his very
powerful and deep speech, I have to believe our President will act
wisely, partly because of the light that will be on him, partly because
of the situation, partly because of the need for workers to be happy
and to be doing their work well, assuming the flexibility that we give
him only when he really needs that, and that he will be wise in that
respect.
So with this act, Congress and the White House have cooperated to
make a powerful statement to our citizens as well as to our enemies. We
will work together to ensure that the American people are as free as
possible from terror and as free as possible from the fear of
terrorism.
I am very thankful to have been able to play a role in the creation
of the Department. I look forward to playing a continuing role, as I
indicated, in watching this development in sort of a congressional
oversight mode.
I ask my colleagues to join with their support of this homeland
security act.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I take to the floor to talk about where we
are in the homeland security bill, and to call attention to some
special interest provisions added to this bill in the hope that the
American people will take a look at what is happening to their country.
As Senator Voinovich has stated, Osama bin Laden is still alive.
While we cannot be positive of that, it appears that he is still alive.
Certainly, al-Qaida is alive and certainly al-Qaida is working full
time to hurt us--meaning the American people. That we know. The world
is a terribly dangerous place.
Taking care of America is crucial. That is why I was so stunned and
upset when the President refused to spend $5.1 billion that this
Congress gave him for homeland security to ensure that our ports are
more secure, to ensure that our nuclear power plants are safe, to
ensure that our chemical plants are safe, to ensure that our airports
are safer, and to speed up development of necessary vaccines. I was
stunned when the President did what he did.
I was also stunned when he opposed the idea of making the Homeland
Security Department a Cabinet position. Stunned. Only after Senator
Lieberman and his committee had voted out a bill--at least the
Committee Democrats did--did the President decided he wanted to support
this concept.
We know one thing about September 11th. We know that the CIA and the
FBI were not speaking to each other. We know that they were not
communicating with each other. And yet there is not one thing in this
homeland security bill that addresses that issue.
The homeland security bill tinkers around the edges with creating new
ways for the intelligence community to let the Homeland Security
Director know what is happening. But we do not get to the heart of that
cultural problem that exists between these agencies. That is amazing to
me, since we know one thing--that there was a breakdown in
communication between these two agencies.
I also happen to believe that massive reorganization is generally an
invitation to chaos and more bureaucracy. I began my political career a
long time ago in a small county of about 200,000 people. We found that
when you combine agencies in the name of trying to be efficient,
oftentimes you have less accountability. That is what is happening
here--combining all of these agencies, with some 170,000 people,
creating all kinds of subheads, and so on and so forth.
So I am very worried. I hope to be proven wrong because this bill
will pass, but I am worried that there will be less accountability
rather than more. That is why I supported the Byrd amendment, way back
when we started this debate, which would create a Cabinet level
Homeland Security Director and a streamlined Homeland Security
Department, with people who would be held accountable, and with a way
for the Congress to continue to play a role as we develop this very
important agency. I thought that would have been the way to go. I was
proud to stand with Robert Byrd on his amendment.
I happen to believe in my heart of hearts that the President's change
of heart about the need for a homeland security department had a lot to
do with the fact that he is very interested in stripping away worker
protections. I have to believe that deep in my heart. Why do I say
that? Because of his actions. Of the 170,000 people in the new
Department, only 40,000 of them have worker protection, that is all.
There are people at the bottom of the barrel,
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in terms of pay; the secretaries, the janitors, the file clerks. I
don't understand--and I have said this before on the floor of the
Senate--why a President who calls himself ``compassionate'' would want
to take away the most minimum of rights from such people, endanger
their level of health care. I don't understand why this President would
have held up this bill all this time for that.
Now there is a compromise. I am glad a few more protections are
added. That is good. But I don't know how a person who says he is
compassionate could go after people who have the most minimal job
protections. They don't have the right to strike. No Federal employee
has the right to strike. They can scarcely collectively bargain given
the provisions of this bill. That, to me, is a sour note in this debate
and continues to weigh on my heart--that maybe this President changed
his mind, in part, because of this ``opportunity'' to take after these
workers. It is really a sad thing to me.
If we look at the economy today--and I know my colleague from West
Virginia gets this because he talks to me about it all the time--it is
a tough economy we have. The fact is, in the last couple of years, as
the President came into power, we have seen a tremendous loss of
private sector jobs. More jobs have been lost than at any time in 50
years. We know what is happening to people's retirement security
because of the stock market, with the worst performance in more than 50
years. People are frightened. So why do you go after 40,000 workers and
give them insecurity?
We heard yesterday that the President is going to move more than
800,000 jobs into the private sector from the Federal Government--more
than 800,000 jobs. At a time when people are feeling insecurity, he is
going to throw them out into the marketplace where they will have very
little security. There is something missing here that is upsetting to
me.
So here we are. In my opinion, we have a bad choice to make when we
finally vote on homeland security. I will make what I consider to be
the best of that bad choice--a choice between no homeland security bill
and one that I believe was thrown together in a way that is going to
make it less accountable and is going to hit a lot of bumps in the
road. Taking FEMA and putting it in there--what will happen when we
have an earthquake in California? What is going to happen with the
Coast Guard when they have to do search and rescue? These are troubling
questions to me.
We will have that choice to make. That is life. We often don't have
great choices here, and we will make that decision. But one thing I
know I am going to vote for with great pride on Monday is the Daschle-
Lieberman amendment.
I see a couple of colleagues on the floor who care about these
issues, and I want to recognize my friend from Michigan, who called us
together today to explore the ramifications of a particular rider that
was added in the dead of night. I will explain it, and I hope she will
engage me in a bit of a colloquy.
In the dead of night, with no one watching, after we thought we had
made the compromise on these workers, a few things were snuck into this
bill. A big campaign contributor of the Republican Party was rewarded
phenomenally. A provision was added to the homeland security bill that
protected that big contributor but it has nothing to do with homeland
security or protecting the American people. In fact, I say that this
provision which was added will create insecurity in our homeland by
sending a message to thousands of families that their children's health
takes a distant second to the interests of large, wealthy, powerful
corporate America.
Let me explain. In my State of California, autism--a very haunting
and mysterious brain disorder--has increased an astonishing 273 percent
over the last decade and a half. Dr. Neil Halsey, a respected
pediatrician and an expert in vaccination, for years said there was no
connection between vaccines and autism. I am quoting from an article
that appeared in Sunday's New York Times. There is ``some real risk to
children,'' he said, ``from vaccines that contain mercury. It is used
as a preservative in some of these vaccines.''
So what provisions did the Republicans put into the bill? A provision
that holds harmless the company that produces Thimerosal, a mercury-
based preservatives for vaccines.
What does that have to do with homeland security? Absolutely nothing.
Childhood vaccines have nothing to do at all with homeland security.
What does it mean if this stands and we don't have the guts to strip it
out? What does it mean to real people who are fighting this disease?
Many of the families have filed class action lawsuits because--if you
have ever seen an autistic child, although their symptoms range from
mild to severe, in severe cases you are talking about essentially 24-
hour care for that child. What will these families have to do? They
will have to go to a taxpayer fund--a compensation fund that taxpayers
pay for--which has very little money left in it, which is capped at an
amount that will never pay for the cost of raising a child with this
terrible disease.
We heard testimony on the House side that some families trying to
collect from this compensation fund have had to fight for 10 years to
receive their awards.
All the while, if this special interest rider passes, the companies
that cause the problems will continue about their business. There is a
lot about this rider which is upsetting and disturbing.
First of all, how would you feel if you were a parent of a young
child and all of a sudden, without any science, you have a liability
waiver for this mercury compound? They are going to think: My goodness,
if the Republicans--the Bush administration--is protecting their
biggest contributors, maybe they know something we do not know; that
this is really a problem because why would they bother doing it if they
were not worried?
This has nothing to do with homeland security. If it did, they would
have said smallpox vaccines; they would have cited the vaccines.
There are moments when I wonder why we are here if we are not willing
to stand up and fight for the American people. The special interests,
the powerful interests have so much behind them. They can so easily
hire the lawyers they need, the representatives they need to come here
to lobby. But the average family that gets struck with this type of a
tragedy, all they have is the love in their family to get them through.
What are we doing here? We have to help these people, not have a
special interest provision that is put in in the dead of night that
says to them: We do not care about you; we do not care about your kids;
and if you have to suffer through, too bad, because we are going to
protect the people who write the large contributions.
(Mr. ROCKEFELLER assumed the chair.)
Ms. STABENOW. Will my friend from California yield?
Mrs. BOXER. I will be happy to yield to my friend.
Ms. STABENOW. On that point, we actually have counted the number of
pharmaceutical lobbyists in the Senate. There are six lobbyists for
every Member of the Senate: Six for me, six for the Senator from
California, six for the Senator from New Jersey. Six lobbyists are
being paid full time to lobby and bring in these kinds of provisions
and also to kill other provisions.
We passed legislation to lower prescription drug prices for everyone,
to increase competition of generic drugs, and open the border to
Canada. There is a bill that has been languishing in the House for
months that has been stopped by the same group that could take the time
at the last minute to put this outrageous provision into the homeland
security bill.
I thank the Senator from California for her eloquence and for
standing up for families, because as a mother--and I know she is as
well--it is outrageous to think that parents who are concerned about
their children will not have an opportunity to have their day in court
over something that potentially is extremely damaging and hurtful to
them.
Mrs. BOXER. I thank my friend for her leadership. I point out to my
colleagues who are here that four desks down from me sat Paul Wellstone
for 12 years. If Paul was here now, he would be stepping outside that
desk and telling us: Now is the time to stand up for people, for
children, for people without a voice.
[[Page S11187]]
Autistic kids sometimes cannot talk. We have to stand up and be
counted on Monday when this vote takes place and take the consequences
if somebody gets mad at us here or there because there is no reason to
be here if we do not protect the people of this country.
Mr. President, I am not going to take the Senate's time anymore. I
have expressed myself. I look forward to casting a vote on the Daschle-
Lieberman amendment to strike this rider and the other riders that were
attached at the last minute, which I think is just a blatant attempt to
give out special favors to the detriment of the American people.
