[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book II)]
[September 6, 1996]
[Pages 1493-1497]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 1493]]


Remarks at Valencia Community College in Orlando
September 6, 1996

    Thank you. Let me say--well, sit down and relax here. [Laughter] 
First of all, I want to thank Christy Grabowski. It's not the easiest 
thing in the world to stand up here in front of all of you and do this, 
and she did a great job, didn't she? Let's give her a hand. [Applause]
    I thank Governor Chiles and Lieutenant Governor MacKay for being 
here. And thank you, Governor Chiles, for what you said and for your 
support of education and especially of these community colleges. I thank 
your Congresswoman Corrine Brown, who is also here, along with 
Congressman John Conyers from Michigan. Thank you very much.
    Dr. Kinser, thank you for welcoming me here. And to your Board of 
Trustees chair, Marcia Tompkins, thank you for making me feel welcome 
here. I know we have three people who are trying to go to the Congress, 
George Stuart, John Byron, and Al Krulick; thank you for coming. I hope 
you'll support these programs and tell people you do.
    I want to thank Bob Koch and Tom Christian for speaking here first, 
to talk along with Dr. Kinser about the work that Valencia has done with 
AT&T, with Lucent, with the IBEW Local 2000, all working together. That 
is how I think America ought to work, and that's why I'm here today. 
America ought to work more like you work in this community college. You 
are truly building that bridge to the 21st century that I talked to the 
American people about in Chicago last week.
    You know, I spent a wonderful several days before and after the 
Democratic National Convention first on a train going through West 
Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan, and Indiana, and then on a bus going 
through Missouri and Illinois and Kentucky and Tennessee before I went 
back home. And I saw all kinds of people there. If you get out on the 
back roads of America and you go to places that normally Presidents 
don't visit, you see the people that really deserve to be worked for and 
fought for. But you can also see them if you go to any community college 
in the United States of America, because that's where our--[applause].
    Community colleges represent what I think America ought to be, 
because it is opportunity for all, no matter who you are or what your 
background is. People are, by definition, responsible because no one's 
giving you anything except a chance. And there is a real community, that 
is, people band together across the lines that too often divide us, 
across lines of race, religion, gender, economy, you name it. All you've 
got to do is show up and play by the rules, and you're part of this 
community. That's the way America ought to work; that's the way I want 
America to work in the 21st century.
    This strategy is working. Just today we learned that we had more 
good economic news: 250,000 more new jobs for Americans in the month of 
July. That means we have now seen the American economy produce, since 
January of 1993, 10\1/2\ million new jobs. The national unemployment 
rate, the national rate is now 5.1 percent, the lowest in 7\1/2\ years. 
This country is moving in the right direction. We're on the right track 
for the 21st century.
    I think it's very important to me that you understand that one of 
the reasons we've been able to create the conditions and give Americans 
the tools to make the most of their own lives is that I have tried to 
change the way our national politics work so that it would work more 
like you work here. I want to move beyond what I consider to be the hot-
air rhetoric of American politics of who's to blame and focus more on 
what to do. What are we going to do to move this country forward? And I 
just want to talk very briefly about two things that are very important, 
the focus of the work of the community college: the economy and 
education.
    The first thing we have to do is, we have to keep this economic 
growth going. We know that there are business cycles that go up and 
down, but we also know that countries have periods where they're growing 
and periods when they're not. And we had too long when too many people 
worked harder and harder and harder just to hang on by their 
fingernails, just to barely support their kids, never getting a raise, 
never looking forward to a better future.

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    We now have seen not only 10\1/2\ million new jobs but record 
numbers of new businesses formed and wages finally going up again for 
the first time in a decade. We need to keep that going. That's what we 
have to keep going. We need to make sure--and that means that we have to 
have the right kind of conditions, first of all, in which our economy 
can grow. And I'll just mention two or three.
