Community Jobs Forums and Keeping Momentum for the Economy

On Friday we got some encouraging news on the economy, learning that 162,000 jobs were created in March – “the most positive jobs report we have had in three years,” as CEA Chair Christina Romer pointed out. But as the President said later: “At the same time, it’s important to emphasize: while we have come a long way, we still have a ways to go.”

That’s why the President and his Administration have maintained, and will continue to maintain, job creation as our number one priority. The jobs forum at the White House a few months ago brought together some of America’s leading CEOs, small business owners, labor leaders, and thinkers to generate ideas to put Americans back to work and set the stage for a series of new initiatives to build upon the progress made by the Recovery Act. And in the time since, we have seen some of those ideas come to fruition in measures like the HIRE Act, a major jobs bill signed by the President a couple weeks ago that will be helping to boost the economy in the months to come.

At the jobs forum, the President also made clear that he would be looking for ideas and insights from outside Washington:

“And I want to continue this conversation outside of Washington, which is why I'll be meeting with some of the small business owners that you saw in the video in Allentown, Pennsylvania, tomorrow, to get their ideas. It's also why we've asked state and local officials and community organizations to hold their own jobs forums over the next week or so and to report back with the ideas and recommendations that result.”

In the months that followed, hundreds of citizens, mayors, and other local officials came together with their neighbors and community leaders to hold Community Jobs Forums in every corner of the country. Jared Bernstein, Chief Economist for the Vice President, helped us sort through all the feedback we got from those forums to compile a memo to the President which we’ll be submitting to the President soon. 

There were a lot of new and innovative ideas that the White House will be keeping in mind as we continue work on the economy, and you can see some of the most interesting ones in the memo. But the honest truth is that the most striking thing about the feedback was how much demand there was for the jobs programs that were part of the HIRE Act and were already in development here. 

Here’s what President Obama said at the signing of the HIRE Act, alongside some representative quotes from folks who reported back on their forums – we hope that we, and they, are right that this will help our economy keep getting back on the right track.

President Obama: “What we can do is help promote a strong, dynamic private sector – the true engine of job-creation in this country.”

  • Alvaro Bermudez from CA asked for the government to “help small businesses – historically, small businesses have gotten us out of trouble economically.”

President Obama: “First, we’ll forgive payroll taxes for businesses that hire someone who’s been out of work for at least two months – a tax benefit that will apply to unemployed workers hired between last month and the end of this year.”

  • Kenneth from Tennessee and Linda from Arizona wrote us aboutextending tax credits for local, small businesses that take on new hires.
  • Janice in Illinois: “The President has to focus providing incentives to businesses (tax or otherwise) that would encourage them to begin hiring again.”

President Obama: “By the way, I’d also note that part of what health insurance reform would do is provide tax credits to over 4 million small businesses so they don’t have to choose between hiring workers and offering coverage.”

Laura, a Ph.D. from Oklahoma: Offer “financial support for health coverage for employees, tax incentives to hire and maintain new hires, incentives for additional training and re-training.”

President Obama: “Second, this jobs bill encourages smaller businesses to grow and hire by permitting them to write off investments they make in equipment this year. These kinds of expenses typically take years to depreciate, but under this law, businesses will be able to invest up to $250,000 – in say, factory equipment – and write it off right away.”

  • Susan in New York told us government should provide tax relief to “allow small business to expense new equipment in the year purchased.”
  • Tom, Ohio: “Permit small businesses to expense capital equipment purchases.”
  • Alvaro, CA : “We need more tax help in the forms of equipment, tools, and systems.”

President Obama: “Third, we’ll reform municipal bonds to encourage job-creation by expanding investment in schools and clean energy projects.”

  • Mayor Jim Clarke, CA: “Clean energy and water technology is our strength. People are coming to invest here in those markets and have thousands of acres under development right now in that and creating jobs.”
  • Timothy, WA: “Energy will become a well defined industry cluster affecting almost every sector of our economy.”
  • Adama, MD: “Innovative small business services are opportunities for growth and are poised to rebound. Clean energy, green infrastructure and non-profits could be important jobs sources in/of the future.”
  • Tim, MD: “Education fuels growth.” 

President Obama: “Finally,this jobs bill will maintain crucial investments in our roads and bridges as we head into the spring and summer months, when construction jobs are picking up.”

  • Bill: “Continue and expand government construction jobs to put more people to work. The Interstate 80 construction project has put many out of work construction workers back to work in our state.”
  • Jim in Missouri called for “new Construction Projects and Remodel Projects in the Federal and State level, and Highway and road Construction.”
  • Ralph in NC: “Invest federal money in local and interstate transportation systems that will take people to and from work and to visit other states... Jobs will be created to get the light rail and bus system ready as well as to operate and maintain it.”
  • Margaret in California said we should focus on “Security of basic infrastructure- federal funding allocated through the state, county and local communities.”

Promoting Jobs and Growth Through Innovation

April 02, 2010 | 56:20 | Public Domain

President Obama visits battery technology company Celgard in Charlotte, NC to talk about how the Recovery Act is helping to create jobs and economic growth by investing in innovative technologies.

Download mp4 (703MB) | mp3 (52MB)

Read the Transcript

Remarks by the President in a Discussion on Jobs and the Economy in Charlotte, North Carolina

12:02 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, guys.  Hello, everybody!  Hello!  Good to see you.  Everybody, please have a seat.  Have a seat. 

Well, thank you so much for the warm welcome.  To Bob, thank you very much for the terrific introduction.  I want to thank Bryan Moorehead for the great tour, and Mitchell Pulwer for trying to explain to me what was going on here.  (Laughter.)

We’ve got Governor Beverly Perdue, who’s doing just a great job on behalf of all of North Carolina.  Please give her a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  And I think it’s important to note that the state of North Carolina has provided enormous support for expansion here at Celgard as well.  And I know that the combination of both federal and state support makes a big difference.  So I didn’t want to leave the state out.

Lieutenant Governor Walter Dayton -- Dalton is here.  Please stand up, Walter.  (Applause.)  The hotshot young up-and-coming mayor of Charlotte Anthony Foxx is in the house.  Give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.) 

Some outstanding members of Congress:  Congressman Mel Watt.  (Applause.)  Congressman Larry Kissell.  (Applause.)  And even though he’s from across the border, we love him -- Congressman John Spratt of South Carolina.  (Applause.) 

So it is good to be here at Celgard, and it is good to be back in North Carolina.  It is good to be back.  (Applause.)  We just concluded our tour, where we saw some of the workings of this facility where you’re manufacturing components for state-of-the-art batteries.  You’re building separators to make sure diametrically opposed forces can work successfully together.  And I couldn’t help but think:  We could use your help in Congress.  (Laughter and applause.)  We could get one of those -- we could get one of those tri-part films and put it between the Democrats and the Republicans.  (Laughter.)  And it would improve conductivity.  Right?  Did I get that right?  Okay.

Now, the truth is, these have been a very tough two years for North Carolina, and they’ve been a tough two years for the United States of America.  We’ve been through the worst period of economic turmoil since the Great Depression.  Keep in mind, when I first took the oath of office, we were already moving towards what some thought was a Great Depression.  We were losing about 700,000, 800,000 jobs per month.  And the economy was contracting at a pace that we hadn’t seen in generations -- about 6 percent contraction that first quarter when I first took office.  And I’ve often had to report bad news during the course of this year as the recession wreaked havoc on people’s lives. 

But today is an encouraging day.  We learned that the economy actually produced a substantial number of jobs instead of losing a substantial number of jobs.  We are beginning to turn the corner.  (Applause.)  This month, more Americans woke up, got dressed, and headed to work at an office or factory or storefront.  More folks are feeling the sense of pride and satisfaction that comes with a hard-earned and well-deserved paycheck at the end of a long week of work.

As I said, just one year ago, we were losing an average of more than 700,000 jobs each month.  But the tough measures that we took -- measures that were necessary even though sometimes they were unpopular -- have broken this slide and are helping us to climb out of this recession.  We’ve now added an average of more than 50,000 jobs each month over the first quarter of this year.  And this month’s increase of 162,000 jobs was the best news we’ve seen on the job front in more than two years.  (Applause.)

Now, at the same time, it’s important to emphasize:  While we’ve come a long way, we still got a ways to go.  We shouldn’t underestimate the difficulties we face as a country or the hardships that confront millions of our fellow citizens -- some of your friends, some of your neighbors, some of your relatives you know are still going through a tough time.  Eight million people have lost jobs over the past two years.  That’s a staggering sum.  Economic statistics don’t do justice to the pain and anxiety that results from unemployment.  Lasting unemployment takes a toll on families, takes a toll on marriages, takes a toll on children.  It saps the vitality of communities, especially in places that have seen factories and other anchoring businesses shut their doors.  And being unable to find work -- being able to provide for your family -- that doesn’t just affect your economic security, that affects your heart and your soul.  It beats you up.  It’s hard.

So we have to be mindful that today’s job numbers, while welcome, leaves us with a lot more work to do.  It will take time to achieve the strong and sustained job growth that we need.  And long before this recession hit -- for a decade -- middle-class families had already been expensing -- experiencing a sense of declining economic security.  Their paychecks were flat-lining even though the cost of everything from groceries to college educations to health care were all going up.  And this means that even as we pull out of this immediate crisis, we’ve got to tackle some of the long-term problems that have been a drag on our economy.  And that’s why we’ve been working so hard to turn this economy around.

It’s not quick and it’s not easy.  And the truth is, there are some limits to what government can do.  Government can’t reverse the toll of this recession overnight, and government on its own can’t replace the 8 million jobs that have been lost.  The true engine of job growth in this country has always been the private sector, businesses like Celgard.  What government can do is create the conditions for companies to succeed.  It can help to create the conditions for companies to hire again.  What it can do is build the infrastructure and create the incentives that will allow small businesses to add workers; that will help entrepreneurs to take a chance on an idea; that will lead manufacturers to set up shop in places like Charlotte.

And that’s what we did last year through the Recovery Act, also known as the stimulus bill.  A lot of folks were down on it -- well, we don’t know what this did.  A lot of folks got it mixed up with the steps we had to take to avoid the banking system melting down, and I know that wasn’t popular.  It wasn’t popular with me. 

But here’s what the Recovery Act did:  We cut taxes for small businesses and 95 percent of working families to promote spending and hiring -- cut taxes.  That’s what the Recovery Act did, was cutting people’s taxes across America.  (Applause.)   We’re also making investments in our infrastructure, from interstate highways to broadband networks.  That not only creates private sector jobs, but is also creates the platform, a better environment, in which business can prosper. 

It’s also what we did through the jobs bill that I signed into law just recently, a bill that cuts taxes for small businesses who hire unemployed workers; and that allows companies to write off investments in equipment, like some of the equipment that we just saw here today; and that encourages job creation by spurring investments in school renovation and clean energy projects and road construction -- all of which builds on the investments that we’ve put into place last year through the Recovery Act.

So as a consequence of all these investments, we’ve promoted innovation in the private sector not just to create jobs, but also to help America lead in the growth industries of the 21st century.  See, I want to improve the short-term jobs picture, but I also want to improve the long-term prospects for our economy.  And in no area is America more primed to lead them than in clean energy.  And I don’t have to tell the folks here at Celgard about that, because through the Recovery Act, this company has received a $50 million matching grant to expand the facility on this site, and to add another facility in Concord, North Carolina.  And I also know this builds on the work that Governor Perdue did to bring clean energy jobs to this state. 

So here’s the bottom line:  This investment is expected to create nearly 300 jobs for this company, more than a thousand jobs for your contractors and suppliers -- and these are all jobs helping America build the batteries that will power cleaner and more efficient cars and trucks.  And through investments like this one across the country, we’re already seeing an incredible transformation.  Here’s an interesting statistic:  Before the Recovery Act, before I took office, we had the capacity to make less than 2 percent of the world’s lithium ion batteries -- less than 2 percent.  In the next five years, on the trajectory that we’re now on, we’re going to be able to make 40 percent of the advanced batteries right here in the United States of America.  Right here.  (Applause.) 

So the next time somebody asks you, when you’re at the grocery store, well, what did this Recovery Act do?  You can tell them, one of the things it helped do is to expand and catalyze an entire new industry, where the United States of America can gain enormous market share across the globe.  And that’s the kind of strategy we need -- helping the private sector thrive in entirely new industries, the industries of the future.  It’s a strategy that will not only create jobs in the near term, but also sustained growth and opportunity in the long run.

