President Obama Speaks on Raising the Minimum Wage

February 12, 2014 | 19:02 | Public Domain

President Obama delivers remarks on the importance of raising the federal minimum wage for all workers and signs an Executive Order requiring federal contractors to pay their federally funded employees on new contracts a fair wage of at least $10.10 an hour.

Download mp4 (704MB) | mp3 (18MB)

Read the Transcript

Remarks by the President on Signing of Executive Order

East Room

2:18 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, welcome to the White House, everybody. I know you had to come here before you go buy some shovels and some salt.  (Laughter.)  It sounds like we may get a little snow. But I very much appreciate everybody being here.  I want to thank, first and foremost, the workers who are with me here this afternoon.  (Applause.)  And I want to thank two champions for all hardworking Americans:  We've got Secretary of Labor Tom Perez -- (applause) -- he’s in the house.  Where is Tom?  Right here.  Tom is right here.  (Applause.)  I didn’t know where he was.  And we've got an outstanding Congressman -- who’s used to snow because he’s from Minnesota -- Congressman Keith Ellison.  (Applause.)
 
Now, it’s been just over two weeks since I delivered my State of the Union address, and I said this year would be a year of action, and I meant it.  Over the past 14 days I’ve ordered an across-the-board reform of our job training programs to train folks with the skills that employers need, and then match them up with good jobs that are ready to be filled right now. 

I’ve directed the Treasury to create something we're calling “MyRA” -- sort of like an IRA, but it's MyRA.  And that's a new way for Americans to start saving for retirement.  And you can start with as little as $25, $50 and start building up a little bit of a nest egg and get tax benefits for doing it so. 

We’ve rallied the leaders of some of America’s biggest high-tech companies to help us make sure that all of our kids have access to high-speed Internet and up-to-date technology in their classroom so that they’re learning the skills that they need for the new economy.

We’ve brought together business leaders who are committed to hiring more unemployed Americans, particularly long-term unemployed who oftentimes are discriminated against.  They’re in a Catch-22 -- they haven't had a job for a while and then the employer is not willing to look at their resume because they haven't had a job for a while. 

So the point is I’m eager to work with Congress whenever I can find opportunities to expand opportunity for more families.  But wherever I can act on my own, without Congress, by using my pen to take executive actions, or picking up the phone and rallying folks around a common cause, that’s what I’m going to do.  (Applause.)  

And so that brings me to the issue we're going to talk about today.  After the worst economic crisis in generations, our economy has been growing for the past four years.  (Applause.)   And our businesses have created 8.5 million new jobs.  Unemployment rate has come down.  But while those at the top are doing better than ever, -- corporate profits have been high, the stock market has been high -- average wages have barely budged.  So you’ve got too many Americans who are working harder than ever before just to get by, but they can't seem to get ahead, can't seem to make all the ends meet. 

And that’s been true since long before the recession hit.  We’ve got to reverse those trends.  We’ve got to build an economy that works for everybody, not just the fortunate few.  And we’ve got to restore opportunity for everybody, so that no matter who you are, no matter how you started out, no matter what you look like, no matter what your last name is, you can get ahead in America if you're willing to work hard and take responsibility for your life.  (Applause.)  Right? 

So the opportunity agenda I’ve laid out is going to help us do just that.  Part one of this agenda is more new jobs that pay a good wage -- jobs in manufacturing, and exports, and energy, and innovation.  Part two:  We've got to train the folks with the skills to fill those jobs.  Part three:  We've got to make sure every child gets a world-class education.  And part four:  We've got to make sure that the economy rewards hard work for every American.

Making hard work pay off with economic security and decent wages and benefits is what we’re about here today.  It means making sure women earn equal pay for equal work.  (Applause.)   It means making sure workers have the chance to save for a dignified retirement.  (Applause.)  It means access to affordable health insurance that gives you the freedom to change jobs or be your own boss, and the peace of mind that it will be there for you when you get sick and you need it most.  (Applause.) 

So if you know anybody who doesn’t have health insurance right now -- (laughter) -- send them to healthcare.gov.  The website is working.  (Laughter.)  Sign them up.  You can get health care for less than your cellphone bill for a lot of folks.

But it also means that in the wealthiest nation on Earth, nobody who works full-time should have to live in poverty.  (Applause.)  Nobody.  Not here in America.  (Applause.)

Now, it was one year ago today -- one year ago today -- that I first asked Congress to raise the federal minimum wage -- a federal minimum wage that in real terms is worth about 20 percent less than it was when Ronald Reagan took office -- 20 percent less, a fifth less. 

