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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release August 22, 1996
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE SIGNING OF THE
PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY AND
WORK OPPORTUNITY RECONCILIATION ACT
The Rose Garden
11:15 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Thank you very much.
Lillie, thank you. Thank you, Mr. Vice President, to the members of the
Cabinet. All of the members of Congress who are here, thank you very
much.
I'd like to say to Congressman Castle, I'm especially glad
to see you here, because eight years ago about this time when you were
the Governor of Delaware and Governor Carper was the Congressman from
Delaware, you and I were together at a signing like this.
Thank you, Senator Long, for coming here. Thank you,
Governors Romer, Carper, Miller and Caperton.
I'd also like to thank Penelope Howard and Janet Ferrel for
coming here. They, too, have worked their way from welfare to
independence and we're honored to have them here. I'd like to thank all
of the people who worked on this bill who have been introduced from our
staff and Cabinet, but I'd also like to especially thank Bruce Reed, who
did a lot to do with working on the final compromises of this bill; I
thank him.
Lillie Harden was up there talking, and I want to tell you
how she happens to be here today. Ten years ago, Governor Castle and I
were asked to cochair a Governors Task Force on Welfare Reform, and we
were asked together on it, and when we met at Hilton Head in South
Carolina, we had a little panel. And 41 governors showed up to listen
to people who were on welfare from several states.
So I asked Carol Rasco to find me somebody from our state
who had been in one of our welfare reform programs and had gone to work.
She found Lillie Harden and Lillie showed up at the program. And I was
conducting this meeting and I committed a mistake that they always tell
lawyers never to do: never ask a question you do not know the answer
to. (Laughter.)
But she was doing so well talking about it, as you saw how
well-spoken she was today -- and I said, "Lillie, what's the best thing
about being off welfare?" And she looked me straight in the eye and
said, "When my boy goes to school and they say what does your mama do
for a living, he can give an answer." I have never forgotten that.
(Applause.) And when I saw the success of all of her children and the
success that she's had in the past 10 years, I can tell you, you've had
a bigger impact on me than I've had on you. And I thank you for the
power of your example, for your family's. And for all of America, thank
you very much. (Applause.)
What we are trying to do today is to overcome the flaws of
the welfare system for the people who are trapped on it. We all know
that the typical family on welfare today is very different from the one
that welfare was designed to deal with 60 years ago. We all know that
there are a lot of good people on welfare who just get off of it in the
ordinary course of business, but that a significant number of people are
trapped on welfare for a very long time, exiling them from the entire
community of work that gives structure to our lives.
Nearly 30 years ago, Robert Kennedy said, "Work is the
meaning of what this country is all about. We need it as individuals,
we need to sense it in our fellow citizens, and we need it as a society
and as a people." He was right then, and it's right now.
From now on, our nation's answer to this great social
challenge will no longer be a never-ending cycle of welfare, it will be
the dignity, the power and the ethic of work. Today, we are taking an
historic chance to make welfare what it was meant to be: a second
chance, not a way of life.
The bill I'm about to sign, as I have said many times, is
far from perfect, but it has come a very long way. Congress sent me two
previous bills that I strongly believe failed to protect our children
and did too little to move people from welfare to work. I vetoed both
of them. This bill had broad bipartisan support and is much, much
better on both counts.
The new bill restores America's basic bargain of providing
opportunity and demanding in return responsibility. It provides $14
billion for child care, $4 billion more than the present law does. It
is good because without the assurance of child care it's all but
impossible for a mother with young children to go to work. It requires
states to maintain their own spending on welfare reform and gives them
powerful performance incentives to place more people on welfare in jobs.
It gives states the capacity to create jobs by taking money now used for
welfare checks and giving it to employers as subsidies as incentives to
hire people. This bill will help people to go to work so they can stop
drawing a welfare check and start drawing a paycheck.
It's also better for children. It preserves the national
safety net of food stamps and school lunches. It drops the deep cuts
and the devastating changes in child protection, adoption, and help for
disabled children. It preserves the national guarantee of health care
for poor children, the disabled, the elderly, and people on welfare --
the most important preservation of all.
