Home > 2002 Presidential Documents > pd05au02 Digest of Other White House Announcements...pd05au02 Digest of Other White House Announcements...
I also met Steve Riggs, who is a volunteer here in South Carolina.
He came out to Air Force One. Steve's job is to--as a volunteer is to
work with the South Carolina military department, which reenacts moments
of American history. Steve believes it's important to teach history--
live history, or history that--through people wearing uniforms, so they
can see history come to life. He believes it's important to teach our
youngsters values that they can hold dear for the rest of their life.
Steve decided to do this on his own. It didn't require any Government
edict or any proclamation. He's a volunteer to make South Carolina the
best State it can be. And I'm honored you're with us today, Steve. Thank
you for coming.
The reason I like to talk about people like Steve--and many of the
people I met this morning share the same concept that one person can do
something to help change America, and each of us have got to be a person
helping to change America. If you want to fight evil, if you want to
join the war on terror, do some good in your society. If you want to
send a message to the evil ones
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who attacked us, one way to do so is to love your neighbor like you'd
like to be loved yourself. And that's what's happening all across
America.
I can't imagine what went through the mind of the enemy when they
attacked us. They must have thought America and Americans were shallow
people, so materialistic that when it came to defending something we
hold dear, we'd just kind of file a lawsuit or, you know, wring our
hands, be afraid of our shadows. But they didn't understand America,
see. And they're learning a pretty tough lesson about this country: When
it comes to the defense of our freedom, when it comes to defending that
which we hold dear, we're plenty tough, and we're determined, and we
will succeed.
Now, we're making progress on the war against terror. It's a
different kind of war. Steve reenacts battles where there used to be
infantries moving against infantries and artilleries moving against
artilleries and flights of aircraft flying all over the--this is a
different type of war. These folks are nothing but a bunch of
coldblooded killers who--they'll send youngsters to their death, and
they'll hide. And so this country, in order to protect America, is going
to hunt them down, one person at a time, no matter how long it takes--
one person at a time.
I know this is a great military town, and I want to thank all of you
who have got loved ones in the United States military. Please pass on
from their Commander in Chief that we're proud. We're proud of their
service, and we're proud of their sacrifice.
We're making progress on our economy. The foundation for growth is
strong in America. Interest rates are low. Inflation is low. Monetary
policy is sound. Fiscal policy is sound. Productivity is up. And
tomorrow I'm going to sign a bill that says as clearly as we can
possibly say it out of Washington, DC--by the way, a bill supported by
both Republicans and Democrats--that if you're a CEO and you think you
can fudge the books in order to make yourself look better, we're going
to find you; we're going to arrest you; and we're going to hold you to
account.
And as Tommy mentioned, we're making great progress on helping
people help themselves, so they do not become dependent upon Government.
We're helping people become independent people, so they can realize
their full human potential.
The welfare reform is a true success story. Since the passage of the
bill in 1996, welfare caseloads have dropped more than 50 percent. It's
a remarkable achievement--50 percent fewer people on welfare. Today, 5.4
million fewer people live in poverty than in 1996; 2.8 million fewer
children live in poverty. And that's positive for America. And an
incredibly vital statistic is, the percentage of African Americans and
children in poverty is the lowest ever.
The success of welfare reform is not in the numbers, however. The
success of welfare reform is not in the caseloads cut. The success in
welfare reform is the number of people whose lives have been changed in
a positive way. That's the success. And we've got many success stories
in South Carolina and all across the country. I'm sure there are some
here who I haven't had a chance to meet.
Today I did meet Lushanda Bright. She talked about her life and her
story. First of all, she had the toughest job in America, which is being
a single mother. That's the hardest work in this country, by the way, is
trying to raise your children on your own. And that's what she was
doing. She was a 24-year-old at the time. She had two young children.
She was on unemployment benefits, and they were about to run out in
August. But she didn't just want a job. She wanted to do something
better for herself and for her children. And so she hooked up with a
group here, all aimed at helping people go from welfare to work, a group
that came to be after the '96 law, because the Federal Government
finally in its wisdom said, ``We ought to trust the local people to
help, the local people to design the programs that best work for South
Carolina, people we're trying to help; that all knowledge isn't in
Washington, DC. As a matter of fact, the more we trust the local people,
the more likely it is that good programs will spring forward to help the
Lushanda Brights of the world.''
And such a program is called Moving Up. And they helped Lushanda.
They asked what she wanted. They asked what they could do
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to help. She enrolled in Northeastern Technical College. She completed
several courses on medical insurance and billing--by the way, while
working at a convenience store and being a mother of two. Today, she has
a full time job at Marlboro Park Hospital. In the fall she's going back
to school to continue her education. And here's what she had to say: ``A
whole lot has changed for me. My life has turned around. It was hard,
but I went from having nothing and ended up with a job I love.''