Now, this has been a harrowing time for our country.  And it’s easy to grow cynical and wonder if America’s best days are behind us, especially after such a terrible crisis.  And we’ve seen folks in Washington trying to play the usual politics with the crisis.  And that’s not surprising, of course.  That’s how Washington works.  Although I do think it’s important for the American people to remember the failed economic policies that got us into this mess, just so we make sure we don’t return to them. 

But what we can see here, at this plant, is that the worst of the storm is over; that brighter days are still ahead.  In Charlotte and all across the country, we can see the promise and possibility that awaits us.  If we tap our ingenuity and our inventiveness, our skill and our drive as a people; if we’re smart, if we’re willing to do what it takes, we can lead in new industries and create new jobs and strengthen the middle class and achieve a shared and lasting prosperity.  And we can turn this turmoil into recovery and emerge stronger than before.

I’m convinced that’s what we’re called to do; I’m confident that that is what we will do.  And I want to say to all the employees here at Celgard, we are proud of you because you’re helping to point the way and helping to lead not just here in North Carolina but all across the country.

So thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.)  Let me take some questions from you.  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

So, you know, when they let me out of my cage at the White House I like to actually have a chance to talk to folks.  And so we’ve got time for a few questions and we’ve got some young people here in the audience with their microphones.  This is not formal, even though I’m sure with some of the cameras a few of you may feel it’s a little intimidating.  All you got to do is raise your hand.  We’ll call on you.  And it can be a question about anything.  If you can introduce yourself, though, that’s helpful, so everybody knows who’s speaking.  And we’ll start with that young lady right there since you’re right next to the mic.

Q    Hi, my name is Jennifer Dakin (ph).  I’m here from Charlotte.  I’m part of the Polypore parent company.  My question is regarding the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.  And many people have commented on the fact that it has come at a great cost to many public organizations, the fact that we need to assess and report on our internal controls of our financial reporting.  It’s also come, many say, without value in the recent financial crisis.  What value do you think it may have going forward on the upswing as the economy goes forward?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, it’s a great question.  For those of you who aren’t aware of it, Sarbanes-Oxley was instituted not in response to this financial crisis, but in response to the Enron/WorldCom nonsense that took place over a decade ago.  And the concern there was that the accounting practices of companies had gotten so out of whack that you had a company like Enron that was essentially booking all these profits, driving up their stock really high; CEOs were making these gazillion-dollar bonuses.  But it turned out when you actually got in there and started looking at what they were doing, they were building a house of cards.  It was manufacturing profits out of thin air. 

And so the concern was, how do we make sure that CEOs and their boards of directors are more accountable to the reporting that they’re doing, so that investors, shareholders, the market, customers, suppliers, and employees, a lot of whom had gotten tricked into putting all their savings into a company like Enron and then it turned out that everything they thought they had been saving just went up in a cloud of smoke -- that all those folks would be protected.

So the intent around Sarbanes-Oxley was a good idea.  It was the right thing to do.  There have been, I think, some legitimate criticisms about the fact that although Sarbanes-Oxley is a relatively modest cost for a very big company, it can be a very significant cost for a mid-sized or a small company.  Because if they have to abide by all the rules and all the regulations and all the double-checking and triple-checking and quadruple-checking, and so they’ve got to hire a whole bunch of accountants, it’s one thing if you’re a Fortune 100 company that’s got several billion dollars in revenue to spend a couple million dollars on accountants.  It’s another thing if you are a company that is making $100 million a year and you’re spending a couple million dollars on accountants.  That’s suddenly -- that could be the difference in terms of your profit margin.

So what we’re interested in doing is to work with companies to get advice:  Are there ways that we can streamline and make this more effective?  Are there ways that we can lessen the burden on small and medium-sized companies, but still retain the basic principle that accounting standards have to be met, and they have to be cleared, they have to be understandable -- you can’t cook the books -- and that CEOs and boards of directors have to be accountable for the accounting statements that they put out there?  And they’ve got to sign a bottom line.  And they’re going to be directly liable if, for some reason, it turns out that there were some shenanigans going on there.

So this raises a broader question about regulation.  We went through a period of time where I think the general theory was the less regulation, the better.  And if you talk to most companies, they’d rather not have any regulations whatsoever.  There’s nothing wrong with that.  That’s just the nature of it.  You figure companies think they’re pretty smart, they know what they’re doing.  And I’m sure if I talk to Bob, he’d say, there are a whole bunch of things that I’ve got to do that I wish I didn’t have to do. 

But it’s like any other law.  You put the laws in place, even though you know most folks are following the rules and operating decently and commonsense, to make sure that those folks who aren’t operating that way can’t wreak havoc on the system.

And so we’re going to be having a big debate when it comes to financial regulatory reform.  You’re seeing the same pattern come up right now.  You essentially had a whole bunch of financial institutions -- investment banks like Lehman Brothers -- who were taking one dollar and they were able to leverage, essentially bet that -- use that dollar to make a $60 bet on sub-prime loans in housing and take huge, exorbitant risks that almost brought the entire system to heel.  And all your friends and neighbors and communities are paying the price, because nobody was minding the store and making sure that these banks and these financial institutions were following basic rules of the road.

So what we’ve now said is, look, we’ve got to have a financial system that works.  That’s how credit flows.  That’s how businesses finance themselves.  But we’ve got to have some basic rules to make sure that we never find ourselves in a situation again where we’ve got two choices -- either you bail out the banks, in which case you’re thinking, why am I propping up these folks who caused the problems in the first place; or you don’t but then these banks start failing and the whole system breaks down, creating what could have been a Great Depression. 

We can’t allow ourselves to be put in that position again.  So we’ve got to have some basic rules, some basic regulations, at the front end that say to banks, we’re not going to let you get too big to fail.  We’re not going to put ourselves in a position where somehow you’re able to gamble with other people’s money in such a way that it can potentially bring down the whole system.

Getting the balance right, how to do that, is something that you’ve got to be very careful about.  But I think now that we’ve got -- we’re starting to see a framework emerge both in the House of Representatives and in the Senate, where my hope is, is that we can actually get this sometime in the next several weeks.

Thank you for the great question.  This gentleman right here.

Q    Thank you, sir.  My name is Michael Shore (ph).  I’m here in Charlotte.  First, it’s an honor to have you here with us today.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you very much.

Q    I’m concerned that your decision to allow offshore drilling could have the effect of chilling investment into alternate sources of energy.  And I’m interested in what incentives you’re going to be proposing to establish the conditions and to stimulate research and development and expansion of that critical sector.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think that’s a great question.  Look, first of all, understand that the Recovery Act, what we passed last year, represented the single largest investment in clean energy in history, by far.  So we invested in wind; we invested in solar; we invested in biomass.  We invested in research and development; we invested in commercialization.  We invested in battery technologies.  We are interested in figuring out how we can improve efficiency across the system, both in buildings and in transportation sectors and -- you name it, we’re all about increasing energy efficiency and finding new renewable, clean sources of energy.  It’s one of my highest priorities, and I think it’s got to be one of our highest strategic priorities as an economy.  It has the potential of being an enormous growth industry.

Here’s the challenge that we have.  We don’t yet have the technological breakthroughs that can completely replace fossil fuels.  So for the next 10 years, next 20 years, we’re still going to be using oil; we’re still going to be using coal; we’re still going to be using natural gas -- we’re still going to be using the traditional sources to fuel our cars, to heat our homes, to run our big power plants, et cetera. 

It’s my hope that if we’re aggressive over the next several years, we can substantially cut our energy use in every sector while still maintaining our high levels of economic growth.  So, for example, at the announcement where I talked about offshore drilling, I did so in front of an F-18, a fighter jet, that is actually going to be run half on biomass.  So I was joking with the pilot -- I said, so this thing runs on vegetable oil.  But they’re going to break the sound barrier using biomass as fuel.

So the Pentagon is investing huge amounts in energy efficiency.  We are promoting weatherization across the country because this is a win-win situation; you put people to work putting in insulation, putting in windows -- most of which, by the way, that insulation and windows is manufactured here in the United States -- it saves on the individual’s energy bill, plus it means that that power plant has to produce less energy to keep that home warm.  So it’s a win-win all across the board.

That’s our biggest priority -- energy efficiency and renewable, clean energy.  But because we’re going to have this transition -- unless somebody here invents something tomorrow, which would be very helpful, and if you have it let me know, we’ll get it going right away -- but what’s most likely is we’re going to have this transition.  And so in the interim we’ve got to look at our traditional energy sources and figure out how can we use those most effectively and in the most environmentally sound way.

That’s why I announced that we were going to start the first nuclear plant in 30 years.  Japan, France, other countries have a safe, secure, reliable and effective nuclear -- civilian nuclear energy.  We essentially stopped 30 years ago.  For those of you who are concerned about climate change, nuclear energy doesn’t produce greenhouse gases.  It’s not a perfect energy source because it’s got the problem with spent fuel and how that is properly stored, but generally speaking, that’s going to have to be part of our energy mix.

The decision around drilling -- same approach.  What we did was we said we’re not going to have drilling a mile off the North Carolina coast or two miles off.  But 50 miles off, 100 miles off, where it is appropriate and environmentally sound and not risky, we should allow exploration to begin taking place to see if there’s certain reserves.

There are some areas that we just completely put off limits, like Bristol Bay in Alaska where it’s a huge fishery, environmentally very sensitive.  There are some areas off the coast in the Gulf of Mexico which don’t make sense for us to allow exploration, even though we know that there are existing reserves there.

But what we did was we tried to look at the scientific evidence and figure out where are areas where low risk environmentally and a high potential upside.

Now, here’s the last thing I’ll say about drilling, though, because what you have is, you have some environmentalists who just said, don’t drill anywhere; and then you’ve got some of my friends on the Republican side who were saying, well, this is a nice first step but it’s not enough -- you should open up everything.

I don’t agree with the notion that we shouldn’t do anything.  It turns out, by the way, that oil rigs today generally don’t cause spills.  They are technologically very advanced.  Even during Katrina, the spills didn’t come from the oil rigs, they came from the refineries onshore.

But the notion that we could drill our way out of the problem -- you’ll start hearing about this because you know what happens during the summer.  As soon as gas prices start going up -- every summer it’s the same thing, right?  And then politicians start standing up and -- “we’re going to do something about it” -- and these days some of my colleagues on the Republican side, what they’ll say is, you got to drill even more.

Just remember the statistics when you start hearing this.  We account for 2 percent of the world’s oil reserves but we use 20 percent of the world’s oil.  We use 20 percent; we only got 2 percent.  We can’t drill our way out of the problem. 

That’s why we’ve got to get moving on this clean energy sector, but we also have to make sure that we’ve got enough supply that’s regular in terms of these other energy -- traditional energy, sources, so that by the time we get to the clean energy sector, we haven’t had to sacrifice economic growth along the way.

All right?  All right.  The gentleman right here, white shirt.

Q    James Hill from Greenwood, South Carolina.  I work in the (inaudible) lab and I agree it’s an honor for you to be here today.  Thank you.  My question is, how long do you think -- the kind of springboard from which you were just saying, how long do you think it would take for us to have more hybrid vehicles on the road than gas vehicles, and what would it take?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, we have already seen a huge spike in the purchase of hybrid vehicles.  I mean, if you think about it, just two years ago if you found out somebody had a hybrid vehicle, that was a pretty big deal and you wanted to go over and test it out and see how it worked.  Now, it’s pretty common.  I mean, everybody here knows somebody who’s got a hybrid, and you’ve probably tried it out and it’s kind of cool when you’re backing up and it’s all quiet. 

So I think that that’s the future.  And consumers are naturally going to start gravitating in that direction.  Because here’s the fact -- we were just talking about oil -- not only do we produce only 2 percent and use 20 percent, but countries around the world, everybody is starting to use more oil.  Think about it.  China, if they get even half of the number of cars per capita, per population, that we have right now -- there are a lot of folks in China.  And there are a lot of folks in India.  And their standards of living are all starting to rise and they’re all starting to be interested in buying cars.  And the fact of the matter is, is that if they even approach the amount of car ownership that we have, oil will run out very quickly and on the way, prices will just spike up naturally, no matter what we do. 

So it is a huge need for us to increase our fuel efficiency on cars now.  And that’s why one of the things that I did last year -- it’s actually taking effect this week -- is to raise a national fuel efficiency standard, first time we’ve done it in a very long time.  But, frankly, even with us raising those standards, I think consumers just in terms of their pocketbook interests are going to be even more interested in buying hybrids and electric cars.

