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Pelosi: Oil Spill Response Package Puts $5 Billion Toward Deficit Reduction

July 27, 2010

Contact: Brendan Daly/Nadeam Elshami/Drew Hammill, 202-226-7616

Washington, D.C. – Speaker Nancy Pelosi released the following statement today on the House introduction of the oil spill response package, which will be considered on the floor later this week. The package includes: the revised Consolidated Land, Energy, and Aquatic Resources (CLEAR) Act, estimated by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office to reduce the deficit by $5.3 billion over the next five years; and the Offshore Oil and Gas Worker Whistleblower Protection Act:

“In the wake of the BP disaster, Congress must act on its commitment to protect America’s families and businesses, rebuild the Gulf Coast, hold oil companies accountable, and work to ensure that a spill of this kind never happens again. This week, the House will vote on an oil spill response package to achieve these goals and keep our promise to the American people.

“The updated CLEAR Act includes strong new safety measures, restores the Gulf Coast, protects local residents and taxpayers, reforms the agency charged with overseeing oil drilling, and holds the oil industry responsible for cleanup costs and recovery. This is good for our families, our environment, and the health of our natural resources. And today, the independent CBO told us that it’s good for our budget – saving taxpayers more than $5 billion in the next five years.

“The other piece of this package – the Offshore Oil and Gas Worker Whistleblower Protection Act – protects workers who put the people’s interest first, speak up, and inform state and federal government authorities of violations or practices that endanger the public.

“This package, along with the other measure the House has passed, forms a powerful response to the tragedy in the Gulf. We look forward to working with Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle to enact this package and do right by the people of the Gulf Coast.”

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RECENT LEGISLATION

Last week, the House passed two bills from the Science and Technology Committee:

• H.R. 2693, the Oil Pollution Research and Development Program Reauthorization Act, which will modify oil drilling research, development to further innovation technologies and methods to prevent, detect, recover and mitigate oil discharges.

• H.R. 5716, the Safer Oil and Natural Gas Drilling Technology Research and Development Program, which makes safety and accident prevention and mitigation a key priority in the deepwater drilling research and development.

Last month, the House passed H.R. 5503, the SPILL Act, to reform maritime liability laws – Death on the High Seas Act (1920), Jones Act (1920) and the Limitation on Liability Act (1851) – to ensure that the families of those killed or injured in the BP Spill and other such tragedies are justly compensated for their losses.

The House has passed legislation (H.R. 5481) to give subpoena power to the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling. The Commission—co-chaired by former Senator Bob Graham of Florida and former EPA Administrator Bill Reilly—was established on May 22 and is tasked with providing recommendations on how we can prevent future spills that result from offshore drilling and mitigate any impact.

To ensure we have the tools needed to respond to the BP Oil Spill, last month Congress passed S. 3473 to permit the Coast Guard to obtain one or more advances from the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund to underwrite federal response activities related to the BP/Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Under current law, the Coast Guard can only withdraw up to $100 million from the fund to finance emergency response efforts after an accident and that money is about to run out. BP is required to repay these funds. The trust fund, created by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, is funded by an 8-cent fee paid by the oil companies on each barrel of oil. This legislation has been signed by President Obama.

The American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act passed by the House will protect coastal economies by making oil companies pay to strengthen the solvency of the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund—instead of passing the bill on to taxpayers. That measure will raise the fee oil companies pay per barrel and increase the current $1 billion cap on individual claims against the fund to $5 billion, and increase the $500 million cap on natural resource damage assessments to $2.5 billion. Currently, the trust fund has a balance of roughly $1.6 billion.