[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George W. Bush (2003, Book II)]
[July 28, 2003]
[Pages 937-943]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]


[[Page 937]]


Remarks to the National Urban League Conference in Pittsburgh, 
Pennsylvania
July 28, 2003

    Thanks for the warm welcome. Thanks for your kind invitation. But 
most importantly, thanks for your service to your fellow Americans. The 
Urban League has always stood for justice and hope and healing. It's 
stood for opportunity for all our citizens. I'm honored to be at such an 
organization.
    I appreciate the chance as well to come to Pittsburgh. It's a city 
that's rich in civil rights, the history of civil rights. In the 1800s, 
the Underground Railroad here delivered thousands out of slavery and 
into freedom. In the 1930s and 1940s, Pittsburgh's Urban League led 
successful protests against schools and department stores that refused 
to hire African Americans. And today in this city, community leaders are 
showing what good people can accomplish by working together. I now know 
why they call it the Renaissance City, and I want to thank you for your 
hospitality.
    The work of the National Urban League represents one of the basic 
commitments of this country. See, we believe in opportunity for all, a 
society where every person can dream and work and realize his or her 
potential. We're dedicated to bringing economic hope to every 
neighborhood, a good education to every child, and comfort and 
compassion to the afflicted. And our Nation has come a long way, and we 
have a long way to go. And we will not stop, we will not tire until we 
extend the great promise of America to every neighborhood in America. 
And that's what I want to talk about today.
    I want to thank Mr. President, President Marc Morial, for his kind invitation and his willingness to lead this 
important American institution. He replaces a good man in Hugh 
Price, who has ably led the Urban League for 
nearly a decade. And there's no doubt in my mind that Marc Morial will 
do a great job on behalf of America. Thank you, Mr. Mayor. As he said, 
we grew up right around the corner from each other. And I know what he 
was--what New Orleans was like when he was the mayor of that important 
city. Bourbon Street was never more alive when--[laughter]--never mind. 
[Laughter]
    I'm honored that the Secretary of Education is with us today, Rod 
Paige. He is a good friend and a good man.
    I appreciate so very much Michael Critelli, who is the chairman of the board of the National Urban 
League, a businessman that understands corporate responsibility. It 
means you've got to help somebody else as well as watching the bottom 
line. Mike, thank you for being here.
    I'm honored that members from the Pennsylvania congressional 
delegation are with us today, Senators Specter 
and Santorum and Congressman Tim 
Murphy. I appreciate them coming. A couple of 
them jumped on Air Force One. [Laughter] I'm not suggesting that's why 
they came. [Laughter] There's not a lot of air raids on Air Force One. 
[Laughter] But I'm glad to have them.
    I see Reverend Jackson is with us 
today. Jesse Jackson, it's good to see you. Congressman 
Cummings--I'm honored to see you, 
Congressman. Thank you for being here. I appreciate so very much my 
friend Mayor Jim Garner, who's the president 
of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, who is with us today. Mr. Mayor, thank 
you for coming.
    I know that Mike Fisher, the State 
attorney general, is with us today. And the Allegheny County chief 
executive, Jim Roddey, is with us today. And I'm 
honored that they have come. I want to thank all the elected officials. 
I want to thank the board of the National Urban League. And I want