Two things that we can do that would make a big difference right now:  Number one, we’ve got to make sure that those cars are made here in the United States of America.  And so part of the reason why it’s so important for us to develop the battery technology here is if we’re developing battery technology that helps us leverage more auto production here in the United States.  And that has, just in the same way that when Bob was talking about what’s happening here at Celgard, the grant we gave creates 300 jobs in the company, but potentially a thousand jobs in suppliers, the same is true with the auto industry.  Some of you might have said, why are we helping out GM?  Well, let me tell you, GM might have employed -- along with its dealers and everybody -- a hundred thousand, several hundred thousand.  But when you looked at all the suppliers involved and the economies, you could have seen another couple million jobs lost.  That would have had huge implications for the economy.  Now, GM is actually making a profit and starting to buy -- or starting to hire people back. 

But one thing we need to do is make sure that those cars are made here in the United States.  The second thing we need to do is to create the electricity grid, what we’re calling the smart grid, which is -- think about it, part of the reason that we can drive our cars is because there’s a gas station every so often.  There are roads.  There are gas stations.  We know how to fuel up our automobiles.  Now, if we want to have everybody getting maximum use out of an electric car or a hybrid car, part of what we have to do is to create a similar distribution mechanism for electricity.  And one of the exciting things about these hybrids is we want to get to the point where you’ve got what’s called a plug-in hybrid, where you essentially have a gas station at your house -- called your electric socket.  And you’re going to be able to plug in your car at night.  Some of the energy that was stored in the car can actually go back into the house, and then when you’re ready to go, you can get that energy and use it to drive.

But to do all that you need a better electricity grid.  We’ve got kind of a creaky infrastructure when it comes to electricity, and that’s one of the major investments that we want to start making.  And that, by the way, is an investment that only government, working with the private sector, can help to make. 

You’re hearing a lot of talk these days about government, and government is terrible, and bureaucrats, and they’re taking over and all this stuff.  Look, I don’t want government any more than is necessary, but there are some things that Bob or any CEO can’t invest in.  Bob is not going to build the roads to get to Celgard.  No company is going to make investments for a public good.  None of you would expect a private company to fund our military or our firefighters.  There are just some things that you can’t do on your own, and the private sector is not going to do -- it’s not profitable because if Bob was the guy who had to build the road, he’d have a whole bunch of other people driving on that road that weren’t paying for it.  So it’s not a good investment for him.

That’s where government comes in.  The same is true when it comes to something like the electricity grid.  We’re going to have to help create that infrastructure, just like broadband lines, just like a whole bunch of basic 21st century infrastructure, so we’ve got the platform in order to succeed and compete economically.  That’s what the Chinese are doing.  That’s what the Indians are doing.  That’s what the Germans are doing.  That’s what the United States is going to have to do.

All right?  I’ve got time for a couple more questions.  I can already see the -- this is my guy, Reggie Love, from Charlotte, North Carolina, by the way.  (Applause.) 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Reggie!  Reggie!

THE PRESIDENT:  Yes.  He already told me he’s not getting on the plane going back.  (Laughter.)  He’s spending the weekend here.

All right, I think I should -- let’s see, I want to make sure that -- I’ve got to get a woman in here, make sure that it’s balanced.  All right, this young lady right there.

Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  We’re honored to have you here today.  I’m Doris Ravis (sp) from Lake Wylie, South Carolina.  I work at Celgard.  We have wonderful CEOs that take care of us and have really helped the company grow.  My question is, though, in the economy times that we have now, is it a wise decision to add more taxes to us with the health care?  Because it -- we are over-taxed as it is.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, let’s talk about that, because this is an area where there’s been just a whole lot of misinformation, and I’m going to have to work hard over the next several months to clean up a lot of the misapprehensions that people have.  Here’s the bottom line:  Number one is that we are the only -- we have been up until last week the only advanced country that allows 50 million of its citizens to not have any health insurance, and the vast majority of those folks work.  It’s just that they don’t happen to work for a company that is either big enough or generous enough to provide them any coverage.

So that’s point number one.  There is a moral imperative that is important.  Number two, you don’t know who might end up being in that situation.  See, those of us who have health care right now ask ourselves, well, is this something that should be a priority right now, but anybody here who lost their job and then COBRA ran out, or COBRA wasn’t subsidized the way the Recovery Act made sure COBRA paid 65 percent of the cost of COBRA -- and if you had somebody at home who was sick, or you had a child who got sick, you’d suddenly say to yourself, well, now I see the need. 

And so part of what we have to do is always say to ourselves, there but for the grace of God go I -- and have a basic safety net.  So that’s point number two.

Point number three is that the way insurance companies have been operating, even if you’ve got health insurance you don’t always know what you got, because what has been increasingly the practice is that if you’re not lucky enough to work for a big company that is a big pool, that essentially is almost a self-insurer, then what’s happening is, is you’re going out on the marketplace, you may be buying insurance, you think you’re covered, but then when you get sick they decide to drop the insurance right when you need it.  Or when you get sick they try to find what they consider to be a preexisting condition that would justify them canceling your policy.  Or there’s some fine print in there where you’ve got a lifetime limit, and it turns out you thought you had coverage, but it turns out the coverage only goes up to a certain point and then afterwards you have to start paying out of pocket.  And even after paying all those premiums, you’re now in the hole for $100,000 or $200,000, and you’re going bankrupt and you’re losing your house.

And the final point is that the costs of health care -- setting aside anything we did in reform, I mean, if we just allowed the current trajectory to go on -- is out of control.  I haven’t talked to Bob about what his costs are looking like for Celgard employees, but I can tell you that health care costs have gone up, the price of health care has gone up three times faster than wages.  So either the company is having to swallow those costs, which means that’s less money that they could use for hiring new workers or investing in new plants and equipment, or they’re passing on those costs to their employees in the form of higher premiums, higher deductibles, higher co-payments.

And what’s happening federally is, because the costs are so out of control, all the programs that we already have -- Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program -- all those things are completely out of control.  So if you’re concerned about the deficit, what you’re really concerned about is the cost of Medicare, Medicaid, and all the other programs that are already in place.

So here’s what we did.  What we said is, number one, we’ll have the basic principle that everybody gets coverage.  And the way we’re going to do that is to say that most people individually shouldn’t buy health insurance on their own because they have no leverage and the insurance companies take advantage of it.  Instead what we’re going to do is we’re going to set up a big pool, a marketplace, that allows everybody to buy into this pool -- that members of Congress, by the way, will be a part of so you know it’s going to be a good deal -- because members of Congress, they’ve got to look out for their own families; they wouldn’t vote for it if it wasn’t going to be a good deal.  And just like Walmart is able to leverage a really good price from its suppliers for everything because they’re such a big purchaser, well, this pool will be a big purchaser and it will be able to get a better deal from insurance companies.

So that’s point number one.  That will drive down the prices for people who are participating and it will allow everybody to get a decent deal on insurance.  And what we do is we provide tax credits to people who still can’t afford it so that they can afford it.  That’s point number one.

Point number two is we’ve got the strongest insurance reforms in history.  So all those things I told you about -- you not being able to get insurance because of a preexisting condition; you finding yourself getting dropped even though you’ve been paying premiums for 15 years and suddenly they just decide, sorry, we don’t want you because you’re getting sick -- those policies will be over.  And so you will be protected as a consumer to make sure you’ve got security and protection if you’ve got insurance already.  That’s the second thing we do.

The third thing we do is we actually put in place a whole bunch of mechanisms to start reducing the actual cost of health care.  So, for example, one of the things that we do is to say we’re going to start encouraging paying doctors not based on how many tests they take, but based on the quality of the outcome -- does somebody end up healthy.

And it turns out that a lot of times if you go to the doctor you get one test.  Then you go -- referred to a specialist, you get another test.  Then maybe you go to a third person, the surgeon, you get a third test -- it’s all the same test but you’re paying three times.

So what we’re trying to say is, we’ll pay you for the first test and then e-mail the test to everybody.  Right?  (Applause.)  Or have all three doctors in the room when the test is being taken.

But that’s an example of the kinds of things that save money and will start reducing costs over the long term.  So what we’ve done is we’ve embedded in how Medicare reimburses, how Medicaid reimburses, all these ideas to actually reduce the costs of care.

So our hope is that over time, over the next three, four, five, six years, because of all these changes, that we’ve actually saved money from this, even though more people are covered. 

And so now you’ll hear the critics and the Republicans say, now, that just defies common sense.  If you’re adding 30 million more people, then it’s got to cost more money.  And you can’t pretend like somehow that’s going to help us on the deficit.  I’ve heard this criticism, I understand it. 

But let me give you an example.  If you’ve got a house and you’ve got a big hole in your roof, and it’s raining and snowing through that roof and there are some people who are inside the rooms where the roof is okay and they’re nice and warm, and then you got a few -- your family members in that room where there’s a big hole in the roof and they’re shivering, and they’re cold -- if you repair the roof, that’s going to cost some money.  But if all the water damage from your floors and all the heat that’s going out of the roof, you count all those savings, over time it may turn out that it actually is saving you money and, by the way, all those family members now are warm, too.  You’re not the only one who’s warm, right?  That’s essentially what we’re trying to set up.

Now, last point I want to make.  All those savings that we’re anticipating, we don’t even count those when it comes to making sure that this is deficit-neutral.  Here are the two ways that we’re paying for this thing:  Number one, we are eliminating a whole bunch of waste, fraud, and insurance subsidies that were being paid out under Medicare that aren’t making our seniors any healthier.  I mean, you’ve got a pretty sweet deal for insurance companies right now in a program called Medicare Advantage where they get $18 billion a year paid to them to manage a Medicare program that about 80 percent of seniors are getting directly from the government, and it’s working just fine.  It’s just a subsidy to them that doesn’t make anybody healthier.  So what we’re saying is, well, let’s eliminate the subsidy.  So that’s about how we pay for half of this thing.

The other half of it, it is true that we have identified some additional taxes that we think are fair.  And let me describe, just to give you an example -- I don’t think this will affect you, but I don’t know -- I don’t know your family’s circumstances.  Right now, if you’re on salary, you get your salary from Celgard or any of the companies around here, you’re paying your Medicare tax on all of that, right?  You see it on your -- it’s part of your FICA.  But if you’re Warren Buffett and you get most of your money from dividends and capital gains, you don’t pay Medicare tax on that.  You’re eligible for it.  You’re going to get the same Medicare benefits as anybody else.  But because your source of income is what’s called unearned income -- capital gains and dividends -- you don’t have to pay this.

Well, I’m thinking to myself how is it that the guy who is cleaning up the office is paying the Medicare tax and the guy who is making capital gains isn’t?  So what we said was, look, if you make more than $200,000, $250,000 a year, then that money that you make over $200,000, $250,000 a year that’s unearned -- that’s from capital gains and dividends -- you should have to pitch in to Medicare just like everybody else, because you’re going to be using it like everybody else.  So it’s a concept of fairness.  (Applause.)

Now, what the Congressional Budget Office has said -- I’m sorry, by the way, these questions sometimes are -- or these answers are long, but I want to make sure you guys -- that I’m really answering your question.  I hope you feel like I really want to respect the importance of your question.  What the Congressional Budget Office has said is that as a consequence of the savings from the waste and fraud, combined with the new revenue sources I just mentioned, that this thing is going to actually reduce our deficit by over a trillion dollars -- over a trillion dollars.  We’re actually saving money for the government -- because we closed the roof, the house is now insulated, it’s warm.  And by the way, in the meantime we’ve got a whole bunch of people who were left out in the cold who are now being taken care of.

That’s the concept.  But I know that for a lot of people, they’ve got a legitimate concern about, gosh, it just seems like government spending is out of control.  I understand that.  I feel that.  But understand what happened:  When I walked in, we already had a $1.3 trillion deficit.  That’s an annual deficit of $1.3 trillion.  That’s -- the day I got sworn in, before I did a thing, we had $8 trillion in accumulated debt from the war in Iraq -- not paid for; the prescription drug plan, Medicare Part D -- not paid for; Bush tax cuts -- not paid for.

So we already had all this debt that had just been piled up, but nobody had noticed because things were going kind of good.  Just like a lot of folks didn’t notice their credit card was going up or that their home equity loans were going up because when things are going good you tend not to notice.

So all that debt had already accumulated.  We then had to spend $787 billion on the Recovery Act to do all the things -- unemployment insurance; COBRA; what’s called FMAP, which is essentially helping states to keep their budgets afloat so that they didn’t have to lay off teachers and cops and firefighters -- all of which if that had happened would have further depressed the economy and we would have recovered a lot later; the investments we’re making in clean energy and things like Celgard to help spur economic growth.

So we had to spend that, but that’s only a fraction of what our debt was.  And in addition what happens is when the economy goes south, there are fewer tax revenues.  And so you’re putting more money out to help people with unemployment insurance and things like that, but you’re getting less money in because folks are out of work and businesses aren’t making money.