I thank the Chair, and I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
Mr. CORZINE. I thank the Chair.
Mr. President, before I begin, I commend the Senator from California
on raising not only the issue regarding childhood vaccines but the
whole issue of adding riders about which I am going to speak in a
moment on a whole series of issues. It makes a complicated and
troubling piece of legislation even more difficult to weigh and balance
as to whether it is truly one that gets us to a more secure future for
America. All of us want to protect our freedoms and protect the lives
of citizens across this country, but one has to think about it in the
context of what is the give and take and whether it actually works.
My first comment is not dissimilar to what I heard from a number of
Members who are supportive and not supportive of the direction we are
taking. It is hard to conceive of how we can put 170,000 or 175,000
people together who had trouble in the organization that was in place
before when it was smaller and more manageable and come up with a sense
of security that we are actually going to make things better by pushing
them together.
At least in my experience in my private life, sometimes mergers do
not always amount to what is intended, and value is not always created.
It certainly leads to a question of whether we have the flexibility and
responsiveness in an organizational structure.
I am certainly troubled by the idea of creating a larger organization
made up of parts that apparently have not been working so well
historically. Clearly, we need to take positive steps. It may very well
be we are doing that with the proposal with regard to homeland
security, but at least as one individual, I am troubled with the
overall size of the operation and whether it will bring about the
responsiveness to the need, which I think all of us feel quite clearly
needs to be addressed, of protecting the American people.
I also am equally concerned about a number of these provisions that
were added in a closed manner.
I have to second my colleague's comments with regard to liability
protection for pharmaceutical companies on vaccines. That should be an
issue that is debated openly and understood. It should be fully vetted.
It is an open question about whether this is a serious problem, but I
do not think adding it as a rider that is particularly attractive to a
particular segment is germane to the context of homeland security. It
attacks the fundamental premise about which we are talking.
I wish to relate that to something about which I will talk which is
really the heart of my comments today--chemical plant security--which I
think is missing from the homeland security debate.
It is also troubling and hard to understand why pieces of the
Wellstone amendment which prohibited contracting with corporate
expatriates is pulled out of the bill. We have some adds and we have
some drops. I am not sure why we are doing that. This was unanimously
accepted by the Senate. I find it very difficult to understand why we
are resourcing, promoting, or allowing those companies which choose not
to be supportive of America with their tax dollars to have equal access
and participate in contracting with the Federal Government with regard
to homeland security issues.
It is hard for me to understand why this particular amendment was
dropped. There are a whole series of these. There are special earmarks
for a given university. There are liability protection issues that
really get at tort reform debates which we ought to have on the Senate
floor--no question about that--with regard to airport screening,
negligent manufacturing of homeland security devices. All of those
issues should be the subject of fair debates. So why are they added as
a so-called element of compromise, on the floor of the Senate, without
a debate? It is unclear to me, other than we are more interested in
rewarding special interests than the general interests, which is what I
think is the basic theme of both the administration and certainly
Senator Lieberman's initial proposal coming out of the Governmental
Affairs Committee with regard to homeland security. There is a need. We
all embrace that concept and think we should move forward.
For the life of me, I do not understand why we are putting down new
barriers to the Transportation Security Agency with respect to rules
for rail transportation in this country--it is one of those areas of
vulnerability assessments that almost anyone would talk about--other
than we are responsive to special interests and that it is going to
cost too much.
As I earlier entered into a colloquy with the senior Senator from
West Virginia on the freedom of information activities, I continue to
be troubled as to why we are writing a blank check to cover up the kind
of advisory meetings that could be held with private industry, hand-
picked advisers, with regard to setting policy within an
administration.
There may be things that should be carved out from public view, but
when private sector individuals can have a perspective of conflict of
interest in the advice, it seems perfectly clear that ought to be made
available to the American public, and I am very troubled by the blank
check mentality we are taking with regard to secret activity,
particularly when it involves the private sector.
We have had that debate with regard to our energy policies, and I
think we are now making that a normal course of events.
So for all of those reasons--and those are mostly adds, except for
maybe the drop with regard to the Wellstone initiative--I am troubled.
Finally, this National Commission on September 11 and the review, to
me, is incomprehensible. Hopefully we will find another way to bring
this back, but in my 30 years in the world of management I have never
seen a situation where you have a failure, a breakdown, a problem that
people do not stand back and say, what went wrong and what could we
have done differently to make sure we are secure going forward, without
an independent review that people can have confidence that all of the
facts are laid upon the table, including, by the way, observing whether
congressional oversight is operated with its most effective provision.
I find it difficult to understand why we are investing so much with
so great certainty about the direction we should be taking with regard
to homeland security.
As I said, this is going to be a tough weekend for me because I have
trouble with the conceptual issue of putting so many people together.
Now that the senior Senator from West Virginia is present, we could
argue that the Constitution he is carrying in his pocket would also
raise serious questions about some of the authorities there. These
special additions and drops at the end are particularly concerning to
me.
So for all of those reasons, this is going to be a very difficult
weekend for weighing and balancing these various elements because, like
everyone else, and particularly for the people of New Jersey who lost
691 lives on September 11, there is an expectation that we have a
responsibility to protect our homeland. It is obvious. It is self-
evident. But it is not obvious and self-evident that we are, in my
view, improving dramatically that effort.
I certainly believe there are risks in the transition from where we
are today to the full implementation of this measure and that we may
very well be operating under the analogy that people talk about of
running a marathon while you are performing open heart surgery. Whether
we are going to be more secure while that process is going on in the
midst of a war is an open question. It has not been proven to me that
we are actually developing greater certainty.
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Now, there is another issue which has not been discussed on which I
have worked very hard through most of this year and feel deeply about
because it deeply impacts my State. Actually, it impacts almost every
State in the Union.
I see the ranking member from the Committee on Environment and Public
Works, the Senator from New Hampshire, who has heard much of this
discussion in the committee, which I think is something that is missing
from this bill, and that is the need to protect Americans from attacks
on our Nation's privately owned chemical facilities.
I realize this is also one of those things that is futile in the
context of the cloture debate, but it is absolutely essential that
America be aware of an issue that needs to be focused on and needs to
be moved forward. I would be remiss in not having brought this farther
in the process, and hopefully this discussion and the efforts that have
gone on before will keep it in the debate, in the committees, and in
this new Department which is most certainly going to come to pass.
I will discuss it in the context that there are literally thousands
of chemical facilities in the United States where a chemical release
could expose tens of thousands of Americans to highly toxic gases. That
is why these facilities are potentially so attractive to terrorists. As
a matter of fact, if one goes to a chemical facility in Israel, they
will see it protected by a security infrastructure that is not unlike
what one would see at a nuclear powerplant in the United States.
As I will relate, if someone visits some of these facilities in the
United States, they will see an entirely different standard by which we
are securing them. In fact, there are currently no Federal security
standards for chemical facilities--none--so that the private sector is
left to do whatever it desires or believes it can afford. It is a
completely voluntary situation.
Many facilities simply have not fulfilled their responsibilities, in
my view. Many are certainly vulnerable to attack. As the statistics and
studies show, literally millions of Americans are at risk. They are at
risk in New Jersey. If one flies into Newark Airport and looks at the
chemical plant storage facilities, the refining facilities that are
right in the path of the landing strips, they will get a sense of the
kind of exposure we have.
Also, if one looks at how easy it is to access, which I will speak
more clearly to in a minute, they get an even greater sense of the
insecurity with regard to this area of our infrastructure.
According to the EPA, there are 123 facilities in 24 States where a
chemical release could expose more than 1 million people to highly
toxic chemicals. One of these plants in New Jersey has exposure to 7\1/
2\ million people inside the metropolitan region of New York. A lot of
chemical plants are located in our urban communities, not scattered out
into the hinterland but right smack dab in the middle of where we have
high concentrations of populations. There are about 750 facilities in
39 States where chemical release could expose more than 100,000 people
to toxic chemicals. There are nearly 3,000 facilities spread across 49
States where a chemical release could expose more than 10,000 people to
highly toxic chemicals.
I think the numbers speak for themselves, and they are
staggering. There is a large exposure in a broad context in our Nation.
A single attack on a facility could unleash highly toxic chemicals
such as chlorine, ammonia, and hydrogen fluoride that cause widespread
injuries and death. Considering the literally thousands of potentially
deadly facilities across the country, we cannot escape the conclusion
that it represents a major vulnerability, a major homeland security
problem.
It is not just my opinion. In fact, the Justice Department issued a
report on this matter a year and a half before September 11. I will
read a brief excerpt from a summary of the report issued April 18,
2000.
We have concluded the risk of terrorists attempting in the
foreseeable future causing industrial, chemical release is
both real and credible . . . Increasingly, terrorists
engineer their attacks to cause mass casualities to the
populace and/or more large-scale damage to property.
Terrorists or other criminals are likely to view the
potential of chemical release from an industrial facility as
a relatively attractive means of achieving these goals.
That report was issued before September 11. Its conclusions have been
echoed by several other Government agencies and individuals since.
For example, Governor Ridge said the following in recent testimony
before EPW:
The fact is, we have a very diversified economy and our
enemies look at some of our economic assets as targets. And
clearly, the chemical facilities are one of them. We know
that there have been reports validated about security
deficiencies at dozens and dozens of those.
Let me talk about the reports Governor Ridge may have been referring
to. Earlier this year, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review conducted a major
investigation of western Pennsylvania. Here is what they found:
A Pittsburgh Tribune-Review investigation has shown that
intruder has unfettered access to 30 of the region's
deadliest stockpiles of toxins and explosives, despite
repeated warnings from the Federal intelligence agencies to
safeguard large chemical tanks.
This Tribune-Review went on to say:
Security was so lax at the 30 sites that in broad daylight
a Trib reporter--wearing a press pass and carrying a camera--
could walk or drive right up to tanks, pipes and control
rooms considered key targets for terrorists.
