Dear
Oklahoma
Friends
and
Neighbors,
It
was
great
to
spend
some
quality
time
in
the
state
during
August
to
breathe
the
Oklahoma
fresh
air.
August
is
the
only
month
out
of
the
year
that
Congress
is
not
voting
on
legislation,
so
it
allowed
me
to
spend
time
traveling
all
over
the
state
to
hear
the
issues
important
to
you
and
your
families. The
top
issues
I
heard
were
about
healthcare,
education,
terrorism,
energy
and
federal
rules
that
make
it
tough
to
run
a
business
or
find
a
job.
Tax
money
to
the
Iranian
military
Last
week,
I
sent
a
letter
to
President
Obama
to
request
details
about
the
very
unusual
$1.7
billion
in
cash
sent
to
Iran
in
January
and
Februarymoney
we
now
know
was
used
to
build
up
the
Iranian
military.
Americans
deserve
answers
about
how
their
hard-earned
tax
dollars
were
spent
and
the
terms
under
which
the
money
was
exchanged.
To
read
the
letter
and
the
13
questions
I
asked
the
president, CLICK
HERE.
I
will
include
in
a
future
e-newsletter
the
president's
response.
This
is
a
bigger
issue
than
a
single
payment,
no
matter
how
large.
The
cash
money
sent
to
Iran
changes
our
historic
foreign
policy
of
isolating
Iran
as
the
largest
state
sponsor
of
terrorism
in
the
world,
and
it
sets
a
new
precedent
for
sending
money
to
foreign
governments
from
the
long-established
Judgment
Fund.
To
deal
with
the
long-term
precedent,
I
authored
a
bill to
limit
the
future
use
of
the
Judgment
Fund
and
make
sure
no
future
president
can
transfer
American
tax
dollars
to
a
nation
that
sponsors
terrorism.
In
April,
I
also
introduced
a
resolution
to
ensure
the
president
follows
through
on
commitments
made
to
reimpose
sanctions
if
Iran
violates
the
nuclear
deal.
CLICK
HERE to
read
more
about
the
resolution.
New
regulation
process
for
independent
agencies
Last
week,
I
chaired
a
Homeland
Security
and
Governmental
Affairs
Subcommittee
on
Regulatory
Affairs
and
Federal
Management
hearing
to
examine
the
evolving
regulatory
guidelines
for
independent
federal
agencies,
which
are
structured
to
be
independent
of
political
influence.
Unlike
executive
branch
agencies,
independent
regulatory
agencies
are
not
subject
to
the
same
basic
requirements
when
writing
federal
regulation.
Therefore,
they
are
not
held
to
the
same
standard
to
conduct
rigorous
cost-benefit
analysis.
That
means
if
they
are
not
held
accountable,
they
can
write
rules
that
can
cost
Americans
hundreds
of
millions
of
dollars.
During
the
hearing,
all
the
legal
experts
agreed:
we
need
better
oversight
and
a
change
in
how
agencies
make
new
rules.
Independent
agencies
are
not
independent
governments
free
from
answering
to
the
public.
To
read
more
about
the
hearing, CLICK
HERE.
Broken
budget
process
I
would
love
to
tell
you
that
the
appropriations
bills
will
be
completed
on
time
this
year,
but
once
again,
they
will
not.
The
budget
process
to
fund
the
federal
government
is
broken.
Since
1977,
when
the
current
budget
process
was
adopted,
there
have
only
been
four
times
that
the
budget
process
worked
the
way
it
was
intended.
Only
four
times
in
39
years
has
the
budget
been
adopted
before
the
October
1 fiscal-year
deadline.
It
is
not
a
political
party
issue;
it
is
a
bad
process
issue,
and
it
is
time
for
Congress
to
fix
the
broken
process.
This
year,
the
Appropriations
Committee
passed
all
12
bills
with
wide
bi-partisan
majorities
to
fund
the
federal
government,
which
was
a
major
improvement
from
previous
years.
