[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000-2001, Book III)]
[January 16, 2001]
[Pages 2924-2927]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]
Remarks to the United States Conference of Mayors
January 16, 2001
Mayor Coles, thank you very much. Thank you,
ladies and gentlemen. I want to thank Secretary Cuomo and Mickey Ibarra for the
wonderful job they have done. And I thank Secretary Herman and Director Aida Alvarez.
Secretary Riley, thank you for being here.
We have the Acting Director of our Office of National Drug Control
Policy, Ed Jurith; Zina Pierre and others here who have worked with you. I thank Lynn
Cutler, I see out there. And I thank Ellen
Lovell, the head of the First Lady's millennial effort, who brought a lot of
projects to a lot of communities across this country. And all the others
who have worked with you.
I also want to say a special word of thanks to Mayor Coles. We always hear a lot of talk in Washington about
bipartisanship, but if we look to America's mayors, we actually see it.
Maybe because Fiorello LaGuardia was right when he said, ``There was no
Republican or Democratic way to pick up the garbage. You either pick it
up, or you don't.'' [Laughter] I thank you, Mayor Coles.
I also want to thank some of the other officials of the various
organizations who are here. Mayor Morial,
thank you; Mayor Menino, thank you.
Executive Director Tom Cochran, thank you.
Thank you, Wellington Webb, for the
award, for all the good times we had in Denver over the last several
years.
It's been a real joy for me to welcome the U.S. Conference of Mayors
here, and I am very proud of the partnership that we have formed. The
record has already been established, in terms of the rebound of
America's cities.
I would like to make today a different point, one that I rarely read
in the retrospectives now being written about the last 8 years, whether
they're favorable or critical; even the favorable ones sometimes, I
rarely read it. They say, ``Oh, this was''--let's take the best case
ones--``You know, Clinton got rid of the deficit, and he's paying the
debt down, and we've got a healthy economy again.'' Or, ``There was one
big idea, America would be connected to the world through networks of
trade in an interdependent world, and we would stay ahead of the
curve.'' Or the critical ones, ``Oh, they just read the polls that came
out for little things like school uniforms.'' I might say,
parenthetically, that school districts that have them don't think
they're little things.
But they miss the whole point, which is that for 8 years, we have
had a partnership that focused on working together and that took policy
seriously. That is, the thing that made all this work was beyond party
and beyond the vast gulf between the White House and your house--is we
actually believed there is a real connection in people's lives between
the ideas you adopt, how you put them into practice, and then how people
wind up living.
And one of the things that really has always bothered me about
Washington, and I must say, I live without--I mean, I leave without
having changed that very much, is that I think the public enterprise
matters. I'm proud to have been in public life for over 25 years. And I
believe that people of good will who are more interested in the impact
of their actions on other people's lives than whether they are
increasing their own power and position, whether they're Republicans or
Democrats, liberals or conservatives, those people can work together. If
what drives you is, ``What is the impact of what you do on other people
for the better,'' everybody that's motivated by that, without regard to
party or philosophy, can work together.
But to get that done, we have to first of all, accept the fact that
ideas matter and that how you turn ideas into policies matter, and then
you've got to keep score. People are either better off or they're not.
And the reason I loved working with the mayors--apart from the fact that
I thought it was fun to visit your communities, and I always liked
getting out there where
[[Page 2925]]
I got to see so-called real people--is that I knew you felt that. I knew
you were out there thinking ideas mattered. I knew you were out there
keeping score on yourselves.
And there's hardly a mayor here who's community I haven't visited at
one time or another. And I just want to tell you how profoundly grateful
I am for what you did. Because I think if we hadn't had the partnership
we had, it is quite doubtful that we would have the 22\1/2\ million more
jobs, 35 million people now taking advantage of the family leave law.
Interestingly enough, it didn't hurt the economy like the people who
were against it said it would.
The other thing I'm quite proud of is that the poverty rate has gone
down to a 20-year low. And the last 3 years, the lowest 20 percent of
working people have had the highest percentage increase in their income.
I figured if we could get the economy going again, that we'd create more
millionaires. It turned out the economy created a lot more billionaires
too. But the real test, it seems to me, is whether all the people that
are working get a fair reward for their efforts. And while I think a lot
more needs to be done in that regard, it is good to see, for the first
time in 30 years, the rising tide lifting all boats again.
I think it's worth pointing out here that the cities did lead the
way. Incomes have risen faster in the cities than in the suburbs.
Nationally, poverty is down 20 percent since 1993; it's down 23 percent
in America's cities. So all of you can be very proud of what you have
done. And I want to thank you for what you have done.