After this initial story, the Tribune-Review expanded the scope of
investigation. They went to Houston, Baltimore, and Chicago to see if
what they found in western Pennsylvania was a fluke. They looked at 30
or more facilities in 3 other States and the findings were equally
disturbing.
I point out in metropolitan New York the local television station has
done similar sorts of walk-ons to chemical plant facilities, including
the one that has the 7.5 million people exposure in metropolitan New
York.
This is troubling, to say the least. There is a pattern. Perhaps that
is why the chemical industry got low marks for post-September 11
terrorism response.
On September 10 of this year, the Washington Post graded critical
infrastructure sectors, giving the chemical industry a D. Newsweek,
which is owned by the same people, did a similar piece. They were even
tougher. Newsweek gave the chemical industry an F. I have seen this
repeatedly in a number of surveys of America's infrastructure.
While some companies may be doing everything they can, and I know
there are some that are working very hard, they are concerned about it
for security reasons and protecting their people and maybe themselves.
But the fact is we need to do a lot more. We need to be a lot more
certain the breadth of the industry is being attended to.
That is why in October 2001 I introduced the Chemical Security Act.
That is why I worked with Senators on both sides of the aisle to move
the bill through the EPW Committee. This is the hard part. Ultimately,
the committee approved the legislation on a vote of 19-to-0. Not a
single Senator voted no. I note Senator Inhofe did, in fairness,
express concerns about the bill at markup and I agreed to continue to
work with him on those issues afterwards, particularly so we could
potentially add it as an amendment to homeland security.
In fact, as I suggested, I talked with other Members and we tried to
keep the concerns of the bill, deal with them, and while I will not go
through the post-markup negotiations, there were substantial revisions
so it could get added to the bill. Unfortunately, we have not been able
to get to conclusion in that process even though it was a 19-to-0 vote
in committee for it. Sometimes I wonder whether special interests
sometimes trump the people's interests.
I will not be offering my amendment; it is not germane. But I think
we need to come back and go to work on this issue as soon, as
forcefully, as possible. It is absolutely relevant to homeland security
and protecting the American people. I know that is the case in New
Jersey.
I will not go through it in detail, but the first thing we have to do
is be very specific about identifying high priority chemical
facilities. That can be done relatively straightforwardly. It will take
cooperation between EPA and the new Homeland Security Department. There
is some debate about that. We
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need a list. It does not have to be published on the front page of the
New York Times, but we need to understand what the exposures are and
get about protecting the American people.
Second, we need to have audits of what that process is so there is a
reality to what has been talked about. There is not a moral hazard
saying we have done something and nothing really has occurred.
In a nutshell, that is what this is about. It is a little more
complicated than that in detail, but I suggest this is something that
really should be a priority when we return. I hope we do not face the
stonewalling that has come up from some elements in the industry. The
need to act is urgent. This is, by the way, consistent with some of the
things other people who have looked at homeland security on a broader
basis have talked about.
I will quote from a recent op-ed piece by Warren Rudman and Gary
Hart, who have been following homeland security as effectively as any
two Americans studying this. They have an op-ed page written in October
of this year:
America's corporate leaders must accept their new
responsibilities to protect the privately owned critical
infrastructure and cease the behind-the-scenes lobbying
against measures requiring them to do so. If necessary, the
President must deliver this message bluntly and directly.
Some of those things that were added in the middle of the night, the
kind of experience that I have experienced with regard to trying to
deal with chemical plant security, is indicative that that process of
resisting, protecting the American people, is not fully embraced in the
private sector.
I could not agree more. We need to work together as a Congress, with
the administration, and deal with this issue.
Homeland security in general, time is of the essence, as someone said
around here. It is not neutral. So I hope we can move very quickly on
this. I am sorry we have not been able to deal with this. There are
some good voluntary efforts with regard to chemical security. But I
don't think we have gone far enough. Voluntary efforts alone are not
going to be sufficient. We need to work in Congress to make it happen.
Finally, I am proud to be an author, a promoter, a sponsor of this
legislation with regard to chemical plants. I am also proud to be a
cosponsor of the Daschle amendment that will deal with some of these
other special interests. I think the two relate in the sense that we
are not all on the same page pushing forward to protect the American
people on homeland security. We need to get there. With both the
private sector and the public sector.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent that there be debate only on the
matter now before the Senate until 3:30 today.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. REID. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Corzine). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, if the Chair will bear with me momentarily.
Mr. President, over recent weeks as the President crisscrossed the
Nation on campaign stops--campaign stop after campaign stop--he used a
number of gimmicks, including this legislation, to rally support for
his chosen candidates. He painted this bill as a panacea for the
terrorist threats that plague us and challenged this Congress to pass
this bill quickly.
On each occasion, as I followed the newspaper accounts of the
President's stops during the campaign, the President left the
impression among the public that this bill is urgently needed, and that
it will make life safer for American families. But there was much he
didn't say. Here is what the people can expect after the Congress
approves this legislation to transfer 28 agencies and offices to a new
Homeland Security Department.
Next February, the President will submit a plan--his plan--to the
Congress about how he intends to transfer 28 agencies and offices into
a massive new Department over the period of just 12 months. We don't
know what is in the President's plan today, and we will not know what
is in the President's plan when and if Congress passes this bill and it
goes to the Chief Executive for his signature.
We will not know what is in the President's plan. After we have
passed this bill and it becomes law, the President will then inform the
Congress about how he intends to reorganize, consolidate, and
streamline these 28 agencies as they are moved into the new Department.
He will not seek approval of the Congress--the elected representatives
of the people. He will not seek our approval. He will not need to
because--according to the provisions of this bill on which we are being
hurried and stampeded to act, according to the provisions of this
bill--he will simply drop the plan in the laps of the committees so
they can be informed about what he intends to do. He will not be asking
for their approval. We will have already given our approval when we
pass this bill.
I hope Senators understand that. When we pass this bill, we, the
Congress, are out of it. The President will in due time submit his
plan. In due time he will inform the Congress as to what he intends to
do. He won't have to ask us if we approve of what he is going to do. We
will have already said to him: Here it is. You submit your plan.
According to the provisions of this bill, your plan will go into effect
in due time. And we will not have any more to say about it.
He will simply drop the plan. It will not fall like manna from
heaven, because it won't come from heaven. This is what we are
authorizing the President to do when we adopt this bill that is before
the Senate.
Here it is. Those who are watching this floor through the electronic
lenses before us, here is the bill. It is made up of 484 pages. These
pages are not like reading ``Robinson Crusoe'' or Milton's ``Paradise
Lost.'' They are very difficult pages to understand. On only a single
page there may be many references to various and sundry laws that are
already on the statute books, so that in order to understand what may
be on a single page, we have to go back, look at the references, and go
back to those statutes that have been on the books--some of them--for
many years or decades. We have to go back and see what those laws
contain before we understand what is on a single written page. It is
not like reading a novel. In some senses, it is made to sound like a
fairy tale. But it is indeed not a fairy tale.
This is a bill that affects you--a bill that affects those two
members of the staff back here who are talking. This is a bill that
affects you. This is a bill that will affect you, each of you--you,
you, you, you, each Senator. Each of those persons out there who are
watching this debate--it is really not a debate. There is only one
Senator talking here and one Senator listening and one Senator in the
chair. So there are not too many Senators here. Hopefully, they are
watching from their offices, as we all do.
This is the bill. Let me say it again: 484 pages of complicated
material.
How long have we had it? A little over 48 hours. It came to us early
in the morning on the day before yesterday. Today is Friday--early in
the morning of Wednesday. There it is. There is the whole thing--the
whole thing. I don't know what is in it. I know about some of the
things that are in it. But no Senator in here knows everything that is
in this bill. I daresay that. I would be happy for any Senator to stand
on his feet and challenge me on that and say: Hold up here a minute; I
know everything that is in it.
We are authorizing the President to submit this plan. He can do it
without our subsequent approval. This legislation authorizes the
President to reorganize, consolidate, or streamline these 28 agencies
and offices any way he chooses--any way he, that one man, the President
of the United States--as these various agencies are moved into the new
Department.
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All this legislation asks of the President of the United States is
that he let us know what he has decided. That is not asking a lot from
the Chief Executive of this country. That is all he needs to be
concerned about. All he needs to be concerned about is to explain what
he plans to do. Too late. I am sorry to say to any of you Senators that
you can't do anything about this. You have already given him the
approval. When you vote aye on this 484-page bill, you will have given
the President the approval that he needs. You can be sorry for what you
have done. You can crab about it and be cranky and wish you had not
done it. But it is too late now.
You remember that old song: ``It is too late now.'' Well, it will be
too late for any of us--too late.
We can weep and gnash our teeth--if we have any teeth left. And I
happen to have my full set after 85 years. I have a full--I can't say
quite a full set. But I have lost about I think four teeth in my
lifetime of 85 years. These are real teeth. I can't take them out at
night and scrub them, wash them, and put them in a big glass of water.
I can't do that. They are real. They are real teeth. And they can bite,
thank God. We didn't have all of this fancy medicine and all of these
fancy health programs that the young people and children have today,
with which mothers and fathers are blessed. We didn't have anything
like that in those days.
So all I have is what the good Lord gave me through my mother's and
father's genes. Well, that is all I have.
So here we are. I can gnash my teeth. They are real teeth. I can
gnash those teeth. I seldom show them around here, but they are there.
I can gnash my teeth, and complain all I want, and say I wish I had
known--I wish I had known. Well, it is too late now. That will be the
way it is.
He can move these agencies any way he chooses. All this legislation
asks the President to do is: You please just tell us what your plan is.
Will you do that? Please, just tell us what your plan is.
There are 1.8 million people in West Virginia whom I represent, and
who are represented by my colleague, Senator Rockefeller.
My people, my 1.8 million, would love to know what those plans are.
But bless his name, the President does not have to tell us today. And
we don't ask him. But we will get on our knees and fold our hands and
say: Mr. President, will you just please tell us, when you are ready,
what you plan to do? You can do it now. Here is the bill. We are
passing it today, but just please tell us what you are going to do.