Unfortunately,
Democrats
filibustered
every
Appropriations
bill
that
came
up
on
the
Senate
floor,
and
Congress
will
have
to
rely
on
another
short-term
extension
of
spending
levels
until
December
9
called
a
Continuing
Resolution.
The
system
needs
to
be
reformed,
which
is
why
I
have
proposed
specific
solutions
that
will
fix
the
issues
with
the
current
system,
such
as
biennial
budgeting,
government
shutdown
prevention
incentives
and
the
elimination
of
budget
gimmicks.
I
will
continue
to
encourage
my
colleagues
that
change
is
desperately
needed,
and
that
for
the
future
of
our
country,
that
change
needs
to
happen
now.
Congressional
trip
to
Guatemala
As
part
of
my
duties
on
the
Homeland
Security
and
Intelligence
committees,
I
led
a
national
security
trip
to
Guatemala
last
month.
The
agenda
of
the
trip
was
to
meet
with
officials
to
discuss
major
challenges
for
America
and
our
partners
that
included
drug
trafficking,
immigration,
national
security
and
intelligence
issues.
To
read
more
about
my
trip, CLICK
HERE.
Solution
Sundays
Our
country
still
mourns
the
many
losses
over
the
summer
that
have
further
divided
our
nation.
After
a
number
of
tragic
events
in
our
country,
Senator
Tim
Scott
and
I
started
asking
our
friends
and
neighbors
a
simple
question:
Have
you
ever
had
dinner
in
your
home
with
a
person
of
another
race
or
culture
your family
with
their
family
in
your
home?
Race
relationships
will
not
be
solved
by
saying
we
should
have
a
"national
conversation."
Race
relationships
are
like
all
other
relationships;
they
are
built
over
time,
trust
and
meals
together. I
believe
that
we
will
never
get
all
the
issues
on
the
table
until
we
put
our
feet
under
the
same
dinner
table.
I
encourage
you
to
read
this
opinion
piece
I
co-authored
with
Senator
Scott
about
our
idea
to
address
the
divisive
issues
in
our
nation
by
joining
one
another
at
the
table.
The
whole
world
is
watching
America
to
see
if
we
can
set
the
example,
I
believe
we
can.
CLICK
HERE
to
read
the
Time
Magazine
opinion
piece.
Let’s
respond
to
Zika
responsibly
Zika
is
not
a
new
virus,
and
for
most
people
it
is
not
harmful.
But
there
is
some
evidence
that
the
Zika
virus
can
be
very
harmful
for
children
in
the
womb. We
can
respond
to
the
Zika
virus
in
a
safe,
effective
and
affordable
way.
Just
as
families
do
in
times
of
emergency,
when
a
need
comes
up,
we
make
hard
choices
to
meet
the
new
priorities.
Our
country
cannot
afford
to
address
the
Zika
virus
using
new
“emergency”
money,
when
the
administration
still
has
tens
of
billions
of
"unobligated"
dollars
at
its
disposal.
There
are
millions
of
dollars
in
unused
Ebola
funding
that
can
be
used
today,
yet
the
administration
is
choosing
not
to.
I
have
opposed
a $1.1
billion
emergency
debt
spending
bill to
direct
more
money
towards
the
US
Zika
response
because
spending
new
taxpayer
dollars
when
there
is
already
money
available
is
the
very
definition
of
irresponsible
spending.
CLICK
HERE to
see
my
statement
on
why
I
opposed
the
fiscally irresponsible
Zika
bill
last
week. CLICK
HERE to
read
the
letter
I
sent
to
the
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
to
ask
why
they
don’t
redirect
billions
of
dollars
of
available
funds
to
the
Zika
response.
Keeping
You
in
the
Loop
- Tomorrow,
Saturday,
September
17,
my
office
will
hold
a
Service
Academy
Information
Day
for
Oklahoma
students
in
grades
8-12
who
are
interested
in
the
application
process
for
US
Service
Academies.
