[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 30, Number 19 (Monday, May 16, 1994)]
[Pages 1028-1029]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Exchange With Reporters During a Meeting With Health Care Letter Writers 
in New York City

May 9, 1994

Haiti

    Q. Mr. President, Lawton Chiles is worried that your new refugee 
policy is going to put an undue burden on his State. Is there anything 
you can say to allay his concerns?
    The President. Yes, I've already talked to him. We had a long talk 
about it. He just wants to make sure we don't start it until we have the 
capacity to implement it, which is what I said yesterday.
    Q. Are you going to seek prior congressional authorization before 
you would consider sending troops to Haiti?
    The President. I don't have anything further to say. I'm not going 
to discuss that option until it becomes appropriate.
    Press Secretary Myers. Thank you.

Health Care Reform

    Q. Mr. President, what did you gain by just meeting these people 
just now? Some insight into the average American's mind on health care?
    The President. Well, these are--we received three letters from 
people who are here who either can't get health insurance or lost it, or 
people who think they have to stop caring for their children to go to 
work. There are all kinds of--the people who wrote me these letters--
maybe I should let them speak for themselves--are often lost in the 
debate in Washington. Millions and millions of people whose hopes and 
whose whole lives are riding on the outcome of this health care debate 
are almost exclusively unorganized. They very often represent far more 
people than the people who have organized who are lobbying Congress, who 
are saying one thing or another about this health care bill. But they're 
in every community; they're in every work force; they're in every kind 
of situation.
    Why don't we just--I don't know if you've met them already, but--did 
you introduce yourself to everybody here? Tell them who you are and what 
you do.
    Sally Gorsline. I'm Sally Gorsline. I'm from Kingston, New York.
    The President. And----
    Ms. Gorsline. I had an illness, and I went bankrupt because I didn't 
have health insurance.
    The President. And your friends came with you, right?
    Ms. Gorsline. This is my daughter, Stephanie, and my future son-in-
law, Bill.
    The President. Who also has no health insurance.
    Cathy Rosen. My name is Cathy Rosen. I'm from New Rochelle, New 
York. And I had coverage, but my boss went out of business, and I wound 
up taking up another job. And I have no insurance coverage right now. 
And I have a condition that warrants it, that needs health insurance 
coverage, but I don't have it and it's potentially life-threatening.

[[Page 1029]]

And this is my girlfriend, Ellen, who came with me.
    The President. And you've now been seeing who?
    Ms. Rosen. No, I'm not. I can't get treatment. I can't even find out 
what the possibilities are because I have no health coverage. And I just 
can't afford it.
    Anita Lampert. My name is Anita Lampert. This is my husband, Steven, 
and my son, Cameron, who's getting very restless. My husband is self-
employed. And so I wrote a letter discussing the problems of a self-
employed individual, like probably a lot of you, photographers, 
freelance artists, plumbers, architects, anybody who's self-employed, 
and the problem with rates being so high. If you don't work for a big 
corporation, it's very hard to get insurance at affordable rates. And 
when you have a child that comes into your life, health insurance is 
very, very important.
    The President. They might not be organized, but there are tens of 
millions of them. And we've already received--Hillary and I have 
received a million letters. We're just trying to give voice to them.
    So in addition to all the economic arguments and all the substantive 
arguments I made in there in the speech, the real compelling case for 
health care reform is with these folks here.
    Thank you.

Note: The exchange began at 2:10 p.m. in the Mercury Ballroom at the New 
York Hilton. In his remarks, he referred to Gov. Lawton Chiles of 
Florida. A tape was not available for verification of the content of 
this exchange.