Lushanda, thank you for coming. Thank you for sharing with us. I
appreciate you being here.
These are the human stories. These are stories which are repeated
over and over again all across America because of a philosophy inherent
in the 1996 welfare reform bill that says people can achieve, just give
them a chance. Help people help themselves, and amazing things will
happen in America.
I understand leaving welfare is not easy, but it's an essential step
toward independence from Government. Work is the pathway to dignity and
to freedom and to self-respect. The stories that you hear across America
are a tribute to personal effort. They're a tribute to the organizations
which help them, and they're a tribute to the businesses which employ
the people who want help. They're a tribute to corporate America, which
understands there is a responsibility not only to be honest about the
books but a responsibility to help in the communities in which they
exist by helping people who want to help themselves.
And so the welfare reform bill passed in '96 is a real success. And
so the fundamental question facing the country and facing the Members of
Congress is, what to do when the bill becomes--comes up for
reauthorization. In other words, the way things work in Washington is,
if you pass a law, sometimes it doesn't exist forever. In this case,
this requires a reauthorization. And Congress has got to choose whether
or not we will continue to reform to help people, or will law undermine
the clear successes that have taken place since '96? That's the
fundamental choice facing your elected Representatives.
I believe that compassionate welfare reform must move forward, to
strengthen work, to insist upon work as one of the benchmarks for
success, because I believe work increases somebody's self-worth and
dignity. I know that the welfare bill, the reauthorization, needs to
encourage marriage and family. In order to help people, we also have got
to start with our youngsters early, and the welfare reform effort, the
reauthorization, must support effective teen abstinence programs. I urge
Congress to join me on these principles, these practical ways to help
make America a better place.
Congress must always remember that when they write law, that we've
got to trust the local folks as well, that one size doesn't fit all when
it comes to trying to help people help themselves, that the more
flexibility there is for people at the local level to design programs
that work, the more likely it is we'll achieve national objectives,
which is fewer people on welfare, more people working; fewer people
despondent, more people hopeful; fewer people addicted, more people
free--free to realize the great potential here in America.
And so we--and we made some work--made some progress. The House of
Representatives, these Members here, stayed with us on a very important
bill that--on the reauthorization bill which supports stronger work
requirements.
Today, for example, on the average in the State--States require work
of only about 5 percent of the adults on welfare. In other words, the
goal is incredibly low. If you require work from only 5 percent of the
adults on welfare, you're likely to achieve that objective. That means a
lot of other people aren't working, and that's not right. Every State
should be required within 5 years to have 70 percent of the people on
welfare working.
That's not just a statistic, however. Inherent in the 70 percent
number means that we've got to help people at the same time, that we've
got to provide the resources, the flexibility--and the flexibility so we
can help people find work. Programs like Moving Up work, and we've got
to encourage programs such as that, not stifle them but encourage them.
[[Page 1275]]
And here's what I mean by work--that means 40 hours a week. Now, I
fully understand some people need help, and so as part of the 40-hour
workweek, 16 of those hours can be hours spent on job training or
education, on skills, on going to courses which help on changing skills.
It is so important that we have high standards, flexibility, but also
recognize that people need help. People that want to work, and on
welfare, many times don't understand how to even get started. Many of
them haven't even graduated from high school. And that's why the
proposal also recognizes that an adolescent mom, for example, can meet
her work requirements and still be helped, by attending high school.
There are some in our society who are addicted. They might want to
work, but they've got to deal with their addiction first. And so part of
the work requirements can be 3 months in full-time drug rehabilitation
programs.
The point is, is that we've got to give people the tools necessary
to improve their lives and at the same time understand how important
work is in freeing people from the clutches of our Government. And
Congress must hear that message when it comes to work.
It is also important to understand that a more hopeful society is
one in which we encourage strong marriages and families. I understand
building and preserving a family is not always possible; I know that.
But it should be a national goal. We ought to aspire for what's best,
and what's best is for our families to remain intact.
All you've got to hear is from the man I met today, Patrick, talk
about the fatherhood initiative. He talked in compelling terms about
what it's like to have dads want to be a dad and, when Dad is reunited
with their families, how vital and how real that person's life becomes
and, more importantly, how hopeful the life becomes for the children. He
works for the Sisters of Charity Foundation on the Fatherhood
Initiative. There are such initiatives throughout our society--many in
the faith community, by the way--initiatives that ought to be supported
by the Federal Government.
And so, therefore, the bill that the House passed, that I proposed--
in my budget, I have $300 million on an annual basis to support
education programs and counseling programs, out of the faith community
and out of the charitable community and out of the government community,
all aimed at encouraging marriage, all aimed at helping couples to build
and sustain healthy marriage in our society. Families are important for
our children. Families are important for American women and American
men. Families are important for America.