It includes the tough child support enforcement measures
that, as far as I know, every member of Congress and everybody in the
administration and every thinking person in the country has supported
for more than two years.
It's the most sweeping crackdown on deadbeat parents in
history. We have succeeded in increasing child support collection 40
percent, but over a third of the cases where there's delinquencies,
involve who cross state lines. For a lot of women and children, the
only reason they're on welfare today -- the only reason -- is that the
father up and walked away when he could have made a contribution to the
welfare of the children. That is wrong. If every parent paid the child
support that he or she owes legally today, we could move 800,000 women
and children off welfare immediately.
With this bill we say, if you don't pay the child support
you owe we'll garnish your wages, take away your driver's license, track
you across state lines; if necessary, make you work off what you pay --
what you owe. It is a good thing and it will help dramatically to
reduce welfare, increase independence, and reenforce parental
responsibility. (Applause.)
As the Vice President said, we strongly disagree with a
couple of provisions of this bill. We believe that the nutritional cuts
are too deep, especially as they affect low-income working people and
children. We should not be punishing people who are working for a
living already; we should do everything we can to lift them up and keep
them at work and help them to support their children. We also believe
that the congressional leadership insisted in cuts in programs for legal
immigrants that are far too deep.
These cuts, however, have nothing to do with the
fundamental purpose of welfare reform. I signed this bill because this
is an historic chance -- where Republicans and Democrats got together
and said, we're going to take this historic chance to try to recreate
the nation's social bargain with the poor. We're going to try to change
the parameters of the debate. We're going to make it all new again and
see if we can't create a system of incentives which reenforce work and
family and independence.
We can change what is wrong. We should not have passed
this historic opportunity to do what is right. And so I want to ask all
of you, without regard to party, to think through the implications of
these other non-welfare issues on the American people and let's work
together in good spirits and good faith to remedy what is wrong. We can
balance the budget without these cuts, but let's not obscure the
fundamental purpose of the welfare provisions of this legislation which
are good and solid, and which can give us at least the chance to end the
terrible, almost physical isolation of huge numbers of poor people and
their children from the rest of mainstream America. We have to do that.
(Applause.)
Let me also say that there's something really good about
this legislation. When I sign it we all have to start again. And this
becomes everybody's responsibility. After I sign my name to this bill,
welfare will no longer be a political issue. The two parties cannot
attack each other over it. Politicians cannot attack poor people over
it. There are no encrusted habits, systems and failures that can be
laid at the foot of someone else. We have to begin again. This is not
the end of welfare reform, this is the beginning. And we have to all
assume responsibility. (Applause.)
Now that we are saying with this bill we expect work, we
have to make sure the people have a chance to go to work. If we really
value work, everybody in this society -- businesses, non-profits,
religious institutions, individuals, those in government -- all have a
responsibility to make sure the jobs are there.
These three women have great stories. Almost everybody on
welfare would like to have a story like that. And the rest of us now
have a responsibility to give them that story. We cannot blame the
system for the jobs they don't have anymore. If it doesn't work now,
it's everybody's fault -- mine, yours, and everybody else. There is no
longer a system in the way. (Applause.)
I've worked hard over the past four years to create jobs
and to steer investment into places where there are large numbers of
people on welfare because there's been no economic recovery. That's
what the empowerment zone program was all about. That's what the
community development bank initiative was all about. That's what our
urban Brownfield cleanup initiative was all about -- trying to give
people the means to make a living in areas that had been left behind.
I think we have to do more here in Washington to do that,
and I'll have more to say about that later. But let me say again, we
have to build a new work and family system. And this is everybody's
responsibility now. The people on welfare are people just like these
three people we honor here today and their families. They are human
beings. And we owe it to all of them to give them a chance to come
back.
