[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 33, Number 15 (Monday, April 14, 1997)]
[Pages 494-497]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks Prior to a Cabinet Meeting and an Exchange With Reporters

April 10, 1997

Implementation of Welfare Reform

    The President. Welcome to the members of the Cabinet and their 
representatives as well as to the members of the press. One month ago, I 
directed the members of the Cabinet to do everything they can to hire 
people off the welfare rolls into available jobs in Government. And I 
asked the Vice President to lead and coordinate this effort. Today we 
are here to receive each agency's specific plans to do that.
    We have the good fortune to begin with some encouraging news. Today 
I am pleased to report that over the last 4 years, from January of '93 
to January of '97, America's welfare rolls declined by 2.8 million 
people. The welfare rolls have now declined by as much in the past 4 
years as they increased in the previous 25 years. And that's a great 
tribute to all of those who worked on welfare reform as well as to the 
strength of the American economy.

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    In the next 4 years, we have to move another 2 million people off 
welfare to meet the targets of the welfare reform law. We have all got 
to take responsibility to see that the jobs are there so that people can 
leave welfare and become permanent members of the work force. Of course, 
the vast majority of these jobs will have to come from the private 
sector. And I will convene a meeting of business leaders here at the 
White House next month to talk about what more can be done to aid that 
endeavor. I also want to say that the members of the Cabinet that have 
special responsibility there will be doing more. And I'm glad to 
announce today that, at the initiative of Aida Alvarez, Betsy Myers, the 
Director of Women's Outreach here at the White House, will leave the 
White House and move to the Small Business Administration to coordinate 
a new effort there to encourage small- and women-owned businesses to 
hire people from welfare to work.
    But the Government must do its share as well. The Federal 
Government, after all, is a large employer in the United States. We 
employ a little over one percent of the total work force of our country. 
Today I'm pleased to announce that we will hire at least 10,000 welfare 
recipients over the next 4 years, and we will urge private contractors 
that work with Government to hire people off welfare as well.
    I'm especially pleased that six of those who will be hired from the 
welfare rolls will work right here in the White House. Now, let me be 
clear: These will not be make-work jobs. These will be jobs that 
actually need to be fulfilled, work that needs to be done for the 
American people. We will demand the highest performance from the new 
employees and insist that they live up to their responsibilities. But we 
will also offer them a chance at a new beginning.
    Today we have with us two former welfare recipients who have found 
that new beginning. The Vice President and I just had the honor of 
meeting with them in the Oval Office. They are on my left. To my far 
left is Rebecca Wilson of Clinton, Iowa. That has a nice ring to it. 
[Laughter] She is a single mother of two who was on welfare, working and 
attending and--then while she was attending Clinton Community College. 
Last year, she got a part-time job as a clerk in her local Social 
Security office. That enabled her to leave the welfare rolls while she 
finished school. With her supervisor's encouragement, she's now on her 
way to a business degree. She just got a raise and a promotion 2 days 
ago. Congratulations.
    Ms. Wilson. Thank you.
    The President. And she's been offered a permanent job with the 
Social Security Administration after she graduates.
    Tonya Graham of Plainview, Texas, had a child when she was 16, went 
on welfare while attending college part-time. She found out about a job 
at the Social Security Administration through one of her professors. She 
left welfare the very month she was hired, finished her degree, and is 
now working full-time as a Social Security claims representative.
    These two women are examples that, not just for the Government but 
for the private and nonprofit sectors as well, if we give people who are 
on welfare the opportunity, they will do the rest, helping us to break 
the cycle of dependence and make responsibility a way of life.
    The decisions we make in this room today will enable thousands of 
more American families to remake their lives as Rebecca and Tonya have 
done. Together, we have already reduced the welfare rolls by 2.8 
million; that is the greatest reduction in our history. Now we have to 
finish the job, and the Federal Government has to do its part by 
offering jobs to at least 10,000 more welfare recipients over the next 4 
years.
    We can elevate our most fundamental values of family and work and 
responsibility and make welfare reform work.
    Now I'd like to ask the Vice President, who has done so much to 
reinvent our Government and who spearheaded this effort to get all the 
agencies together around this number, and ask him to say a few words.

[At this point, the Vice President made brief remarks.]

    Q. Mr. President, if people want to get these jobs, if they think 
they're eligible for them, how are they going to find out about it? How 
do they learn whether they can qualify?