All this legislation asks is that the President let us know what he--
he, the President of the United States. He will be with us 2 more
years, maybe 6. Who knows. But anyhow, this man down here in the White
House, one man out of 280 million, he will tell us what he plans to do.
A few months after we receive the President's proposal--after he is
so generous to come up here and tell us what he plans to do--a few
months after we receive his proposal, we will begin reading articles in
newspapers and magazines. I am going to come back to the floor--the
Lord willing, if He lets me live--I am going to come back on the floor
and remind my colleagues; I am going to remind all these staff people
around here: This is what I told you. I told you.
After we start reading all these articles in newspapers and magazines
about special advisory committees--this is exactly what that Senator
who is sitting in the Chair right now, the Senator from New Jersey, Mr.
Corzine, talked about this morning. He told us about it. He told us
about these special advisory committees. And they will have been
established, by the new Homeland Security Secretary, to make
recommendations about certain homeland security-related issues.
Now, look at that. I hope Senators will go back and read today's
Record or that of the first of the week about what Senator Corzine had
to say about this, yes, about certain homeland security-related issues.
Possibly, we will hear about an advisory committee being
established--maybe we will see it in the Federal Registry, that an
advisory committee has been established--to make recommendations about
how the new Directorate of Information Analysis can look at our e-mail
accounts. This will not be a laughing matter. I will tell you, this
will not be a laughing matter.
Now, let me say that again. Possibly, we will hear about an advisory
committee that has been established to make recommendations about how
the new Directorate of Information Analysis can look at our e-mail
accounts, can look at our banking transactions, can look at our
telephone conversations, or can even look at our credit card
transactions.
I don't have any credit cards. Let them look at mine. They can't look
at my credit card transactions. I grew up the old-fashioned way. I pay
for it as I get it. No credit card for Robert C. Byrd, or the Mrs. But
to those who have credit cards, he can look at your credit card
transactions to trace everything you purchase from butter to bullets.
Welcome, Big Brother. How do you like that?
The American people will want to know, and will deserve to know, what
recommendations are being made to the Homeland Security Secretary. The
press will try to provide the public with answers. But under this bill,
you can be sure that the press will not be allowed to access the
minutes of those committee meetings. That is what we are making
possible by the passage of this legislation. We are making it possible
for the American public not to know what these special committees
are considering. And the public will not be able to find out because
this bill--this bill--here it is; 484 pages, new, never been in a
committee, never seen the light of day in a committee meeting. There is
no analysis of this bill that I know of from any departments here.
There have been no witnesses appearing before Senate committees
supporting this bill. Nobody had any committee markup that I know
about. This bill just suddenly emerged out of the darkness on the
morning of Wednesday, the evening of Tuesday night. There it was.
But that bill--that bill--will allow the new Secretary to exempt such
advisory committees from the public disclosure laws that are on the
books now that enable the press--the fourth estate--and the American
public to find out what these advisory committees are doing.
This bill will allow the Secretary to drop a veil, to bring the
curtain of secrecy down, to drop a veil of secrecy over these advisory
committees and hide their work from the press--from the all-seeing eyes
of the press--and from the public.
Do you want to vote for that? Is that what you Senators want to vote
for? Is that what your constituents want you to vote for, Senators? I
hope, if you are not hearing me now, that your staffs are listening. I
hope, if you don't hear me, that somebody will show it to you in the
Record on Monday morning what Senator Corzine, the distinguished able
Senator from New Jersey, who presides over this Senate at this moment,
I hope they will read what he said and what I am saying here about
these advisory committees and about what we are about to let happen.
And here is the bill that will allow it to happen.
I hope you Senators who vote on this matter--probably one day next
week--will have to answer to your constituents for that. I have been in
this Congress 50 years, and I have cast many votes. I have cast more
votes, than any Senator who ever lived, in the Senate of this Republic.
And I just have to say, I have cast some votes that were critical
votes, but I think that what we are doing in this bill, more than
anything else I have voted on in my 50 years in Congress, is shifting
power to an administration, shifting power to a President.
I would say this: God, so help me--and God could drop me in my tracks
right here in this moment if I were not saying what I believe--I would
say the same thing about this bill if it were a Democratic President in
the White House.
I have no ax to grind. I am not on the payroll of any pharmaceutical
company or any other company in this country. I am on the people's
payroll right here in this Senate. That is it. So I have no ax to
grind. I am just saying that if it were a Democratic President in the
White House, I would be standing here today saying the very same thing.
It isn't because the current President of the United States is a
Republican. That is not it. But there is something about this
Republican administration that is far different from
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what I have seen in former Republican administrations. And I served
under Republican administrations, beginning with the Eisenhower
administration.
This is a different kind of administration. This is a bill that I
will vote against regardless of who might be in the office of the
President. This bill will allow the Secretary to drop a veil of secrecy
over these advisory committees and hide their works from the press and
the public.
So what we are doing when we vote next week on this bill, if we vote
next week, what we are doing is putting our hands over our eyes, and we
are saying the public has no right to know. We are taking away the
public's right to know.
That is what we are about to do to you out there in the land, across
the land, across the plateaus, the Plains, the mountains, the valleys.
That is what we are saying to you. You may not catch us at it, but that
is what we are doing to you. That is exactly what we are doing to your
right to know.
Later in the year, the people may begin to read in the newspapers
about start-up problems in this vast new Department. The papers will
possibly report about a failure by the new Immigration Service to deny
entry to a known terrorist because the relevant immigration officials
were too preoccupied with moving their offices, reconnecting their
computers, reinstalling their phones, or even changing the heading on
their stationery to handle their primary responsibility; namely,
protecting our borders.
This would bring about a clamoring of public disgust as agency
officials are found to be too busy organizing their offices to properly
handle their duties. Editorials will appear around the country
remarking about the failures of the new Department, and the public very
well may have reason to lose trust in that Department.
These kinds of high-profile debacles could carry over to the
Transportation Security Administration, the Customs Service, FEMA, the
Coast Guard, or any of the 28 agencies and offices and 170,000
employees being transferred to the new Department. Senators may well
read a few months from now about Federal workforces in their home
States and the jobs of Federal employees being privatized under the
labor rules included in this bill.
Don't say that you were not warned, I say to my colleagues. Don't say
that you were not warned.
The Washington Post reported today that the administration plans to
open as many as 850,000 Federal jobs to private contractors. Have you
read it? If you haven't, go to today's Washington Post. Look for that
story. It is there. Read it with your own eyes, and you will believe
it. What a nice plum that is for the big business friends of the
administration. How about that? What a shortsighted, ill-conceived
political gimmick it is. What a hoax it is to play on the taxpayers.
Privatization has nothing whatsoever to do with improving security.
Look at the private security firms that were in charge at some of our
Nation's largest airports on September 11. Remember reading about these
in the newspaper? Go back and look at some of those old newspapers. Is
more of that what this administration really wants? I ask, is more of
that what this administration really wants?
The Wall Street Journal editorialized today about the fallacy of
pushing this bill through at such a late date.
Now, imagine that. The Wall Street Journal. Hear me now. Paul Revere
awakened Concord. I would like to be able to awaken this Senate and the
other body. Do you suppose I could do that? Paul Revere did that. He
was able to awaken Concord. Get out of your beds; the redcoats are
coming.
Let me say that again. The Wall Street Journal editorialized today
about the fallacy of pushing this bill through at such a late date.
How many of our Senators today voted for cloture? If Senators had
read the Wall Street Journal, the editorial today about the fallacy of
pushing this bill through at such a late date, would the Senators who
voted yes--and I implored and I importuned and I urged, which I seldom
do, I urged Senators right there in front of that desk, that table in
the well of the Senate. There were several Senators I urged: Please
don't vote for cloture today. You can vote for it next week perhaps,
but don't vote today. Let's take a little more time and study this
bill.
The answer I got: Well, you have the weekend. You have 30 hours. You
have 30 hours; isn't that enough?
Do we have? No. We have already been told by the minority: You won't
be able to offer any more amendments.
The only amendment that is going to be offered is the amendment that
has been offered by the majority leader, Mr. Daschle, that amendment on
behalf of Senator Lieberman, and I added my name to it afterwards, when
I saw what was going on. So there it is, the Daschle-Lieberman-Byrd
amendment.
But we are told by the current minority--soon to be the majority--
that you can't offer any more amendments. That is the only amendment we
are going to let you offer.
So how about that cloture now? I was told by some of my colleagues on
this side of the aisle: Well, you have the whole weekend. You can
study.
Who saw this thing coming? Who saw the situation coming in which we
would offer one amendment and we are told by our Republican friends,
that is it, no more; that is the only amendment that will be offered?
So what about it now, my colleagues who reminded me that we have this
weekend? Even under cloture, we have this weekend.
I said to one of the Senators who said that to me: I wasn't born
yesterday. I am not a new kid on the street here. I have been in this
Congress 50 years. I know a little something. I have learned a little
something about the rules of the Senate, and so forth.
But here we are, one amendment. That is all.
We are not going to be allowed to have any other votes on amendments,
except that one. ``You have 30 hours,'' I was told by Senators down in
the well there. ``Well, you have 30 hours; you have the weekend, and
your staff has the weekend. You have 30 hours.''
I have several amendments I would like to offer, but I cannot do it.
The tree is filled. Remember the tree at the Garden of Eden? It is the
first thing you read about in the Bible. The greatest scientific
treatise ever written is that first chapter of Genesis. That will tell
you more about science than many scientists today can tell you. It
tells you the order of things in which they were created. The
scientists of today will tell you that is the correct chronological
order. Go back and read that first chapter of Genesis and you will read
the chronological order of creation, and that was written thousands of
years ago. What a piece of science that is.
I have three grandsons, two of whom are physicists. I have a son-in-
law who is a physicist. I have a grandson who married a physicist. So
we have lots of physicists, lots of scientists in my family. But before
all those scientists came into being, the greatest scientific treatise
ever written had been written right there in the Book of Genesis. We
have no reason to stay dumb about how creation went forward. It is
right there.