Bottom line is, we now have a significant debt that has to be paid down.  That’s why I’m freezing government spending.  That’s why we reinstated what’s called pay-as-you-go.  You can’t start a program without paying for it.  Our health care program is paid for.

But the big thing, if you’re really worried about leaving debt to the next generation, which I know you are, the most important thing we’re going to have to tackle is our health care costs, because Medicare is by far -- Medicare and Medicaid are the biggest things that are looming in the horizon in terms of what our debt is going to be.  Nothing else comes close. 

If this health care bill never existed, if I didn’t do anything about it, we’d actually be a trillion dollars worse off over the long term.  But even with the saving we’re getting from health care, we’re still going to have to do more.  And if you don’t believe that, go on our Web site -- www.whitehouse.gov -- and you can look at how the federal budget works. 

A lot of people think if you just eliminated foreign aid we could balance the budget, or if you just eliminated earmarks you could balance the budget.  Earmarks -- pork projects, what everybody calls pork -- those account for about 1 percent of the budget, less than 1 percent.  Foreign aid accounts for about 1.5 to 2 percent of the budget.

Most of the budget is Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid, defense spending, and interest on the national debt.  That accounts for about 70 percent of the budget.  And so all this other stuff that sometimes we argue about, that’s not the big stuff.  We’re going to have to tackle the big stuff if we’re going to get our budget under control.

Boy, that was a long answer.  I’m sorry.  (Laughter.)  But I hope everybody -- but I hope I answered your question.  (Applause.)  All right, I’m going to -- I’ve got to make this the last question.  I’m going to ask this young man right here.

Q    My name is Matt Litzler (ph) and I flew down from Cleveland, Ohio, this morning.  We’re a supplier here to Celgard and about 75 of those 1,000 jobs are in northeast Ohio.  A real quick question:  If Reggie is not going to go on the plane, can I get a ride back to the airport?  (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT:  You know, come on, let’s go.

Q    But secondly, the limousines that you drive -- electric with Celgard membranes in them sometime soon?

THE PRESIDENT:  You know, the answer -- I’m going to be honest with you.  I’m going to be honest with him.  (Applause.)  When I first got Secret Service protection, I asked, can we make these cars hybrids?  And I apologize because Secret Service said no.

Now, the reason is not because Secret Service are bad guys.  It’s because the cars that I’m in are like tanks.  I mean, they -- as you might imagine, they’re -- a little bit of extra stuff on it.  They’re a little reinforced.  So they weigh twice or three times what an ordinary car weighs.  So they just couldn’t get the performance, in terms of acceleration, using a hybrid engine. 

But here’s the good news, is that as part of our overall energy strategy, I have ordered us to triple the federal fleet that is hybrid.  And so government purchases an awful lot of cars for all kinds of things.  I think we’re the biggest -- I’m assuming we’re the biggest car purchaser -- maybe Hertz is bigger, I don’t know -- but we’re big and so we are using our purchasing power to help encourage the clean car industry and, hopefully, to get you more business.  All right?

Thank you very much, everybody.  God bless you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END
1:00 P.M. EDT

Close Transcript

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President in a Discussion on Jobs and the Economy in Charlotte, North Carolina

Celgard, LLC, Charlotte, North Carolina

12:02 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, guys.  Hello, everybody!  Hello!  Good to see you.  Everybody, please have a seat.  Have a seat. 

Well, thank you so much for the warm welcome.  To Bob, thank you very much for the terrific introduction.  I want to thank Bryan Moorehead for the great tour, and Mitchell Pulwer for trying to explain to me what was going on here.  (Laughter.)

We’ve got Governor Beverly Perdue, who’s doing just a great job on behalf of all of North Carolina.  Please give her a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  And I think it’s important to note that the state of North Carolina has provided enormous support for expansion here at Celgard as well.  And I know that the combination of both federal and state support makes a big difference.  So I didn’t want to leave the state out.

Lieutenant Governor Walter Dayton -- Dalton is here.  Please stand up, Walter.  (Applause.)  The hotshot young up-and-coming mayor of Charlotte Anthony Foxx is in the house.  Give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.) 

Some outstanding members of Congress:  Congressman Mel Watt.  (Applause.)  Congressman Larry Kissell.  (Applause.)  And even though he’s from across the border, we love him -- Congressman John Spratt of South Carolina.  (Applause.) 

So it is good to be here at Celgard, and it is good to be back in North Carolina.  It is good to be back.  (Applause.)  We just concluded our tour, where we saw some of the workings of this facility where you’re manufacturing components for state-of-the-art batteries.  You’re building separators to make sure diametrically opposed forces can work successfully together.  And I couldn’t help but think:  We could use your help in Congress.  (Laughter and applause.)  We could get one of those -- we could get one of those tri-part films and put it between the Democrats and the Republicans.  (Laughter.)  And it would improve conductivity.  Right?  Did I get that right?  Okay.

Now, the truth is, these have been a very tough two years for North Carolina, and they’ve been a tough two years for the United States of America.  We’ve been through the worst period of economic turmoil since the Great Depression.  Keep in mind, when I first took the oath of office, we were already moving towards what some thought was a Great Depression.  We were losing about 700,000, 800,000 jobs per month.  And the economy was contracting at a pace that we hadn’t seen in generations -- about 6 percent contraction that first quarter when I first took office.  And I’ve often had to report bad news during the course of this year as the recession wreaked havoc on people’s lives. 

But today is an encouraging day.  We learned that the economy actually produced a substantial number of jobs instead of losing a substantial number of jobs.  We are beginning to turn the corner.  (Applause.)  This month, more Americans woke up, got dressed, and headed to work at an office or factory or storefront.  More folks are feeling the sense of pride and satisfaction that comes with a hard-earned and well-deserved paycheck at the end of a long week of work.

As I said, just one year ago, we were losing an average of more than 700,000 jobs each month.  But the tough measures that we took -- measures that were necessary even though sometimes they were unpopular -- have broken this slide and are helping us to climb out of this recession.  We’ve now added an average of more than 50,000 jobs each month over the first quarter of this year.  And this month’s increase of 162,000 jobs was the best news we’ve seen on the job front in more than two years.  (Applause.)

Now, at the same time, it’s important to emphasize:  While we’ve come a long way, we still got a ways to go.  We shouldn’t underestimate the difficulties we face as a country or the hardships that confront millions of our fellow citizens -- some of your friends, some of your neighbors, some of your relatives you know are still going through a tough time.  Eight million people have lost jobs over the past two years.  That’s a staggering sum.  Economic statistics don’t do justice to the pain and anxiety that results from unemployment.  Lasting unemployment takes a toll on families, takes a toll on marriages, takes a toll on children.  It saps the vitality of communities, especially in places that have seen factories and other anchoring businesses shut their doors.  And being unable to find work -- being able to provide for your family -- that doesn’t just affect your economic security, that affects your heart and your soul.  It beats you up.  It’s hard.

So we have to be mindful that today’s job numbers, while welcome, leaves us with a lot more work to do.  It will take time to achieve the strong and sustained job growth that we need.  And long before this recession hit -- for a decade -- middle-class families had already been expensing -- experiencing a sense of declining economic security.  Their paychecks were flat-lining even though the cost of everything from groceries to college educations to health care were all going up.  And this means that even as we pull out of this immediate crisis, we’ve got to tackle some of the long-term problems that have been a drag on our economy.  And that’s why we’ve been working so hard to turn this economy around.

It’s not quick and it’s not easy.  And the truth is, there are some limits to what government can do.  Government can’t reverse the toll of this recession overnight, and government on its own can’t replace the 8 million jobs that have been lost.  The true engine of job growth in this country has always been the private sector, businesses like Celgard.  What government can do is create the conditions for companies to succeed.  It can help to create the conditions for companies to hire again.  What it can do is build the infrastructure and create the incentives that will allow small businesses to add workers; that will help entrepreneurs to take a chance on an idea; that will lead manufacturers to set up shop in places like Charlotte.

And that’s what we did last year through the Recovery Act, also known as the stimulus bill.  A lot of folks were down on it -- well, we don’t know what this did.  A lot of folks got it mixed up with the steps we had to take to avoid the banking system melting down, and I know that wasn’t popular.  It wasn’t popular with me. 

But here’s what the Recovery Act did:  We cut taxes for small businesses and 95 percent of working families to promote spending and hiring -- cut taxes.  That’s what the Recovery Act did, was cutting people’s taxes across America.  (Applause.)   We’re also making investments in our infrastructure, from interstate highways to broadband networks.  That not only creates private sector jobs, but is also creates the platform, a better environment, in which business can prosper. 

It’s also what we did through the jobs bill that I signed into law just recently, a bill that cuts taxes for small businesses who hire unemployed workers; and that allows companies to write off investments in equipment, like some of the equipment that we just saw here today; and that encourages job creation by spurring investments in school renovation and clean energy projects and road construction -- all of which builds on the investments that we’ve put into place last year through the Recovery Act.

So as a consequence of all these investments, we’ve promoted innovation in the private sector not just to create jobs, but also to help America lead in the growth industries of the 21st century.  See, I want to improve the short-term jobs picture, but I also want to improve the long-term prospects for our economy.  And in no area is America more primed to lead them than in clean energy.  And I don’t have to tell the folks here at Celgard about that, because through the Recovery Act, this company has received a $50 million matching grant to expand the facility on this site, and to add another facility in Concord, North Carolina.  And I also know this builds on the work that Governor Perdue did to bring clean energy jobs to this state. 

So here’s the bottom line:  This investment is expected to create nearly 300 jobs for this company, more than a thousand jobs for your contractors and suppliers -- and these are all jobs helping America build the batteries that will power cleaner and more efficient cars and trucks.  And through investments like this one across the country, we’re already seeing an incredible transformation.  Here’s an interesting statistic:  Before the Recovery Act, before I took office, we had the capacity to make less than 2 percent of the world’s lithium ion batteries -- less than 2 percent.  In the next five years, on the trajectory that we’re now on, we’re going to be able to make 40 percent of the advanced batteries right here in the United States of America.  Right here.  (Applause.) 

So the next time somebody asks you, when you’re at the grocery store, well, what did this Recovery Act do?  You can tell them, one of the things it helped do is to expand and catalyze an entire new industry, where the United States of America can gain enormous market share across the globe.  And that’s the kind of strategy we need -- helping the private sector thrive in entirely new industries, the industries of the future.  It’s a strategy that will not only create jobs in the near term, but also sustained growth and opportunity in the long run.

Now, this has been a harrowing time for our country.  And it’s easy to grow cynical and wonder if America’s best days are behind us, especially after such a terrible crisis.  And we’ve seen folks in Washington trying to play the usual politics with the crisis.  And that’s not surprising, of course.  That’s how Washington works.  Although I do think it’s important for the American people to remember the failed economic policies that got us into this mess, just so we make sure we don’t return to them. 

But what we can see here, at this plant, is that the worst of the storm is over; that brighter days are still ahead.  In Charlotte and all across the country, we can see the promise and possibility that awaits us.  If we tap our ingenuity and our inventiveness, our skill and our drive as a people; if we’re smart, if we’re willing to do what it takes, we can lead in new industries and create new jobs and strengthen the middle class and achieve a shared and lasting prosperity.  And we can turn this turmoil into recovery and emerge stronger than before.

I’m convinced that’s what we’re called to do; I’m confident that that is what we will do.  And I want to say to all the employees here at Celgard, we are proud of you because you’re helping to point the way and helping to lead not just here in North Carolina but all across the country.

So thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.)  Let me take some questions from you.  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

So, you know, when they let me out of my cage at the White House I like to actually have a chance to talk to folks.  And so we’ve got time for a few questions and we’ve got some young people here in the audience with their microphones.  This is not formal, even though I’m sure with some of the cameras a few of you may feel it’s a little intimidating.  All you got to do is raise your hand.  We’ll call on you.  And it can be a question about anything.  If you can introduce yourself, though, that’s helpful, so everybody knows who’s speaking.  And we’ll start with that young lady right there since you’re right next to the mic.

Q    Hi, my name is Jennifer Dakin (ph).  I’m here from Charlotte.  I’m part of the Polypore parent company.  My question is regarding the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.  And many people have commented on the fact that it has come at a great cost to many public organizations, the fact that we need to assess and report on our internal controls of our financial reporting.  It’s also come, many say, without value in the recent financial crisis.  What value do you think it may have going forward on the upswing as the economy goes forward?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, it’s a great question.  For those of you who aren’t aware of it, Sarbanes-Oxley was instituted not in response to this financial crisis, but in response to the Enron/WorldCom nonsense that took place over a decade ago.  And the concern there was that the accounting practices of companies had gotten so out of whack that you had a company like Enron that was essentially booking all these profits, driving up their stock really high; CEOs were making these gazillion-dollar bonuses.  But it turned out when you actually got in there and started looking at what they were doing, they were building a house of cards.  It was manufacturing profits out of thin air. 

