[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 39, Number 45 (Monday, November 10, 2003)]
[Pages 1538-1540]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks to Off-Duty Firefighters and Volunteers in El Cajon, California

November 4, 2003

    The President. Thank you all. Thanks for such a warm greeting. I 
want to say a couple of things. First, I want to say it's a great 
pleasure to be in the presence of people who have dedicated their lives 
to saving life, people who have heard a call, and the call is to serve 
something greater than yourself.
    And I saw firsthand the--Governor Davis and Governor-elect 
Schwarzenegger and I saw firsthand what it means for people to draw a 
line in the sand and say, ``This fire is not getting any farther.'' We 
saw devastation on one side--and for those victims, we send our prayers 
and our love--but we saw what heroic efforts meant, for people who said, 
``We're not going to yield.'' And we're here, first and foremost, to 
thank you all for setting such a great example and for serving your 
community and for saving lives. There's no better calling, is there? God 
bless you for that. Thank you.
    I want to thank all the State officials who are working hard. See, 
one of the things I'm looking for is to make sure that there's good

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cooperation between the Federal Government and the State Government and 
the local firefighters. I want to make sure FEMA is doing its job. 
Sometimes the President gets the cook's tour, if you know what I mean. 
[Laughter] I'm interested in hearing the truth, and I believe I've been 
told the truth and that there has been good coordination. And if we need 
to learn any lessons, we'll learn the lessons.
    But I want to thank you all for not only fighting the fires, but I 
want to thank those who are now responsible for helping rebuild lives, 
for the quick response--to answer people's questions and to make those 
State and Federal loans and grants available quickly to the communities 
that have been hurt. I want to thank all the local officials who are 
here, the mayors and the supervisors, the fire chiefs, everybody who is 
serving their community. Thanks for coming. Thanks for giving us a 
chance to praise your efforts.
    As well I want to thank the leaders of the tribal nations who are 
here, the Members of the United States Congress. I suspected that they 
might be here because they want a nice ride back to Washington. 
[Laughter] But then I realized that they care deeply about the people 
whose lives have been upset. After all, Duncan Hunter--Congressman 
Hunter lost his own home in the fire.
    He reflected the spirit, by the way, of the people who we've met. He 
said, ``Don't worry about me. I'm going to rebuild. You don't have to 
worry about me, Mr. President. I'm going to rally. I'm going to pick up 
my life and move it on.'' And those are the citizens I met today, up in 
this valley where this fire just came roaring through like a chimney. 
All their possessions were gone, but to the person, their spirit was 
strong and able. They said, ``God is on my side,'' one family said. I 
said, ``We heard.''
    I want to thank Bill Clayton. Mike Simpson----
    Audience member. Woo-hoo!
    The President. Yes. Mike, I'm glad your sister came. [Laughter] I 
want to thank Chief Jeff Bowman, Bill McCammon, Chief Bill McCammon, and 
Chief Ernie Mitchell for the briefing we had today, to see the scope and 
the size of this massive amount of destruction that took place. I think 
when people realize the scope of the fires, the historic nature of these 
fires, they'll realize what a superhuman effort you all put in to save 
lives. This is, to me, an ultimate act of sacrifice.
    I do want to pay tribute and homage to Steve Rucker. Steve's fire 
chief said he wasn't sent there; he asked to go. And that's the spirit 
of a lot of the people here we're looking at. You weren't sent there; 
you asked to go. You've heard a call, and you've responded, and you put 
your life at risk. To Steve's family, we send our deepest condolences 
and prayers to his comrades. We thank you for honoring his fallen 
memory. May God bless him, and may God bless his loved ones as well.
    When I landed at Miramar--and by the way, the fire was right up 
there to the runway--I met a lady named Sue Mayberry. She's a Red Cross 
volunteer. This week, she volunteered 100 hours of her time to help 
people who hurt. She set up an emergency shelter at a high school or a 
school in Ramona. And then the fires came roaring toward Ramona. So she 
and others moved 550 families safely to Julian.
    The reason I bring up Sue is there are a lot of people who are 
deeply concerned about the 27,000 displaced persons. There are people in 
your communities, when they hear that over 3,300 homes have been 
destroyed, they want to do something about it. They want to help a 
neighbor in need.
    And so for all the great citizens of this wonderful State who have 
heard the call to love a neighbor just like you would like to be loved 
yourself, who, when they see somebody who hurts, are willing to put 
their arm around a neighbor in need, I want to thank you from the bottom 
of our collective hearts.
    There are a lot of citizens who wonder what tomorrow is going to be 
like. And when a citizen provides a ray of hope, just a little bit of 
love, it brightens that person's future. It's amazing what nature has--
we've seen the worst of nature. But when you go to these communities and 
you realize what's taken place, you see the absolute best of mankind.
    For Californians who want to help, please do. Please know that some 
of your citizens hurt. Please help them any way you can. The Federal 
Government's response is needed and necessary. I brought officials with 
me

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just to make sure it's active and vibrant. The State's response is 
needed and necessary. But the truth of the matter is, the best response 
is the response you hear from the citizens whose lives have been 
affected, the response--the refusal to give up, the notion that tomorrow 
can be a better day, the refusal to be defeated. And after all, that is 
the spirit of America, isn't it? It's a fabulous country because of the 
people who make up this country. And it's my honor to represent this 
country.
    May God bless you all, and may God bless California, and may God 
bless America. Thank you all very much.

Note: The President spoke at 11:09 a.m. at Gillespie Field. In his 
remarks, he referred to Governor Gray Davis and Governor-elect Arnold 
Schwarzenegger of California; Bill Clayton, division chief, California 
Department of Forestry; Mike Simpson, captain, San Diego County Rural 
Fire District; Jeff Bowman, fire chief, San Diego Fire-Rescue 
Department; William J. McCammon, chief, Alameda County Fire Department; 
Ernest Mitchell, chief, Pasadena Fire Department; and Steven L. Rucker, 
engineer, Novato Fire Protection District, who died on October 29 in San 
Diego County.