[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1994, Book I)]
[May 20, 1994]
[Pages 957-959]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks to the Community in San Bernardino, California
May 20, 1994

    Thank you very much. Thank you, Senator Feinstein, for that fine 
introduction, Senator Boxer, Congressman Brown, and Congressman Lewis. 
I'm glad to see Supervisor Jerry Eaves; he's already been to see me in 
Washington. Mayor Minor, it's good to see you. We talked on the phone 
about law enforcement not very long ago. I was thinking, when I saw Mr. 
Larson up here talking, he's about a head taller than I am; he could run 
any airport in the country for me. [Laughter] I kind of like that.
    And I also want to thank our Secretary of the Air Force, Sheila 
Widnall, for being here and for the very poignant remarks that she made 
about the importance of these military bases to our communities and our 
life here. I would like to say also a special word of appreciation for 
the intense efforts that the California delegation has made to bring to 
bear in the Oval Office the needs of the people of California. I know 
you thought that Senator Feinstein was being somewhat aggressive here on 
the public forum. That is nothing compared to what I hear in private. 
[Laughter] If you've never been worked on by Feinstein and Boxer at one 
time, just imagine if somebody took a huge fingernail file and applied 
it to your head. Sooner or later you just say, ``All right, whatever you 
want, take it and run.'' [Laughter]
    I'd like to say a special word of thanks, too, to George Brown for 
his brilliant leadership in the fields of science and technology, trying 
to help us to modernize the economy in ways that can only help. And I 
want to say a particular word of thanks to Jerry Lewis for his work with 
me on a number of issues and for his kind comments today and for holding 
out the prospect that we can still bridge some of the awful partisan 
divide that still paralyzes Washington too often. I thank him for what 
he said; I especially thank him for what he said about Jacqueline 
Kennedy Onassis.
    This is a very sad day for my wife and for my daughter and for me 
because, in addition to being a very important figure in our Nation, she 
was a personal friend of ours. Last summer on our family vacation, we 
had one of the most wonderful days I ever spent with Jackie and her 
daughter, Caroline, and her son-in-law and her brother-in-law and a 
number of members of her family. She was an astonishing woman who I 
think did a remarkable thing in raising two very fine children in what 
could have been the destructive public glare of the spotlight.
    I'd like to just echo one thing that Jerry said. When President 
Kennedy was elected, he inspired a whole generation of Americans, I 
think, without regard to party, with the promise that public life could 
be a noble and good thing and that together we could make a difference. 
The country had grown somewhat weary after the burdens of World War II 
and then the war in Korea, and he said we ought to get moving again; we 
ought to get the country moving again. And people felt good about it, 
even when they disagreed about the specifics. The main reason I ran for 
President is that I thought we ought to get the country moving again and 
that we ought to pull the country together again.

[[Page 958]]