So this afternoon, I’ve invited some of the folks who would see a raise if we raised that federal minimum wage.  They happened to join me here at the White House.  And like most workers in their situation, they’re not teenagers -- they look like teenagers, some of them are very young looking.  (Laughter.) But they’re not teenagers taking on their first job.  They’re adults -- average age is 35 years old.  A majority of lower-wage jobs are held by women.  Many of them have children that they’re supporting.  These are Americans who work full-time, often to support a family, and if the minimum wage had kept pace with our economic productivity, they’d already be getting paid well over $10 an hour. 

Instead, the minimum wage is still just $7.25.  And when Congress refuses to raise it, it loses value -- because there’s a little bit inflation, everything else starts costing a little bit more -- even though inflation has been pretty low, it’s still costing a little bit more each year.  That means each dollar isn’t going as far and they’ve got a little bit less.  So over the past year, the failure of Congress to act was the equivalent of a $200 pay cut for these folks -- for a typical minimum wage worker.  That’s a month worth of groceries, maybe two months’ worth of electricity.  It makes a big difference for a lot of families.

Now, the good news is that in the year since I first asked Congress to raise the minimum wage, six states went ahead and passed laws to raise theirs.  (Applause.)  We appreciate that. You got more states and cities and counties that are taking steps to raise their minimum wage as we speak.  And a lot of companies are doing it, too -- not out of charity, but because they’ve discovered it’s good business. 

Two weeks ago, I visited a Costco store in Maryland.  Now, Costco is a very profitable company.  Its stock has done great.  It’s expanding all over the place.  But their philosophy is higher wages are a smart way to boost productivity and reduce turnover.  If employees are happy and feel like the company is invested in them, then they’re going to do more for the company. They’re going to go above and beyond. 

And when I was over at the Costco store I was meeting folks who had started off at the cash register and now were in supervisory positions, and had been there for 20 years, and you could see the kind of pride that they had in the company because the company cared about them.  I even received a letter the next day from a woman who saw my visit on TV -- she decided to apply for a job at Costco.  (Laughter.)  She said, let me apply for a job at Costco.  They look like they can do a good job. 

So across the country, owners of small and large businesses are recognizing that fair wages and higher profits go hand in hand; it’s good for the bottom line.

And as America’s chief executive, I agree.  So while Congress decides what it’s going to do -- and I hope this year, and I'm going to work this year and urge this year that they actually pass a law -- today, I’m going to do what I can to help raise working Americans’ wages.  (Applause.) 

So today, I’m issuing an executive order requiring federal contractors to pay their employees a fair wage of at least $10.10 an hour -- (applause) -- $10.10 an hour.  (Applause.)

This will make a difference for folks.  Right now, there’s a dishwasher at Randolph Air Force Base in Texas making $7.76 an hour -- $7.76 an hour.  There’s a fast-food worker at Andrews, right down the street, making $8.91 an hour.  There’s a laundry worker at Camp Dodge in Iowa making $9.03 an hour.  Once I sign this order, starting next year, as their contracts come up, each of them and many of their fellow coworkers are going to get a raise.  And by the way, that includes folks who get paid in tips -- they’ll get a raise, too.  (Applause.)  A tip wage has gone up even slower than the regular minimum wage.

So just as it’s good for companies across the country, this will be good for America’s bottom line -- for contractors and for taxpayers.  The opponents of the minimum wage have been using the same arguments for years, and time and again they’ve been proven wrong.  Raising the minimum wage is good for business, and it's good for workers, and it's good for the economy.  Put more money in these folks’ pockets, that means they got some money to go shopping, which in turn means the business has more customers -- (applause) -- which means they may hire more workers and make more of a profit.  (Applause.) 

And let’s not forget -- not only is it good for the economy, it’s the right thing to do.  (Applause.)  There’s a simple moral principle at stake -- if you take responsibility and you work as hard as these folks work, if you work full-time, you shouldn’t be living in poverty.  Not in America.  We believe that.  (Applause.)  

And this executive order will cover Americans with disabilities -- (applause) -- because this principle doesn’t just apply to some of us; it applies to all of us.  (Applause.) 

So I’m going to keep doing whatever I can to raise working Americans’ wages.  And I would ask any business leader out there, any governor, any mayor, any local leader listening, do what you can to raise your employees’ wages; to work to raise the wages of citizens in your jurisdiction.  They’ll support these efforts.  A majority of Americans -- not just Democrats, not just independents, but Republicans, too -- support raising the minimum wage.  (Applause.)  It's the right thing to do.  So that’s something Congress should keep in mind this year. 