And so the concern was, how do we make sure that CEOs and their boards of directors are more accountable to the reporting that they’re doing, so that investors, shareholders, the market, customers, suppliers, and employees, a lot of whom had gotten tricked into putting all their savings into a company like Enron and then it turned out that everything they thought they had been saving just went up in a cloud of smoke -- that all those folks would be protected.

So the intent around Sarbanes-Oxley was a good idea.  It was the right thing to do.  There have been, I think, some legitimate criticisms about the fact that although Sarbanes-Oxley is a relatively modest cost for a very big company, it can be a very significant cost for a mid-sized or a small company.  Because if they have to abide by all the rules and all the regulations and all the double-checking and triple-checking and quadruple-checking, and so they’ve got to hire a whole bunch of accountants, it’s one thing if you’re a Fortune 100 company that’s got several billion dollars in revenue to spend a couple million dollars on accountants.  It’s another thing if you are a company that is making $100 million a year and you’re spending a couple million dollars on accountants.  That’s suddenly -- that could be the difference in terms of your profit margin.

So what we’re interested in doing is to work with companies to get advice:  Are there ways that we can streamline and make this more effective?  Are there ways that we can lessen the burden on small and medium-sized companies, but still retain the basic principle that accounting standards have to be met, and they have to be cleared, they have to be understandable -- you can’t cook the books -- and that CEOs and boards of directors have to be accountable for the accounting statements that they put out there?  And they’ve got to sign a bottom line.  And they’re going to be directly liable if, for some reason, it turns out that there were some shenanigans going on there.

So this raises a broader question about regulation.  We went through a period of time where I think the general theory was the less regulation, the better.  And if you talk to most companies, they’d rather not have any regulations whatsoever.  There’s nothing wrong with that.  That’s just the nature of it.  You figure companies think they’re pretty smart, they know what they’re doing.  And I’m sure if I talk to Bob, he’d say, there are a whole bunch of things that I’ve got to do that I wish I didn’t have to do. 

But it’s like any other law.  You put the laws in place, even though you know most folks are following the rules and operating decently and commonsense, to make sure that those folks who aren’t operating that way can’t wreak havoc on the system.

And so we’re going to be having a big debate when it comes to financial regulatory reform.  You’re seeing the same pattern come up right now.  You essentially had a whole bunch of financial institutions -- investment banks like Lehman Brothers -- who were taking one dollar and they were able to leverage, essentially bet that -- use that dollar to make a $60 bet on sub-prime loans in housing and take huge, exorbitant risks that almost brought the entire system to heel.  And all your friends and neighbors and communities are paying the price, because nobody was minding the store and making sure that these banks and these financial institutions were following basic rules of the road.

So what we’ve now said is, look, we’ve got to have a financial system that works.  That’s how credit flows.  That’s how businesses finance themselves.  But we’ve got to have some basic rules to make sure that we never find ourselves in a situation again where we’ve got two choices -- either you bail out the banks, in which case you’re thinking, why am I propping up these folks who caused the problems in the first place; or you don’t but then these banks start failing and the whole system breaks down, creating what could have been a Great Depression. 

We can’t allow ourselves to be put in that position again.  So we’ve got to have some basic rules, some basic regulations, at the front end that say to banks, we’re not going to let you get too big to fail.  We’re not going to put ourselves in a position where somehow you’re able to gamble with other people’s money in such a way that it can potentially bring down the whole system.

Getting the balance right, how to do that, is something that you’ve got to be very careful about.  But I think now that we’ve got -- we’re starting to see a framework emerge both in the House of Representatives and in the Senate, where my hope is, is that we can actually get this sometime in the next several weeks.

Thank you for the great question.  This gentleman right here.

Q    Thank you, sir.  My name is Michael Shore (ph).  I’m here in Charlotte.  First, it’s an honor to have you here with us today.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you very much.

Q    I’m concerned that your decision to allow offshore drilling could have the effect of chilling investment into alternate sources of energy.  And I’m interested in what incentives you’re going to be proposing to establish the conditions and to stimulate research and development and expansion of that critical sector.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think that’s a great question.  Look, first of all, understand that the Recovery Act, what we passed last year, represented the single largest investment in clean energy in history, by far.  So we invested in wind; we invested in solar; we invested in biomass.  We invested in research and development; we invested in commercialization.  We invested in battery technologies.  We are interested in figuring out how we can improve efficiency across the system, both in buildings and in transportation sectors and -- you name it, we’re all about increasing energy efficiency and finding new renewable, clean sources of energy.  It’s one of my highest priorities, and I think it’s got to be one of our highest strategic priorities as an economy.  It has the potential of being an enormous growth industry.

Here’s the challenge that we have.  We don’t yet have the technological breakthroughs that can completely replace fossil fuels.  So for the next 10 years, next 20 years, we’re still going to be using oil; we’re still going to be using coal; we’re still going to be using natural gas -- we’re still going to be using the traditional sources to fuel our cars, to heat our homes, to run our big power plants, et cetera. 

It’s my hope that if we’re aggressive over the next several years, we can substantially cut our energy use in every sector while still maintaining our high levels of economic growth.  So, for example, at the announcement where I talked about offshore drilling, I did so in front of an F-18, a fighter jet, that is actually going to be run half on biomass.  So I was joking with the pilot -- I said, so this thing runs on vegetable oil.  But they’re going to break the sound barrier using biomass as fuel.

So the Pentagon is investing huge amounts in energy efficiency.  We are promoting weatherization across the country because this is a win-win situation; you put people to work putting in insulation, putting in windows -- most of which, by the way, that insulation and windows is manufactured here in the United States -- it saves on the individual’s energy bill, plus it means that that power plant has to produce less energy to keep that home warm.  So it’s a win-win all across the board.

That’s our biggest priority -- energy efficiency and renewable, clean energy.  But because we’re going to have this transition -- unless somebody here invents something tomorrow, which would be very helpful, and if you have it let me know, we’ll get it going right away -- but what’s most likely is we’re going to have this transition.  And so in the interim we’ve got to look at our traditional energy sources and figure out how can we use those most effectively and in the most environmentally sound way.

That’s why I announced that we were going to start the first nuclear plant in 30 years.  Japan, France, other countries have a safe, secure, reliable and effective nuclear -- civilian nuclear energy.  We essentially stopped 30 years ago.  For those of you who are concerned about climate change, nuclear energy doesn’t produce greenhouse gases.  It’s not a perfect energy source because it’s got the problem with spent fuel and how that is properly stored, but generally speaking, that’s going to have to be part of our energy mix.

The decision around drilling -- same approach.  What we did was we said we’re not going to have drilling a mile off the North Carolina coast or two miles off.  But 50 miles off, 100 miles off, where it is appropriate and environmentally sound and not risky, we should allow exploration to begin taking place to see if there’s certain reserves.

There are some areas that we just completely put off limits, like Bristol Bay in Alaska where it’s a huge fishery, environmentally very sensitive.  There are some areas off the coast in the Gulf of Mexico which don’t make sense for us to allow exploration, even though we know that there are existing reserves there.

But what we did was we tried to look at the scientific evidence and figure out where are areas where low risk environmentally and a high potential upside.

Now, here’s the last thing I’ll say about drilling, though, because what you have is, you have some environmentalists who just said, don’t drill anywhere; and then you’ve got some of my friends on the Republican side who were saying, well, this is a nice first step but it’s not enough -- you should open up everything.

I don’t agree with the notion that we shouldn’t do anything.  It turns out, by the way, that oil rigs today generally don’t cause spills.  They are technologically very advanced.  Even during Katrina, the spills didn’t come from the oil rigs, they came from the refineries onshore.

But the notion that we could drill our way out of the problem -- you’ll start hearing about this because you know what happens during the summer.  As soon as gas prices start going up -- every summer it’s the same thing, right?  And then politicians start standing up and -- “we’re going to do something about it” -- and these days some of my colleagues on the Republican side, what they’ll say is, you got to drill even more.

Just remember the statistics when you start hearing this.  We account for 2 percent of the world’s oil reserves but we use 20 percent of the world’s oil.  We use 20 percent; we only got 2 percent.  We can’t drill our way out of the problem. 

That’s why we’ve got to get moving on this clean energy sector, but we also have to make sure that we’ve got enough supply that’s regular in terms of these other energy -- traditional energy, sources, so that by the time we get to the clean energy sector, we haven’t had to sacrifice economic growth along the way.

All right?  All right.  The gentleman right here, white shirt.

Q    James Hill from Greenwood, South Carolina.  I work in the (inaudible) lab and I agree it’s an honor for you to be here today.  Thank you.  My question is, how long do you think -- the kind of springboard from which you were just saying, how long do you think it would take for us to have more hybrid vehicles on the road than gas vehicles, and what would it take?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, we have already seen a huge spike in the purchase of hybrid vehicles.  I mean, if you think about it, just two years ago if you found out somebody had a hybrid vehicle, that was a pretty big deal and you wanted to go over and test it out and see how it worked.  Now, it’s pretty common.  I mean, everybody here knows somebody who’s got a hybrid, and you’ve probably tried it out and it’s kind of cool when you’re backing up and it’s all quiet. 

So I think that that’s the future.  And consumers are naturally going to start gravitating in that direction.  Because here’s the fact -- we were just talking about oil -- not only do we produce only 2 percent and use 20 percent, but countries around the world, everybody is starting to use more oil.  Think about it.  China, if they get even half of the number of cars per capita, per population, that we have right now -- there are a lot of folks in China.  And there are a lot of folks in India.  And their standards of living are all starting to rise and they’re all starting to be interested in buying cars.  And the fact of the matter is, is that if they even approach the amount of car ownership that we have, oil will run out very quickly and on the way, prices will just spike up naturally, no matter what we do. 

So it is a huge need for us to increase our fuel efficiency on cars now.  And that’s why one of the things that I did last year -- it’s actually taking effect this week -- is to raise a national fuel efficiency standard, first time we’ve done it in a very long time.  But, frankly, even with us raising those standards, I think consumers just in terms of their pocketbook interests are going to be even more interested in buying hybrids and electric cars.

Two things that we can do that would make a big difference right now:  Number one, we’ve got to make sure that those cars are made here in the United States of America.  And so part of the reason why it’s so important for us to develop the battery technology here is if we’re developing battery technology that helps us leverage more auto production here in the United States.  And that has, just in the same way that when Bob was talking about what’s happening here at Celgard, the grant we gave creates 300 jobs in the company, but potentially a thousand jobs in suppliers, the same is true with the auto industry.  Some of you might have said, why are we helping out GM?  Well, let me tell you, GM might have employed -- along with its dealers and everybody -- a hundred thousand, several hundred thousand.  But when you looked at all the suppliers involved and the economies, you could have seen another couple million jobs lost.  That would have had huge implications for the economy.  Now, GM is actually making a profit and starting to buy -- or starting to hire people back. 

But one thing we need to do is make sure that those cars are made here in the United States.  The second thing we need to do is to create the electricity grid, what we’re calling the smart grid, which is -- think about it, part of the reason that we can drive our cars is because there’s a gas station every so often.  There are roads.  There are gas stations.  We know how to fuel up our automobiles.  Now, if we want to have everybody getting maximum use out of an electric car or a hybrid car, part of what we have to do is to create a similar distribution mechanism for electricity.  And one of the exciting things about these hybrids is we want to get to the point where you’ve got what’s called a plug-in hybrid, where you essentially have a gas station at your house -- called your electric socket.  And you’re going to be able to plug in your car at night.  Some of the energy that was stored in the car can actually go back into the house, and then when you’re ready to go, you can get that energy and use it to drive.

But to do all that you need a better electricity grid.  We’ve got kind of a creaky infrastructure when it comes to electricity, and that’s one of the major investments that we want to start making.  And that, by the way, is an investment that only government, working with the private sector, can help to make. 

You’re hearing a lot of talk these days about government, and government is terrible, and bureaucrats, and they’re taking over and all this stuff.  Look, I don’t want government any more than is necessary, but there are some things that Bob or any CEO can’t invest in.  Bob is not going to build the roads to get to Celgard.  No company is going to make investments for a public good.  None of you would expect a private company to fund our military or our firefighters.  There are just some things that you can’t do on your own, and the private sector is not going to do -- it’s not profitable because if Bob was the guy who had to build the road, he’d have a whole bunch of other people driving on that road that weren’t paying for it.  So it’s not a good investment for him.