Anyhow, there it is for us. So here the Wall Street Journal
editorialized today about the fallacy of pushing this bill through at
such a late date. Here were these great Senators who stood up there in
my face and two or three of them told me, ``Well, you have this
weekend, you have 30 hours,'' as though I didn't know that. How many
Senators would like to tell me that? One or two of them did. I did say
to one that this is not a new kid on the block. I know about that 30
hours.
Now look at what we have. I cannot offer an amendment, even though we
have 30 hours. The tree is filled. But it is not that tree in the
Garden of Eden. That is the tree of knowledge and we all can continue
to learn. But I cannot offer an amendment. Our Republican friends would
say you can go this far but no farther. You have an amendment pending,
but that's all. That is the only amendment you are going to have to
vote on before that 30 hours is up.
How do you like being given that kind of medicine? That is what we
have to deal with here. Here is what the Wall Street Journal said. Get
this:
There's little or nothing that this rump session can
accomplish that couldn't be done better starting anew in
January.
That reminds me of the distinguished Senator from Texas. I love him
in many ways, and I agree with him on
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occasion. He stood right here today and said, ``This bill is the best
you will get. How many in here are willing to believe that by putting
this over another 3 months they can get a better bill?'' I said, ``I
do.'' But that was his position, that this is the best bill you are
likely to get. Do I think we will get a better bill after 3 months in a
new Congress? Yes, I do. But that was his question.
I don't need to answer that. Let the Wall Street Journal answer that
question. Do you think you can get a better bill if you wait 3 months?
That is the question.
The first question that was ever asked was asked by God as He went
into the Garden of Eden and started looking for Adam--Adam and Eve in
that garden. God was walking in the cool of the day and he was looking
for Adam in that paradise setting. How lovely that must have been. Here
is old Adam over here somewhere under a tree, or back in the bushes,
with some figleaves hiding from God. God said: ``Adam, where art
thou?'' That was the first question ever asked.
The people are going to say to us: Senator, where were you? Those
Senators who voted for cloture, God love them--and I love them and I
respect their viewpoints. They have a right to cast the votes they want
to cast them. I don't like to tell them how to vote. But let my
constituents say: Robert, where were you? Where were you when you cast
that vote?
So here is what the Wall Street Journal would say:
There's little or nothing that this rump session can
accomplish that couldn't be done better starting anew in
January.
Hallelujah. Thank God for the Wall Street Journal. They answer the
question well--better than I.
There's little or nothing that this rump session can
accomplish that couldn't be done better starting anew in
January. That includes President Bush's priority of a new
Department of Homeland Security . . . the proposal is mostly
about rearranging the bureaucratic furniture . . . And as
with any bill whipped through this quickly, we can expect to
learn later about many bad ideas that deserved more scrutiny.
Mr. President, at a later moment, I will ask unanimous consent that
the entire editorial be printed in the Record but not at this point. I
suspect it won't be long before we begin to hear about the bad ideas
that deserved more scrutiny.
Some Senators may find comfort in the fact that this bill has been
touted as a compromise. It won't compare with the great compromise of
July 16, 1787, which created this Senate. If it had not been for that
compromise, you would not be here today, Mr. President. You would not
be presiding over a Senate of equals, regardless of the size of your
State, or the size of its population; you would not be in a Senate in
which two Senators from the smallest State would have the same
strength, as to their vote, as two Senators from the largest State in
the Union. I would not be here. The Senator from New Hampshire would
not be here. The Senator who is the minority leader from Mississippi
would not be here. The Senator who is the majority leader, the Senator
from South Dakota, would not be here. All of these pages, they would
not be here. No, this would not be the Senate. But it is that
Constitution--here it is; I hold it in my hand. Senators should, above
all people, become more acquainted with this Constitution.
Some Senators may find comfort in the fact that this bill has been
touted as a compromise. I don't know who this bill was a compromise
between, other than the White House and the congressional Republicans,
who already supported some version of the President's original plan.
Call me old-fashioned. Yes, there he is, there is that old-fashioned
guy. I am married to an old-fashioned sweetheart. Thank God for her.
She has been my sweetheart now for 65 years and going on quickly to the
66th. Thank God for that kind of an old-fashioned sweetheart. I hope
she thinks the same thing about her old-fashioned husband--ha, ha, ha,
that old-fashioned guy. That is the man. He has been around 85 years--
an old-fashioned guy.
I remember a time, Mr. President, when compromises were crafted by
individuals who had differing views on an issue. This kind of
compromise, this 484 pages--let me make sure I am right. Yes, it is 484
difficult, complicated, hard-to-read, harder-to-understand pages. There
it is. This kind of compromise is like legislative shadow boxing.
Have you ever tried boxing? I tried it, and I got knocked on my
anterior. That was the end of my boxing. I found I was not so good at
boxing. This kind of compromise here is like some kind of shadow
boxing. It would be laughable if it were not so serious. This kind of
compromise is like legislative shadow boxing--punching and jabbing and
sparring with absent opponents. The opponents are not there.
This ephemeral compromise makes no concessions with regard to the
President's efforts to exempt this new Department from public
disclosure law, such as the Federal Advisory Committee Act. You will
not find that spelled out, but you will find reference is made to it.
You have to go beyond the plain print in section 871. You have to go
beyond the plain print. It is referenced there, but you have to go back
to the statute books to see what they are talking about.
This ephemeral compromise makes no concessions with regard to the
President's efforts to exempt the new Department from public disclosure
laws, such as the Federal Advisory Committee Act. It includes no
concessions with regard to the President's reorganizing the 28 agencies
and offices being transferred to this new Department without
congressional approval.
I have never seen anything like it. In 50 years in Congress, I have
never seen anything like it--never. All this without congressional
approval. It includes only token concessions to those who have
substantive, genuine reservations about this bill with regard to the
civil service and collective bargaining issues. How can we pretend that
this amendment is a serious attempt at a compromise when it is only an
agreement between the President and the few supporters of the
President's bill?
Oh, there are compromises in this. Yes, there are compromises in this
amendment. It compromises the rights of Federal workers. It compromises
the civil liberties of the American people out there. It compromises
your daddies' and mothers' civil liberties, the parents of these nice
pages we have here.
They are just the most wonderful people. They come here seeking to
understand the legislative process. What are they getting? They are not
getting the legislative process in this monstrosity. They are not
getting the legislative process. These--I said kids; these are young
people. They are all juniors in high school. They are at that tender
age where they learn quickly. They have come here wanting to learn the
legislative process. They are being cheated. I say to you young fine
pages here, I love you.
From time to time, I meet out in the corridor with the pages,
Republicans and Democrats. I tell them good stories, I mean wholesome
stories. That is right. They are wholesome stories. I tell them stories
in which there is a moral lesson. I tell them the story of the house
with the golden windows. I tell them the story written by that great
Russian, Tolstoy, ``How Much Land Does A Man Need?'' I tell them the
story about ``Acres of Diamonds'' that was told, I understand, 5,000
times by that great Chautauqua speaker, Russell Conwell.
I tell these pages good stories, wholesome stories. I talk about the
Bible. I talk about Milton. I talk about the Constitution. I talk about
history. I talk about Nathan Hale to these young people here. Bless
their hearts. I always am inspired when I talk to these young people.
These are the cream of the crop. Mind you, there are millions across
this country just like these. But they are being fooled. We are fooling
these young people.
They come here to learn the legislative process. What do they get
from this bill? This is not the legislative process. They do not learn
in this amendment. They will go back one day and they will say: I heard
Senator Byrd say that was not how our laws are made. No. We short
circuited that process on this amendment, this 484-page bill. Here it
is, 484 pages. What is in it? Don't ask me. I know a few things that
are in it, and I have heard other Senators talk about a few things that
were left out of it in the darkness of the night.
We talk about compromise. This 484-page monstrosity compromises the
civil liberties of the American public.
[[Page S11193]]
It compromises the constitutional doctrines of the separation of powers
and checks and balances that we find in the Constitution, which I hold
in my hand.
This bill compromises the notion that the Senate should debate and
amend legislation and act as the greatest deliberative body in the
world before passing massive--massive--reorganizations of the Federal
Government.
Mr. President, we have allowed ourselves to be stampeded, and I could
be as King Canute. A lot of King Canute's followers thought he could do
anything. He thought he would disabuse his followers of that fallacy,
that belief that King Canute could do anything. So he went down to the
sands of the oceanside, and he commanded the waves to be still. The
waves were not still. They did not go still, so the people finally
understood that King Canute could speak to the ocean and it would not
necessarily heed him.
I say that to say this, Mr. President: I might as well speak to the
ocean. I might as well be like King Canute as to speak to some of my
colleagues here. My speech would fall upon deaf ears, and they would
say: There he goes again, that old-fashioned guy who believes that we
ought to take the time; there he goes again.
We have allowed ourselves to be stampeded into passing this bill.
Afraid to be on the wrong side of this issue, we hear cries from both
sides of the aisle that we must support our President. We hear cries
of, ``My President,'' ``My party,'' ``My Commander in Chief.'' When
will we hear, Mr. President, ``My country''? When will we hear, ``My
country''?
Senators are obviously upset about the miscellaneous provisions that
were included in this bill at the last minute. The Washington Post this
morning outlined a number of these provisions ranging from language
that would help the FBI obtain customer information from Internet
service providers to language incorporated in the bill by the House
Republican leadership that gives Texas A&M--I do not believe it
mentioned Texas A&M--that gives Texas A&M the inside track in hosting
the first university center on homeland security to be established
within 1 year.
It will not say that in the bill. Senators will not find that in the
bill.
But the language in the bill is so targeted only that one--at least
that one institution would be most favored over others.
Probably the most egregious provision inserted is a White House-
backed provision designed to head off dozens of potential lawsuits
against Eli Lilly and Company and other pharmaceutical giants that are
being sued by parents who have linked their children's autism to those
companies' childhood vaccines.
How about that? I ask the distinguished Members of the other body.
