When Congress recessed on August 1, 214 members of the House of Representatives had signed House Continuing Resolution 65, a statement of full support for the Jones Act. Joining the list of Lakes legislators was Sabo (MN). In total, 71 members of the Lakes delegation in the House have signed the Resolution to date and this group represents virtually every lakefront district. More members of Congress are expected to sign the Resolution when the House returns in September.
The Jones Act is one of several U.S. "Cabotage" laws and reserves the movement of cargo between U.S. ports to ships which are U.S.-owned, U.S.-built and U.S.-crewed. Although the Jones Act dates from 1920, the United States has had Cabotage laws since 1789 and these laws have fostered a domestic fleet second to none. The U.S.-Flag Great Lakes is the largest assemblage of self-unloading vessels in the world. For information on how the Jones Act benefits other regions of the country, please visit the homepage of the Maritime Cabotage Task Force, the national organization promoting the U.S. Cabotage laws.
Legislation to largely repeal the Jones Act was introduced in the House by Michigan Congressman Nick Smith, but the bill (H. R. 1991) has a mere 14 co-sponsors and no hearings are scheduled. A companion bill was introduced in the Senate on on July 31 with 5 sponsors (Helms - NC, Brownback and Roberts - KS, Burns - MT and Hagel - NE).
The 71 Great Lakes legislators who have signed H. Con. Res. 65 to date are, by state:
