[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1994, Book I)]
[May 9, 1994]
[Pages 864-865]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks to Pathmark Employees in New York City
May 9, 1994

    Thank you so much, Jack. And I want to thank you and all of you here 
for hosting me today. I was beginning to tell a story. You know, the 
first job I ever had was working in a grocery store. I was 13 years old; 
I don't think I violated the child labor laws at the time. [Laughter] 
But anyway, I did. And so every time I come into a food store, I'm 
always so happy, and I look around to see how the merchandise is stacked 
and how it's organized and everything. And I remember how different it 
was when I started my career as a worker almost 35 years ago now.
    I want to thank you for your support of this endeavor. I want to 
thank Senator Connor and my longtime friend, your borough president, 
Ruth Messenger, for being here today in support of this. I want to thank 
Doug Dority and the United Food and Commercial Workers for their support 
of health care reform and their intense efforts to educate the Congress 
about this.
    I want to say again what this plastic bag says, and I want to 
emphasize why I'm here today, besides the fact that I was kind of 
hungry, driving in from the airport. [Laughter] That bag says: 
``Pathmark and the UFCW support health benefits at work and quality 
health care, including prescription medicines for all Americans.'' That 
just about says it all.
    We're having this raging political struggle in Washington where 
everybody in the wide world says, ``Oh, I believe every American ought 
to have access to health care, but we can't figure out how to do it.'' 
And the Members of Congress are being told day-in and day-out that all 
retail establishments and all small businesses oppose requiring 
employers and employees that don't have any health insurance at all now 
to get coverage at work, with the employers paying a substantial and 
fair share of that. And the image they have now is that all retail 
establishments and all small businesses feel that way. We have now 
produced hundreds of small business people, men and women from all over 
America who say, ``I want to insure my employees, but I can't afford to 
because my competitors don't have to do it. Please require us all to do 
it, and then give small business the same chance to buy that big 
business has.''
    Today, you see a major American retailer, 175 stores, a company 
that's proved that you can be socially responsible and still make money. 
You can provide health care to your employees, and you can put stores in 
the inner cities. And you can make money by treating people right, your 
customers and the people who work with you. That is the message today.
    The truth is that if all retailers in the country had to provide 
insurance on equal terms to their employees, you would be advantaged, 
because no one would be able to get a competitive advantage over you by 
not covering their employees while you all are covered, and you bear 
that cost in common and the truth is that in the future, your health 
benefits could be purchased for a lower cost. That is, your costs 
wouldn't go up as much because today part of your cost is paying the 
bill for everybody who doesn't have coverage, because when they get 
sick, they get care. They show up at the emergency room when it's too 
late and too expensive, and then the cost is passed on to everybody in 
our society who is paying a fair share.
    So this is a very, very important thing today. By being here, you 
are saying to me that you support health benefits at work. It works for

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you, and it can work for America. I just want to point out that, today, 
9 out of 10 Americans who have private insurance get their insurance at 
work. Eight out of 10 Americans who do not have health insurance are in 
working families. Therefore, the most conservative, the most practical, 
the most realistic way to cover all Americans is to say, if people are 
working, they should be covered at work, and their employers should bear 
a fair share of that cost, like most employers do. If people are not 
working, then the Government should figure out how to handle it.
    Today, unless you're older, on Medicare, the only people with 
guaranteed health care in this country are people on welfare. Why should 
people on welfare have a guarantee that people that are working don't 
have? There are people all over this country who are on welfare who 
would quit and go to work, let's say for one of your competitors who 
doesn't provide health care, and lose health care benefits for their 
children.
    Think of that: ``Well, what's your story?'' ``Oh, I left welfare. I 
went to work at Food Store X. I don't have health care, but at least I'm 
working. Now I'm paying taxes so people who didn't go to work and stayed 
on welfare could get health care.'' You don't have to be a genius to 
figure out that doesn't make any sense. It is not fair. It is not right. 
It is not fair for your competitors to have any price advantage over you 
because they don't contribute to their employees' health care.
    It's also not fair for people whose children are born with an 
illness or who develop an illness not to ever be able to get health 
insurance because they were never in a work unit that provided it. There 
are millions of people like that. So I just wanted to thank you for 
giving me a chance, through the press, to show America that there are 
plenty of businesses who support requiring employers to pay their fair 
share. Plenty of them. And you represent that. And the truth is this 
country would be a whole lot better off if all the food stores in 
America did what you do instead of walking away. But unless everybody 
does it, it's going to be harder and harder and harder for you to do it. 
That's what Jack said, and it's absolutely right.
    Let me say, I just saw Senator Moynihan walk in. Come over here, 
Senator Moynihan. Senator Moynihan, your Senator, is the chairman of the 
Senate Finance Committee, which has the largest share of responsibility 
for the health care bill in the United States Senate. And he will tell 
you that the big battle that we're fighting out there is how to find a 
way to cover everybody.
    You have proved that a retail establishment can cover their 
employees and make money, that by treating people right you get higher 
productivity, greater employee loyalty, more production, and in the end, 
higher profits. But it isn't right unless everybody has to do it.
    So I want to ask you as I close, every time you fill up that bag, 
tell people you mean it. And ask them to call their Member of Congress 
or write them or drop them a note and say, this is important for 
America. If we don't now seize this opportunity to give health care 
security to all of our people, more and more people will start to lose 
insurance. Another 100,000 Americans a month lose their health insurance 
permanently. It is not right. We can do this right. It will save us 
money over the long run. We will be a healthier, stronger, happier, more 
coherent, more cohesive society if we do this. We have ignored this for 
60 years. In 1994 we can do something about it if people like you will 
let your voices be heard.
    Thank you very much.

Note: The President spoke at 11:54 a.m. in the Pathmark supermarket at 
227 Cherry St. in Manhattan. In his remarks, he referred to Jack 
Futterman, chairman and chief executive officer of Pathmark, and Doug 
Dority, international president, United Food and Commercial Workers.