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Nelson calls on Congress to act following Parkland school shooting

Posted on February 15, 2018

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) spoke today on the Senate floor about the tragic shooting at Marjory Douglas Stoneman High School in Parkland, Florida.

“At some point, we’ve got to say enough is enough,” Nelson said. “At some point we, as a society, have to come together and put a stop to this.”

“To those who say it’s not the time to talk about gun violence because it’s too soon, we don’t want to politicize right after a tragedy … then I would ask, when is the right time?” Nelson said. “How many more times do we want to do this? How many more folks have to die?”

“Let’s have the conversation about this right now – not just about mental illness, and that’s part of it, not just about protection at our schools, and that’s part of it – let’s get to the root cause … let’s get these assault weapons off our streets,” Nelson said.

“Let’s just not talk about it. Let’s do something about it,” Nelson said. “Let’s make what happened at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School a pivotal moment in this country’s history, not because it was one of the largest mass shootings – but, hopefully, because it was the last.”

Following is a rush transcript of his speech:

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson
Remarks on the Senate Floor
February 15, 2018

Sen. Nelson: Mr. President, those were all our children.

Those of us who are parents, you can imagine the parents of those children wondering what else can be done.

Because yesterday a former student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in northern Broward County, Parkland, Florida, walked on to the campus with a gas mask, smoke grenades, and carrying an AR-15 assault rifle. He pulled the fire alarm. He waited for the students to come out into the hallway and he opened fire.

And as a result, 17 families are grieving. Their worst fears have become reality, and more than a dozen other students who were injured, they’re in the hospital and some of them in critical condition.

At some point, we’ve got to say enough is enough. At some point, we as a society have got to come together and put a stop to this. This senator grew up on a ranch. I have hunted all my life. I have had guns all my life.

I still hunt with my son. But an AR-15 is not for hunting. It’s for killing. But despite these horrific events that are occurring over and over, these tragedies have led so many of us to come right here to this floor and to beg our colleagues to take commonsense actions that we all know will help protect our children and our fellow citizens from these kind of tragedies. And we get nowhere.

So when is enough going to be enough?

Sandy Hook elementary, 20 students killed. That wasn’t enough.

The Pulse nightclub in Orlando, 49 people killed, a terrorist. That wasn’t enough.

Las Vegas, 58 people killed, that wasn’t enough.

Or just a year ago in the same county as the Parkland murders, Broward county, Fort Lauderdale airport, five people killed. That wasn’t enough.

Now this high school, 17 killed, some as young as 14 years old. So when is enough going to be enough?

This senator has spoken to local officials on the ground. I’ve spoken to the superintendent of the schools who in his own way is going through the grieving process.

I’ve spoken to the F.B.I. I’ve spoken to the sheriff’s department to make sure that they have everything they need, but when I finish talking to these folks and as we get through with the Dreamer legislation today, I’m headed down there and when I go to the hospital and see the families and see the hospital victims, all I can thank is how many more times are we going to have to go through this?

And those families are going to say to me, when is enough, enough?

To those who say now that it’s not the time to talk about gun violence because it’s too soon, we don’t want to politicize right after a tragedy, that’s what is said over and over. Then I would ask, when is the time?

If now is not the right time, when is the right time? After the next shooting? Or after the one that’s going to come after that? Because these are not going to stop unless we change ourselves as a culture.

How many more times do we have to do this? How many more folks have to die? When is enough going to be enough?

So let’s don’t hide from it. Let’s have a conversation about this right now, not just about mental illness and that’s part of it, not just about protection at our schools and that’s part of it.

Let’s get to the root cause. Let’s come together and help end this violence.

Let’s talk about that 19-year-old carrying an AR-15. Let’s do what needs to be done and let’s get these assault weapons off our streets. Let’s accomplish something on background checks.

My state passed a constitutional amendment, Florida, 1998. Background checks have to be done in the purchase of a gun. It’s never been implemented totally and it’s never been enforced. A simple background check.

The terrorist that killed 49 in Orlando at the Pulse nightclub, he had been on the terrorist watch list. If we’d have had a background check there, he wasn’t on it but maybe in a background check, we ought to include those who had been on a terrorist watch list.

Let’s have a conversation about this.