How do they feel about having passed this bill with that kind of
language in it? Hear me over there at the other end of the Capitol.
Yes, explain your vote, explain your vote to your constituents. You,
back there in the other--we are not supposed to refer to the other body
in our speeches, but the other body passed this bill in a hurry.
Those in the other body who voted for this, go back and look at what
you voted for.
How much time do I have remaining, Mr. President?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has 5 minutes remaining.
Mr. SARBANES. Will the Senator yield to me on my time for a few
questions?
Mr. BYRD. Yes, I will be glad to yield.
Mr. SARBANES. May I have this counted against my time under cloture?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. SARBANES. I ask the distinguished Senator from West Virginia: In
July, the Brookings Institution issued a report concerning this
reorganization, and they said the following, and I am quoting from them
now:
Any fundamental reorganization represents a huge managerial
undertaking, one that becomes ever more daunting as the
number of agencies to be included increases. The danger is
that top managers will be preoccupied for months, if not
years, with getting the reorganization right, thus giving
insufficient attention to their real job, taking concrete
action to counter the terrorist threat at home.
This Brookings report advocated some consolidation of agencies, but
it proposed a much smaller, more streamlined consolidation, and the
report went on to say: ``Reorganization is not a panacea. In fact,
there is a risk that reorganization could interfere with, rather than
enhance, homeland security tasks.'' Certainly, changes should be made
only when there is a compelling case that consolidation offers clear
benefits.
I supported a proposal--and this leads up to my question--that the
Senator from West Virginia offered earlier in the consideration of this
issue, which would have undertaken to do a reorganization, but would
have phased it and would have brought it back at periodic times for
further scrutiny, examination, and implementation by the Congress. Was
that the approach which the Senator had taken?
Mr. BYRD. Yes, it was. Mr. President, if I may respond to the
distinguished Senator. The amendment I offered to the legislation that
was being proposed by Mr. Lieberman in his committee, the language I
offered with several cosponsors and supporters, such as the
distinguished Senator from Maryland, Mr. Sarbanes, would have provided
for the recommendations of the administration to come back to the
Congress periodically--every 4 months, for the next 12 months--which
recommendations would have to do with the phasing in of the various and
sundry agencies, a few at a time, three times, every 120 days. Some
of the agencies would be phased in.
Those recommendations would come back to the Congress and would go to
the appropriate committees having jurisdiction--in this case it would
be Mr. Lieberman's committee and his committee's counterpart in the
House of Representatives--and expedited procedures would require that
committee to act to bring out a bill implementing those
recommendations, or amending them or changing them. Then the Senate,
under expedited procedures, would proceed to call up that bill and pass
it. That would be done three times.
So the amendment which the distinguished Senator from Maryland refers
to would provide for a phased-in approach over the same period of time
that is going to be utilized by the President and the Secretary under
this bill--namely, 12 months--and over that same period of time a
phased-in approach with Congress still in the mix. Congress would still
have a say at each of these three junctures.
Mr. SARBANES. It seems to me that this is a far more sensible way to
proceed. First, I think it maintains a better balance with respect to
the roles of the executive and the legislative branches of our
Government. I think the Senator has been absolutely right to underscore
the fact that what is at stake here is a tremendous grant of authority
to the executive branch.
Mr. BYRD. Tremendous.
Mr. SARBANES. It is sweeping in its dimension.
Mr. BYRD. Sweeping.
Mr. SARBANES. Secondly, I think that review process is more likely,
far more likely, to produce beneficial results, because as the Senator
said earlier today, the more scrutiny and discussion you have, the
higher the likelihood--not a guarantee, but the higher the likelihood--
that you will have a better result.
As I have listened to the Senator over these weeks of the debate, I
have increasingly come to have very deep concerns about what we are
doing with this legislation. I feel for the Senator when he says people
are not--even now, as we near the last hour, focusing fully on the
implications and the consequences of what we are discussing.
Back in September, the Baltimore Sun published an editorial, and I
want to read a couple of paragraphs from it. This is from September 23
of this year:
Months of debate have made clear that this bureaucratic
boondoggle offers no promise of making the homeland more
secure. Worse, it takes the focus off the need for tighter
oversight of the Nation's security systems. President Bush
offered the most sweeping government reorganization in a half
a century, largely as a political and public relations
tactic. He was trying to counter Senate Democrats who were
advancing similar legislation of their own. He timed the
unveiling of his plan to drown out the testimony of FBI Agent
Coleen Rowley, who was blowing the whistle on the security
failures of her hidebound agency that blinded it to the clues
of the September 11 attacks. Shifting 22 Federal agencies and
170,000 workers into a new department will cost billions but
will do nothing to solve the problems agent Rowley
[[Page S11194]]
addressed. What is needed is greater sharing, coordination
and synthesis of the security information collected by the
myriad agencies. But this new department will not even
include the FBI and the CIA which are the two premier
intelligence gatherers. Nor is there any guarantee that
greater sharing would take place between them if they were
together.
I think this is right on point and parallels much of what the
Senator, as I understand it, has been arguing.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, before I respond to the distinguished
Senator from Maryland, I understand that the able Senator from Hawaii,
Mr. Akaka, has a unanimous consent request he would like to make. Will
the Senator from Maryland yield for that request since this is on his
time?
Mr. SARBANES. Certainly.
Mr. AKAKA. I thank the Senator from West Virginia and the Senator
from Maryland for yielding to me.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that my hour under cloture be
yielded to Senator Byrd.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, I thank the distinguished Senator from
Hawaii, Mr. Akaka, who is about to take the chair. He wanted to make
the request before he took the chair.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order now
in effect, that there be debate only until 3:30, be extended until 5
o'clock today.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BYRD. On the time of the distinguished Senator, let me be just a
little bit loquacious in my response. I have served in this Senate for
44 years and in the Congress for 50 years. In my time in the Senate and
in the House, the Senator from Maryland--I don't have to say this; I
don't owe the distinguished Senator from Maryland the tribute I am
about to say, except it is honest and he is entitled to it.
We often pass around our warm words of praise because we are Senators
and this is a happy family here. I admire this son of ancient Greece.
He is a son of Athens. He is American. He grew up in this country. His
parents came to this country. He knows what being an immigrants means.
He is a Rhodes scholar. I can't say that about Robert Byrd. But this
man from Maryland is a Rhodes scholar. He is a true son of Athens, a
son of the people whom Socrates, Sophocles, and Plato were a part. He
is one of the most thoughtful Senators I have ever seen.
When I was majority leader and when I was minority leader--thank
Heavens, thank Heavens that experience is in the background now; it is
long past--but when I was the leader duly elected by my colleagues, I
always had meetings in which I tried to get from the most brilliant,
most thoughtful Senators on my side of the aisle, their thoughts, their
opinion, their advice as to this or that issue, whatever issue might be
before the Senate or about to come before the Senate. Paul Sarbanes was
one who was always there. He was never out of the room. Not because he
was the ``yes'' American. He wasn't, by any means. But I knew I would
get the real stuff from Paul Sarbanes.
Here is a man who is head and shoulders above some Senators with whom
I have served, and I have served with a great many Senators. This man
is a true thinker. We have seen the picture of The Thinker. This is the
thinker, Paul Sarbanes.
A little while ago he said something which brought to my mind the
words of William Wordsworth who said: No matter how high you may be in
your department, you are still responsible for the actions of the
lowliest clerk in your department.
I forget now what the Senator said, but it brought that thought to
mind. We are talking about 28 agencies. Who is going to be responsible
for the lowliest clerk's actions in this conglomeration, the epitome of
chaos that will occur?
I thank the distinguished Senator from Maryland. Please, if he has
something further I will sit down at any moment. If he has anything
further of me, I will be glad to respond.
(Mr. AKAKA assumed the Chair.)
Mr. SARBANES. First, Mr. President, I appreciate the generous and
gracious remarks of the distinguished Senator from West Virginia. I
must say that with all of my schooling he mentioned, I have learned
more from him than at any other point along the way. I am extremely
appreciative to him for that.
I did want to cite this quote that the Senator has used in the course
of this debate, which is so appropriate to our situation, from the
Roman poet and the adviser to Nero, Gaius Petronious Arbiter. It is
another instant in which the Senator has enlightened this institution
through his use of Roman history. The quote could not be more on point.
It is written as though it were written for the current situation. It
is as follows:
We trained hard, but it seemed that every time we were
beginning to form into teams, we would be reorganized.
I was to learn later in life that we tend to meet any new
situation by reorganizing, and the wonderful method it can be
for creating the illusion of progress while producing
confusion, inefficiency, and demoralization.
We could not have a more appropriate quote to the situation that we
are confronting today.
If the Senator would indulge me for just a couple of minutes, I tie
in with the demoralization, confusion, and inefficiency what this
legislation is doing to loyal, dedicated, hard-working, committed
Federal employees. I am very frank to say taking from our employees
rights that they now have, which this legislation will do on the
grounds of flexibility to enhance homeland security, will do just the
contrary. It will deal a blow to homeland security. We are talking
about dedicated employees who are serving our country. They have been
involved in protecting homeland security. They are loyal and committed
workers. We want them to go on providing our high level of service, yet
this legislation does not protect longstanding rights to bargain
collectively about issues of importance, nor does it retain important
civil service protections which have been worked out over a very long
period of time.
The Federal employees in this new Department, all of whom are already
working to protect our national security, ought to have the same rights
and protections they heretofore have had. Taking these rights away,
cutting them down, will undercut the morale of these employees. We will
get lesser performance, although I think these are very dedicated
people. In contrast, if we protect our workforce, our workforce will
protect us.
Let me turn it around the other way. Our federal employees have been
protecting us. Why should we withdraw from them important employee
protections? Many of these protections came into being in order to
protect whistleblowers who are trying to do a better job, to eliminate
cronyism or favoritism or unfair labor practices. Some say that
membership in unions by employees in the Homeland Department will
impede efforts to protect our national security. I find this difficult
to understand. There are currently 200,000 union employees--employees
who have a union affiliation--at the Department of Defense. Many of
those employees have high-level security clearances. This never seemed
to impair our national security during the cold war. Many of the first
responders on September 11 were union members. Their membership in
unions in no way hindered their remarkable displays of bravery. They
were thinking only of their duty to their country.
