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Dave
Reichert
represents
Washington’s 8th
Congressional
District in the
U.S. House of
Representatives.
Elected in 2004,
he first came to
national
prominence as
the detective
who led the
effort to
capture the
Green River
serial killer.
He serves on
three committees
in Congress, and
is Chairman of
the Homeland
Security
Subcommittee on
Emergency
Preparedness,
Science and
Technology. He
is also a member
of the Suburban
Caucus. The
Congressman
discusses his
role in the
Caucus below:
RF:
There’s been a
lot of
discussion so
far this year
about developing
a Suburban
Agenda that
would be geared
toward helping
families in
their everyday
lives. You are
part of a core
group in the
House of
Representatives
working on a
plan to do just
that. Could you
tell us about
this effort?
REICHERT:
Up until very
recently, we
viewed our
nation as one
third rural, one
third urban and
one third
suburban. That’s
just not
accurate
anymore. America
is
overwhelmingly
suburban, with
less than 20
percent of
constituents
coming from
rural areas or
big cities.
Over half of all
voters live in
suburbs or small
cities.
Additionally,
these voters
tend to be the
“swing” voters
we always hear
about. If you
look at the
swing districts
in Congress,
almost all of
them are
suburban
districts. But
our political
agenda in
Congress has
thus far failed
to recognize and
specifically
target this.
So
Congressman Mark
Kirk of Illinois
went to about 20
suburban areas
and asked the
families who
live there what
was important to
them, what
concerns were on
their minds.
They told him
the country is
on the “wrong
track.”
Repeatedly, he
heard about
concerns with
health care,
crime,
education, taxes
and the
environment.
Every single one
of those
concerns is one
I hear over and
over again in my
own district in
Washington
State.
The members of the
Suburban Caucus
have made a top
five list of
priorities for
the Suburban
Agenda, which
came out of
those
discussions with
suburbanites:
keeping
pedophiles from
becoming
teachers; making
health insurance
fully portable;
long term saving
for children;
more cleanup and
less court for
the superfund
environment
program; and
expanding
federal backup
to fight
international
drug gangs. This
last priority is
where my own
background and
expertise comes
in, but these
ideas together
form the
backbone of the
Suburban
Agenda.
RF:
What is your
role and what
issues are you
personally
looking at?
REICHERT:
I was tapped by
Mark Kirk
chiefly for my
experience
fighting drugs
and the spread
of gangs from
urban
communities into
the nearby
suburban areas.
Gangs backed by
international
drug cartels are
moving beyond
cities into
suburban
schools,
threatening to
overwhelm local
police
departments. As
Sheriffof King
County, which is
the 12th largest
county in the
nation and
includes Seattle
and the
surrounding
suburbs, I
wrestled with
the spread of
gangs and drugs
from Seattle to
outlying areas.
With over
500,000
registered
members in the
U.S., drug gangs
in America would
be the fifth
largest army in
the world. I
took the lead as
Sheriff of King
County to expand
the federal
prosecution of
gang members,
emphasizing the
importance of
prosecuting
gangs who have a
presence in
schools and that
seek to recruit
new members
there.
The increased
presence of meth
labs and all of
the problems
that go along
with that are
something I’m
particularly
experienced
with. The West
coast has been
dealing with a
severe meth
problem since
the early 1990s,
and has actually
fought through
the worst of it
due to
Washington
State’s very
progressive,
aggressive
approach to
fighting the
movement of meth
into our
communities. I’d
like to say I
played more than
a passing role
in that fight. I
hope that our
experience in
Washington State
will help other
communities in
the Midwest and
East.
I believe my
role as a vocal
opponent of
domestic
violence could
also have a
place as we
determine what
this group’s
priorities will
be.
RF:
Some people
might scoff and
say this is just
another attempt
by Washington to
put a slogan on
an issue and
impose a
“one-size-fits-all”
solution on
people’s
problems. What
makes this
effort
different?
REICHERT:
The relatively
recent
development of
suburban
neighborhoods as
important
political areas
produced a new
reality, which
has not been
given the same
study or
consideration
that rural or
urban areas
have. It’s only
a natural
progression to
move our focus
as the
population
migrates as it
has from rural
to urban to
suburban.