Oh, and do you remember a couple of years ago there was a proposal on the floor that if you’re on the terrorist watch list, you can’t buy a gun. That’s pretty common sense. We won’t let them get on an airplane because we don’t want them taking down a commercial airliner. But they don’t have a restriction of buying a gun.

So let’s get at the root cause of this issue. Let’s do what we all know needs to be done. And let’s do it now, not later.

Let’s just not talk about it. Let’s do something about it.

Let’s make what happened at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School a pivotal moment in this country’s history, not because it was one of the largest mass shootings, but hopefully because it was the last.

It’s with a heavy heart, Madam President, I yield the floor.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Congress, Florida, Marjory Douglas Stoneman High School, Parkland, School Shooting, Senator Bill Nelson

ICYMI: WJHG: Gov. Scott Proclaims Florida Foster Family Appreciation Week

Posted on February 13, 2018

“Gov. Scott Proclaims Florida Foster Family Appreciation Week”
WJHG (NBC) – Panama City, FL
February 12, 2018
To view the clip, click HERE.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Florida Foster Family Appreciation Week, Governor Rick Scott, ICYMI, WJHG

Mast For Congress Releases First Ad: “Promises Kept”

Posted on January 16, 2018

Campaign Passes $1 Million Cash on Hand

The Mast for Congress campaign today released the first ad of the 2018 campaign cycle, titled “Promises Kept.”  The 30-second spot highlights three bipartisan legislative achievements that fulfill major campaign promises: protecting seniors from fraud, preventing critical veterans programs from expiring and passing new funding to combat harmful algal blooms.
Additionally, after raising $419,000 during Q4 of 2017, the Mast For Congress campaign now has $1,039,000 cash on hand.
Watch the ad here:

Transcript:
When I became your Congressman, my promises became my mission.
To protect seniors, I passed legislation to crack down on crimes which target seniors and strengthen Medicare.
For our veterans, my bill averted crisis by protecting veterans healthcare programs.
And for our environment, I secured more than $20 million to combat harmful algal blooms in our waterways.
I know my mission is not over.  That’s why I’m asking for your support to stay in the fight.
I’m Brian Mast and I approve this message.
Background:
The ad references several pieces of legislation that fulfill campaign promises made by Congressman Mast:
FOR SENIORS

  • Congressman Mast has helped pass numerous pieces of legislation to protect seniors and strengthen Medicare, including:
    • The Elder Abuse Prevention and Prosecution Act promotes the investigation and prosecution of criminals who prey upon seniors, enhances data collection on crimes targeting seniors and provides additional resources for elder abuse prevention programs.  The bipartisan bill passed the House of Representatives on October 3, 2017, with Congressman Mast’s support, and was signed into law on October 18, 2017.
    • The Protecting Seniors Access to Medicare Act strengthens Medicare by eliminating the unaccountable and unelected Independent Payment Advisory Board.  The bill passed the House of Representatives, with Congressman Mast’s support, on November 2, 2017.
    • Medicare Part B Improvement Act helps ensure there aren’t gaps in coverage for Medicare beneficiaries and helps patients with chronic diseases more easily access their treatments.  The bipartisan bill passed the House of Representatives, with Congressman Mast’s support, on July 25, 2017.

FOR VETERANS

  • Congressman Mast introduced the Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of 2017.  The bill extended a number of expiring programs impacting veterans healthcare and benefits, including homeless programs, nursing home care, child care assistance and home loan services.  The bill passed the House on September 25, 2017 and the Senate on September 27, 2017 with bipartisan support.  The Department of Veterans Affairs Expiring Authorities Act of 2017 was signed into law by the President on September 29, 2017.