Many agencies that already protect homeland security have union
members amongst their ranks: The Border Patrol, the Customs Service,
the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to name just a few. These
employees are already doing their job well. Are they to be rewarded by
stripping them of these union protections, of these civil service
rights?
We have spent a long part of our history working out these employee
rights, and they are important to the success of the Government and to
the attraction and retention of the best possible Federal employees. We
ought not to be diminishing these rights and protections, as this
legislation does.
I think that stripping the employees of these protections will harm
national security rather than help it. That is a subissue within the
larger issue on which the Senator from West Virginia has been focusing,
about the dislocation that is going to be created by this sweeping
proposal, the one that brings us back, of course, to this wonderful
quote from Gaius Petronius Arbiter.
I urge my colleagues to reexamine this closely. I know this issue has
now
[[Page S11195]]
been politicized. No one is against homeland security. No one is
against enhancing the security that our people feel, and protecting it.
The question then becomes, what is the best way to do it?
We have had studies on this point. The Brookings Institute made a
very careful evaluation. They said they thought some consolidation was
in order, but they thought it should be limited, it should be done
carefully, it should be done thoughtfully, it should be done with
prudence. They pointed out, of course, that it is a huge managerial
undertaking; that it becomes more daunting as the number of agencies to
be included increases. And then last summer they said in their report:
The danger is top managers will be preoccupied for months
if not years with getting the reorganization right, thus
giving insufficient attention to their real job, taking
concrete action to counter the terrorist threat at home.
I think that is absolutely on point and it is a point which the able
Senator from West Virginia has made repeatedly, of course, during this
debate. It really tracks what Gaius Petronius Arbiter said, when he
said:
I was to learn later in life that we tend to meet any new
situation by reorganizing, and a wonderful method it can be
for creating the illusion of progress while producing
confusion, inefficiency, and demoralization.
Mr. BYRD. Hear, hear, hear.
Mr. SARBANES. And that is exactly what we are confronted with here.
Mr. President, I thank the Senator for yielding, and I yield the
floor.
Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, I thank the distinguished Senator for his
contribution today, and for his references to the ancient Roman, Gaius
Petronius Arbiter, whom the Senator from Maryland more than once has
quoted on this floor. I thank the Senator for his defense of the
patriotic Federal employees who work day and night to protect us.
Mr. President, we will not have one whit more protection with the
passage of this 484 pages, not one whit protection more than we have
now. The same people who will protect us at the borders, at the ports,
at the airports and throughout the land at the ports of entry, the same
people who will protect us then are out there now. They are there day
and night protecting us.
So I thank the distinguished Senator from Maryland.
Mr. President, continuing my statement, and I will not be overly
long, probably the most egregious provision inserted is a White House-
backed provision designed to head off dozens of potential lawsuits
against Eli Lilly and Company and other pharmaceutical giants that are
being sued by parents who have linked their children's autism to those
companies' childhood vaccines. The language would keep the lawsuits out
of State courts, ruling out huge judgments and lengthy litigation and,
instead, channel complaints to a Federal program set up to provide
liability protection for vaccine manufacturers. The program, funded
through a surcharge on vaccines, compensates persons injured by such
vaccines to a maximum of $250,000.
A number of Senators, including the very distinguished Senator from
Michigan, Ms. Stabenow, strongly criticized these provisions yesterday.
And yet at the same time, some Senators who have made these
statements--not the Senator whose name I have expressed just now--but
some Senators at the same time have pledged to vote in favor of this
bill, regardless of whether these provisions are included or removed.
How about that. We are acting as though this is a conference report
that cannot be amended, as though its passage is a fait accompli. We
still have the opportunity to amend this bill, except for the fact that
our Republican friends on the other side of the aisle have said: This
far and no further. We have got an amendment pending in the tree and
that is all you will get. You will get a vote on that amendment--up or
down on or in relation to it, I suppose, at the end of the 30 hours--
but no more amendments. That is it. That is the only amendment.
Well, we will see about that.
We still have the opportunity to amend the bill, at least the basic
bill, H.R. 5005, even postcloture. So this amendment introduced by
Senator Daschle will strike language in this bill which the Senate has
not previously considered, the language that would allow the Homeland
Security Secretary to establish advisory committees within the Homeland
Security Department and to exempt these committees from the Federal
Advisory Committee Act.
When I saw that in the amendment that the leader was introducing on
behalf of Mr. Lieberman--I saw that in the amendment, and I immediately
wanted my name attached because I have been complaining, I have been
criticizing that, complaining about that language in the bill.
This statute which has been on the books, the Federal Advisory
Committee Act, which has been on the books for 30 years, ensures that
the ad hoc committees used to craft policy in the executive branch
provide objective advice that is accessible to the public. These public
disclosure rules allow Congress and the media and groups outside of
Government to know how the executive branch is making important policy
decisions.
Section 871 of this new substitute we have just been given, less than
60 hours ago, provides the Secretary of Homeland Security blanket
authority to exempt all advisory committees in the Department from
existing public disclosure rules. This provision was not included in
Senator Lieberman's substitute, but it has been slipped into this new
bill, which was made available to us, as I say, less than 60 hours ago,
with the hope that Senators will not have enough time to scrutinize
this dramatic change to existing statute.
Many of the advisory committees in this new Homeland Security
Department will be dealing with issues of national security that should
not be subjected to public disclosure rules. But the Federal Advisory
Committee Act already allows the President to exempt these public
disclosure rules for advisory committee for national security reasons.
This is authority that the President has used for 30 years, and
authority he will be able to use for advisory committees in the
Homeland Security Department.
But instead of relying on the President's current authority to exempt
committees on a case-by-case basis, the new language in this bill
allows the Secretary to exempt ANY advisory committee from public
disclosure rules, regardless of whether national security is pertinent
or not.
This new blanket authority is not necessary. As a matter of fact, we
ought not have it. It shouldn't be that way because it interferes with
the people's right to know, and it is a danger to our liberty. It is a
danger to our constitutional system.
The provisions in this bill allow the Secretary to use ad hoc
advisory committees to craft policy in secret, without making specific
findings that such secrecy is necessary in any particular instance.
The press, I hope, will read this bill and understand this bill. I
hope the press is fully aware of how this presents a danger and a
threat to the media's efforts to probe, to ask questions, and to
scrutinize and to protect the public's right to know.
This unnecessary new blanket authority will give the President carte
blanche to respond and expand the culture of secrecy that now permeates
this White House--this administration.
Let me say that again.
This unnecessary new blanket authority can be used to give the
President carte blanche to expand the culture of secrecy that now
permeates this White House--this administration.
The public disclosure exemptions in this bill are a license for
abuse. They are a danger. They are un-American. They should not become
law.
I hope that Senators, before they cast their vote on the passage of
this bill, will think about this. I hope they will be prepared to
answer the public--their constituents--in the next election, whatever
election down the road awaits them. I hope they will be prepared. There
are going to be stories in the press as time goes on, I would wager,
about this particular authority that the Senate will extend with
passage of this bill to this administration and to this new
Department--to the Secretary of this new Department.
We see on the front page of the Washington Times today--I have
already mentioned the Wall Street Journal, and I mentioned the
Washington Post. Now I call attention to the front page of the
Washington Times this morning. There is a headline which reads
[[Page S11196]]
``Homeland Bill a Supersnoop's Dream.''
There are many dreams to which we can allude--Jacob's dream--the
dreams.
``Homeland Bill a Supersnoop's Dream.''
In yesterday's New York Times, William Safire warned that if this
homeland security legislation is passed as it is currently written, the
Federal Government may be planning to use its new intelligence
authority to compile computerized dossiers on every American citizen,
including ``every piece of information that government has about you .
. . ''
--every piece of information that the Government has about you, each
of you, about you, about you, about you--
. . . including ``every piece of information that government has
about you--passport applications, driver's license, bridge toll
records, judicial and divorce records, complaints from nosy neighbors
to the FBI, your lifetime paper trail . . . ''
That is a long trail.
. . . ''your lifetime paper trail plus the latest hidden camera
surveillance.''
No one knows about those hidden cameras and where they are.
They may be looking at you. Who knows. They may be in your office
looking at you.
Do we need to add to all of this by providing even more authority for
the Federal Government to hide decisions behind locked doors--decisions
which affect the safety of every man, woman, and child in this Nation?
Exampting these committees from the Federal Advisory Committee Act
also removes requirements that the advice of these committees be
objective and that the membership of the committees represent balanced
viewpoints on the issues. With this new authority, the Secretary will
not have to make any effort whatsoever to ensure the integrity and
objectivity of these committees.
The language in this bill--here it is--484 pages. It wasn't around a
week ago today. Nobody saw one page a week ago today. This bill didn't
exist a week ago today.
The language in this bill even exempts individual members of advisory
committees from financial conflict-of-interest rules. We should not
allow our homeland security policies to be crafted by corporate
advisors with a financial interest in those policies. This bill should
not become a vehicle for lining the pockets of corporate fat cats.
Section 232 of the new bill also exempts advisory committees within
the Office of Science and Technology in the Justice Department. This
means that this new office, which will serve as the focal point for
developing law enforcement technology, may rely on advisory committees
whose members have a personal stake in the policy recommendations
adopted by the committees. I am worried that exempting this new Science
and Technology Office will allow the administration to provide special
treatment for corporate campaign contributions who are pushing new
anti-terrorism technologies.
It worries me that issues as important as homeland security and the
safety of the American people may be decided in secret by ad hoc
committees that are exempt from traditional good government laws. Under
this language, the Secretary will be able to exempt not only new
advisory committees, but also existing committees that are transferred
into the Department along with these 28 agencies and offices.
This amendment, which I have cosponsored, will strike this exemption
authority from the bill.
