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Sen. Moran Pays Tribute to Coach Roger Barta
Dec 20 2012
There are certainly so many serious issues that we face in this country, and so many tragedies have occurred. I was on the floor earlier this week paying tribute to the lost lives in Connecticut and two police officers killed in the line of duty in Topeka, KS, this week and the death of our colleague-certainly serious issues that we face now awaiting the House to pass legislation in regard to the cliff.
This is perhaps a lighter subject. I want to pay tribute to something that’s such a great tradition in our State of Kansas and really across the country. Football is something that is important to communities across my State. On Friday nights, each fall of each year, thousands of Americans, they gather at their local high school football fields to cheer on their favorite teams. This tradition has stood strong for decades on the Kansas prairie, but it’s especially true in a little town not too far from my hometown, in the town of Smith Center.
There are few if any high school football fans in our State who are unaware of Smith Center's reputation. Coach Roger Barta and his Redmen football team have won more than 320 games and eight state championships; five of them in a row. They are even known here in Washington, DC.
A few years ago, when they were on their 79-game winning streak, people would come to me and ask me if I had ever heard of Smith Center, KS. And I would say: Certainly. Yes. What’s the story? And they had read on the sports page that Smith Center had scored 74 points on another team in the first quarter. It turned out to be my hometown of Plainville. 74 points in the first quarter-this is an amazing team.
But under the leadership of Coach Barta, the Redmen football team has set State and national records. That 79-game winning streak is a remarkable achievement, and it caught the attention of the New York Times. A New York Times sportswriter, in fact Joe Drape, moved his family from New York City to Smith Center, KS, and lived there for an entire school year to chronicle the team's achievements and to write about the community. He tells their story in his best-selling book called ``Our Boys: A Perfect Season on the Plains.''
There are many reasons for this team's success that would, in fact, bring a New York Times reporter to this small town, but I think the community of Smith Center would agree with me that perhaps the greatest reason behind their success is their head coach-Coach Roger Barta. The coach's 323 victories place him among the top 5 coaches in all time Kansas football on the list of wins, and in 2007 he was named the Gatorade National Coach of the Year. But this season, after 35 years of coaching, Coach Barta announced he is ready to hang up his whistle and retire.
I’ve had the opportunity to participate in several pregame coin flips with Coach Barta and his team over a number of seasons, including their 2009 State title game. Each time, I watched a very talented and sportsmanlike football team and a very spirited set of fans from Smith Center and across the region. Yet all the success this team has enjoyed on the field is not what makes them so remarkable. The truly exceptional work being done on the plains of Kansas is the development of character in the boys of the Smith Center football team. It is the respect the athletes learn to have for their teammates and the opponents on the field. It is the integrity the boys are expected to have both on and off the field. And it’s the hard-working spirit they take with them when they graduate.
As a member of the Redmen football team, the athletes are not expected to just excel on the field but in the classroom and the community as well. From school plays to school concerts, the Redmen do more than simply play football. And Coach Barta serves more than just to coach football-he serves as a role model and mentor for young men and the community.
I remember the story in the book that says when one of the team members violates a team rule-young fourth grade students in Smith Center, KS, have a player card, and that football team member who violates a rule has to go to the fourth grade member and explain his error in violation of the team rule and apologize to the fourth grader.
Coach Barta's wife had this to say about her husband's commitment to the Redmen: “Roger likes everything about football, but what he loves most are the practices, the camaraderie, and watching the boys learn a little more. He lets them know how much he wants them to succeed.”
In the book about the Redmen, the writer Joe Drape extols the virtues we in America hold so dear. Humility, sacrifice, and unwavering commitment are all the characteristics that are exemplified by the Redmen and their fans.
But perhaps Coach Barta's greatest legacy as he leaves the coaching field in Smith Center is within the Smith Center city limits: former Redmen who left town for college or work but eventually returned home.
Broch Hutchison, one of the Coach Barta's former players, is now an assistant coach and he had this to say about working alongside Coach Barta: “We all had opportunities, but this is where we've learned to love one another and work hard and build a community. If we can have an impact on kid's lives like Coach Barta, we want to do it in our hometown.”
This attitude exemplifies the teaching, coaching, and parenting philosophy of rural America. Our populations are dwindling and our communities are aging, but our commitment to raising responsible children and preparing them to be successful in life is something that will never leave us. I am thankful that Coach Barta and his staff understand this, and I am proud to come from a part of the country that remains committed to that way of life.
Coach Barta summed it up best when he said this about his coaching philosophy: “What we do really well around here is raise kids…None of this is really about football. What we're doing is sending kids into life who know that every day means something.”