FOR THE ENVIRONMENT

  • Congressman Mast has introduced and passed more than 10 amendments, totaling more than $20 million, to add funding to combat harmful algal blooms and clean up local waterways.  The programs include:
    • $8 million to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to combat harmful algal blooms.  Introduced with Congressman Vern Buchanan (FL-16).
    • $5.6 million for the Natural Resource Conservation Service to promote environmentally sustainable toxic runoff mitigation.
    • $2 million for the Agriculture and Food Service Initiative to expand research into prevention of harmful algal blooms.
    • $1.5 million for the Food and Drug Administration to research the health impact of contaminated seafood.
    • $1.1 million for the Environmental Protection Agency to research the impact on water quality of nutrient inputs.
    • $1 million for non-point source pollution mitigation grants, including removal of toxic substances.
    • $1 million for the U.S. Geological Service to research harmful algal blooms.
    • $1 million for the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences to study the health impacts of exposure to harmful algal blooms.
    • $598,000 for the Department of the Navy to fund the Environmental Sustainability Development Project research on coastal contamination.
    • $500,000 for the Aquatic Plant Control Research Program to develop technology to combat harmful algal blooms.
    • $400,000 to the Centers for Disease Control to investigate environmental threats of public exposure to waterborne contaminates.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: campaign, Rep. Brian Mast, U.S. Congress

ICYMI: WWSB: Gov. Scott Presents Florida Job Growth Fund Awards First Grant to Manatee Technical College

Posted on January 11, 2018


“Gov. Scott: Florida Job Growth Fund Awards First Grant to Manatee Technical College”
WWSB (ABC) – Tampa Bay, FL
January 10, 2018
To view the clip, click HERE.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Florida Job Growth Fund, Governor Rick Scott, ICYMI, Manatee Technical College, WWSB

ICYMI: WJAX: Gov. Scott Highlights $180 Million Tax Cut Package

Posted on January 11, 2018


“Gov. Scott Highlights $180 Million Tax Cut Package”
WJAX – Jacksonville, FL
January 10, 2018
To view the clip, click HERE.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Governor Rick Scott, ICYMI, Tax Cut Package, WJAX

ICYMI: WKMG: Gov. Scott Hosts Puerto Rico Relief Efforts Roundtable in Orlando

Posted on January 5, 2018


“Gov. Scott Hosts Puerto Rico Relief Efforts Roundtable in Orlando”
WKMG-ORD (CBS) – Orlando, FL
January 4, 2018
To view the clip, click HERE.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Governor Rick Scott, ICYMI, Orlando, Puerto Rico, Relief Efforts, Roundtable, WKMG

Caldwell Campaign Raises $1.56 Million in 2017

Posted on January 5, 2018

Representative Matt Caldwell announced a successful fundraising year, having raised a total of $1.56 million in his bid for Florida Commissioner of Agriculture in 2017. In December, Caldwell’s campaign and Political Committee raised a combined $101,701 and has over $1.07 million cash-on-hand.
Caldwell’s campaign for Florida Commissioner of Agriculture raised $42,201 in December, while Friends of Matt Caldwell, a Political Committee supporting his bid, brought in $59,500. After tallying another strong month of fundraising, the campaign and Political Committee raised more than $1.56 million in 2017.
Representative Caldwell said, “We are working hard and our support continues to grow each and every day. We have traveled nearly 41,000 miles across this State since May 1st and, in every small town or big city we visit across the Sunshine State, supporters know how important it is to have a principled conservative serving as Commissioner of Agriculture and on the Florida cabinet.”
The Commissioner of Agriculture serves as a member of the Florida Cabinet and is critical to the foundation of Florida’s economy. The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services helps the agricultural industry with its daily challenges, promotes Florida’s agricultural commodities, manages state forests, safeguards consumers, implements the school lunch program, and oversees the concealed-weapon license system.
The campaign recently announced the endorsements of Republican House members from the Panhandle, Northeast Florida, Central Florida, Southwest Florida, and South Florida delegations. This is in addition to endorsements from the Associated Builders and Contractors of Florida, U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, former candidate for Commissioner of Agriculture Paul Paulson, and a number of county constitutional officers.
The campaign continues to travel across the Sunshine State as a part of Caldwell’s statewide #2LaneTravels Work Days Tour that highlights and showcases industries overseen as Commissioner of Agriculture.