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    The President. Do you want to answer that?
    The Vice President. They will find out from the Federal departments 
in their area. We also have a job bank on the Internet and you can, from 
a library or from a friend who has a personal computer, or if you have 
an Internet connection in some other way, you can plug into the job 
bank, and they will be listed there, and you can go to the Federal 
office building in your area.
    The President. But the main thing is, you see, the Federal 
departments will all be trying to meet their targets, and the people who 
are placing the welfare workers who will be working for the State, 
people who interview the people on welfare, will be able to tell them, 
``Look, the Federal Government's got a program here, and they're trying 
to hire people, and we'll check around at all of these different 
agencies in your community and see if there's an opening there.'' That's 
how welfare workers--welfare workers at the State level actually 
interview these people, but they will all know now what our national 
goals are, and then they'll be able to determine quickly whether, by 
department, there's an opening in the area. And the welfare recipients 
will be coming in under the new welfare reform law to these workers, and 
they will be working together to try to help them get a job within the 
time prescribed.
    Q. Can we ask Ms. Wilson and Ms. Graham if they are making ends meet 
with their job? The Vice President mentioned child care being a problem. 
As a single mother of two, are you able to make enough money?
    Ms. Wilson. I have a lot of support from my family and friends and 
all the people around me. So it's been rough, but they're there for me 
if I need them.
    Ms. Graham. And I do not have any small children that are not in 
school.
    Q. What about all the people that do?
    The President. We put $4 billion more into child care, keep in mind. 
But one of things that we have to work on here is we gave the money to 
the States. Keep in mind that the States are in a unique position now to 
provide even more for child care than we appropriated in the bill, 
because their block grant is tied to the moment--the highest--the peak 
of the welfare rolls. If I make a mistake, Secretary Shalala, correct 
me. The block grant is tied to the peak population of welfare rolls, 
which we reached sometime in early '94. So they're getting money now 
that's more money than they would otherwise get, because the welfare 
rolls have gone down so much.
    Plus, there's a $4 billion add-on in the welfare reform bill to the 
States to help them provide affordable child care. What we have to do--
and that's one of the reasons that this process has been so important--
is we've had to work through with each department, since they don't get 
part of that block grant, whether there's some way they can be a part of 
it, or the recipient, at least, if it's out in the States as opposed to 
DC, could get some benefit from it. And we'll have to work through all 
that.
    But I think that there won't be any problem with that, and at 
least--I think one of the things that will happen as a result of welfare 
reform, by the way, that will be one of the ancillary benefits is that 
there will be a lot more child care slots opened up in the country, and 
that will make available more affordable child care to people who aren't 
on welfare and haven't ever been on welfare. That's one of the goals 
that I have, and I believe it will occur.
    Q. Mr. President, the two women who are with you are living proof 
that it can be done, in a sense, without a special program or a special 
idea. I imagine the critics would say, we don't necessarily need all of 
this special push.
    The President. But you do if you want everybody to be like them. 
That is, let me--remember what I said all along, from the day I got here 
and we started these welfare reform experiments over 4 years ago, I said 
all along, look, the system we have works fine for about 40 to 45 
percent of the people because they are like these women. And nearly 
everybody on welfare wants to get off, wants to be self-supporting, 
wants to be an independent member of society, would rather pay taxes 
than draw from the public treasury.
    But the system we have--the way it works, especially for people with 
very young children made it actually--it was a disincentive for a lot of 
people to get off welfare. So all we tried to do is to create a set of 
cir

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cumstances now where 100 percent of the able-bodied people on welfare 
will be able to do what these two women have done on their own under the 
old system.
    If we didn't do anything, about 4 in 10 people on welfare would 
continue to be on a while, get the help they need, get right off, and go 
on with their lives. What we're trying to do is to get to the other 60 
percent. That's what welfare reform is all about.
    And the reason we had--let me remind you--the reason we had the 
biggest drop ever in the last 4 years, according to a study done by 
Janet Yellen and the Council of Economic Advisers. They say about a 
third of the drop in the welfare rolls was due directly to specific 
welfare reform efforts. And a quarter of the drop was due to other 
efforts like the 50 percent increase in child support collections. And a 
little over 40 percent was due to the improvement in the economy. And 
that corresponds with a little over 40 percent who always do--who did 
well under the old welfare system.
    So we're working on the other 60 percent. But the other 60 percent 
had become a significant problem for America because you were having 
generational dependence on welfare.

Webster Hubbell

    Q. Mr. President, I have to ask you a question about another topic 
because this is the only time I will see you today, but----
    The President. Go ahead.
    Q. ----just a little while ago, Mrs. Clinton was asked about 
questions that keep coming up about efforts--whether the White House 
knew of or was behind or whether there were any efforts to pay hush 
money to Webster Hubbell. And she called it part of the continuing saga 
of Whitewater, the never-ending fictional conspiracy that honest-to-
goodness reminds me of some people's obsession with UFO's and the Hale-
Bopp comet. [Laughter] And I was wondering----
    The President. Did she say that? [Laughter] That's pretty good. 
[Laughter]
    Q. I was wondering if you share that sentiment? And also, we haven't 
had a chance to--[laughter].
    The President. Well, if I didn't, I wouldn't disagree with her in 
public. [Laughter]
    Q. We haven't had a chance to hear what your comment is to the 
apology that Webb Hubbell made and his claim that he was a con artist 
who fooled people here at the White House. Are you angry at him now? He 
seems to have caused you a whole lot of trouble, and he seems to be 
causing it----
    The President. Well, no, I'm not angry at him anymore because he's 
paid a very high price for the mistake he made. And, you know, if he 
hadn't come up here and he'd stayed home and tried to work it through, 
he would have paid a price, but it would have been a smaller one.
    But let me remind you that everybody pays in life. There's--somehow 
we all wind up paying for whatever we do, and he paid a very high price. 
And he's apologized, and I accept his apology. He's got four wonderful 
children and a fine wife, and he's done a lot of wonderful things in his 
life, and I hope he'll be able to go on and do some more wonderful 
things. And as far as I'm concerned, that's why we have a criminal 
justice system: people get punished; they pay their price; and they're 
supposed to be able to go on. He got punished and paid quite a high 
price, and I hope he'll be able to go on with his life now.

President's Health

    Q. How are you getting along on those crutches?
    The President. I'm doing great. These are my stealth crutches. 
[Laughter] I think really they were developed as an offshoot of B-2 
technology, see, and I like them quite a lot. [Laughter]
    Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 1:48 p.m. in the Cabinet Room at the White 
House.