There’s a bill right now in front of both the House and the Senate that would boost America’s minimum wage to $10.10 an hour -- just like I'm doing with this executive action.  It’s easy to remember:  10-10 -- 10-10.  Let’s get that done.  Raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 wouldn’t just raise wages for minimum-wage workers, its effect would lift wages for about 28 million Americans.  It would lift millions of Americans out of poverty immediately.  (Applause.)  It would help millions more work their way out of poverty -- without requiring a single dollar in new taxes or spending.  (Applause.)  It's the right thing to do.

Just last month, 600 economists, including seven Nobel Prize winners, wrote the leaders of houses of Congress to remind them that the bill before Congress would have little or no negative effect on hiring, on jobs.  So it's not going to depress the economy.  It will boost the economy.  (Baby says, “Yes!”)  Yes!  (Laughter and applause.)  It will give more businesses more customers with more money to spend.  It will grow the economy for everybody.  So -- yeah!  (Laughter.)  He’s excited about it.  (Laughter.) 

So members of Congress have a pretty clear choice to make right now:  Raise our workers’ wages, grow our economy -- or let wages stagnate further, and give workers what amounts to another pay cut this year.  Restore unemployment insurance for Americans still looking for that job -- (applause) -- or expose them further to hardship.  (Applause.)  Members of Congress, you can help people make progress in their own lives, or you can hinder that progress.

And every American deserves to know where your elected representative stands on this issue.  So ask your senator; ask your representative in the House:  Do you support raising the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour?  If they say, yes, tell them “good job.”  (Laughter.)  They don’t hear that that often so -- (laughter) -- give them a pat on the back, give them a hug, let them know “way to go.”  That's the right thing to do.  If they say, no -- be polite, I mean, don't just yell at them, but say, “Well, why not?”  Ask them to reconsider siding with an overwhelming majority of Americans.  Encourage them to say yes.  Give America a raise.  

So I’m about to sign this executive order.  When you hear me talking about my pen and my phone to make a difference for middle-class Americans and those working to get into the middle class, this is exactly what I mean.  I’m doing to do what I can. Congress should do what it needs to do.  I will not give up on this fight, no matter how long it takes.  America deserves a raise.  (Applause.)  Working families deserve to know some more economic security in their own lives.  (Applause.) 

We've got to create new jobs, strengthen the middle class, build new ladders of opportunity for folks working their way into the middle class -- just like these folks are doing right here.  There are millions of Americans who could just use a little bit of boost -- millions of Americans outside Washington who are tired of the old, stale political arguments, or tired of folks just looking out for people who can afford big lobbyists and big campaign contributions.  There are folks out there who want to see us restore an economy that works for everybody, and get back to our founding vision of opportunity for all.

So I know you guys will work with me.  But go out there and organize some more.  Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)  Let’s give Americans a raise right now.  I’m going to sign this.  (Applause.)

END  
2:30 P.M. EST

Close Transcript

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the President on Congress Voting to Raise the Debt Ceiling

I’m pleased that Republicans and Democrats in Congress have come together to pay for what they’ve already spent, and remove the threat of default from our economy once and for all. The full faith and credit of the United States is too important to use as leverage or a tool for extortion. Hopefully, this puts an end to politics by brinksmanship and allows us to move forward to do more to create good jobs and strengthen the economy.  Instead of wasting time creating new crises, Congress should be focused on creating new jobs and opportunities. That’s what the American people deserve from their representatives in Washington, and that's what they should get.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Presidential Nominations Sent to the Senate

NOMINATIONS SENT TO THE SENATE:

Todd A. Batta, of Iowa, to be an Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, vice Brian T. Baenig, resigned.

Maria Cancian, of Wisconsin, to be Assistant Secretary for Family Support, Department of Health and Human Services, vice Carmen R. Nazario.

R. Jane Chu, of Missouri, to be Chairperson of the National Endowment for the Arts for a term of four years, vice Rocco Landesman, retired.

Julia Akins Clark, of Maryland, to be General Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority for a term of five years.  (Reappointment)

Victoria Reggie Kennedy, of Massachusetts, to be a Governor of  the United States Postal Service for a term expiring December 8, 2016, vice Carolyn L. Gallagher, term expired.

D. Nathan Sheets, of Maryland, to be an Under Secretary of the Treasury, vice Lael Brainard, resigned.

Mark Sobel, of Virginia, to be United States Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund for a term of two years, vice Margrethe Lundsager, resigning.

