ms. wasserman schultz of florida. ms. wasserman schultz: thank you very much. thank you, mr. speaker. appreciate the time from the gentleman. first, let me commend and pile on to the commendations that are so deserving by our colleagues and my good friends, chairman culberson and ranking member bishop on crafting a strong and bipartisan bill. see, congress can really work together when we put our heads and our hearts together. let me especially recognize their leadership in including language in the bill which will help many of our nation's veterans transition into careers in civilian health care. the united states military has the best trained medics and corpsmen in the world. in fact, the data substantiates that special forces medics greatly increases the chance of survival for those that suffer injuries on the battlefield. despite this, they have one of the highest unemployment rates because their expensive medical training in the military doesn't perfectly match qualifications in the civilian world. for example, army specialist nick kolgan, who president obama applauded an america