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to thank the delegates for giving me a chance to come by and say hello.
    Today I had the honor, when I landed at the airport, of meeting a 
board member of the Urban League of Pittsburgh, a fellow named Xavier 
Williams. He came to see me because one of 
the things I try to do is herald the great strength of the country, 
which happens to be the heart and soul of our citizens. You see, Xavier 
works for a--it's called INROADS. It's a nonprofit organization which 
matches minority youth with successful businesses and corporations to 
try to help them have the skills necessary to realize the 
entrepreneurial spirit of America. Xavier knows what I know, that the 
best way to serve your country is to love a neighbor just like you'd 
like to be loved yourself. And I appreciate the example that Xavier 
Williams sets for not only the good folks here in Pittsburgh but for 
people all around the country. Thank you, Xavier, for your service to 
our country.
    Every generation of Americans must rise to its own challenges, and 
this generation is rising to meet ours. We will never forget the lessons 
of September the 11th, 2001. Great oceans no longer protect us from 
dangers that gather far from home. And the other lesson is that there 
are people who can't stand what America stands for and desire to 
conflict great harm on the American people. In the 22 months since that 
day, we have put those who hate America on notice: Wherever they plot, 
wherever they plan, they will find no place to hide from American 
justice.
    The Al Qaida terrorists still threaten our country, but they're on 
the run. The regime in Afghanistan, the Taliban regime, inflicted great 
harm on the citizens of that country and protected the terrorists. But 
that regime is no more. Afghanistan is now free.
    And our current mission in Iraq is essential to the broader war on 
terror; it's essential to the security of the American people. You see, 
a free, democratic, peaceful Iraq will not threaten America or our 
friends with weapons. A free Iraq will not be a training ground for 
terrorists or a funnel of money to terrorists or provide weapons to 
terrorists who would willingly use them to strike our country. A free 
Iraq will not destabilize the Middle East. A free Iraq can set a hopeful 
example to the entire region and lead other nations to choose freedom. 
And as the pursuits of freedom replace hatred and resentment and terror 
in the Middle East, the American people will be more secure.
    Our men and women in uniform are serving our Nation and the cause of 
security and peace. We're proud of them. We appreciate their progress. 
We appreciate their dedication to the country called America.
    This Nation has got another great challenge. While we stand for 
freedom and opportunity abroad, we must make those same values real in 
the lives of all Americans. This Nation has got work to do. There are 
citizens who can't find jobs. There are citizens looking for homes for 
their families. There are students who go to school that are letting 
them down every day and don't seem to improve. There are children who 
need mentors in their lives, people struggling with addiction who need 
to know they don't face that struggle alone.
    To make the promise of America real for everyone, we need active 
citizens who help their neighbors; we need active churches and active 
communities; and we need active government. We can make a difference in 
people's lives with creative, innovative policies that focus on results.
    Greater opportunity and hope begins with a growing economy. The 
stock market started to decline in March of 2000. And then we had 
recession in the first quarter of 2001. So we acted. We provided 
historic tax relief for families. And then as the economy was beginning 
to come back, we found out some of our citizens, corporate CEOs, forgot 
what it means to be a responsible citizen, and they did not tell the 
truth to shareholder and employee alike. So we

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acted, and we're now holding corporate criminals to account.
    Last year, we saw too many Americans were still struggling to find a 
job, so we acted again. We brought the marriage penalty down. It doesn't 
make any sense, by the way, to penalize marriage in the Tax Code. It 
seems like the Tax Code ought to encourage marriage, not penalize it. We 
reduced income tax rates. We expanded the child credit from $600 to 
$1,000 per child, and we made the change retroactive to January 1st of 
this year, so the checks are in the mail. And as a matter of fairness, 
Congress should make the child credit refundable--low-income families 
need help as well during these economic slow times.
    To add more jobs to the economy, we're also focusing a lot on small 
businesses, because small businesses create the most new jobs in an 
economy. Most small businesses are sole proprietorships or Subchapter 
S's, so when you reduce the income tax rates, you help small businesses. 
They pay tax at the individual rates. We're also allowing higher expense 
deduction for small businesses, which will make it easier for small 
businesses to buy new equipment and to hire new people. We're working 
through the Small Business Administration and Minority Business 
Development Agency to ensure that minority businesses get access to 
Federal contracting and financing and technical assistance for startups, 
because we understand small businesses are the path to the American 
Dream, and this path must be more open to all our citizens.
    You hear a lot of talk about tax relief. Let me tell you my belief. 
When a person has got more money in his or her pocket, he or she is 
likely to demand an additional good or a service. And when somebody 
demands a good or a service in our society, somebody is going to produce 
the good or a service. And when somebody produces that good or a 
service, it means somebody is more likely find a job. The tax relief we 
packaged is good for helping people find work in America.
    Now, we've been through a lot: recession, war, emergencies, and 
corporate scandals. But I'm optimistic about the future. I'm optimistic 
about the future, because I see hopeful signs. Home sales are strong, 
and people are refinancing their mortgages to put more money in their 
pockets. Inflation is low. Retail sales have begun to show growth. 
Productivity is high. And the good news is, a lot of the economists are 
beginning to forecast a better tomorrow, which is important for making 
sure that people have hope in our society.
    No, we're dealing with the economy. We saw a problem, and we dealt 
with it straight up.
    And as the economy expands, we've got to help Americans who find the 
greatest difficulty finding work. So I proposed what we call 
reemployment accounts. The job-seeker would have an account up to $3,000 
for job training or child care or transportation or relocating to get a 
new job in a new city. If a worker finds a new job quickly, within 13 
weeks, he or she gets to keep the balance of the cash as a reemployment 
account. Congress needs to put this plan in effect. Congress needs to 
help those who are having trouble finding work.
    Congress also needs to understand, we need a sound energy policy in 
America. We need to cut down on frivolous litigation, which inhibits 
economic growth. We need a trade policy that opens up new markets for 
American products.
    We also need good housing policy. A good way to make sure this 
economy remains strong is a housing policy which closes the minority 
homeownership gap in America. We need greater tax incentives for people 
to build homes in inner cities. I believe our Government should provide 
downpayment assistance to people who want to buy a home but need a 
little extra help. I understand there's a lot of fine print when it 
comes to mortgages, so we need to help people understand what's in the 
fine print. We need grant programs to help counsel low- and moderate-
income folks