    First of all, I want to mention something that every political 
consultant that I ever talked to says never works. They say--for years 
I've been told, ``Oh, Bill, don't talk about the deficit except when the 
economy is bad. When the economy is bad, people really worry about the 
deficit. When the economy is good, they could give a rip about it; it 
bores them. They want to hear about tax cuts.'' Well, what I want to 
tell you is, the reason the economy is good is because this is the first 
administration since before the Civil War that brought the deficit down 
in every year, bringing interest rates down, making investment possible, 
making the economy grow.
    It is imperative that we stay on this path to balancing the budget, 
because we've got to keep the interest rates down so we can have more 
companies affording to borrow the money to invest, to build the new 
facilities, to create the new jobs, to raise the incomes; not to mention 
the fact that if interest rates are down, for you that means lower home 
payments, car payments, and interest rate payments. So it's very 
important. We've got to keep the economy going.
    The second thing we have to do is to have tax cuts that are paid 
for, therefore, as Governor Chiles said. That's why, yes, I want tax 
cuts for education, for childrearing, for people to save in an IRA and 
be able to withdraw tax-free for education or buying a new home or a 
health care emergency; but we've got to pay for them. They have to be 
paid for in the context of balancing the budget. And that's the critical 
distinction here.
    Now, the third thing we have to do is to invest enough money on your 
behalf, for you as a country, to grow the economy. That means we have to 
invest in research. That means we have to invest in education. And let 
me just give you a couple of examples that would really affect Florida.
    I think if we build a bridge to the 21st century that's the right 
kind of bridge, it will be very much a bridge that will keep America on 
the cutting edge of all the latest investments in new technology. That 
means we have to keep the economy growing with projects like the 
proposed high-speed rail project here in Florida. And I support that, 
and I will do what I can to continue to support it with flexibility, 
with resources, with cutting redtape. The Lieutenant Governor talks to 
me about that every time I see him. I haven't yet wanted to run away 
from him when I see him because I don't get tired of hearing about it, 
but these are important issues. I'll give you another example.
    We have to continue to invest money in research. A lot of you were 
very moved I'm sure at our convention when Christopher Reeve gave that 
passionate speech about research. But let me tell you, we now have for 
the first time ever laboratory animals that were--sustained serious 
spinal cord injuries, that were paraplegic, that had nerve transplants 
and for the first time ever moved their lower limbs. The boundaries of 
medical research are enormous. In the last 4 years, research and the 
more rapid movement of drugs to market has more than doubled--more than 
doubled in only 4 years--the life expectancy of people with HIV and 
AIDS--way more than doubled in only 4 years.
    We are making breathtaking discoveries in what can be done to 
preserve the environment while you're growing the economy, whether it's 
in agriculture or industry, through research. The Internet, something a 
lot of you use regularly now, you should know, is the product of 
Government research. It was first developed in a Government research 
project. Then when it had commercial potential, the Government did 
exactly what should be done. The Government got out of it, let the 
private sector run it so it could grow in the proper way.
    We are now building with IBM--I heard you talking about the computer 
chip and the transistor capacity--we are building with IBM a 
supercomputer that will be finished in a few years that, when finished, 
will have the capacity to do in one second the number of calculations it 
would take you on a hand-held calculator 30,000 years to do.
    So I say to you, when people tell you that the Government's all bad 
and all that, just remember, research is an important part of our common 
future. Technology is an important part of our common future. You are 
going to be trained here for jobs--when I look at Christy

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talking--for jobs that some day in the past were just a gleam in 
someone's eye, were just part of someone's imagination. And the young 
people in this audience, within a decade, will be doing jobs that have 
not been invented yet. Some of them will be doing jobs that have not 
even been imagined yet. So we have to keep the economy growing.
    The second thing we have to do, if you look out across this sea of 
students here, is we have to find a way to grow together and to give, 
with all of our diversity, everybody who is willing to work for it a 
chance to live up to their own God-given capacity. And there is no other 
way to do it except through education; there is no other way to do it. 