I want to thank you for the work you did in crime and urge you to
try to maintain that partnership. You know, we wrote a crime bill in
1994 based on what mayors, police chiefs, police on the street, and
prosecutors at the local level told us would work. They said, ``Do this;
this will work.'' And we put 100,000 police on the street, did those
other things, passed the Brady law, and 611,000 felons, fugitives, and
stalkers have not been able to get handguns, and the crime rate is at a
25-year low. In many urban areas, it's even lower than that.
And now we're in the process of putting the second group of 50,000
more police on the street, concentrated in the areas of highest crime
and greatest difficulty. So it worked. You proved it worked.
You worked with the Vice President to
make sure the empowerment zone program worked, the program to clean up
brownfields in urban areas, and I thank you for that. And I thank you
for the input you had on the new markets initiative, and how we expanded
the empowerment zones more, and then had some general tax incentives to
invest in urban areas so that you didn't have to compete to get an
empowerment zone or an enterprise community to get some of the benefits
that I think ought to flow to anybody in the country not fully
participating in our Nation's economic recovery now. So I thank you for
all that.
I thank you for the work you did with us on welfare and housing. I
thank you for the work you have done with us on health care. We had the
number of people without health insurance going down in our country for
the first time in a dozen years, thanks to the Children's Health
Insurance Program, which is flowing money into a lot of urban areas in a
way that is absolutely critical to your hospitals and your public health
clinics.
I thank you for the work you have done with us on education, for the
support you've given us to try to hire 100,000 more teachers to lower
the classes in early grades, and for the support you've given--many of
you very vocally--for funds to repair or modernize schools.
For the first time since World War II, this Congress gave us over a
billion dollars to provide emergency repairs in schools all across the
country. And in many, many of our cities, the average school building is
over 50 years old. So this is something that you're going to be able to
take advantage of. And I urge you to keep going with that and keep
pushing it until we have more money, because, believe me, a billion
dollars--I remember when I was a boy, Everett Dirksen said, ``You can
take a billion dollars here and a billion dollars there, and pretty soon
you're talking about real money.'' And it is real money, but it's
nowhere nearly enough for what we should do for our schools.
I thank you--and Mayor Webb mentioned this earlier today--for the
support you gave us to continue Federal funding for the arts. One of the
things that I was totally mystified by, when we had 5 years ago this
sort of war on Federal funding for the arts that came out, is that it
seemed to me that the people that were conducting the war may have had
some poster project or another that they thought they could inflame
public opinion about, but they had no idea how many community art
centers out there
[[Page 2926]]
were running educational programs for kids in their own schools, that
the cities could not possibly afford to run on their own without this
supporting help. You helped us put the real face of NEA and our funding
in the minds of the people doing it. And this year, of course, we
actually got an increase.
So I feel that two of our major initiatives here were validated. I
felt that what the Vice President did--and
thank you, Alvin Brown--on the empowerment zones
and the enterprise communities was also ratified when we adopted this
big new markets initiative. So I thank you for that. And thank you for
what you've done.
Now, let's just look ahead for a minute here. One of the things that
I think is most important about our cities, and I see it everywhere, is
the way people who come into vibrant cities basically naturally incline
toward an attitude of interdependence, and they have a high comfort
level, much higher comfort level, living with people who are different
from them. And since I believe that's the biggest challenge facing
people all over the world today, I think that the cities that succeed
actually have something profoundly important to show the rest of our
Nation and the world.
And I think when you just live close to one another and you have to
share a lot of things, like whether it's a subway ride or waiting at a
bus stop or some other more basic facility, you just naturally develop a
different attitude toward your fellow human beings, and politics becomes
a matter of practical cooperation. And I think that's what we need to
continue to work on. So I think the cities are very, very important in
that regard.
And on the Martin Luther King Holiday, yesterday, I released a
report to the Congress, the last report I will issue on race, under our
One America initiative. And I had some very specific recommendations in
there that I hope the next administration and the next Congress will
embrace--this Congress now; they're already meeting. And I would urge
you to look at that, and if you agree, I hope you will help to get it
done.
Because I really believe we've got a lot more work to do in
education, particularly in modernizing these facilities and making sure
all these urban schools are hooked up to the Internet. I think we've got
a lot more work to do in terms of economic empowerment of people and
places that are left behind. And it offers an enormous opportunity for
the cities of our Nation to have an alliance with rural areas and Native
American communities, so that you can't be pitted one against another.