Paid by Matt Caldwell, Republican, for Commissioner of Agriculture

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Matt Caldwell Campaign

ICYMI: WFOX: Gov. Scott Highlights Job Growth at St. Johns Marine Group

Posted on January 3, 2018


“Gov. Scott Highlights Job Growth at St. Johns Marine Group”
WFOX – Jacksonville, FL
January 3, 2018
To view the clip, click HERE.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Governor Rick Scott, ICYMI, Job growth, St. Johns Marine Group, WFOX

Nelson threatens to block roll-back of offshore drilling regulations

Posted on January 3, 2018

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) said today he plans to invoke a procedural rule known as the Congressional Review Act in an attempt to block the Trump administration’s latest efforts to roll back several safety standards the Obama administration put in place after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil rig disaster.
The move comes less than a week after the U.S. Dept. of Interior released for public comment its latest proposal to un-do a series of safety regulations put in place to prevent another incident like the Deepwater Horizon tragedy from happening. Among the provisions the agency is seeking to un-do is one that requires a third-party to certify that an oil rig’s blowout preventer is functioning properly.
“Almost five million barrels of oil spilled as a result of a defective device called a blowout preventer,” Nelson said on the Senate floor Wednesday. “Now, what the Interior Department and this administration is trying to do is undo the updated standards for shear rams and blowout preventers and is trying to get rid of a required third party to certify the safety mechanisms.”
Nelson, a long-time opponent of having oil rigs near Florida’s coast, often cites the state’s unique environment, its multi-billion dollar, tourism-driven economy and the vital national military training areas as reasons why drilling should not be allowed near Florida’s coast. He said today that if Interior finalizes a rule to roll-back the Obama-era regulations, he will work to block it.
“The BP spill devastated my state’s economy and eleven people lost their lives,” Nelson said. “That’s why I plan to subject this misguided rule to the Congressional Review Act.”
The Congressional Review Act gives Congress the power to overturn an agency’s final rule. A lawmaker seeking to block an agency rule from taking effect can file a so-called Resolution of Disapproval within 60 days of a final rule being sent to Congress. If a Resolution of Disapproval is approved by a majority in both the House and Senate and signed into law by the president, the agency’s rule would be overturned.
The Interior Department is currently accepting public comments on its proposal to roll-back the Obama-era drilling regulations until January 29. After that, the agency will likely work to finalize the rule.
“I hope the public understands that and starts registering some complaints,” Nelson said, “and I hope that during that time every Floridian remembers what happened to us when the beaches of Pensacola Beach were blackened with tar and oil, and we lost a whole season of our guests, our tourists who come to this extraordinary state.”
In 2006, Nelson and then-Sen. Mel Martinez successfully brokered a deal to ban drilling off Florida’s Gulf coast through the year 2022. Nelson filed legislation last year to extend that ban an additional five years, to 2027.