Congratulations to Coach Barta for his outstanding achievements over the last three decades. But most importantly, thank you, coach, for your investment in the lives of young men from Smith Center. Their lives are forever changed because of you.
Sen. Moran Discusses Senate Rule Changes
Dec 20 2012
Thank you, the Senate, of which I am a new Member, was at one time called the world's greatest deliberative body. Its rules have remained largely unchanged since the origin of the Senate. This Chamber's distinguishing attribute has undoubtedly been its right of unlimited debate and its greatest protections are the rules put in place to defend that right to debate.
I am worried about the talk now of destroying any Senator's ability to filibuster, to delay consideration of a bill, because it’s a fundamental right of all Senators to express their opposition to legislation even when that Senator stands alone-when you are the only one who opposes that legislation. This is an important right, protecting a Senator's right to object and a Senator's right to represent his or her own constituency.
Something tells me the desire to curb this debate of the Senate doesn't really come from a failure of the Senate's rules but, rather, a desire by some to see that an agenda can be pushed through by ignoring that minority right, by overriding the objections of an individual Senator on behalf of his or her constituents.
The rules of the United States Senate should not be targeted for change until we look at maybe what the problems are in the way we conduct our business currently. For so long-again, I have only been here two years, but for the two years I have been here, it seems to me that often the majority has obstructed the ideal of unlimited debate and put undue stress on the rules of our Chamber. The practice of the majority party has prevented me and my colleagues from contributing to the legislative process in several ways. Rather than encourage debate and compromise by welcoming amendments, often, what we call it here, “the tree has been filled,” or, in the way we would say it in Kansas, we fill up the opportunity for amendments with certain amendments that then preclude any other amendments being considered, that being the amendments of the rest of us.
In addition to that, the majority leader has filed cloture more than 100 times on the very day the measure was first raised on the Senate floor, which basically ends debate on that day.
We get compromise whenever everyone, the majority and minority, have the opportunity to present their points of view. Then we sit down and try to figure out the differences, how we can make things work among ourselves. We have seen rule XIV used to bypass committee work nearly 70 times in the last six years.
I am honored to serve on a long list of committees in the United States Senate and I attend many committee meetings and we hold hearings. We listen to our constituents, we listen to the experts, and we try to reach a conclusion as to what is best in a piece of legislation. When that process is bypassed, we lose that opportunity to gain from that insight.
In so many instances the committee process is bypassed. I am a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, with the example of our inability to have appropriations bills and no budget. I am in the Banking Committee on which we have lots of hearings but very few markups. I think it undermines the ability for each of us to do our jobs on behalf of America.
I think we have been forced away from what is most valuable here-discussions. Not that any of us get our own way. That’s not the nature of this place. It’s not the nature of America. But we each have our own voice, and by being able to express ourselves we have the opportunity to flesh out the best ideas and ultimately to require people to come together and reach an agreement-that word that sometimes is not said often enough-compromise.
I recognize this as a Member of the United States Senate representing the State of Kansas. I consider my State often in the minority. We are very rural. The issues we care about are different than places in the rest of the country. I represent a small population and many of my colleagues represent large urban areas with large populations. In the absence of rules protecting me as a Senator representing a minority, I think my ability to represent that minority is diminished. I recognize that I don’t always have the right answer to every question. I have great respect for everyone's opinion. I was never ordained by God to have all the answers to every problem, but I think we find that by having the respect and listening to others, and to sort out what we think is the best of our ideas and the best of other ideas to see that good things happen on behalf of America.
We need to make certain that Republicans and Democrats have the opportunity to express their opinions and then come together. We need to make certain the legislative process works in the committee and we need to make certain that we are not precluded from standing here, day after day; in opposition to legislation that we believe is bad for America. It is the Senate that has the opportunity to keep bad things from happening.
Again, I worry that as a result of the lack of function of the Senate over the last years that we are going to make dramatic changes in the rules that change the nature of this body, who we are and what we can accomplish, what our purpose is.
We need to work together, no doubt about it, but the idea of changing the rules, in my view, diminishes the need to do so. Our constituents expect us to represent them and their best interests and that means that we have the right-the necessity-of participating in the legislative process. I owe that to Kansas. I owe them nothing less. Without the right to use the filibuster to stop consideration of a bill until all ideas, all issues are heard, we risk the loss of that dissenting voice for a minority-no matter what party may be in power.