This dangerous new authority should not be slipped under the cover of
darkness, as it were, into legislation that Senators have had little
time to study or amend. If the Secretary of the new Department of
Homeland Security needs this blanket authority, let him come to
Congress and make his case. Congress must not hand over blanket
authority to this administration which would allow it to cloak
decisions in secrecy.
Now, Senators, this is what we are about to vote on, this bill. Now,
if the amendment fails, Senators should not then go ahead and vote for
this bill. If this amendment to strike these provisions fails to be
adopted, Senators have no right then to go home and say: Well, I voted
for the amendment. I was for that, but it failed and I, therefore, went
ahead and voted for this bill.
What a crappy bill. Don't hide behind your vote when you vote on this
amendment or you vote in relation to it or whatever the vote is when it
comes. Don't hide behind that. If that amendment fails, don't hide
behind that and say: Well, I voted for the amendment, and so I tried to
get it in there, but the Senate voted it down, so I went ahead and
voted for the bill. Shame on you. And your constituents should say so:
Shame on you. Now, you say you voted for the amendment, and that the
Senate didn't adopt it. Your convictions were not very strong, so you
went ahead and voted for the bill, then, after that amendment failed.
Shame on you.
Mr. President, I don't know of any measure that has ever come before
the Senate in connection with which I have spoken more passionately,
with greater conviction, than I have in regard to this bill. I have no
special ax to grind. No, I have no special ax to grind. I am on
nobody's payroll except the people's.
I am concerned about this. I am more concerned about this bill than I
believe any bill I have ever voted on or will ever have voted on. And I
have cast more votes than any Senator in the history of this Republic.
I have no special ax to grind. You say: Well, he's 85. He won't be
running again. Don't bet on it. Don't bet on it. That is a matter for
the Good Lord to determine and the people of the State of West
Virginia. So don't count me out. There are those who may say: Don't
count me in. I believe there is a song to that effect: ``Don't Count Me
In.'' But don't count me out.
That is my belief.
This dramatic reduction of transparency should not be clandestinely
slipped into this eleventh-hour legislation, and the Senate should not
allow such a dangerous provision to be rushed through this Chamber
during the final minutes of this Congress.
So shame on you if you vote for this amendment, and then, if it
fails, you turn around and vote for this 484-page bill. Don't use that
as an excuse when you go back to your constituents.
Every Senator has the right to do what he thinks best, but, believe
you me, your constituents, if you vote for this bill--if that amendment
fails, and you still vote for this bill, I hope you won't try to hide
behind your vote for the amendment that is before the Senate: Oh, I
voted for that amendment, but the Senate rejected it, so I then felt
that I had done my best, and I went ahead and voted for the bill. Shame
on you.
This administration has worked hard to keep the Congress out of the
loop. The President has sought to isolate himself from the American
public and their Representatives in Congress. He has asked for the
Congress to provide him with broad statutory powers to further block
congressional involvement.
That is what this bill will do. Pass this bill, and you will say to
the President: Well, I don't know what your plan is--you have not told
us what your plan is--but we have approved it. Here it is. Here is the
bill. So you have the next 12 months in which to determine your plan,
and all you need to do--we hope you will tell us about it. The language
here provides for the President ``informing'' the Congress about the
plan.
Well, in some cases, Senators have supported the President on these
issues, either to show unity with the leader of their party or because
they fear political attacks if they do not. Less and less, it seems to
me, do we think about these grants of power that will affect the
constitutional checks and balances and separation of powers that
protect the constitutional freedoms of our country.
I must say this, that the shelf life of appreciation one might expect
from this administration, in having supported it--those of us, may I
say, on this side of the aisle, in particular--the shelf life of
appreciation from this administration for your efforts to curry favor
with the administration, if that is what it is, is very short indeed.
We saw that in the case of the distinguished Senator from Georgia,
Mr. Cleland. We saw that in the case of the distinguished Senator from
Missouri, Mrs. Carnahan. We have seen it in the cases of other Senators
who supported the administration. They did
[[Page S11197]]
what they thought was right. But in any event, their votes were in
support of the administration on various issues--the tax cut, the Iraq
war resolution, whatever it might have been--and yet, the President,
himself, went into those very States and campaigned against those
Senators. So this administration's thanks don't go very far, may I say
to Senators.
So the best thing to do, as always, is to do your best, vote your
convictions, and stand by your people who send you here, and stand by
the Constitution.
Henry Clay, as a Senator from Kentucky in 1833, in building the case
for the censure of President Andrew Jackson, asked the Senate:
How often have we, Senators, felt that the check of the
Senate, instead of being, as the Constitution intended, a
salutary control, was an idle ceremony . . . We have
established a system, in which power has been most carefully
separated and distributed between three separate and
independent departments. We have been told a thousand times,
and all experience assures us, that such a division is
indispensable to the existence and preservation of freedom. .
. .
This is Henry Clay talking:
The president, it is true, presides over the whole . . .
but has he power to come into Congress, and to say such laws
only shall pass . . . to arrest their lawful progress,
because they have dared to act contrary to his pleasure? No,
sir; no, sir.
Well, Henry Clay was an opponent of the Presidential veto. He thought
that was a despicable thing, the President's veto.
So he spoke, as I have just read. He spoke of the President and he
said: It is true, he presides over the whole:
. . . but has he power to come into Congress, and to say such
laws only shall pass . . . to arrest their lawful progress,
because they have dared to act contrary to his pleasure? No,
sir; no, sir.
The Senate must not blindly follow in the name of party unity. I
don't blindly follow in the name of the Democratic Party unity. I don't
do that. I won't do that. That will not be my guiding star. In storm or
in tempest or in fair weather, that will not be my guiding star.
The Senate must not blindly follow, in the name of party unity or
under the yoke of political pressure, a shortsighted path that
ultimately undermines our sworn duty to support and defend the
Constitution.
I will vote against this homeland security bill because even the
amendment that is before the Senate is not enough. I have some
amendments that I would like to offer. If this amendment fails, I would
like to offer my amendments. It is very questionable as to whether I
will get to do that, very questionable as to whether or not those
amendments will pass the Senate. I doubt that they will.
So I intend to vote against this homeland security bill. I will raise
my voice as long as I have a voice, and I will raise my hand as long as
I can raise that hand to attempt to derail this blatant power grab and
giveaway of the people's liberties.
Mr. President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. AKAKA. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Barkley). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. AKAKA. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I be able to
reclaim 5 minutes of my time that I yielded to Senator Byrd.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The
Senator from Hawaii is recognized.
Mr. AKAKA. Mr. President, I rise in support of the amendment offered
by Senator Daschle, Senator Lieberman, and Senator Byrd to the pending
legislation concerning homeland security.
I voted earlier against invoking cloture on this legislation because
in part I disagreed with many of the amendments which were added at the
last moment by the House to this bill. The amendment offered by Senator
Daschle and Senator Lieberman would correct many problems in this House
bill, although not all. There is much about the underlying bill which
still needs to be corrected. I laid out earlier my concerns. Today
however, I want to address the House's legislative ``add-ons'' that
should be stripped from this bill. I think it is clear what the house
has done in the midnight hour of this Congress.
The House leadership has taken a moving train--legislation for a
Department of Homeland Security--and attached gilded carriages for
their special friends to travel on this legislative express.
What has been added does not enhance the security of the American
people. It enriches a select few companies and special individuals, and
very special people. One provision is clearly meant to earmark a new
university-based homeland security research center program for Texas
A&M University, avoiding an open and competitive award process. All of
us have universities, distinguished centers of higher learning in our
states, all of which would welcome the opportunity to make their case
for this funding. but under this bill, they will not get that chance.
However, if the Daschle amendment passes, other colleges and
universities would be permitted to demonstrate their competence to be a
center for homeland security research, including Texas A&M.
Another provision in this legislation would limit liability to
companies producing homeland security technologies. The main intent of
this provision is to eliminate the ability of Americans to obtain
compensation should they be harmed by any of these technologies. The
provision is open-ended. It does not define how anti-terrorism
technologies will be identified. Under the liability provision
sections, the Secretary has the discretion to designate which
technologies will benefit from this additional protection from
liability. This section is not about stimulating the development of new
technologies to protect us. It is about finding new ways to protect
companies from legal liability. Indeed one section of this bill is
labeled ``Litigation Management.'' That says it all.
The subparagraphs, almost too small to be noticed, undermine the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, or FACA, and the public's right to know
the make-up, meeting schedules, and findings of federal commissions,
committees, councils, and task forces. These groups are chartered by
the President, Congress, and agency heads to give independent advice
and recommendations on substantial policy issues and technological
problems.
Congress enacted FACA in 1972 to address concerns of committees being
redundant, having inadequate oversight, using secretive operations, and
not representing public interest. FACA requires that the advice
provided by such committees be objective and responsive to public
concerns. Committee meetings are required to be open and properly
noticed, with specific exceptions. The House bill would give the
Secretary of Homeland Security a blanket exemption from FACA
requirements once the Secretary notices the creation of a committee and
its intent. One wonders why the House Leadership wants to overturn
sunshine rules. What do they want to hide?
This is a very serious matter. What sort of oversight will these
committees have? Who will serve on them? Will all interests be
represented? How will we confirm that the public interests have been
met? To allow the Secretary of Homeland Security to set up advisory
committees that are free from the balanced regulations of FACA is to
retreat back to a time when special interests groups ran roughshod over
the public's interest and recommended one sided-views without
appropriate oversight.
The original Lieberman substitute, and the original Gramm-Miller
amendment, were based upon provisions that were debated and discussed
within the Governmental Affairs Committee through hearings and business
meetings. The bill before us today has several provisions that have not
had that treatment and will directly benefit the airline and rail
companies and other special interests.
The Governmental Affairs Committee spent weeks and months studying,
debating, and drafting legislation on homeland security. In contrast,
this bill was not written in committee and some parts of the bill
before us today have had only special interest input. That is not the
best way to ensure public safety and national security.
I yield my time, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
[[Page S11198]]
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________
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