That’s where government comes in.  The same is true when it comes to something like the electricity grid.  We’re going to have to help create that infrastructure, just like broadband lines, just like a whole bunch of basic 21st century infrastructure, so we’ve got the platform in order to succeed and compete economically.  That’s what the Chinese are doing.  That’s what the Indians are doing.  That’s what the Germans are doing.  That’s what the United States is going to have to do.

All right?  I’ve got time for a couple more questions.  I can already see the -- this is my guy, Reggie Love, from Charlotte, North Carolina, by the way.  (Applause.) 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Reggie!  Reggie!

THE PRESIDENT:  Yes.  He already told me he’s not getting on the plane going back.  (Laughter.)  He’s spending the weekend here.

All right, I think I should -- let’s see, I want to make sure that -- I’ve got to get a woman in here, make sure that it’s balanced.  All right, this young lady right there.

Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  We’re honored to have you here today.  I’m Doris Ravis (sp) from Lake Wylie, South Carolina.  I work at Celgard.  We have wonderful CEOs that take care of us and have really helped the company grow.  My question is, though, in the economy times that we have now, is it a wise decision to add more taxes to us with the health care?  Because it -- we are over-taxed as it is.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, let’s talk about that, because this is an area where there’s been just a whole lot of misinformation, and I’m going to have to work hard over the next several months to clean up a lot of the misapprehensions that people have.  Here’s the bottom line:  Number one is that we are the only -- we have been up until last week the only advanced country that allows 50 million of its citizens to not have any health insurance, and the vast majority of those folks work.  It’s just that they don’t happen to work for a company that is either big enough or generous enough to provide them any coverage.

So that’s point number one.  There is a moral imperative that is important.  Number two, you don’t know who might end up being in that situation.  See, those of us who have health care right now ask ourselves, well, is this something that should be a priority right now, but anybody here who lost their job and then COBRA ran out, or COBRA wasn’t subsidized the way the Recovery Act made sure COBRA paid 65 percent of the cost of COBRA -- and if you had somebody at home who was sick, or you had a child who got sick, you’d suddenly say to yourself, well, now I see the need. 

And so part of what we have to do is always say to ourselves, there but for the grace of God go I -- and have a basic safety net.  So that’s point number two.

Point number three is that the way insurance companies have been operating, even if you’ve got health insurance you don’t always know what you got, because what has been increasingly the practice is that if you’re not lucky enough to work for a big company that is a big pool, that essentially is almost a self-insurer, then what’s happening is, is you’re going out on the marketplace, you may be buying insurance, you think you’re covered, but then when you get sick they decide to drop the insurance right when you need it.  Or when you get sick they try to find what they consider to be a preexisting condition that would justify them canceling your policy.  Or there’s some fine print in there where you’ve got a lifetime limit, and it turns out you thought you had coverage, but it turns out the coverage only goes up to a certain point and then afterwards you have to start paying out of pocket.  And even after paying all those premiums, you’re now in the hole for $100,000 or $200,000, and you’re going bankrupt and you’re losing your house.

And the final point is that the costs of health care -- setting aside anything we did in reform, I mean, if we just allowed the current trajectory to go on -- is out of control.  I haven’t talked to Bob about what his costs are looking like for Celgard employees, but I can tell you that health care costs have gone up, the price of health care has gone up three times faster than wages.  So either the company is having to swallow those costs, which means that’s less money that they could use for hiring new workers or investing in new plants and equipment, or they’re passing on those costs to their employees in the form of higher premiums, higher deductibles, higher co-payments.

And what’s happening federally is, because the costs are so out of control, all the programs that we already have -- Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program -- all those things are completely out of control.  So if you’re concerned about the deficit, what you’re really concerned about is the cost of Medicare, Medicaid, and all the other programs that are already in place.

So here’s what we did.  What we said is, number one, we’ll have the basic principle that everybody gets coverage.  And the way we’re going to do that is to say that most people individually shouldn’t buy health insurance on their own because they have no leverage and the insurance companies take advantage of it.  Instead what we’re going to do is we’re going to set up a big pool, a marketplace, that allows everybody to buy into this pool -- that members of Congress, by the way, will be a part of so you know it’s going to be a good deal -- because members of Congress, they’ve got to look out for their own families; they wouldn’t vote for it if it wasn’t going to be a good deal.  And just like Walmart is able to leverage a really good price from its suppliers for everything because they’re such a big purchaser, well, this pool will be a big purchaser and it will be able to get a better deal from insurance companies.

So that’s point number one.  That will drive down the prices for people who are participating and it will allow everybody to get a decent deal on insurance.  And what we do is we provide tax credits to people who still can’t afford it so that they can afford it.  That’s point number one.

Point number two is we’ve got the strongest insurance reforms in history.  So all those things I told you about -- you not being able to get insurance because of a preexisting condition; you finding yourself getting dropped even though you’ve been paying premiums for 15 years and suddenly they just decide, sorry, we don’t want you because you’re getting sick -- those policies will be over.  And so you will be protected as a consumer to make sure you’ve got security and protection if you’ve got insurance already.  That’s the second thing we do.

The third thing we do is we actually put in place a whole bunch of mechanisms to start reducing the actual cost of health care.  So, for example, one of the things that we do is to say we’re going to start encouraging paying doctors not based on how many tests they take, but based on the quality of the outcome -- does somebody end up healthy.

And it turns out that a lot of times if you go to the doctor you get one test.  Then you go -- referred to a specialist, you get another test.  Then maybe you go to a third person, the surgeon, you get a third test -- it’s all the same test but you’re paying three times.

So what we’re trying to say is, we’ll pay you for the first test and then e-mail the test to everybody.  Right?  (Applause.)  Or have all three doctors in the room when the test is being taken.

But that’s an example of the kinds of things that save money and will start reducing costs over the long term.  So what we’ve done is we’ve embedded in how Medicare reimburses, how Medicaid reimburses, all these ideas to actually reduce the costs of care.

So our hope is that over time, over the next three, four, five, six years, because of all these changes, that we’ve actually saved money from this, even though more people are covered. 

And so now you’ll hear the critics and the Republicans say, now, that just defies common sense.  If you’re adding 30 million more people, then it’s got to cost more money.  And you can’t pretend like somehow that’s going to help us on the deficit.  I’ve heard this criticism, I understand it. 

But let me give you an example.  If you’ve got a house and you’ve got a big hole in your roof, and it’s raining and snowing through that roof and there are some people who are inside the rooms where the roof is okay and they’re nice and warm, and then you got a few -- your family members in that room where there’s a big hole in the roof and they’re shivering, and they’re cold -- if you repair the roof, that’s going to cost some money.  But if all the water damage from your floors and all the heat that’s going out of the roof, you count all those savings, over time it may turn out that it actually is saving you money and, by the way, all those family members now are warm, too.  You’re not the only one who’s warm, right?  That’s essentially what we’re trying to set up.

Now, last point I want to make.  All those savings that we’re anticipating, we don’t even count those when it comes to making sure that this is deficit-neutral.  Here are the two ways that we’re paying for this thing:  Number one, we are eliminating a whole bunch of waste, fraud, and insurance subsidies that were being paid out under Medicare that aren’t making our seniors any healthier.  I mean, you’ve got a pretty sweet deal for insurance companies right now in a program called Medicare Advantage where they get $18 billion a year paid to them to manage a Medicare program that about 80 percent of seniors are getting directly from the government, and it’s working just fine.  It’s just a subsidy to them that doesn’t make anybody healthier.  So what we’re saying is, well, let’s eliminate the subsidy.  So that’s about how we pay for half of this thing.

The other half of it, it is true that we have identified some additional taxes that we think are fair.  And let me describe, just to give you an example -- I don’t think this will affect you, but I don’t know -- I don’t know your family’s circumstances.  Right now, if you’re on salary, you get your salary from Celgard or any of the companies around here, you’re paying your Medicare tax on all of that, right?  You see it on your -- it’s part of your FICA.  But if you’re Warren Buffett and you get most of your money from dividends and capital gains, you don’t pay Medicare tax on that.  You’re eligible for it.  You’re going to get the same Medicare benefits as anybody else.  But because your source of income is what’s called unearned income -- capital gains and dividends -- you don’t have to pay this.

Well, I’m thinking to myself how is it that the guy who is cleaning up the office is paying the Medicare tax and the guy who is making capital gains isn’t?  So what we said was, look, if you make more than $200,000, $250,000 a year, then that money that you make over $200,000, $250,000 a year that’s unearned -- that’s from capital gains and dividends -- you should have to pitch in to Medicare just like everybody else, because you’re going to be using it like everybody else.  So it’s a concept of fairness.  (Applause.)

Now, what the Congressional Budget Office has said -- I’m sorry, by the way, these questions sometimes are -- or these answers are long, but I want to make sure you guys -- that I’m really answering your question.  I hope you feel like I really want to respect the importance of your question.  What the Congressional Budget Office has said is that as a consequence of the savings from the waste and fraud, combined with the new revenue sources I just mentioned, that this thing is going to actually reduce our deficit by over a trillion dollars -- over a trillion dollars.  We’re actually saving money for the government -- because we closed the roof, the house is now insulated, it’s warm.  And by the way, in the meantime we’ve got a whole bunch of people who were left out in the cold who are now being taken care of.

That’s the concept.  But I know that for a lot of people, they’ve got a legitimate concern about, gosh, it just seems like government spending is out of control.  I understand that.  I feel that.  But understand what happened:  When I walked in, we already had a $1.3 trillion deficit.  That’s an annual deficit of $1.3 trillion.  That’s -- the day I got sworn in, before I did a thing, we had $8 trillion in accumulated debt from the war in Iraq -- not paid for; the prescription drug plan, Medicare Part D -- not paid for; Bush tax cuts -- not paid for.

So we already had all this debt that had just been piled up, but nobody had noticed because things were going kind of good.  Just like a lot of folks didn’t notice their credit card was going up or that their home equity loans were going up because when things are going good you tend not to notice.

So all that debt had already accumulated.  We then had to spend $787 billion on the Recovery Act to do all the things -- unemployment insurance; COBRA; what’s called FMAP, which is essentially helping states to keep their budgets afloat so that they didn’t have to lay off teachers and cops and firefighters -- all of which if that had happened would have further depressed the economy and we would have recovered a lot later; the investments we’re making in clean energy and things like Celgard to help spur economic growth.

So we had to spend that, but that’s only a fraction of what our debt was.  And in addition what happens is when the economy goes south, there are fewer tax revenues.  And so you’re putting more money out to help people with unemployment insurance and things like that, but you’re getting less money in because folks are out of work and businesses aren’t making money.

Bottom line is, we now have a significant debt that has to be paid down.  That’s why I’m freezing government spending.  That’s why we reinstated what’s called pay-as-you-go.  You can’t start a program without paying for it.  Our health care program is paid for.

But the big thing, if you’re really worried about leaving debt to the next generation, which I know you are, the most important thing we’re going to have to tackle is our health care costs, because Medicare is by far -- Medicare and Medicaid are the biggest things that are looming in the horizon in terms of what our debt is going to be.  Nothing else comes close. 

If this health care bill never existed, if I didn’t do anything about it, we’d actually be a trillion dollars worse off over the long term.  But even with the saving we’re getting from health care, we’re still going to have to do more.  And if you don’t believe that, go on our Web site -- www.whitehouse.gov -- and you can look at how the federal budget works. 

A lot of people think if you just eliminated foreign aid we could balance the budget, or if you just eliminated earmarks you could balance the budget.  Earmarks -- pork projects, what everybody calls pork -- those account for about 1 percent of the budget, less than 1 percent.  Foreign aid accounts for about 1.5 to 2 percent of the budget.

Most of the budget is Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid, defense spending, and interest on the national debt.  That accounts for about 70 percent of the budget.  And so all this other stuff that sometimes we argue about, that’s not the big stuff.  We’re going to have to tackle the big stuff if we’re going to get our budget under control.

Boy, that was a long answer.  I’m sorry.  (Laughter.)  But I hope everybody -- but I hope I answered your question.  (Applause.)  All right, I’m going to -- I’ve got to make this the last question.  I’m going to ask this young man right here.

Q    My name is Matt Litzler (ph) and I flew down from Cleveland, Ohio, this morning.  We’re a supplier here to Celgard and about 75 of those 1,000 jobs are in northeast Ohio.  A real quick question:  If Reggie is not going to go on the plane, can I get a ride back to the airport?  (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT:  You know, come on, let’s go.

Q    But secondly, the limousines that you drive -- electric with Celgard membranes in them sometime soon?