    I'll never forget the day I came to the Inland Empire and played in 
that big softball game. Some of you might have been there. It wasn't my 
best softball game, but it was one of my better days. And I left that 
crowd thinking, ``You know, this is America. We are a very diverse 
country, but we're at our best when we're pulling together.'' And out 
here in the real world where people worry about base closures and their 
kids' education and whether their streets are safe, most of our problems 
do not have an answer that pulls us hard to the left or the right or 
calls for a label of party or philosophy. And most of them can only be 
solved if we air our differences in a civilized and honest and listening 
way and then pull together and work together.
    I was afraid in 1992 that we weren't doing what we needed to do to 
go into the 21st century. The deficit was going up when it ought to be 
going down. Unemployment was going up when it ought to be going down. We 
weren't adequately preparing our workers and our children. We weren't 
investing in new technologies. We weren't coming to grips with the 
demands of change. And nothing made it more clear to me than an 
experience I had as Governor of my own State dealing with a base 
closing, when a base closed in a part of my State that already had 
double-digit unemployment before it closed. And they told me that I 
could have some of this land for a public park but not to put people 
back to work. They told me that we'd have to come up with all kinds of 
money if we wanted to convert the base, and the whole area, as I said, 
had double-digit unemployment before the base closed.
    Well, we've tried to change all that. Our economic plan's got the 
deficit going down and unemployment going down--3 million new jobs in 16 
months. We'll have, if the Congress passes this plan--and I believe they 
will pass this one on a bipartisan basis--for the first time since Harry 
Truman was President, the deficit will go down for 3 years in a row. And 
that's something that America can be proud of.
    And we came up with this new strategy to try to help people who had 
won the cold war for us but were losing the aftermath because of base 
closings deal with that. You've heard a little bit about it today. The 
announcement of the DFAS center here and in three other places in 
California is a symbol of that. But I want you to know how it came 
about. When I became President, I knew that the Defense Department had 
plans to collapse over 300 very small data processing centers into some 
smaller number, perhaps as few as 8, perhaps as many as 13. And I said, 
``Well, what are the economies of this?'' And they had basically opened 
the bidding process, again, inviting communities to put up as much money 
as they could in facilities and other things to get these things. And it 
seemed to me that that was wrong, because this was a defense investment 
after years and years of defense disinvestment in communities all over 
the country. And I know how a small investment like this can really 
jumpstart a whole economy and what it can do to the psychology of a 
community.
    So we decided that we would go back and change the DFAS process, not 
to pick communities--we didn't know who would win and who wouldn't--but 
to give special consideration to communities that had suffered from base 
closings. And we also learned that the economies of this were such that 
we could do 25 and save about as much money as we could if we just did 
10 or 12. So we decided that we would do that.
    You were the victor in that process, partly because you had the 
talent and the resources and because you had a base closing. So you 
didn't have to win a bazaar; all you had to do was to show that you 
could do the job, you could do a very fine job, and that you had 
suffered grievously from the base closing process. That, I think, was 
the right thing to do.
    The second thing we did was to change the rules for how we handled 
these bases. Under the old rule, we could give away bases free, as I 
said, for new parks but not for new jobs. Under our plan we give 
planning grants to communities that put together groups like this; we 
speed up the environmental cleanup; we cut a lot of the redtape, and we 
focus on creating new jobs.
    As you know, about 1,300 acres, if I remember my briefing right, has 
already been approved here for your new San Bernardino International 
Airport. There will be a few other acres approved in the course of this 
year for good public purposes, dealing with parks and education and 
other problems that you have. And we are working now on the negotiations 
for the transfer of the land which will permit economic development of 
all kinds.

[[Page 959]]

    The thing I want to say to you is that normally when a politician 
comes to a place like this, the emphasis is on what we are giving to 
you. And what we gave to you here was the DFAS center. Now, I'm proud of 
that, but you got it because you deserve it. You got it because you lost 
a base and because you have the capacity to do it.
    But over the long run--and I predict 10 years from now you all will 
look back on this and agree with me--as important as that DFAS center 
is, the far more important thing we have done is to change the rules by 
which this base is given back to you because that empowers you to create 
your own future with a resource that rightfully belongs to you. And you 
should be very proud of that today.
    When I leave here, I'm going over to UCLA to speak at their 
convocation, and I'll try to remember that the most important thing for 
young people at graduation time is that the speaker be brief. [Laughter] 
But I'll be thinking about you over there and the spirit of John and 
Jackie Kennedy and the simple idea that the future is something that 
none of us can ever take for granted, that we always have to make for 
ourselves, for our children, and for our grandchildren.
    If I could leave that legacy as President, if I could make the 
American people feel good about embracing the changes that we're 
confronting, instead of feeling threatened by them, and believe again 
that by pulling together across all the lines that divide us, we can 
solve our problems and seize our opportunities, that would be a legacy 
worth leaving. More important than any specific project, my fellow 
Americans, we have to believe in our better selves again. We cannot be, 
we cannot be distracted, divided, diverted, dragged down. This is a time 
for uplift, for looking to the future, and for pulling together. You 
have proved that it works. Let us do it for all America.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 10:32 a.m. at the San Bernardino 
International Airport. In his remarks, he referred to Jerry Eaves, 
county supervisor and chair of the Reuse Project; Swen Larson, 
president, International Airport Authority, San Bernardino International 
Airport; and Mayor Tom Minor of San Bernardino.