Representatives
from
the
US
Military
Academy
at
West
Point,
US
Merchant
Marine
Academy,
US
Naval
Academy,
US
Coast
Guard
Academy
and
US
Air
Force
Academy
will
all
be
available
to
answer
your
questions.
For
more
information,
please
call
918-581-7651
or CLICK
HERE.
Registration
starts
at
7:45am
at
the
Francis
Tuttle
Technology
Center
in
Oklahoma
City,
7301
West
Reno,
Oklahoma
City.
The
meeting
will
begin
at
8:30am
and
last
until
11:30am
with
a
networking
hour
with
all
Service
Academy
representatives
until
12:30pm.
- In
July,
I
was
humbled
and
honored
to
receive
the
Minuteman
of
the
Year
Award
from
the
Oklahoma
chapter
of
the
Reserve
Officers
Association.
Whenever
they
are
called
upon,
reservists
are
always
willing
and
ready
to
serve
and
sacrifice
for
America.
I
am
in
awe
of
their
contributions
to
safety
and
security
to
protect
the
land
of
the
free. CLICK
HERE
to
read
more.
- On
July
30,
2016,
our
nation
recognized
the
60th
anniversary
of
legislation
officially
making
“In
God
We
Trust”
our
national
motto.
I
wrote
an
opinion
piece
to
discuss
this
important
anniversary
and
what
it
means
to
today’s
culture
and
politics. CLICK
HERE
to
read
the
piece.
- On
October
1,
the
Obama
administration
plans
to
transfer
the
Department
of
Commerce’s
Internet
Assigned
Numbers
Authority,
which
is
responsible
for
administrative
functions
that
transform
code
into
language
on
the
Internet,
to
an
international
authority
called
Internet
Corporation
for
Assigned
Names
and
Numbers
(ICANN).
This
is
a
direct
overreach
of
the
Department
of
Commerce,
and
my
colleagues
and
I
in
the
Senate
are
working
to
stop
the
transfer.
We
should
not
give
control
of
the
future
of
the
Internet
to
an
international
body
where
we
have
the
same
vote
as
Russia,
China,
Cuba,
Iran
and
North
Korea.
We
believe
in
freedom
of
speech;
let's
keep
the
Internet
open
and
free.
For
more
information, CLICK
HERE.
- This
week,
the
Senate
passed
the
Water
Resources
Development
Act
of
2016
(WRDA).
This
is
the
authorization
and
oversight
of
our
water
infrastructure
for
the
Army
Corps
of
Engineers
and
the
administration.
Specifically,
the
authorization
provides
necessary
reforms
that
will
allow
local
sponsors
to
improve
infrastructure
so
they
do
not
have
to
wait
on
the
federal
government
and
will
provide
much
needed
improvement
to
the
Port
of
Catoosa
in
Oklahoma.
The
Tulsa
levees,
Grand
Lake,
the
Oklahoma
Water
Compact
and
many
other
vital
water
projects
are
all
included.
CLICK
HERE
to
read
my
statement.
Stay
Connected!
If
you
would
like
more
information
on
these
topics
or
any
other
legislation
currently
before
the
U.S.
Senate,
please
do
not
hesitate
to
call
my
D.C.
office
at
(202)
224-5754.
My
Oklahoma
City
office
can
be
reached
at
(405)
231-4941
and
my
Tulsa
office
at
(918)
581-7651.
You
can
also
follow
me
on
Facebook
or
Twitter
or
Instagram
for
updates
on
my
work
in
Congress.
Notice:
If
you
wish
to
stop
ALL
electronic
communications
from
my
office,
visit
this
link
to
opt out
permanently
from
this
list.
If
you
have
any
questions
about
this
Notice
or
your
right
to
decline
future
electronic
mail
from
this
office,
please
contact
us
at
United
States
Senate,
316
Hart
Senate
Office
Building
Washington,
DC
20510. |