Home > 1998 Presidential Documents > pd10au98 Memorandum on Economic Development in American Indian and Alaska Native...pd10au98 Memorandum on Economic Development in American Indian and Alaska Native...
recipients in just the past year. That means
[[Page 1566]]
we're well over half the way toward our goal of hiring 10,000 by the
year 2000.
Fourth, let me say again, I think it's important that we do more to
bring the benefits of this economic revival our country is enjoying into
isolated urban and rural areas where free enterprise has not yet
reached. A lot of the people who are still stuck on welfare are
physically separate from the job availability. And I have asked the
Congress to approve a second round of empowerment zones, to approve a
whole range of initiatives, and Secretary Herman and Secretary Cuomo's
budget designed to create jobs principally in the private sector in
isolated inner-city and rural neighborhoods. So I hope that will be a
part of the work we conclude in the days remaining in this congressional
session.
Welfare reform itself was a bipartisan effort. It became an American
issue. Now, providing jobs and opportunity and new businesses and new
free enterprise in these neighborhoods that still have not felt the
economy should also be an American issue.
We have now the lowest unemployment in 28 years, the lowest
inflation in 32 years, the highest homeownership in history. Wages are
on the rise for our families after 20 years of stagnation. This is our
window of maximum opportunity to make sure every poor person in America
stuck on welfare has a chance to be a part of America's future and to
share in the American dream. if we can't do it now, when our economy and
our prospects and our confidence are so strong, then when?
Now we have jobs waiting to be filled in almost every community.
I've been working with people here in Washington, DC--there are hundreds
of thousands of jobs in information technology-related fields open
today, everywhere from Silicon Valley to the suburban areas of the
Nation's Capital. If we make the best use of this time, we can change
the whole culture of poverty and long neglected neighborhoods. We can
help millions more people ensure that their children will be raised in
homes full of hope and pride based on dignity and work.
To all of you who have made this day come to pass, who have played a
role in the progress of the last 2 years, and to all of you who are
committed to keeping on until the job is done, I extend the thanks of
our Nation. Great job. Let's do better.
Thank you very much, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 3:15 p.m. in the East Room at the White
House. In his remarks, he referred to Vesta Kimble, deputy director,
Anne Arundel County Department of Social Services, MD; and Eli Segal,
president and chief executive officer, Welfare to Work Partnership.
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[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
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Monday, August 10, 1998
Volume 34--Number 32
Pages 1553-1589
Week Ending Friday, August 7, 1998
Statement on the Death of Arthur Barbieri
August 4, 1998
Hillary and I are deeply saddened by the death of Arthur Barbieri.
New Haven has lost a great political leader; I have lost a mentor and a
friend.
When I was a law student, I was lucky enough to work by Arthur's
side and learn grassroots politics at its absolute best. I'm forever
grateful for all that he taught me. Our thoughts and prayers are with
his loved ones.
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Monday, August 10, 1998
Volume 34--Number 32
Pages 1553-1589
Week Ending Friday, August 7, 1998
Statement on House Action on Credit Union Legislation
August 4, 1998
I am pleased that the House has passed the ``Credit Union Membership
Access Act'' to protect and strengthen credit unions for the 71 million
Americans who own, use , and rely upon them. This bill resolves
uncertainty about the future of credit unions created by a recent
Supreme Court decision by protecting existing credit union members and
making it easier for credit unions to expand where appropriate. It also
helps put credit unions on sounder footing by making important reforms
that could pay enormous dividends in more difficult times. This bill
ensures that consumers continue to have a broad array of choices in
financial services, and, when Congress sends me this bill, I will sign
it.
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Monday, August 10, 1998
Volume 34--Number 32
Pages 1553-1589
Week Ending Friday, August 7, 1998
Remarks at a Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Dinner
August 4, 1998
Thank you very much. Maxine, you have neither been a fair-weather
nor a faint-hearted friend. [Laughter] And you have always let me know
exactly what you think, whether I wanted to hear it or not--[laughter]--
in good times and bad. And I thank you.