And here’s a rush transcript of his speech:
U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson
Remarks on the Senate floor
January 3, 2018
Sen. Nelson: Mr. President, on December 28, the Department of the Interior and this administration sent the oil industry a belated Christmas present, just three days after Christmas, because they published a proposal to release offshore drilling companies from sensible rules designed to prevent a tragedy like the one that we experienced back in 2010, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. That was at a time that 11 people lost their lives, that almost five million barrels were spilled of oil spilled as a result of a defective device clause called a blowout preventer.
Five million barrels of oil sloshing around in the Gulf of Mexico, much of which is still out there. It’s down at depths of 5,000 feet where the actual well pipe came out, 5,000 feet a mile underneath the surface of the Gulf of Mexico.
And of course we know the economic damage that that did all up and down the Gulf of Mexico. As a matter of fact, when the wind shifted since the explosion was some 50 or 60 miles off of Louisiana, but the wind shifted and they started blowing that oil to the east, and it got as far east aspens coal a beach, and those sugary white sands were covered up with black oil, and that Associated Press and UPI photographs went around the world. And do you know the consequence of that? Even though when the winds continued and it went as far as Destin and the white sands of Destin, it had tar balls float as far east as the white sand beaches of Panama City Beach, and then the wind shifted and brought it back the other way.
But do you know what happened as a consequence of that? Because people all over the world had seen that photograph. They thought oil was on the entire beaches of the Gulf Coast of Florida and the people did not come. The tourists did not come. Now, I haven’t even spoken about the economic and environmental degradation that occurred throughout the entire Gulf and the fishing industries, and of course the administration has proposed to do now drilling off the east coast of the United States, including off of the coast of the state of the presiding officer.
There are a number of us that have come together that don’t think that that matches with what our tourism industry is. It certainly doesn’t match with regard to our fishing industries, but it also does not match with our United States Department of Defense training and testing mission. So if you look at the Gulf Coast off of Florida, the only place where it is off limits in law, that’s the largest testing and training area for the United States military in the world. But if you go up and down the Atlantic coast of the eastern seaboard, you will see training range after training range, and you get as far south as the central east coast of Florida and lo and behold what is that area of protection for not only the US Department of Defense, but for NASA and other agencies. It’s because that’s where we are rocketing our satellites into orbit, of which the first stages have to have a place to land. That’s where when we had the space shuttle and soon we are rocketing astronauts, American astronauts to the international space station on American rockets, many of whom first stages will fall in the Atlantic Ocean below, just like the solid rocket boosters did on the space shuttle when it launched.
And so there are reasons not to have drilling platforms out there, but let’s come back to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. What happened was deep below the sea bed, miles further into the earth’s crust, pressure had built up, and an explosion had occurred. The safety mechanism is right where the pipe comes out of the sea bed, and that pipe then goes up five miles to the surface to deliver oil. The safety mechanism is a blowout preventer which is like a huge set of pincers that comes through and cuts off the pipe. If that blowout preventer, in other words preventing the blowout of the well, if it is defective like it was in the BP oil spill, five million barrels of oil spewed out five miles below the surface of the gulf into the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, and rendered the havoc and economic damage that it did.
So in the turmoil and trauma that ensued, there was obviously a need in the Department of Interior in the bureau of safety, it’s called BSEE, to go in and change the rules to give additional safety mechanisms to make sure that this wouldn’t happen again. Well, lo and behold, there is now a change, and we are starting to see the first attempts at the weakening of those rules.
Sometimes the issue of regulatory reform feels abstract or arbitrary. This is technical stuff. It’s dry. But safety standards created after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, they’re not dull and boring. They’re life or death. They were written specifically to make sure that families like those 11 that lost their loved ones wouldn’t have to be notified again that there was a preventable death.
So what are these new rules about? Well, they are real estate coming in on the blowout preventer, which is a system to control the flow of oil to seal an oil well. A blowout preventer is what stands between the enormous pressure that builds up in the oil well pipe and the ocean around it. Its purpose is exactly what the name sounds like. It’s to prevent the oil from blowing out into the sea. Uncontrollably. And how many days did it take? It took several months to finally get that well capped 5,000 feet below the surface of the water. These are massive pieces of equipment. The blowout preventer for Deepwater Horizon stood 57 feet tall, and it weighed over 400 tons. That’s how big this thing is. Then there is a piece of that blowout preventer 57-feet high mechanism, a device called a device with two blades that seal off the well in an emergency. And that’s what failed to fully close in the BP oil spill.
Now, what the Interior Department and this administration is trying to do is undo the updated standards for sheer rams and blowout preventers and is trying to get rid of a required third party to certify the safety mechanisms. Obviously, after what we suffered, this is a commonsense thing to do to have those safety mechanisms, and it means that for a third party to ensure the safety mechanisms by certifying that they are in place, it means that somebody, other than the oil company, needs to make sure their safety equipment is in place and functioning properly. These rules require better training for workers, real-time monitoring of deep water drilling and inspections to increase safety. These rules were also the product of a thorough and transparent discussion by scientists, engineers, industry representatives, agency officials, and the public, and it took six years after the spill for the well-control rule to be finalized.
Now the Trump Interior Department wants to pull a bait and switch, reversing the safety measures, and giving the public a mere 30 days to review a highly technical rule. It took six years to develop this rule ensuring safety devices and now they have a rule to undo it and they are going to give 30 days. That’s nothing more than a free pass to the oil and gas industry at the expense of everybody else, including folks that work on those rigs that are going to have to suffer if there’s another blowout. There are a lot of other things, communities, marine life, your state’s economy, my state’s economy, the gulf state’s economy. It’s totally misguided and reckless.
Over the past year President Trump has issued executive orders cut straight from big oil’s playbook. He directed agencies to gut rules designed to protect the environment and the safety of workers if the rules interfered with an oil company’s bottom line. That’s what this one does. It saves them some $900 million. He directed the Secretary of the Interior, Secretary Zinke, to reconsider the well-control rule which was finalized in 2016. That rule stemmed directly from what we had learned in the investigation of the 2010 BP spill.
And by the way, the agency that issued this proposed rollback, it’s long name, BSEE, the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, it’s separate from the Bureau of Ocean and Energy Management, the agency that schedules leases in the outer continental shelf.