Francis Xavier Taylor, of Maryland, to be Under Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis, Department of Homeland Security, vice Caryn A. Wagner, resigned.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 2/12/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:54 P.M. EST

MR. CARNEY:  Good afternoon.  Thank you all for being here.  I have with me, as you can see today, another guest briefer, the Secretary of Labor Tom Perez, who is going to talk to you a little bit about the President’s event today where he will sign the executive order that raises the minimum wage for federal contractors to $10.10 an hour, and why it is an important step forward towards achieving the President’s objective here, which is ensuring that if you work hard, if you take responsibility for yourself and your family, you should not be paid a wage that keeps you in poverty. 

So, as you know, the President very much wants to see Congress take action on this, but this is a step he can take using his authority, and he will sign that order today.

     So, as in keeping with past practice, we’ll have the Secretary speak first.  You can address questions to him on subject areas that he covers at the top.  We’ll let him go and I’ll remain for questions on other subjects. 

     With that, the Secretary of Labor.

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Great.  Thanks, Jay.  Good afternoon.  The President has said that this year will be a Year of Action, and so today he will take an important step to expand opportunity by rewarding hard work with fair wages. 

     In a short time from now, the President will sign an executive order to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 for workers employed through federal contracts.  If you’re serving food or doing laundry on a military base, if you’re a nursing assistant caring for our nation’s veterans, if you’re staffing the parking lot at a federal courthouse, or if you’re working concessions at our national parks, then you deserve a raise.  As the President said in the State of the Union address, if you cook our troops’ meals or wash their dishes, you shouldn’t have to live in poverty.

     The President believes that the federal government should lead by example as a model employer, joining so many other private businesses who recognize that paying a fair wage is both the right thing to do, the smart thing to do, and the efficient thing to do.

     We estimate that the executive order will benefit hundreds of thousands of people directly by increasing their pay, but it will also improve taxpayers’ return on their investment.  Higher wages make for a more productive workforce, thus improving the quality and efficiency of services provided to the government. 

     But this should be a first step.  Every American worker, not just federal contract employees, need a raise.  That will take an act of Congress.  So the administration will continue to push strongly for the passage of the Harkin-Miller bill, which will increase the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour.  And in the meantime, we’ll continue to encourage and support efforts at the state level and at the local level to do the same.

     And with that, I’m happy to take any questions.

     MR. CARNEY:  Chuck.

     Q    Mr. Secretary, do you have an estimate on how many workers are going to be helped by this federal contract raise?  I know that you’ve been coming up with a -- there hasn’t been a full -- in the last few weeks.  Do you have a better --

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, we estimate that it will be in the hundreds of thousands.  And the reason we don’t have a more precise estimate than that is as we finalize the regulations in the course of the ensuing months, that will give us a better handle on that.  I had read a study that it indicated that it was in the millions.  We believe that’s too high.  And the assumptions that were involved in that estimate, including the fact that they had a $12/hour minimum wage, those assumptions didn’t apply to the executive order that the President will be issuing.  But we’re confident that our estimates are where the actual number will be.

     Q    Can I follow up on that?  You said hundreds of thousands -- during what time period?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  During the course -- it goes into effect January 1st of next year.  So not every contract will come up January 1st of next year.  So in the course of the ensuing period of time, which will be months and years for contracts to come to the end of their life and be renewed, then you will have more and more people benefitting.  The President was very explicit about not wanting it to interfere with contracts that are already in place.

     Q    No, but I’m asking you a specific question.  You’ve given us an estimate here.  You claim this is going to benefit hundreds of thousands of workers.  So is this during the first year, during the first five years, during the first ten years?  What period of time are we talking about?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  It will benefit hundreds of thousands of workers as new contracts come in place.  And new contracts will come in place over the course of years beginning January 1st of 2015 when the executive order goes into effect.

     Q    So over the course of eternity?  I mean, I’m just wondering, what’s the --

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Over the course of a number of years -- three to five years.

     Q    Three to five years?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Some will benefit year one, more will benefit year two, more will benefit year three.  Even more will benefit in the ensuing years.

     Q    And what percentage of workers on federal contracts make the minimum wage, or make less than $10.10 an hour?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, again, we don’t have a precise figure because we’re still finalizing the regulations and preparing the regulations.  But, again, we estimate that there are hundreds of thousands of workers who will benefit from this, which means they are making below $10.10 an hour right now.