Previous Members of the Senate have understood the importance of protecting the minority's rights and have spoken out in defense of unlimited debate that exists in the Senate today. I worry that the Senate is becoming a place different. As I studied history, there was always the voice of the institution, the Senator who had been here for a long time. The collective wisdom that, yes, we are in the minority now-or we are in the majority now-but someday it will be the reverse, and we want the rules to apply no matter what position that we’re in. It seems to me in days gone past there would have been Members of the Senate who would speak out—regardless of whether a Democrat or Republican-for the institution of the Senate and what it means to the American people and the Constitution of the United States.
The late Senator Byrd once said this about the design of the Senate: “The Senate was intended to be a forum for open and free debate and for the protection of political minorities. As long as the Senate retains the power to amend and the power of unlimited debate, the liberties of the people will remain secure.”
When Senator Biden, our Vice President, was a part of this Chamber, he once said in defense of the filibuster: “At its core, the filibuster is not about stopping a nominee or a bill, it is about compromise and moderation.”
In 2005, when Republicans controlled the Senate and our president, President Obama was a Senator, he said: “If the majority chooses to end the filibuster; if they choose to change the rules and put an end to democratic debate-then fighting and bitterness and the gridlock will only get worse.”
I think this statement applies today. I am tired of the fighting, and the bitterness, and the gridlock. The American people do not want to see even more partisan bickering in Washington, DC. They want us to work together and solve our Nation's problems. They want us to get things done.
Preserving the rules of the Senate is not a partisan issue, but it’s about protecting the nature of the Senate and the rights of the minority. Without the ability to compromise or debate on the floor of the Senate, I fear that the greatest deliberative body will be drastically changed and changed for the worse.
The original design of the Senate enables each Senator to be equal to one another no matter the party label, and each has the right to protest using the filibuster. If we choose to silence the Senators in the minority now for the sake of political expediency and lower the number of votes needed for a bill to pass without dissent, then we risk changing the very nature of the Senate.
I see this as a former Member of the House of Representatives. I am accustomed—from 14 years—of having these words spoken. I yield to the gentleman from Kansas 60 seconds. The Senate is different than the House. We are entitled to more than 60 seconds of being able to speak in support or in opposition to issues before the Senate. If that filibuster were to be destroyed, and if the last protection of the rights of the minority were to be disregarded, then the Senate would become substantially no different than the House. It would be marked by limited debate where the majority runs against the basic nature of the Senate rules based upon population.
When the Republicans were in control of the Senate in 2005, Senator Reid, our majority leader, said: “The threat to change the Senate rules is a raw abuse of power and will destroy the very checks and balances our Founding Fathers put in place to prevent absolute power by any one branch of government.”
It is my belief that the Senate still exists today in the form that the Framers intended and that we must put a stop to the raw abuse of power. The Senate represents the embodiment of freedom of speech, and we should encourage the full exercise of our hard-won freedoms and unlimited debate. This tradition stands as testament to the sacrifices of generations of early Americans and Americans throughout the history of our country. This freedom is one that will certainly be fought for in this Congress and the next.
Sen. Moran Pays Tribute to Coach Roger Barta
Dec 20 2012
On Thursday, December 20, 2012, Sen. Moran paid tribute to Coach Roger Barta on the Senate Floor. After 35 years of coaching football, the renowned coach of the Smith Center Redmen is hanging up his whistle and retiring. There are few, if any, high school football fans in Kansas who are unaware of Smith Center’s reputation; Coach Barta and his Redmen football team have won more than 320 games and eight state championships – five of them in a row.
But Coach Barta does more than just coach football – he serves as a role model and mentor for dozens of young men. As a member of the Redmen football team, the athletes are not expected to just excel on the field, but in the classroom and community as well. Coach Barta summed it up best when he said this about his coaching philosophy: “What we do real well around here is raise kids… None of this is really about football. What we’re doing is sending kids into life who know that every day means something.”
Sen. Moran Honors Life of Fallen Topeka Officers
Dec 18 2012
We all know it has been a difficult and tragic couple of days for America. We were so deeply saddened to hear the news from Newtown, Connecticut, on Friday. As a parent, nothing in life is more important than the protection of our children. The death of a child-there is no recovery from. My heart goes out to all the families who lost loved ones in this unspeakable tragedy. Last night we learned of the death of our colleague Senator Inouye.
I want to mention today that just this past Sunday, over the weekend, grief struck the capital city of Kansas, my home State. Corporal David Gogian and Officer Jeff Atherly were fatally shot Sunday in Topeka while on duty. These public servants were investigating drug activity that was allegedly occurring inside a vehicle outside a neighborhood grocery store. As they approached the vehicle and ordered the occupants to get out, a gunman took the lives of both officers. When we lose someone in a community in Kansas, it is not just a name to us, it is somebody we see at our kids' activities at school, somebody we go to church with, somebody we know and care about. These two individuals are that to their friends and family in Topeka and across our State.