There is no shortcut.
    Now, it is true that in the last 4 years we've tried to do a lot, 
everything from expanding Head Start to helping the schools do a better 
job, to lowering the cost and improving the repayment terms on college 
loans and saving the education programs, especially the financial aid 
programs, from the assault of the Congress in the last budget. We did do 
that, but we have to do more.
    And let me just say, I want to mention three or four things that I 
think are very important. One involves our younger children. Forty 
percent of the 8-year-olds in this country can still not read on their 
own. And that is wrong. It is very hard for people to get where you are 
today unless they can learn what they're supposed to learn at each step 
along the way. Yes, it's true that you may be--a lot of you probably are 
nontraditional students or considerably--maybe you're in your late 
twenties, your thirties, your forties, your fifties, maybe even in your 
sixties, maybe even older, but you have to learn what you're supposed to 
learn at each step along the way.
    One of the things that I think is very important to do in building 
that bridge to the 21st century in the next 4 years is to mobilize a 
corps of reading mentors--from AmeriCorps volunteers, from work-study 
students in college, from others that we can bring in and pay for--to 
get other volunteers, up to a million volunteers to make sure that every 
8-year-old can read on his or her own by the year 2000, every single 
one. That's important.
    The second thing that I think it's important to get--this goes back 
to technology and research and some work that I have seen done by AT&T 
and by Bell Atlantic and others in other school districts in the 
country--but it's very important to understand what the Internet means 
in terms of education of children. We are trying to, right now--we've 
had a project going where we've had 100,000 teachers teaching 500,000 
more how to make the most of computers in the classroom, and we are 
working to get every school the computers that they need, good 
educational software, and trained teachers.
    But it's very important to understand that if you do all of that and 
you can hook up every classroom and library in America to the Internet 
by the year 2000, it will make it possible for the first time in 
American history--think about this--for the children in the most 
isolated rural districts in the mountains of Appalachia or in the far 
plains of North Dakota and the children in the most isolated inner-city 
urban areas in the poorest school districts to have access in the same 
way at the same time at the same level of quality and quantity to the 
information that the children in the wealthiest districts in America 
have. It has never happened before. This is an enormously significant 
thing. And it could democratize education in a way we never have been 
able to do before. And if we do all those things, that's important. Then 
you would have--every 8-year-old would be able to read, every 12-year-
old could log in on the Internet, and high school graduates all over 
America could be expected to meet the same high standards.
    It's still not enough, you and I know. If you just look at the 
census or you look at your own experience--do we need a doctor here? 
We're okay? I asked my medical team to show up here. That's the 
Presidential service; we carry people everywhere. [Laughter]
    But let me say, it's not enough. We already know. You wouldn't be 
here if you didn't know this, but let me tell you, I first saw it when I 
reviewed the 1990 Census, which may look like a boring document to a lot 
of people, but it tells you what's happening to America. It took my 
breath away to see how the earnings of our people were dividing by 
education, not by race, not by region, not by anything, by education.
    And we know now that people who have a community college degree are 
likely to get jobs in industries with a good future, with the prospect 
of a growing income. We also know that people who don't, who have less, 
are likely not

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to. So I say to you, we can't build the bridge to the future we want and 
give everybody a chance unless we say we want to make it possible for 
every person to go to a community college, and we're going to make 2 
years of education after high school just as universal in 4 years as a 
high school diploma is today. And I want you to help me do that.
    If we provide a refundable tax credit of up to $1,500 a year, we can 
cover the costs through a tax cut of the tuition at the typical 
community college in any State in the country, and we can revolutionize 
access to community college. That's what I want. That's my idea of the 
HOPE scholarship. And it is modeled on a program I saw in Georgia and on 
a more limited thing we tried to do at home when I was Governor of 
Arkansas. I just think we ought to say, okay, you get out of high 
school, you get into community college, here's your tax credit, we'll 
pay your way; you've just got to do a good job, keep your grades up, and 
keep going, and we'll see you through it. For those who go on, let me 
say again, I think we ought to have a tax deduction of up to $10,000 a 
year for the cost of any education after high school.