I think there are still a lot of things that have to be done in the
way of dealing fairly with immigrant populations coming to our country--
so that we have the capacity to have laws and enforce them so that we
don't wind up rewarding one group of immigrants over another, and the
people that get the shaft are those that loyally waited in line for
their time to be able to come to the United States and do what should be
done. But on the other hand, I don't think we can afford to be treating
some groups of immigrants different than others under the law either.
That's why I've supported the ``Latino Fairness Act'' in the Congress
last time. I'm real sorry we didn't pass it. It's about the only thing
we wanted to pass we didn't. So I hope you will help with that.
I think we've got a real--we need to really give a lot more thought
than we have to our imprisonment policies: how long people are in jail,
what are they going to jail for, and what do they do when they get out.
Nearly everybody that goes to jail gets out. I think it is time that we
change, as a matter of national policy, the idea that you have to have a
Presidential pardon or a Governor's pardon before you can get your vote
back. I think if you pay a price, you go to jail, you get out, then
you're on probation a while, then your sentence is discharged--why
shouldn't you get your vote back? You think about it.
One of the big controversies in the recent election in Florida was
the review of people to see if they had criminal records, which disabled
them from voting. And then you had a lot of other people agitated
because they were apparently--maybe not intentionally, just
accidentally--purged from the rolls because they had the same names or
similar names as those people who did.
But if--look, I've been doing this for 25 years now, since I was
attorney general in my home State. Nearly everybody that goes to prison
gets out. And when they get out, all the rest of us want them to do
well, go to work, pay taxes, and not commit another crime, right? Why
should we make them go through the incredible gyration of trying to
figure out how to get a pardon? And all the systems are different.
[[Page 2927]]
And I can tell you, I'm sitting here--I've got just a few days left,
and I'm trying to go over all these request for clemency, and it's
almost impossible to deal with them all in a fair way, to give due
concern to the attention of law enforcement as well as the people who
are pleading their case. And I just don't see what that's got to do with
this.
It seems to me--we changed the law in Arkansas 24 years ago--if you
finish your sentence, you go sign up to vote; nobody has to get a pardon
anymore. But I dare say, most people in Arkansas don't know that,
because in most States they haven't done it, and we haven't done it at
the national level.
These are just things I want you to think about, because I think the
cities have got to continue to be the focus of building one America. And
we've got to try to figure out how we're going to deal with the
outstanding issues we've got.
Let me just mention, finally, that I am very grateful for the
environmental support I've had from the mayors and the funding that we
got last time, for the first time in history, under this lands legacy
initiative, to have a permanent source of funding to set aside precious
lands. And I just want to reemphasize to all of you, it is not just to
protect the watershed around the Grand Canyon; it may be to protect the
little square block park in some neighborhood, where that's the only
green space your kids will ever see.
So I urge you, as I leave office, to make full use of this
legislation that was passed last year to provide a permanent funding
screen, to help you set aside green spaces in your communities. And
understand, it is not just about the big open spaces or the big places
or some big project, like the Everglades; it's about what's in your
neighborhoods. We want this bill, this whole bill. The whole idea of
this was to balance our concern for the big chunks of land and resources
that had to be preserved and the need to provide some environmental
balance and access to nature to all of our kids and families in urban
America, as well. So I urge you, when you work in this coming year, to
make sure that your cities are a part of that initiative.
Well, I've already said more than I meant to. I thank you for the
award. I thank you for the work we've done to put this country in good
shape. The 8 years passed in a flash, but I enjoyed it very much. And I
particularly enjoyed working with the mayors. All of you who have
welcomed me to your communities, I thank you for that. And I hope that
you will do what you can to keep America on a positive track. Together
we proved that good economics was good social policy, that you could be
fiscally responsible and reduce poverty, that you could have an urban
policy that actually helped the rest of the country, too. You did that.
You should be very proud.
But I think that the biggest rewards of our efforts of the last 8
years are still out there. And if ever I can help any of you to do
what's right by your people in the future, I will certainly do it. I
thank you, and I feel better about my country knowing that you're
staying behind to keep up the fight.
God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 3:24 p.m. in the East Room at the White
House. In his remarks, he referred to Mayor Brent Coles of Boise, ID,
president, Mayor Wellington Webb of Denver, CO, past president, and J.
Thomas Cochran, executive director, U.S. Conference of Mayors; Mayors
Marc Morial of New Orleans, LA, and Thomas Menino of Boston, MA; and
Alvin Brown, Senior Adviser to the Vice President for Urban Affairs.
Prior to his remarks, the President was presented with the U.S.
Conference of Mayors Distinguished Public Service Award.