STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 5278 - Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act
(Rep. Duffy, R-WI, and two cosponsors)
The Administration strongly supports House passage of H.R. 5278, the
Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act
(PROMESA), which would provide Puerto Rico with a comprehensive
restructuring authority to address its unsustainable debt, coupled with
appropriate fiscal oversight to increase transparency and achieve
meaningful reforms.
Puerto Rico has already begun defaulting on its $70 billion of debt with a much larger default anticipated on July 1
when nearly $2 billion in additional payments are due. However, this
is not just a matter of financial liabilities. The human costs for the
3.5 million Americans in Puerto Rico – in terms of access to health
care, electricity, education, and basic public safety – are real and
escalating daily. H.R. 5278 would allow Puerto Rico to restructure its
liabilities to help address the ongoing crisis, with no new Federal
spending.
While the Administration
supports passage of H.R. 5278, the Administration has concerns with some
provisions in the bill. The Administration opposes the measures in
this bill on minimum wage and overtime that put in jeopardy important
protections for workers, do nothing to address the crisis, and further
exacerbate the economic disparities between Puerto Rico and the mainland
United States. Although the bill would include important provisions to
ensure adequate funding for public sector pensions, it could do even
more to protect pensions. Further, the bill should ensure Puerto Ricans
have a robust voice on the proposed Financial Oversight and Management
Board. While the bill includes provisions the Administration opposes,
on balance, the Administration believes this compromise legislation is
far superior to the status quo and is necessary to protect the
well-being of 3.5 million Americans and create a path to recovery.
Only Congress has the
authority to provide Puerto Rico the tools to resolve this crisis.
Failing to act now will result in an economic and humanitarian crisis
far beyond what Puerto Rico is already facing today. Absent the bill's
protections and tools, an escalating series of lawsuits between
creditors and against Puerto Rico could ensue, which could imperil
essential services and put pensions in jeopardy.
The
Administration urges the Congress to build on the bipartisan effort behind
PROMESA and pass this legislation quickly before this crisis grows materially
worse.
Source:
Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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