I talked the other day when the Vice President and I went
down to Tennessee and we were working with Congressman Tanner's
district, we were working on a church that had burned. And there was a
pastor there from a church in North Carolina that brought a group of his
people in to work. And he started asking me about welfare reform, and I
started telling him about it. And I said, "You know what you ought to
do? You ought to go tell Governor Hunt that you would hire somebody on
welfare to work in your church if he would give you the welfare check as
a wage supplement, you'd double their pay and you'd keep them employed
for a year or so and see if you couldn't train them and help their
families and see if their kids were all right." I said, "Would you do
that?" He said, "In a heartbeat."
I think there are people all over America like that.
(Applause.) I think there are people all over America like that.
That's what I want all of you to be thinking about today -- what are we
going to do now? This is not over, this is just beginning. The
Congress deserves our thanks for creating a new reality, but we have to
fill in the blanks. The governors asked for this responsibility; now
they've got to live up to it. There are mayors that have
responsibilities, county officials that have responsibilities. Every
employer in this country that ever made a disparaging remark about the
welfare system needs to think about whether he or she should now hire
somebody from welfare and go to work. Go to the state and say, okay,
you give me the check, I'll use it as an income supplement, I'll train
these people, I'll help them to start their lives and we'll go forward
from here.
Every single person needs to be thinking -- every person in
America tonight who sees a report of this who has ever said a
disparaging word about the welfare system should now say, "Okay, that's
gone. What is my responsibility to make it better?" (Applause.)
Two days ago we signed a bill increasing the minimum wage
here and making it easier for people in small businesses to get and keep
pensions. Yesterday we signed the Kassebaum-Kennedy bill which makes
health care more available to up to 25 million Americans, many of them
in lower-income jobs where they're more vulnerable.
The bill I'm signing today preserves the increases in the
earned income tax credit for working families. It is now clearly better
to go to work than to stay on welfare -- clearly better. Because of
actions taken by the Congress in this session, it is clearly better.
And what we have to do now is to make that work a reality.
I've said this many times, but, you know, most American
families find that the greatest challenge of their lives is how to do a
good job raising their kids and do a good job at work. Trying to
balance work and family is the challenge that most Americans in the
workplace face. Thankfully, that's the challenge Lillie Harden's had to
face for the last 10 years. That's just what we want for everybody. We
want at least the chance to strike the right balance for everybody.
Today, we are ending welfare as we know it. But I hope
this day will be remembered not for what it ended, but for what it began
-- a new day that offers hope, honors responsibility, rewards work, and
changes the terms of the debate so that no one in America ever feels
again the need to criticize people who are poor on welfare, but instead
feels the responsibility to reach out to men and women and children who
are isolated, who need opportunity, and who are willing to assume
responsibility, and give them to opportunity and the terms of
responsibility. (Applause.)
Now, I'd like to ask Penelope Howard, Janet Ferrel, Lillie
Harden, the governors and the members of Congress from both parties who
are here to come up and join me as I sign the welfare reform bill.
Q Mr. President, before you sign the bill, can you tell us
whether you think it's right to regulate tobacco or nicotine as a drug?
THE PRESIDENT: You know, Wolf, under the law, I have to
wait until the OMB makes a recommendation to me. I think we have to
anticipate things. I can't say more than that right now.
(The bill is signed.)
Q Mr. President, some of your core constituencies are
furious with you for signing this bill. What do you say to them?
THE PRESIDENT: Just what I said up there. We saved
medical care. We saved food stamps. We saved child care. We saved the
aid to disabled children. We saved the school lunch program. We saved
the framework of support. What we did was to tell the state, now you
have to create a system to give everyone a chance to go to work who is
able-bodied, give everyone a chance to be independent. And we did --
that is the right thing to do.
And now, welfare is no longer a political football to be
kicked around. It's a personal responsibility of every American who
ever criticized the welfare system to help the poor people now to move
from welfare to work. That's what I say.
This is going to be a good thing for the country. We're
going to monitor it and we're going to fix whatever is wrong with it.
Q What guarantees are there that these things will be
fixed, Mr. President, especially if Republicans remain in control of
Congress?
THE PRESIDENT: That's what we have elections for.
END 11:33 A.M. EDT
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