I thank all of you for coming. Sidney, thank you for being here and
for the service you've rendered our country as an Ambassador. I thank
the Members of the Democratic congressional caucus who are here:
Congressman Ford; Congressman Frost, the head of the DCCC; Congressman
Hoyer; Congresswoman Lee; Congressman Rush; and Congressman Lewis, who,
like Maxine, started out with me in 1991. And Congressman Stokes, we're
going to miss you, and we thank you for your service.
I would like to thank two former members of your group who are here,
also my longtime friends, Harold Ford, Sr., and Andrew Young. Thank you
both for being here tonight. I also note your high degree of judgment
about how the Federal Government works in bringing Secretary Slater. You
probably know he got the first budget out this year. He has all the
money. [Laughter] He may have the only money in the Federal Government.
He's doing a wonderful job, and I thank you for bringing him tonight.
Let me say very briefly, we've already had a chance to visit
individually and in groups. More than anything else I would like to
thank you. I'd like to thank you for supporting our congressional
candidates and the genuine prospect we have to reverse 150-plus years of
history in making historic gains in this election. And I would like to
thank you for the example you have set for Americans--for all
Americans--the work you have done, the barriers you have broken, the
hurdles you have overcome, the Americans you have helped, and the
reaffirmation you give in your daily lives that the American dream can
be made real in the lives of all kinds of people.
I also thank you for the specific ideas you gave me tonight to move
forward. I would just like to make a couple of observations. I'm very
grateful to have had the chance to serve as President at a time of
remarkable change and to try to make sure that this period of change
works for all Americans and that, when we get to the 21st century, the
American dream is alive and well for everybody who is responsible enough
to work for it, that our country is strong and visionary enough to
continue to lead the world toward prosperity and peace and freedom, and
that we can do that because we have enough sense to come together,
across all the lines that divide us, into one America. That is what I
have worked for.
Now, we all know that we are facing a new time of economic challenge
because of the difficulties in Asia, which I have spent an enormous
amount of time on, as you might imagine--actually since last November.
For quite a long while now, we've been working on that, and every day we
work on it, because Asia is a big part of our economic growth. Thirty
percent of our growth in the last 6 years has come from exports and
expanding our position in foreign countries.
But I want to ask you to think about where we go now. The temptation
for a great, free country when you have the lowest unemployment rate in
28 years and the lowest crime rate in 25 years and the lowest percentage
of people on welfare in 29 years and the first balanced budget and
surplus in 29 years and the highest homeownership in history, is to say
that's pretty good; let's take a break; I've been working myself to
death; let's just take a break. [Laughter]
But the truth is, as all of you who deal in international economics
know especially, that things are changing so fast, we can't afford to
take a break, number one; and number two, we now have the confidence and
the resources to deal with the long-term challenges of the country. And
I would like to just offer a couple of observations.
We are working with our friends in Asia to try to restore economic
growth, and we will do everything we can to help those who are prepared
to take the necessary steps to help themselves. But we have to look also
at what other opportunities are there to continue to grow the American
economy. And
[[Page 1568]]
I would just like to offer a couple of observations.
Number one, there are still places in this country that have not
fully absorbed this economic recovery. The unemployment rate in New York
City is 9 percent; the unemployment rate in many neighborhoods is
considerably higher. And yet in all those neighborhoods, over 80 percent
of the people are working. There's opportunity for investment that will
create jobs for the others and bring a very high rate of return, with no
risk of inflation to the aggregate economy because those are
underutilized human resources. And it's true in every city in this
country; it's true in a lot of smaller towns; it's true in a lot of
Native American communities. We're going to have a Native American
economic conference in the next few days, first one ever held. And I
think it is very important that we focus on the fact that people who are
out of work, or communities where the unemployment rate is too high and
the investment rate is too low, are enormous opportunities for us at a
time when there is some turmoil around the world.