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across our country, to teach them what it means to buy a home and to 
make sure that the fine print is understood by all. No, we've got a goal 
in America of helping 5\1/2\ million more minority citizens become 
homeowners by the end of this decade.
    The truth of the matter is, the future of our economy and our 
country depend upon good schools in all our neighborhoods. Equal 
education is one of the most pressing civil rights of our day. Nearly 
half a century after Brown v. Board of Education, there's still an 
achievement gap in America. On the most recent National Assessment of 
Educational Progress, on the reading test, 41 percent of white fourth 
graders were proficient and better readers, but only 12 percent of 
African Americans met that standard. That means we've got a problem. 
Both numbers are too low. I think too many of our schools are leaving 
too many of our children unprepared.
    And so we acted. I worked with Congress to pass what we call the No 
Child Left Behind Act. It says every child can learn; we must have high 
standards for every child; and we must hold people to account to make 
sure children do learn. We must challenge the soft bigotry of low 
expectations, and you know what I'm talking about. And as Rod 
Paige will brief you, States are beginning 
to respond. We said, ``In return for record levels of education spending 
at the Federal level, we expect results.''
    You see, if you believe every child can learn, then you ought to be 
asking the question to those who are spending our money, ``Are you 
teaching the child?'' That's what we ought to be asking all across 
America. And now there's accountability plans being put in place in 50 
States plus Puerto Rico and the District. I know people are concerned 
about testing. I've heard this debate a lot. They say it's 
discriminatory to measure and compare results. I say it is 
discriminatory not to measure. I think it's important to know whether or 
not our schools are succeeding. We simply have got to stop shuffling our 
children from grade to grade without asking the question, have they been 
taught to learn to read and write and add and subtract?
    I believe it is those who believe certain children can't learn that 
are willing to shuffle them through. And the No Child Left Behind Act 
ends that. In return for record levels of money, you've got to show us 
whether or not the children can read and write and add and subtract. And 
when schools don't measure up, parents must have more options. It's one 
thing to measure, but there has to be consequences for failing schools. 
So in that act, parents are able to send their children to a different 
public school or a charter school or get special tutorial help.
    I also believe it makes sense to explore private school choices, so 
I'm working with the leadership in Washington, DC. This isn't a Democrat 
issue or Republican issue. This is an issue that focuses on children.
    I know setting high standards works. I know measuring and using the 
measurement system as a way to diagnose problems so you can focus on the 
problems works. In my State, 73 percent of the white students passed the 
math test in 1994, while only 38 percent of the African American 
students passed it. So we made that the point of reference. We had 
people focused on the results for the first time--not process but 
results. And because teachers rose to the challenge, because the problem 
became clear, that gap has now closed to 10 points. Because every child 
can learn, you've just got to focus the attention and the resources when 
necessary. Accountability tells you what's going right, and it tells you 
what's going wrong, and it shows you where the emphasis needs to be. 
We're having the same results in North Carolina. In States that measure, 
you'll find that the achievement gap is closing dramatically.
    Our opportunity society must also be a compassionate society. As 
Americans, when we see hopelessness and suffering and injustice, we will 
not turn our backs. And one of the best ways to build hope is to