David had been part of the Topeka Police Department for 21 years. He spent 13 years as a reserve officer and eight years as a full-time officer. His service did not begin as a police officer; he had previously served his country in the Kansas National Guard and had just recently retired. Police Chief Ronald Miller described David as someone who spent his life in service to his country and to the city of Topeka. David's service to his community was clearly a model to others, including his son Brandon, who followed his dad's footsteps and serves the Topeka community as a police officer himself.
The second officer, Jeff, was just 29 years old and had joined the police department just last year. Chief Miller said that Jeff was just getting started in his career, and he had his entire life ahead of him.
Jeff grew up in the small community of Carbondale, which is just south of Topeka, and graduated from Washington University in 2009 with a degree in law enforcement. After graduation, Jeff-like his parents Steve and Susan, who are both educators-decided to dedicate his life to public service. Jeff was known by his friends for his smile, his great sense of humor, and his kind heart. He leaves behind a 3-year-old son Logan.
These two men honorably served their community by faithfully carrying out the duties of a law enforcement officer. Rather than shirking from danger, police officers pledge to face danger with courage, and that is exactly what these two men did.
Inscribed here in Washington, DC on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial are these words: “It is not how these officers died that made them heroes, it is how they lived.”
Today we remember David and Jeff for their lives. For their lives that was in service to others and their lives that served Topeka. We express our gratitude for their dedication to their community and to their country. We remember their families and their loved ones.
I ask that all Kansans, in fact, all Americans-to join in remembering David's and Jeff's families in their thoughts and prayers this week. May God comfort them in their time of grief and be a source of strength for them. May He also protect all those who continue to serve us today.
On Tuesday, December 18, 2012, U.S. Senator Jerry Moran spoke on the Senate floor regarding the death of two members of the Topeka Police Department, Cpl. David Gogian and Officer Jeff Atherly, who were killed on duty Sunday, December 16, 2012. He paid tribute to their lives and the impact they had on their community.
Sen. Moran Statement on Passing of Sen. Inouye
Dec 17 2012
U.S. Senators Pat Roberts and Jerry Moran, and U.S. Representatives Tim Huelskamp and Lynn Jenkins today announced Ft. Riley was awarded a $35.2 million federal grant to build a new middle school.
“This is great news for the soldiers and their families who call Ft. Riley home. Since, 2005 when BRAC brought new Brigades, support units and the Big Red One back to Ft. Riley, we knew the Fort and Geary County would experience tremendous growth. Last year, I toured the school and it was clear it was in need of modernization and we had to address the overcrowding. Men and women in uniform who protect and defend our nation, should not have to worry about the quality of the schools where they send their children,” Senator Roberts said.
“Christmas has come early for the soldiers and their families at Ft. Riley,” Sen. Moran said. “During my visits to Ft. Riley over the past two years, it was clear that the Junction City community has worked hard to accommodate the growth in Ft. Riley’s population. This grant recognizes that children of military families are an important Department of Defense priority. USD 475 can be proud that it continues to make certain that the needs of those who serve our country are met, and their kids have access to quality schools and other educational resources.”
“We are excited about the announcement that Ft. Riley will receive funds for a new middle school. Programs like this that combine federal and local buy-in help to foster a greater sense of community for towns and bases, especially when military families experience transition,” Congressman Tim Huelskamp said.
"At approximately 40 percent over capacity, it is clear the school at Ft. Riley was in desperate need of an upgrade," said Congresswoman Jenkins. "I am pleased to see the Department of Defense recognize our brave service men, women and their families deserve quality education facilities. They sacrifice every day for this country, and we want them to be assured they will be taken care of at home."
The members of Congress applauded the efforts of Geary County Superintendent Ron Walker, Deputy Garrison Commander Linda Hoeffner, Governor Sam Brownback and John Armbrust, Executive Director of the Governor’s Military Council to ensure the Department of Defense made Ft. Riley schools a priority.
The grant was awarded as part of the Department of Defense Installations and Environment fund. The Geary County School District (USD 475) will match a portion of this funding, $6.7 million, for a total of $41.96 million to demolish and build the new middle school (6-8th grade) on post. The school’s groundbreaking is expected January 22, 2013 with doors opening in 2014. The school will hold roughly 700 students.
The delegation pledged to continue working to secure funds for a needed, second elementary school and to address remaining educational needs on post.