The second thing I'd like to do is make a plug again for Africa. We
have an Africa trade bill before the Congress. I took a great trip to
Africa; a number of you went on it. American investors earned a 30
percent return on their investment in Africa last year--30 percent. Now,
you may say, ``Well, yes, Mr. President, but those were the easiest
investments, and they picked the low-hanging fruit.'' But you could go a
ways down from 30 percent and still make pretty good money.
And so I say again, I think that is an important thing. Tomorrow
Deputy President Mbeki of South Africa is coming back to the United
States for another one of his meetings with the Vice President and the
Gore-Mbeki Commission, and I intend to see him. Secretary Daley is going
to Africa in September. Secretary Slater and Secretary Rubin were there
last month. So we have followed up on the trip that Hillary and I took
to Africa with, as I said, a number of you in this room, and we want to
continue to work on that. It is of enormous importance.
I would also note that Latin America is doing very well. Our
neighbors in Latin America and in the Caribbean are doing relatively
well and continuing to prosper in this difficult time. And there are
opportunities in the Caribbean where there was a relative disinvestment
for several years that I think need to be looked at by Americans. And we
have a lot of cultural ties to a lot of the island nations of the
Caribbean as well as to Latin America that I think would bear fruit.
And so I think it very important that in America, while we do
everything we can to focus on the Asian financial challenges, that we
also know that there are opportunities here at home and opportunities in
Africa and opportunities in Latin America and elsewhere to continue to
grow the American economy.
Now, in connection with the issues here at home, the thing that I
think is important to remember in this election is that in order for the
Democrats to buck the tide of a century and a half of history, we have
to continue to do what we've been doing for the last 8 months. We have
to continue to press our agenda and to be for something that will excite
America and bring hope.
We have before the Congress now an opportunity agenda that would
help a lot of you to make more investments in America's communities: a
second round of empowerment zones, another round of community
development financial institutions. One of you told me today you're
involved with a community development bank in Los Angeles that this
administration helped to set up. These things are going to make a huge
difference around the country if we can reach a critical mass of capital
in enough communities.
Secretary Cuomo at HUD has a number of initiatives that are part of
this that will actually create significant numbers of jobs with
investment--private sector jobs in communities where they're needed.
So I ask for your support in publicizing of the community
empowerment agenda that we have been pushing now ever since my State of
the Union Address in Congress, and that the Democratic caucus, as far as
I know, unanimously supports.
We need to stand up for the educational empowerment zones that we
have been pushing. In Chicago now, the summer school in Chicago, since
it's summer, I can say is the sixth largest school district in America.
[[Page 1569]]
That's how many children are in summer school. Guess what? The juvenile
crime rate is way down in Chicago, and the learning is way up.
Over 40,000 children during a regular school year now get 3 square
meals a day at their school in that city. We have an educational
community empowerment initiative before the Congress that would enable
us to support other communities in doing that, giving children a chance
to stay out of trouble and in school, after school, giving children a
chance to go to summer programs like this, giving us a chance to give
educational opportunities to all different kinds of people. And I ask
for your support for that, but I ask you to talk to your friends and
neighbors about it. There are big issues in this election season that
deserve to be debated.
What we really need to do is to make sure that every child of
whatever race and of whatever station, in whatever neighborhood they're
born in, has the chance to live the success stories that you have lived.
What we really need to do is to make sure that we are still working hard
to create one America. What we really need to do is to make sure that
we're not sitting on our laurels and being distracted but instead
bearing down and looking forward and lifting up and pulling together
this country.
All over the world people still look to the United States for
leadership, for peace, for freedom, for security. But in order for us to
do good in the 21st century around the world, we first must be good here
at home on those things that we know matter most.
You've helped us a lot, and I can tell you that Maxine is grateful;
I am grateful. You're going to make Congressman Frost look better
tomorrow with what he's done for the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee. But the most important thing is, by being here tonight, you
have helped us to work with your constituents to make 21st century
America the greatest period in our Nation's history, and I thank you for
it.
Thank you, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 8:24 p.m., in Ballroom Two at the
Washington Court Hotel. In his remarks, he referred to Representative
Maxine Waters; Sidney Williams, former Ambassador to the Bahamas; and
Deputy President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa.
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