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recognize where some of the great works of compassion are done. You see, 
Government can hand out money--sometimes we do a pretty good job of it--
but what it can't do is put hope in people's hearts or a sense of 
purpose in people's lives. That happens when people who have been called 
to love a neighbor interface with a neighbor in need.
    See, every day across America, faith-based and community groups are 
touching people's lives in profound ways--give shelter to the homeless 
and provide safety for battered women; they bring compassion to lonely 
seniors. America's neighborhood healers have long experience and deep 
understanding of the problems that many face, and many of them have 
something extra besides experience. They have inspiration, as they carry 
God's love to people in need. I like to call the neighborhood healers 
America's social entrepreneurs. And they need the support of foundation 
America and corporate America. They need the support of individuals and, 
of course, congregations. And when appropriate, they deserve the support 
of the Government.
    Government has no business endorsing a religious creed or directly 
funding religious worship. But for too long, Government treated people 
of faith like second-class citizens in the grantmaking process. 
Government can and should support effective social services provided by 
religious people, as long as those services go to anyone in need. And 
when Government gives that support, faith-based institutions should not 
be forced to change the character of their service or compromise their 
principles.
    Neighborhood healers have not been treated well by the Federal 
Government, so I signed an Executive order banning discrimination 
against faith-based charities by Federal agencies. I created special 
offices in my key Cabinet departments to speak up for faith-based groups 
and to help them access Government funding. I've asked the departments 
to report to me on a regular basis to make sure the old days are gone, 
to make sure we challenge and harness the great strength of the country, 
the heart and soul of our citizens. We're changing the focus of 
Government from process to results. Instead of asking the question, ``Is 
this a faith-based program,'' we're now asking the question, ``Does the 
program work,'' and if so, it deserves our support.
    And the support is making a difference. Here in Pittsburgh, the 
North Hills Community Outreach, an interfaith human services agency, 
uses about $76,000 from the Department of Health and Human Services to 
help people get through tough times. In other words, we're using 
taxpayers' money to help support programs that use the faith component 
to help change lives and save lives.
    A fellow named Royal Patterson went to 
this program. He was a painter for 27 years, and then he was unable to 
climb up a ladder. So he goes to North Hills. They gave him food. They 
gave him bus passes. They helped him to get a new job. But what he said 
was--most important--he said, ``It was so uplifting. You figure nobody 
cares, but they care.''
    There's a lot of programs around based on faith that care for 
people, and our Government must recognize their potential in our society 
if we want to heal lives all across America.
    I've asked Congress to fund $100 million for the Compassionate 
Capital Fund. That's a fancy word for providing money for organizations 
like the Urban League to teach some of these small faith programs how to 
apply for grants, how to help manage and train their staffs. In other 
words, I fully recognize that some of the programs in some of the 
neighborhoods need management help. They need guidance. And I would hope 
that Marc would take advantage of this program to help some faith 
programs all around the country be fully prepared to do what they're 
called to do, which is love somebody in need.