In order to help people help themselves, I strongly believe that we
must encourage teen abstinence programs. We've got to help people
understand that, one, it's okay to abstain, and secondly, having a baby
out of wedlock early in life is going to make it awfully tough--awfully
tough on the child, awfully tough on the mom. We've got to make it clear
that we've got a health issue when it comes to sexually transmitted
disease, and that we've got to deal with it in an upfront way with our
youngsters.
You know, I've heard all the talk about the abstinence programs and
this, that, and the other. But let me just be perfectly plain. If you're
worried about teenage pregnancy or if you're worried about sexually
transmitted disease, abstinence works every single time.
The citizens of this State understand--which is what I said--
citizens, by the way, from all walks of life understand what I just
said. You've got one of the finest teen abstinence education programs in
the Nation. A lot of States are turning to you for advice. You know
this, that when our children face a choice between exercising self-
restraint and engaging in harmful behavior, the Government should not be
neutral.
People say, ``Well, do you have enough money in the budget to meet
your goal?'' Well, the budget I submitted and the one passed by the
House spends $17 billion a year on welfare for 2003. Now, that's the
same amount that was spent in '96, but the difference is, the caseloads
have dropped by half. So you've got the same amount of money with half
the clientele, which means there's a--like, for example, on the average,
across the country, $16,000 per family will be spent on helping people
help themselves, as opposed to $7,000 in 1996. Here in the State of
South Carolina, the amount of
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money per family would double from '96 to today, from $4,200 to $10,700
per family to help. No, there's ample money in the budget, because of
the successes of the past, because there's fewer people to help. If you
keep the funding constant, you've got more money to help. And so that
shouldn't be an excuse for people not to move forward with a reform
package that works.
Now, the Senate is writing a bill, and I want to share with you some
of my thoughts about the bill that the Senate is writing. First, I
believe the bill is a retreat from the success. I believe they're not
moving forward. I believe, if the bill goes through the way they've
written it, it's going to go back--we're going to go backward here in
America. And the bill would hurt the very people we're trying to help.
For example, the bill that passed the Senate Finance Committee has
so many work exceptions that it would result in many fewer welfare
recipients moving from welfare to work. There are so many exceptions, so
many loopholes, so many ways out of holding people to high standards,
that fewer people would actually be moving from welfare to work. And
that's not right. That hurts our fellow Americans. There are so many
loopholes that a State could meet its work requirement without having
even one person working at a job.
Now, let me give you an example. Under the way they're kind of
writing it right now, out of the Senate Finance Committee, some people
could spend their entire 5 years--there's a 5-year work requirement--on
welfare, going to college. Now, that's not my view of helping people
become independent. And it's certainly not my view of understanding the
importance of work and helping people achieve the dignity necessary so
they can live a free life, free from Government control.
I'm also--I'm not happy with the fact that they reduced the amount
of money by a third, available to promote healthy marriage. That doesn't
make sense to me. As a matter of fact, some of the money that they
believe they ought to be spent on so-called family building will go to
programs that have nothing to do with promoting marriage.
On top of that, the Senate bill is weak on the budget. In other
words, they're saying, ``We've got to spend a bunch more money in order
to make us feel better and make things work better.'' We don't need
that. What we need is focus on what works, focus on reforms, focus on
flexibility, focus on elevating the programs that have been proven over
the last years to help people. We need a welfare bill that's strong on
work, not weak on work, strong on marriage, and a welfare bill that's
good for the taxpayers. And the Senate needs to do the right thing in
order to help with these reforms.
And finally, encouraging work and supporting families and effective
teen abstinence program is not enough. That's not enough. They're not
enough. We need more. An abandoned child needs something larger and more
important than welfare reform. She needs a loving mentor. She needs
somebody who is willing to put their arm around a child and say, ``I
love you. What can I do to help you?'' People who struggle with
addiction or who are victimized by abuse need more than a check. They
need personal support and concern and care and compassion.
This city is known as the Holy City because of your many churches.
It's also known as the Holy City because of the many good deeds done by
the citizens here, charities and faith-based groups. What we must
understand in our society, faith-based programs and charities fill needs
that no welfare system can fill, fill the needs that no matter--
[applause]--the programs fill the needs that no carefully designed
program out of Washington, DC, can meet. Government can hand out money,
but it cannot put hope into people's hearts. It cannot put faith into
people's lives.
I'm a strong proponent of the faith-based groups in America, because
they're reclaiming America one block at a time. They're helping save one
life at a time. They understand the power of changing a person's heart
is a way to freedom and independence and to better behavior. No, our
Government should not fear faith-based programs in America; we ought to
welcome them.
Faith-based programs ought to be treated equally with nonfaith-based
programs. We ought not to ask the question, ``Who?'' We
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Other Popular 2002 Presidential Documents Documents:
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