THE PRESIDENT:  You know, the answer -- I’m going to be honest with you.  I’m going to be honest with him.  (Applause.)  When I first got Secret Service protection, I asked, can we make these cars hybrids?  And I apologize because Secret Service said no.

Now, the reason is not because Secret Service are bad guys.  It’s because the cars that I’m in are like tanks.  I mean, they -- as you might imagine, they’re -- a little bit of extra stuff on it.  They’re a little reinforced.  So they weigh twice or three times what an ordinary car weighs.  So they just couldn’t get the performance, in terms of acceleration, using a hybrid engine. 

But here’s the good news, is that as part of our overall energy strategy, I have ordered us to triple the federal fleet that is hybrid.  And so government purchases an awful lot of cars for all kinds of things.  I think we’re the biggest -- I’m assuming we’re the biggest car purchaser -- maybe Hertz is bigger, I don’t know -- but we’re big and so we are using our purchasing power to help encourage the clean car industry and, hopefully, to get you more business.  All right?

Thank you very much, everybody.  God bless you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END
1:00 P.M. EDT

Beech Grove Amtrak Facility Creates Jobs, Adds Capacity to American Passenger Rail

Today I was proud to join President Obama and my fellow Cabinet members around the country in highlighting the tremendous role the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act continues to play in putting Americans back to work. 

This morning we learned that the American economy created 162,000 jobs last month and that the revised estimates for January now put average job growth for the first quarter of 2010 at 54,000 per month.

This is the most positive jobs report in three years. And it is a far cry from the same quarter in 2009, when President Obama had just taken office and the economy was losing 753,000 jobs each month.

To see firsthand the positive effects of the Recovery Act across the country, I visited the Amtrak Maintenance Facility in Beech Grove, Indiana, this morning. I toured the passenger car and locomotive shops and met many of Beech Grove's dedicated workers.

One of those workers is Mike Fischer, a machinist in the Beech Grove facility whom President Obama first met in April 2008.  Mike had worked for Amtrak for 22 years, but was about to lose his job last year as the Beech Grove facility planned to lay off 77 workers. He was faced with the decision to either move to Chicago or Wilmington, Delaware, or lose his job altogether.

Secretary LaHood at Amtrak Facility in Beech Grove

Secretary Ray LaHood speaks with machinist Mike Fischer at Amtrak Facility in Beech Grove, Indiana. April 2, 2010. (by Olivia Alair)

Fortunately for Mike, the Recovery Act intervened. The Beech Grove facility secured $32 million to restore 21 passenger cars and 15 locomotives. This infusion not only helped save the jobs of Mike and his coworkers; it also created over 100 new jobs right in Beech Grove.

This money has helped the workers of the Beech Grove facility support their families. It has helped Beech Grove get back on its feet. And this success has been repeated around the country as Amtrak has added over 200 new jobs.

I really enjoyed touring the car shops where six Amtrak passenger cars have already been rehabilitated--with more in the works--and locomotive shops where the first of the locomotives was refurbished. This work adds important capacity to the Amtrak passenger rail system and provides riding comfort to Amtrak's passengers.

Secretary LaHood with group at Amtrak Maintenance Facility

Employees of Beech Grove Amtrak facility stand with Secretary Ray LaHood. April 2, 2010. (by Olivia Alair)

The story of Beech Grove is just one of many I could tell here. People are going back to work. Towns like Beech Grove across the country are waking up as their residents' new paychecks allow them to buy the groceries they need or the school clothes for their kids they've put off for so long.

But we are not done yet. President Obama and I will not rest until every American who wants a job can find one.

It won't be easy, but as our economy continues to recover, the optimism and hard work of the American people I meet--in Beech Grove and all across the country--continues to inspire me.

Ray LaHood is Secretary of Transportation

Related Topics: Economy, Delaware, Indiana

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Holds Discussion on Jobs and the Economy

Obama Administration Officials Hold Events Across the Country

Background on the President’s event in Charlotte, North Carolina

TOUR & REMARKS AT CELGARD
Today, the President traveled to Charlotte, North Carolina, where he will tour Celgard, LLC - A Polypore Company (a lithium battery separator producer and stimulus grant recipient), deliver remarks on the economy, and take questions from an audience of approximately 300 Celgard employees. 

The President was joined on Air Force One by Rep. John Spratt, Jr.

The President was greeted on arrival by:
Governor: Bev Perdue
First Gentlemen Bob Eaves
Lt. Governor Walter Dalton
Mayor of Charlotte Anthony Foxx
U.S. Representative Mel Watt
State Senator Charlie Dannelly
State Representative Kelly Alexander Jr.

Bryan Moorehead, Celgard Vice President of Operations, will lead the tour.
Bryan Moorhead joined Celgard, LLC in November 2006, having held previous plant management and supply chain management roles at Trex Company and Newell Rubbermaid.  Prior to joining Newell Rubbermaid, Bryan progressed through a number of manufacturing and supply chain management positions over the course of his 10-year employment with Corning Incorporated.

Bob Toth, Polypore CEO, will introduce the President.
Bob Toth became President and CEO of Polypore International, and a member of the Board of Directors, in July 2005, after having served in the same role for four years at CP Kelco ApS, a leading global manufacturer of hydrocolloids.  Prior to joining CP Kelco, he progressed through a number of sales, marketing and executive management positions over a 19-year career at Monsanto and its chemical company spinoff, Solutia Inc.  Bob earned a bachelor's degree in Industrial Management and Industrial Engineering from Purdue University, and an MBA from the John M. Olin School of Business at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri.

ELECTED OFFICIALS EXPECTED TO ATTEND

Governor Bev Perdue
First Gentlemen Bob Eaves
Lt. Governor Walter Dalton
Mayor of Charlotte Anthony Foxx
U.S. Rep. Mel Watt
U.S. Rep. John Spratt
U.S. Rep. Larry Kissell
State Senator Charlie Dannelly
State Representative Kelly Alexander Jr.
State Representative Tricia Cotham

CELGARD BACKGROUND

Celgard has won $49.2 million in Recovery Act grants to expand its capacity to produce separators for lithium-ion batteries. Celgard is a global leader in production of lithium-ion separators – a key component in advanced lithium-ion batteries. Celgard controls 25 percent of the market and will supply several of the new battery factories supported by the Recovery Act.  Celgard reports that its expansion will create between 200-300 North Carolina jobs within Celgard and provide more than 1,000 jobs among Celgard’s contractors and suppliers. Work at the Charlotte campus has already started – the Charlotte campus already employs 390 workers and the expansion will add 80 workers there.   To-date, Celgard has already added 60 new jobs as a result of the expansion project and approximately 100 additional jobs have already been created among Celgard’s contractors and suppliers.  Work at Concord (northeast of Charlotte) will start after the project completes its environmental review.

CABINET SECRETARIES AND ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS HOSTING EVENTS ON JOBS AND THE ECONOMY

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar:
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar is holding a media availability in front of the Maggie L. Walker National Historic Site in downtown Richmond to discuss the impact of Interior Department and other Recovery Act investments on the Virginia economy and tourism industry.

Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack:
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack is touring RMH Foods Distribution Center in Morton, Illinois, a recipient of a USDA rural Business and Industry loan through the Recovery Act, and discussing the Obama Administration’s job creation efforts.

Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan:
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan is visiting Northeast Building Products, an energy efficient window manufacturer in Philadelphia that hired 100 new employees as a result of the Recovery Act since March 2009.  Following the tour, the Secretary will hold a town hall meeting with employees at the factory and deliver remarks on the economy.

Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood:
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood is touring the Amtrak Beech Grove Maintenance Facility near Indianapolis.  With the help of $32 million from the Recovery Act, the Amtrak facility has created 108 jobs and provided a boost to the local economy.

Secretary of Energy Steven Chu:
Energy Secretary Steven Chu is in Jacksonville, Florida to tour Alternative Energy Technology (AET), a leading manufacturer of solar thermal equipment.  The Secretary will hear from workers at AET and other area small businesses about the increased demand for their products and the new jobs that have resulted from the Recovery Act.

Small Business Administration Administrator Karen Mills and Deputy Secretary of Transportation John Porcari:
SBA Administrator Karen Mills and Transportation Deputy Secretary Porcari are visiting Phoenix Steel, a Cleveland small business creating jobs thanks to their SBA Recovery loan.

Executive director of the White House Council on Automotive Communities and Workers, Dr. Ed Montgomery:
Dr. Ed Montgomery, executive director of the White House Council on Automotive Communities and Workers, is convening a community round table in Elkhart, Indiana with local elected officials, business leaders, and community members to discuss how Recovery Act investments have impacted Elkhart and the surrounding community.

On the Employment Situation in March

Today’s employment report shows continued signs of gradual labor market healing.  Payroll employment rose significantly in March, and the unemployment rate remained constant despite a substantial increase in the labor force.

Payroll employment increased 162,000.  Even after adjusting for the 48,000 temporary Census workers hired and a rebound effect from the February snowstorms, this number suggests an increase in underlying payroll employment.  Moreover, revised estimates now show a small job gain in January and a smaller job loss in February than previously reported.  As a result, for the first quarter of 2010 as a whole, job growth averaged 54,000 per month.  This is a dramatic change from the first quarter of 2009, when average job loss was 753,000 per month.

Nonfarm Payroll Employment Q1 2010

Download this data as a CSV file. April 2, 2010.

The unemployment rate remained constant at 9.7 percent.  This stability reflects roughly proportional rises in the labor force and employment, as measured by the household survey.  This pattern of rising labor force and household employment has been repeated in each of the last three months.  Indeed, according to the household survey, the labor force has increased by 1.1 million since December 2009 and employment has increased by 1.4 million.*

At the same time that we welcome today’s encouraging labor market news, it is obvious that the American labor market remains severely distressed.  More than eight million Americans have lost their jobs since the start of the recession in December 2007.  It will take sustained, robust employment growth to bring the unemployment rate down.  Further targeted actions to spur private sector job creation are critically needed to ensure a more rapid, widespread recovery.

While this is the most positive jobs report we have had in three years, there will likely be bumps in the road ahead.  The monthly employment and unemployment numbers are volatile and subject to substantial revision.  Therefore, it is important not to read too much into any one monthly report, positive or negative.  It is essential that we continue our efforts to move in the right direction and generate steady, strong job gains.

Christina Romer is Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers

 

* The reported numbers are adjusted to remove the impact of revised population controls that the Bureau of Labor Statistics introduced in January 2010.  Without this adjustment the labor force increased by 851,000 and employment increased by 1.11 million.

Forum on Workplace Flexibility: Closing Session

March 31, 2010 | 14:16 | Public Domain

President Obama speaks about how both men and women need flexible workplace options to help balance the needs of family and work as he closes the Forum on Workplace Flexibility.

Download mp4 (286MB) | mp3 (87MB)

Read the Transcript

Remarks by the President at Workplace Flexibility Forum

4:34 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)  Hello, hello, hello.  Thank you, everybody.  Please, please, have a seat.  First, one caveat -- I will not be good -- as good as Michelle.  (Laughter.)  So keep your expectations lower.

I want to, first of all, acknowledge John Berry for the extraordinary work he’s doing here and for helping to organize this.  Thank you, John.  (Applause.) 

In addition, we've got -- Secretary Hilda Solis is here from our Department of Labor.  (Applause.)  Dr. Christina Romer, who’s the chair of our Council of Economic Advisers -- where are you, Christina?  Right there.  (Applause.)  Valerie Jarrett, a senior advisor and chair of the White House Council on Women and Girls.  (Applause.)  Ms. Melody Barnes I actually just saw run off to the garden.  She was on my list -- the chair of our Domestic Policy Council -- but she’s not here.  Karen Mills, who is the administrator for our Small Business Administration.  (Applause.)  And Ms. Martha Johnson, administrator of the General Services Administration.  (Applause.) 

     So I understand you’ve had a wonderful session.  I heard all about it.  And I want to thank all of you for joining us today and sharing your thoughts on what we can do -- as business leaders and advocates, as employees and as government officials -- to modernize our workplaces to meet the needs of our workforce and our families.

And all of us here today know just how wide that gap has grown.  And we’re all familiar with the economic and demographic changes that have brought us to this point -- how over the past generation or two, as costs have risen and wages have lagged, many families have found they can no longer survive on just one income.  And at the same time, we’ve broken down barriers and opened up opportunities, so more women have entered into the workforce, bringing home paychecks that are increasingly critical to supporting families.
 