Before the 2010 spill, the folks who worked with the oil industry to, were the same people in charge of inspecting the rigs in charge of compliance with the safety standards. Talk about a cozy relationship. That’s why one of the first recommendations on the BP spill was to split those responsibilities into two different agencies, one that schedules lease sales and the other that does the safety. That was a very important step, both to clarify the mission of each agency and to restore public trust in offshore regulators. Yet, over the summer there were reports that the Trump administration wanted to re-combine these two agencies. Only one stakeholder group would benefit from that, and you can bet what it is. It’s not the consumers, it’s not the tourists, it’s not the scientists, it’s not the environmentalists, it’s the oil industry.
And so now the Trump administration wants to smack down more recommendations from that investigation, from marine biologists to Chamber of Commerce, I can tell you the people in Florida understand how important it is to keep drilling off the coast and where there is drilling to make sure that the safety mechanisms that were corrected after the BP spill, that they stay in place, but that’s not what happens happening right here in Washington.
When the Interior Department released this revised rule last week, my colleague, a Republican congressman from Sarasota, Florida, said, “It would be a huge mistake to weaken these safety regulations.” End of quote.
And that if the Interior Department doesn’t rescind the proposal, he went on to say, Congress should intervene and codify the rules permanently. He’s right, and I agree with Congressman Buchanan, my colleague in the Florida delegation who has an “R” behind his name.
Mr. President, that’s why I plan to subject this misguided rule to the Congressional Review Act, a CRA.
The Congressional Review Act was once the option of last resort. It was meant to ensure that Congress could override the administration if a rule was widely opposed. In most cases the Congressional Review Act wasn’t necessary because Congress, if it opposed a rule strongly enough, there was enough consensus to pass a law to fix it. At the beginning of this Congress, the CRA was a favorite tool of the party of the presiding officer today of our colleagues across the aisle. It was a favorite tool of the Republicans who wanted to take a sledgehammer to Obama administration’s legacy through the rules that they had enacted. And in 2017, the Senate took 17 votes on CRA resolutions of disapproval on everything from bear hunting on national wildlife refuges in Alaska to drug testing of unemployment benefit recipients.
Well, I think this dangerous proposal from the Interior Department deserves the same level of attention. This proposal is open to public comment until January 29. You’re not going to get six years this time. You’re only going to get 30 days, and it ends up January 29.
I hope the public understands that and starts registering some complaints, and I hope that during that time every Floridian remembers what happened to us when the beaches of Pensacola beach were blackened with tar and oil and we lost a whole season of our guests, our tourists who come to this extraordinary state of natural environment, the beautiful Florida beaches. I hope that every Floridian will remember, whether you were a hotelier, restaurateur, whether you are the dry cleaners, whether you had the taxi services, when you got hit in your pocketbook, I hope that every American who rightly has an interest in protecting our beaches, our oceans, our marine life, decides to write in and complain to Secretary Zinke exactly what he’s putting at risk with this proposal.
The Interior Department claims the revised proposal will lessen unnecessary regulatory burdens. That’s their words. Unnecessary regulatory burdens on the oil and gas industry saving these businesses money. It’s estimated saving some $900 million for the oil industry. But what about all the other businesses that will be hurt by a spill if that bailout preventer doesn’t cut that pipe in two and seal off the well? Which was the lesson learned from the BP horizon spill.
So, we want to go back and weaken these rules? The BP spill devastated my state’s economy. Eleven people lost their lives. Louisiana’s bayous were inundated with gooey oil. I talked to two professor researchers at Louisiana State University, LSU, they compared the critters that developed in the bayous where the oil went in to the same kind of critters, a little fish, about that big, the ones, their progenies were stunted. They were mentally deformed, could not act like normal killifish, a little fish about that big, compared to the bays and bayous where those killifish hatched and grew in waters where there was no oil sloshing around in the waters.
So for 87 days five million barrels of oil gushed, and I bet that folks don’t even realize that there’s a bill that’s happening right now. As a matter of fact, it’s been leaking for 13 years. In 2004, Hurricane Ivan toppled an offshore drilling platform owned by Taylor Energy, and because of the way that the platform slid, several of the wells were buried and have yet to be plugged. We all know it is not a question of if there will be another spill, but when.
And oh by the way, the one that’s been going on since 2004, and how catastrophic is the next one? Is it going to be off of the Carolinas? Is it going to be off of Virginia and all of our military fleet in Norfolk? Is it going to be off of Jacksonville and Mayport, as well as the sub base for our Trident Submarines? Is it going to be off of Canaveral where our commercial, government rockets are launched into space dropping first stages and where the testing for the Trident Submarine that is based in Georgia, where that testing is done with the telemetry on the Eastern Air Force Test Range?
That’s why more than 41,000 businesses on the Atlantic coast have expressed opposition to drilling in the Atlantic Ocean, and that’s why NASA doesn’t want drilling anywhere near the Kennedy Space Center, and that’s why the Department of Defense has said time and time again that we should protect and extend the moratorium on drilling in the eastern Gulf. Bipartisan, Senator Mel Martinez, a Republican from Florida, and I in 2006 passed a moratorium for the eastern Gulf of Mexico off of Florida because of the military as well as all of the environmental things that I’ve talked about.
The Air Force just at the end of last year came to us, wants to put $60 million of new improvements for exquisite telemetry as we are testing some of our most sophisticated weapons systems in the Gulf Testing Range. That’s the Gulf of Mexico off of Florida. But they don’t want to make that investment of $60 million to upgrade all of the telemetry unless they have the assurance that it’s going to be off limits to oil drilling, not just until 2022 which is in the law, but they want it extended another five years until 2027.
And yet we cannot get it up. This senator tried to get it into the defense bill, an appropriate place that the senator who is the presiding officer serves on that distinguished committee led by John McCain, the Armed Services Committee. We couldn’t get it up because of oil interest not wanting to give the Air Force the security that their $60 million investment on advanced telemetry would be protected for not five years from now but ten years from now.
The only reason itself the administration wants to spend time writing a new one is because the oil industry wants them to open up a whole lot more acreage to drilling, not just in the gulf. They want the entire outer continental shelf of the United States. On the west coast and from New Jersey, south, as you come down the state, including the ones I already mentioned in the southeastern United States. Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida.
I don’t think that we should expose even one acre of federal waters to drilling until we’ve got strong safety standards in place to protect another spill, to protect the workers that lost their lives from ever happening again, to protect the environment, to protect the coastal economies that are so dependent on the beautiful beaches, and to protect the national security interest in our testing and training ranges.
It took six years to finalize these rules, and now in a matter of 30 days, comments are out there to undo these rules. That shouldn’t happen. So will other voices in the Senate speak up? It’s happening right underneath our noses.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: offshore drilling, regulations, roll-back

