[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 151 (2005), Part 9] [Senate] [Pages 12750-12751] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]CHUCK LUDLAM Mr. LIEBERMAN. Mr. President, I rise to express my gratitude and, truly, this country's gratitude, to Chuck Ludlam of my staff, for his 33-year career in government service and public policy. He's retiring on June 24, 40 years to the month after his first job on Capitol Hill as a ``Stanford in Government'' intern in the House of Representatives. Thomas Jefferson once asked the question: What duty does a citizen owe to the government that secures the society in which he lives? Answering his own question, Jefferson said: ``A nation that rests on the will of the people must also depend on individuals to support its institutions if it is to flourish. Persons qualified for public service should feel an obligation to make that contribution.'' Chuck has answered that call--a call as old as our Republic--with dedicated service to our Nation and continued service to our world. Chuck began his public service as a Peace Corps volunteer in Nepal in 1968-1970. After his Senate retirement, he and his wife, Paula Hirschoff, also a 1960's Peace Corps volunteer, in Kenya, will serve again as Peace Corps volunteers, in Senegal. This full circle expresses well their commitment to service. The professionalism and accomplishments of congressional staff are often unsung and even unappreciated. While it is difficult to summarize a career as varied and distinguished as Chuck's, let me touch on a few highlights. I have known Chuck since I arrived in the Senate in 1989, and he has served as my economic counsel since 2001. Following the anthrax attack on the Senate in October 2001, Chuck went to work on biodefense and infectious disease policy issues. BioShield I, enacted last July, was in significant part due to his work, and he has now helped Senator Hatch, Senator Brownback, and me fashion BioShield II, S. 975, a visionary tour de force on the full range of issues we must address to prepare for a bioterror attack or infectious disease outbreak. This bill provides a prescription for how to prepare ourselves for these threats to our national health and well being. Now it is incumbent on us to enact it. It is hard to describe the importance to our country of moving this legislation. It is an area of extreme future risk not only for ourselves but for all nations. Chuck developed a profound view of what must be done to deter this nightmare, a nightmare not only of bio attacks but of infectious disease in general, and has been relentlessly pressing this problem and its solutions onto our national policy agenda since 2001. It has been an exceptionally dedicated and unique legislative effort and it underscores the kind of remarkable role talented and driven Senate staff like Chuck can play assisting Senator policymakers. Chuck had a long and very special working education that has enabled him to serve in this Senate policy-developer role. Before his service in my office, Chuck served as chief tax counsel on the Senate Small Business Committee, 1985-1993, with Senator Dale Bumpers; as legal counsel on the Joint Economic Committee, 1982-1985, with Congressman Gillis Long; as legal counsel on the Carter White House Domestic Policy Staff, 1979-1981, working with Si Lazarus and Stu Eizenstat; as counsel to the Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Subcommittee on Separation of Powers of the Senate Judiciary Committee, 1975-1979, with Senator James Abourezk; and as a trial attorney in the Bureau of Consumer Protection of the Federal Trade Commission, 1972-1975. In addition, he served as vice president for Government Relations, Biotechnology Industry Organization, 1993-2000, and Counsel, Musick, Peeler and Garrett, 1981-1982). During his long career on Capitol Hill, Chuck has brought his strong talents to bear on a wide range of legislative issues. While on my staff, these ranged from Federal fiscal responsibility and honest government accounting, S. 1915; to building assets for the poor, S. 476; to promoting U.S.-China educational and cultural engagement; S. 1117; to U.S. economic competitiveness policy, S. 2747; and, as I mentioned, to enacting Project BioShield, Public Law 108-276. Long before joining me, Chuck worked to establish the Office of Senate Legal Counsel, Public Law 95-521; to defeat problematic Airline Noise legislation in 1978; to enact the first law on the subject of organizational conflict of interest, Public Law 95-70; to enact the Regulatory Flexibility Act, Public law 96-354; to save the tax exemption for the bonds for non-profit hospitals and schools, Public Law 97-248; enact the Patent Reform Act of 1999, Public Law 106-113; to enact the first law banning genetic discrimination, Public Law 104-191; to make permanent the Orphan Drug Tax Credit, Public Law 104-188 and 105-34; and to defeat attempts to criminalize some stem cell research in 1997-1998. We know Chuck to be a passionate and tenacious advocate, a dedicated mentor to the talented legislative fellows who have worked for him, an adventurer who continues to trek over some of the most forbidding and fascinating parts of the planet, a loyal friend to many in our office, someone who is always searching for the ``big idea-big picture'' as a visionary policy developer, and a generous human being with a sense of humor. As a Congressional Staffer, he has always kept his focus on the public interest, undistracted by partisan concerns, and I found I could always count on hearing his frank and perceptive perspective on what would be the right policy for the country. Chuck is completing an oral history of his unusual and remarkable Senate career, based on interviews with the Office of the Senate Historian, which has been transcribed and will be available on line. This history describes the challenges, skills and tactics of a Capitol Hill staffer who has fought in the political trenches over forty years. Chuck hopes that this history will encourage young people to consider careers in public service. He's served as the principal advisor and mentor for 25 years to the ``Stanford in Government'' program. He was one of 100 alumni awarded medallions to honor their service to Stanford University during centennial celebrations of the University's founding in 1991; the headquarters for ``Stanford in Government'' at the Haas Center for Public Service is named after him. We wish Chuck and Paula well in their venture in Africa. We will miss Chuck in the office but we know that he's following one of his great dreams, and starting on a remarkable and courageous new round of public service. My office and I are grateful for his dedicated service to our office, to the [[Page 12751]] Senate, and to our Nation, as well as for his friendship. Somewhere right now Jefferson and our Founding Fathers are looking down and smiling proud that our Nation still produces men and women like Chuck and Paula. Congratulations Chuck. Keep in touch and keep teaching us. We eagerly await your reports from Africa. ____________________