RF:
On a similar
note, some
people might say
that some of the
issues being
talked about as
part of the
Suburban Agenda
– teacher checks
and mandatory
Internet filters
are two examples
— are issues
better addressed
and handled by
the states. Why
do you believe
there is a role
for Washington
in these areas
as well?
REICHERT:
The Internet
isn’t just an
intrastate
capability—it
crosses state
lines. It
crosses national
boundaries and
is an
international
issue. Teachers
also can move as
they please,
changing state
residency when
they wish.
Information may
not be easily or
readily
available from
state to state.
The increased
mobility of our
population
requires that we
take necessary
steps to ensure
that those we
entrust with the
care and
education of our
children are
worthy of that
responsibility.
RF:
What about
costs? The
federal
government is
running a
deficit as it
is. Can we
afford to be
undertaking
something as
ambitious the
Suburban
Agenda?
REICHERT:
There is no
dollar figure
attached to the
Suburban Agenda.
It is more
accurately
described as
providing a
focus for
suburban
priorities which
can be included
in current
bills. We’re
already doing
that with things
like permanent
tax cuts, small
business
incentives and
programs to
reduce drug and
gang activity. A
very recent
example was the
inclusion of
teacher
background
checks in the
Children’s
Safety and
Violent Crime
Reduction Act,
which the House
voted on
recently.
RF:
Your background
as a Sheriff
makes you
ideally suited
to tackle these
issues head-on.
How much does
your experience
in local law
enforcement
shape your
efforts on the
issues you are
working on
today?
REICHERT:
My experience as
a cop has a
substantial
influence on the
issues I’m
working on.
Peter King,
Chairman of the
House Homeland
Security
Committee,
tapped me last
year after
Hurricane
Katrina to be
Chairman of the
Subcommittee on
Emergency
Preparedness,
Science and
Technology. He
did so despite
my relative
inexperience in
the House — I am
only the sixth
freshman in the
history of
Congress to
chair a
subcommittee —
because he
understood the
value of my law
enforcement
experience. That
experience is
the reason Mark
Kirk tapped me
for the Suburban
Agenda as well.
I’m also
Vice-Chairman of
the Coast Guard
and Maritime
Transportation
Subcommittee of
the House
Committee on
Transportation
and
Infrastructure
because of my
experience
working with the
Coast Guard and
protecting ports
in Washington
State.
Beyond that,
my experience as
a cop shapes my
Subcommittee’s
agenda too.
We’ve dedicated
ourselves this
year to solving
the problems our
first responders
face with
operability and
interoperability
as they attempt
to communicate
during a
disaster.
Operability is
the ability of
communication
devices to
function when
their users
require them to
and
interoperability
is the ability
for the varied
types of
communication
devices used by
all emergency
response
personnel and
various other
officials in the
event of a
disaster to work
together,
ensuring
information is
shared in a
timely,
efficient and
effective
manner. I know
from firsthand
experience what
it’s like to
call for back-up
and not be able
to reach your
colleagues.
My experience as
Sheriff also
taught me the
importance of
collecting
useful, timely
intelligence. As
a Congressman,
I’m doing
everything I can
to make sure our
intelligence
community has
information
gathering
capabilities
that ensure they
have access to
the best, most
accurate
information
available.
RF:
Finally, this is
very much a
vision-based
plan, where you
have a number of
different issues
held together by
one overarching
theme. What one
message would
like people to
come away with
as they become
more familiar
with the effort
and some of the
goals you and
your colleagues
are trying to
achieve?
REICHERT:
Suburban issues
are different
from rural and
urban issues.
Our suburban
priorities are
transportation —
suburban
dwellers often
commute to and
from their jobs,
making their
roadways of
utmost
importance — the
migration of
gangs into
suburban areas,
and the
increasing
prevalence of
drug use by
suburban
students. We are
listening to our
constituents in
suburban areas
and the Suburban
Agenda is the
response to what
we’re hearing.
Suburban
constituents’
concerns are
unique and they
require a
focused,
coordinated
approach, which
the members
involved in this
effort are
dedicated to
providing.
RF
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