ICYMI: WTVJ: Gov. Scott Hosted a Puerto Rico Relief Efforts Roundtable in Doral

Posted on January 3, 2018


“Gov. Scott Hosted a Puerto Rico Relief Efforts Roundtable in Doral”
WTVJ-MIA (NBC) – Miami, FL
January 2, 2018
To view the clip, click HERE.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: Doral, Gov. Rick Scott, ICYMI, Puerto Rico, Relief Efforts, Roundtable, wtvj

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Florida Democratic Party Launches “Defend Our Dems” Program

Tallahassee, FL — Today, the Florida Democratic Party is proud to launch the “Defend Our Dems” program, an … [Read More...] about Florida Democratic Party Launches “Defend Our Dems” Program

House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell, Representatives Kelly Skidmore and Allison Tant Request FLDOE to Release Critical Data

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Earlier today, House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell (D–Tampa), Representative Kelly … [Read More...] about House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell, Representatives Kelly Skidmore and Allison Tant Request FLDOE to Release Critical Data

Florida Department of Juvenile Justice and Pinellas Technical College Host Signing Day Event for Students

  St. Petersburg, Fla. – The Florida Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) joined together with Pinellas … [Read More...] about Florida Department of Juvenile Justice and Pinellas Technical College Host Signing Day Event for Students

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