Today, two-thirds of American families with kids are headed by two working parents or a single working parent, and the result is the rise of what one expert I know refers to as “the juggler family.”  For these families, every day is a high wire act.  Everything is scheduled right down to the minute.  There’s no room for error.  If the car breaks down, or somebody gets sick, or there’s a problem at school, that begins a cascading domino effect that leaves everybody scrambling.

And I have to say that this is something that Michelle and I have struggled with in our own family.  As she told you earlier today, it wasn’t that long ago that both of us were working full-time outside the home while raising two young daughters.  I was away for days on end for my job, and Michelle was working hard at hers, so a lot of times we felt like we were just barely keeping everything together.  When we were at work, we were worrying about what was happening at home.  When we were at home, we were worrying about work.  We both felt our overloaded schedules were taking a toll on our marriage.

And we had it relatively easy.  We could afford good health care.  We had a wonderful mother-in-law, grandmother -- (laughter) -- who could help out.  We had to ship her in, even in the White House.  (Laughter.)  We both had jobs where we could rework our schedules in an emergency without risking being fired or having our paychecks docked.

Now, most folks just aren’t that lucky -- particularly in today’s economy when many people aren’t just working one job but are having to work two or three to get by, or they’re working longer hours, or they’re out of a job and they can’t afford to be choosy about things like flexibility and benefits.

And this disconnect between the needs of our families and the demands of our workplace also reflects a broader problem, that today, we as a society still see workplace flexibility policies as a special perk for women rather than a critical part of a workplace that can help all of us.  There’s still this perception out there that an employee who needs some time to tend to an aging parent or attend to a parent-teacher’s conference isn’t fully committed to his or her job; or that if you make a workplace more flexible, it necessarily will be less profitable.

Now, it’s true that women are still disproportionately affected by this issue -- something Michelle always reminds me of -- (laughter) -- which is another reason why it’s such great concern for me.  But plenty of fathers out there wish they had more time to spend with their kids.  Plenty of sons wish they could do more for their elderly parents.  Plenty of workers -- both women and men -- wish they could go back to school so they can beef up their skills and advance their careers.  And there are plenty of communities that desperately need the new jobs we can create when we embrace teleworking and mobile workplaces.

And as for how this issue affects companies’ bottom lines, a report by the White House Council of Economic Advisers that we’re releasing today found that companies with flexible work arrangements can actually have lower turnover and absenteeism, and higher productivity, and healthier workers.

So let’s be clear:  Workplace flexibility isn’t just a women’s issue.  It’s an issue that affects the well-being of our families and the success of our businesses.  It affects the strength of our economy -- whether we’ll create the workplaces and jobs of the future we need to compete in today’s global economy.

And ultimately, it reflects our priorities as a society -- our belief that no matter what each of us does for a living, caring for our loved ones and raising the next generation is the single most important job that we have.  I think it’s time we started making that job a little easier for folks.

Many of you here represent companies and workplaces that are already doing just that -- embracing telecommuting, flextime, compressed work weeks, job sharing, flexible start and end times, and helping your employees generally find quality childcare and eldercare.  And if you’re doing this not just because it’s the right thing to do, but because you’ve found that what’s good for your workers and is good for your families can be good for your bottom lines and your shareholders as well, then you need to spread the word.

My administration is committed to supporting efforts like these.  Our budget for next year includes competitive grants to help states launch their own paid-leave programs.  It increases funding for childcare and nearly doubles the Child Care Tax Credit for millions of middle-class families.  And it provides support for folks caring for aging relatives, and for seniors who want to live independently for as long as possible.

We’re also committed to practicing what we preach and serving as a model for the policies that we’re encouraging.  John has been all over this.  That’s the purpose of the pilot project that John just told you about.

     And that’s why John is working with our Chief Technology Officer, Aneesh Chopra, to provide opportunities for federal employees -- here in Washington, but also all across America -- to telework on a regular basis.  Where regulations are in the way, we’ll see what we can do to change them.  Where new technology can help, we’ll find a secure, cost-effective way to install it.  Where training is needed to help managers and workers embrace this approach, we’ll adopt the best practices from the private sector.

Because in the end, we believe that all of this isn’t just about providing a better work experience for our employees, it’s about providing better, more efficient service for the American people -- even in the face of snowstorms and other crises that keep folks from getting to the office.  (Laughter.)  I do not want to see the government close because of snow again.  (Laughter.)

It’s about attracting and retaining top talent in the federal workforce and empowering them to do their jobs, and judging their success by the results that they get -- not by how many meetings they attend, or how much face-time they log, or how many hours are spent on airplanes.  It’s about creating a culture where, as Martha Johnson puts it, “Work is what you do, not where you are.”

And in these efforts, we’ll be looking to all of you for advice and ideas.  And we plan to continue this conversation in the coming months, holding forums and roundtables in communities across the country, so we can seek out more good ideas and best practices that we can adopt and promote.

So, again, I thank you for being part of this forum.  I look forward to hearing about what you all came up with today.  And I look forward to working with all of you in the years to come.

Thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.) 

END
4:44 P.M. EDT

Close Transcript

Forum on Workplace Flexibility: Opening Session

March 31, 2010 | 51:06 | Public Domain

First Lady Michelle Obama speaks about the importance of creating workplaces that allow workers to balance job and family as she opens the Forum of Workplace Flexibility. A panel discussion follows the First Lady’s remarks.

Download | mp3 (47MB)

Read the Transcript

President and First Lady Host White House Forum on Workplace Flexibility

Small Business Owners, Workers, Business and Labor Leaders, and Experts Join Administration Officials to Discuss Workplace Practices for a Changing American Workforce

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, President Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama and the White House Council on Women and Girls are hosting the White House Forum on Workplace Flexibility to discuss the importance of creating workplace practices that allow America’s working men and women to meet the demands of their jobs without sacrificing the needs of their families.

Small business owners, business leaders, policy experts, workers and labor leaders are joining with senior administration officials today to share their ideas and strategies for making the workplace more flexible for American workers and families. The opening and closing sessions, as well as five breakout sessions focused on best practices and benefits for the American workplace and workforce, are streaming live on www.WhiteHouse.gov/live. In addition, much of the event is streaming on Facebook and Ustream, and the White House will include comments taken through these social networks in the feedback collected through the forum.

In conjunction with the forum, the President’s Council of Economic Advisers is releasing a report presenting an economic perspective on flexible workplace policies and practices.  The report documents some of the changes in the U.S. workforce which have increased the need for flexibility in the workplace, including the increased number of women entering the labor force, the prevalence of families where all adults work, increasing eldercare responsibilities, and the rising importance of continuing education. It then examines the current state of flexible work arrangements and discusses the economic benefits of workplace flexibility - such as reduced absenteeism, lower turnover, improved health of workers, and increased productivity.  The analysis is available online here: http://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/files/documents/100331-cea-economics-workplace-flexibility.pdf.

"Workplace flexibility isn’t just a women’s issue.  It’s an issue that affects the well-being of our families and the success of our businesses," said President Obama.  "It affects the strength of our economy – whether we’ll create the workplaces and jobs of the future that we need to compete in today’s global economy." 

“Flexible policies actually make employees more – not less – productive,” said Mrs. Obama. “Instead of spending time worrying about what’s happening at home, employees have the support and the peace of mind they need to concentrate at work which is good for their families – and the bottom line.”
The Office of Personnel Management is also announcing a pilot program to incorporate flexibility in the government to provide better, more efficient service for the American people – even in the face of snow storms and other emergencies. The pilot program will build on the cost savings telework provided during last winter's snow storms and expand opportunities for federal employees, here in Washington and across America, to telework on a regular basis.

"Employers, including the federal government, will have to implement flexible work policies if they want to attract the best and the brightest," said Valerie Jarrett, Senior Adviser to the President and Chair of the White House Council on Women and Girls. " The President is committed to making sure that the federal government can compete for talent because he knows that good people produce better work, which in turn, leads to better service for the American people."
Shortly after taking office, the President signed into law the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, restoring basic protections against pay discrimination for women and other workers, and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which is delivering relief to working families across the country, including tax credits and child care assistance for working families.

The President’s Budget for FY2011 builds on those  initiatives with a series of investments to support caregivers for elderly relatives or family members with disabilities, to help families afford the cost of quality child care, to aid states wishing to establish paid leave funds, and to build the knowledge base about work-family policies.

Close Transcript

Summer Jobs for Recovery

Today the White House issued a Statement of Administration Policy (SAP) supporting the inclusion of $600 million for summer employment programs for youth in the House passage of the Disaster Relief and Summer Jobs Act of 2010, saying that in addition to essential help in keeping America prepared for natural disasters, “It also takes another important step forward in the ongoing effort to help put Americans back to work through the expansion of a youth summer jobs program and offers continued support to America’s small businesses, which are the backbone of the American economy.” 

From the SAP:

Summer Employment Programs for Youth

The Administration supports the inclusion of $600 million for the Workforce Investment Act youth program for summer employment opportunities for disadvantaged youth. This funding will create hundreds of thousands of jobs and help young people open the door to future opportunities, while enabling them to generate additional income during these difficult economic times.

The Administration has long recognized the importance of putting youth to work as a way of developing the next generation and strengthening the nation’s economy. The Recovery Act also aimed to create over a hundred thousand summer youth jobs to provide young people with meaningful work experience.
 

Related Topics: Economy

The White House

Office of the Vice President

3,100 Public Housing Authorities Meet Critical Recovery Act Deadline, Create Nearly 9,000 Jobs and Rehab 150,000 Homes for Low-Income Families

Just over one year after Recovery Act is signed, funds already putting Americans to work, making homes healthier for thousands of families across the U.S.

WASHINGTON – U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan today announced that over 3,100 public housing authorities across the U.S. successfully met a critical funding deadline outlined in the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). As a result, the nearly $3 billion in Public Housing Capital Fund grants awarded through the Recovery Act one year ago are being used to make significant improvements to tens of thousands of public housing units nationwide; creating jobs and growing the economy.         

“Strict deadlines, such as this one, were written into the Recovery Act to ensure that funds would be used to meet the top goal of putting Americans back to work as quickly as possible,” said Donovan. “I am proud of the work HUD and public housing authorities across the country did to meet this critical deadline.  It speaks to the commitment they have to improve affordable housing and grow local economies.  Families and communities are already seeing new windows, roofs, cost-saving energy-efficient appliances, and much-needed jobs.”

To date, as a result of this critical Recovery Act funding, public housing authorities reported creating or retaining nearly 9,000 jobs and developing or rehabilitating 150,000 public housing units in hard-hit neighborhoods throughout the country.  Just one year after being awarded, Recovery Act public housing funds, which were intended to help jumpstart the economy during the worst recession in a generation, are also allowing housing agencies to address the long-standing capital needs of public housing, create jobs, and increase energy efficiency. 

On March 17, 2009, less than 30 days after the Recovery Act was signed into law, HUD provided nearly $3 billion in Public Housing Capital funds to over 3,100 public housing authorities nationwide.  The funds were allocated through an established formula, effectively more than doubling the Department’s annual support of local housing authorities.  Specific guidelines in the law required that all funding awarded to public housing authorities through the Recovery Act be “obligated,” or committed to specific projects or activities, one year after it was awarded, or the funding must be recaptured by HUD and redistributed to other agencies in compliance with the requirements.

All public housing authorities were able to meet that deadline by either obligating 100 percent of their funds or voluntarily returning all or a portion of their funds by the deadline.  Of the $2.985 billion that was awarded to 3,134 public housing authorities, $2.981 billion has been obligated and $3.246 million was voluntarily returned.  HUD is currently determining the redistribution process for the funding returned.  The 172 ‘troubled’ housing authorities that received funding all met the deadline as well, with only two troubled agencies returning all or a portion of their funds by March 17th.

HUD’s Capital Fund Program provides annual funding to public housing authorities to develop, finance, and/or modernize the public housing in their communities. This funding can be used to make large-scale improvements such as new roofs and for the replacement of plumbing and electrical systems to increase energy efficiency. 

The Recovery Act included $13.61 billion for projects and programs administered by HUD, nearly 75 percent of which was allocated to state and local recipients only eight days after President Obama signed the Act into law, including public housing capital funding. The remaining 25 percent is being awarded through competitive grant programs. To date, 98 percent of HUD’s Recovery Act funds are in the hands of local communities, being used to improve housing and neighborhoods, while creating jobs.  HUD is committed to implementing Recovery Act investments swiftly and effectively as they generate tens of thousands of jobs, modernize homes to make them energy efficient, and help the families and communities hardest hit by the economic crisis.

To learn more about the story of the Recovery Act, visit www.WhiteHouse.gov/Recovery.  To follow Recovery Act dollars as they are put to work, visit www.Recovery.gov.