    For people who lose their jobs and who are underemployed, who used 
to have to wonder whether they were eligible or not for some Government 
training program, I propose collapsing--because nearly every American is 
within driving distance of a community college--I propose collapsing all 
these different Government training programs into one big block and 
saying, if you're eligible because you're unemployed or grossly 
underemployed, we'll give you a skills grant and you can take it where 
you want. You're all within driving distance of a community college; go 
get it.
    There are many other things that we have to do to build that bridge 
to the 21st century. We have to make it possible for families to succeed 
at home and at work. That's why I'm for an IRA that you can contribute 
to and withdraw without penalty for education, for the first-time 
homebuying, for medical emergency. That's why I don't think people 
should ever have to pay taxes when they sell a home and they buy another 
one, on the gain. That's why I believe that we have to do more to expand 
the Family and Medical Leave Act so parents can take a little time off 
from work to go to their children's parent-teacher conference. I think 
these things are important.
    We have to find a way--we have had 4 years of declining crime rates. 
It has been a long time since America has done that. But we need 4 more. 
And after 4 more years, if we could put together 8 years of declining 
crime rates, it might finally be down to a bearable level. We have to 
keep putting these police officers on the street. We have to keep 
finding ways to keep our kids out of trouble and giving them things to 
say yes to, not just things to say no to. We have to keep working on 
that.
    We have to find a way not just to talk about welfare reform but to 
do it. Now, we've moved 1.8 million people--1,800,000 people--from 
welfare to work since I've been President. Now we passed the welfare 
reform bill that says, we'll give you health care, we'll give you 
nutrition, we'll give you child care, but if you're able-bodied, you 
have to go to work. Now there has to be work for those folks to do. We 
have to work on making sure that we create those jobs for people who 
have lower skills and that we don't block them off from coming back to 
community college or doing other things that will raise their skills.
    I will say again, we have to find a way to grow the economy while 
protecting the environment. We still have 10 million of our children 
living within 4 miles of toxic waste dumps. Even though we've cleaned up 
more in the last 3 years than we did in the previous 12, I want to do 
better. If we clean up the two-thirds worst then we can say our children 
are growing up next to parks, not poison, and we're growing the economy 
while we're doing it. And I want you to help me do that. That's 
important.
    Again I will say, we have to grow the economy and we have to grow 
together through educational opportunity and through a belief that the 
country ought to run the way a community college runs. You have no idea 
how much time I have to spend as your President on foreign policy 
problems that arise because people in other parts of the world insist 
upon hating each other because of their religious, their racial, their 
ethnic, or their tribal differences.
    And if you look around at America now, look around this room--I've 
told many people, when the Olympics came to Atlanta and we had people 
there from 197 different national and ethnic groups, our biggest county, 
Los Angeles County, had over 150 of those groups represented in one 
American county. This is not a country where we define ourselves by our 
race, our reli-


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gion, our ethnic group. Everybody is welcome here who believes in the 
Constitution and is willing to stand up and work for what's right.
    Will you help me build that bridge to the 21st century? [Applause] I 
want you to help because you represent where we all need to go.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 12:03 p.m. in the college gymnasium. In his 
remarks, he referred to electronics engineering student Christy 
Grabowski; Gov. Lawton Chiles and Lt. Gov. Buddy MacKay of Florida; Paul 
Kinser, provost, west campus, Valencia Community College; George Stuart, 
John Byron, and Al Krulick, candidates for Florida's 7th, 15th, and 8th 
Congressional Districts, respectively; Bob Koch, vice president for 
operations, Lucent Technologies; Tom Christian, president, International 
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 2000; and actor Christopher 
Reeve.