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    I've asked Congress for $600 million over 3 years to extend drug and 
alcohol treatment to 300,000 Americans and that faith-based providers 
must be allowed to compete for these funds. Sometimes when a person 
changes their heart, they change their habits. And our Congress must 
recognize that and provide opportunity for faith-based programs such as 
the Sojourner House, named after Sojourner Truth, right here in 
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
    This is a program which helps mothers with drug and alcohol 
problems. A child can live in a loving environment while a mom works to 
break free from addiction. They help the people get on their feet. They 
help people see themselves as a worthy child of God. That may not sound 
like your average Government program. But we're no longer asking, ``Is 
it a faith-based program?'' We're asking, ``Does it work?'' The 
Sojourner House works, and this country of ours ought to support 
programs like the Sojourner House.
    It's important for our Nation to recognize that too many young 
people are growing up without enough caring adults in their lives. Too 
many people wonder whether anybody loves them. We need more mentors, 
committed adults to serve as role models to help shepherd children 
through the early years of their life.
    Congress--I called upon Congress to spend 450 million over 3 years 
to bring more mentors to more than a million disadvantaged children. 
We've got a goal, mentors for a million children--junior high children 
who are making life decisions, as well as the children of prisoners who 
face so many problems through no fault of their own, and they need 
somebody to surround them with some love.
    Faith communities are a great source for mentors, and we must make 
sure that faith-based groups have a chance to participate in this 
program as well. More Americans volunteer through their houses of 
worship than any other organization, and Congress must recognize that. 
Our Government should not fear faith; we ought to welcome it as an equal 
partner in helping people who need help.
    Now, we believe in the value and possibility of every life. And 
we'll help those who need help here at home, and we must help those who 
need help abroad as well.
    I have recently seen for myself the great possibilities of Africa 
and the great needs of Africa. That continent's economic future depends 
upon trade. We'll continue to help African countries become full 
partners in trade and prosperity. Many African people struggle with 
hunger. You need to know your Government and your country is the most 
generous country in the world for providing aid and help for those who 
are hungry.
    America's progress--Africa's progress is threatened by terrorism and 
civil wars, and so we're working with African governments to rid that 
continent of regional conflict and terrorist violence.
    They're suffering in Liberia today. I directed the Secretary of 
Defense to position appropriate military capabilities off the coast of 
Liberia in order to support the deployment of an ECOWAS force. We're 
committed to working with ECOWAS to create the conditions in which lives 
can be saved and aid can be delivered.
    We're also helping Africa overcome one of the deadliest enemies it 
has ever faced, the spread of HIV/AIDS. Over the next 5 years, the 
United States has pledged $15 billion to fight AIDS around the world, 
with special focus on nations in Africa and the Caribbean. We are 
working with governments and private groups and faith-based 
organizations to help with prevention and to provide much needed 
antiretroviral drugs for treatment. We are determined to turn the tide 
against AIDS in Africa.
    Recently, on my trip to Africa, I visited Goree Island in Senegal, 
where for centuries men and women were delivered and sorted and branded 
and shipped. It's a haunting place, a reminder of mankind's capacity for 
cruelty and injustice.

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    Yet Goree Island is also a reminder of the strength of the human 
spirit and the capacity for good to overcome evil. The men and women who 
boarded slave ships on that island and wound up in America endured the 
separation of their families, the brutality of their oppressors, and the 
indifference of laws that regarded them only as articles of commerce. 
Still, the spirit of Africans in America did not break. All the 
generations of oppression under the laws of man could not crush the hope 
of freedom. And by a plan only known to providence, the stolen sons and 
daughters of Africa helped to awake the conscience of America. The very 
people traded into slavery helped to set America free.
    The moral vision of African Americans and of groups like the Urban 
League caused Americans to examine our hearts, to correct our 
Constitution, and to teach our children the dignity and equality of 
every person of every race.
    Our journey toward justice has not been easy, and it is not over. 
Yet I am confident that we will reach our destination. We have been 
called to great work in our time, and we will answer that call. We will 
defend our freedom, and we will lead the world toward peace. And we will 
unite America behind the great goals of opportunity for all and for 
compassion for those in need.
    I want to thank each of you for serving this cause in your own 
lives. May God bless your work, may God bless the Urban League, and may 
God continue to bless the United States of America.

Note: The President spoke at 11:17 a.m. at the David Lawrence Convention 
Center. In his remarks, he referred to Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, Sr., 
founder and president, Rainbow/PUSH Coalition; and Mayor James A. Garner 
of Hempstead, NY.