     Q    Just one last question.  What more will this cost?  Because obviously you’re raising the wages of those working on federal contracts, so what will be the cost of this?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  All federal agencies will be doing this within their existing budget.  And the reason why this is the efficient thing to do is because when employers are paying a fair wage, they have a more efficient workforce.  And when you have a workforce where you have less attrition, you have those sorts of efficiencies.  So we’re confident that just like so many other private sector companies that have paid a fair wage and have low attrition and an efficient and effective workforce, that we will realize the same efficiencies here in the federal government.

     Q    So you’re not allowing the price of the contract to go up?  Are you preventing that in the executive order?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  All of this will be implemented within the existing budget of agencies.  So there’s not a bump-up in the budget to account for this.  Because, again, the efficiencies of paying a fair wage are what we will gain from this executive order.  The President has said many times that the federal government should set the example, and that’s exactly what we’re doing here.

     Q    Mr. Secretary, there were some who had hoped that this would apply to existing contracts.  Can you explain both the legal and economic reasons why that decision was not made?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, the President made a judgment, and I agree that it should be applying to new contracts so that in the middle of a contract there’s not the disruption of having to have a wage inserted that wasn’t in place when you negotiated the contract to begin with.

     Q    Was there ever going to be litigation over that?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, no, again, the President wanted to draw an appropriate balance between ensuring that we have a minimum wage and also minimizing disruption on contractors.  And changing the rules in the middle of a contract we felt would be disruptive and that is why it applies to future contracts and doesn’t take effect until January of 2015.

     Q    And you can see there will be some economic lag time before these benefits are actually enjoyed and then translates to the broader economy?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, again, any law that you put in place will have an effective date that is some time down the road.  And so this is no different than any other law, whether it’s increases in the minimum wage that Congress has passed, which had an effective date down the road.  We just issued some regulations to help home health care workers and we had a delayed effective date so that we could work with the various stakeholders to ensure the effective implementation of that law.  This is no different than any other law that would address these important pocketbook issues for people.

     MR. CARNEY:  Jeff.

     Q    Mr. Secretary, this is obviously something -- right here.

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Hey, Jeff.

     Q    Hi -- that the President can do with his pen.  How likely is it, though, that you will get congressional support for doing a broader minimum wage hike?  There’s not a lot of appetite for this among Republicans.

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, I’m very optimistic --

Q    Why?

SECRETARY PEREZ:  -- and I’m optimistic because I look at history.  First of all, I look at where the American people are.  The American people, regardless of your ideological stripes, strongly support an increase in the minimum wage and they support it because they support the proposition that nobody who works a full-time job should have to live in poverty. 

And when members of Congress go home, they listen to their constituents.  I was in New Jersey earlier this week -- or last week, in Jersey City, listening to baggage workers who are working at Newark Airport talking about how they’re making choices between food and health care; how a guy’s son just turned 16 and he had to look him in the eye and say, I can’t afford to buy you a birthday present because I’ve got to buy food for us.  These are stories that we hear all across the country. 

And if you look at the history of the minimum wage, it has always enjoyed strong bipartisan support, whether it was the increase that George W. Bush signed or the increase that one of my predecessors, Elizabeth Dole, spoke proudly of in helping to shepherd.  And so this issue has enjoyed bipartisan support, and I’m confident that it will continue to.  And we’ll fight very hard because, again, people are working hard and falling further behind, and that’s not right. 

     Q    But it doesn’t enjoy bipartisan support right now.  What do you think needs to change to make that political calculus different?

SECRETARY PEREZ:  I think when members listen even more to their constituents they will see that people are working 40, 50 hours a week and they’re on food stamps.  They’ll see that we’re subsidizing the banking industry to the tune of $900 million a year, because you’ve got bank tellers who are working and collecting food stamps.  The fast food industry subsidized to the tune, according to one report, of $7 billion a year. 

If we want to reduce reliance on public subsidies like food stamps, if we want to promote self-sufficiency, which I think there’s bipartisan support for, if we want to make sure that we reward work and really acknowledge the dignity of work, raising the minimum wage makes a lot of sense.

     And so I think the American people are ahead of some in Congress.  And I’m confident that as people go back and listen to their constituents that this movement will continue to grow.

     Q    Just to follow up, this is not indexed for inflation, right?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  No, that’s incorrect.  It is indexed for inflation.

     Q    It is.  And then the second question is, in the job retraining -- or job training project that the Vice President spearheaded, is there a timeframe?  Can you just remind us, is there a timeframe in which that work is going to be completed?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  We’re working feverishly now and we will be throughout the year, because we want to get back to the American people as soon as possible.  And I meet with the Vice President with great regularity as we draw a blueprint for ensuring that people have career pathways and those tickets to the middle class that come when you have access to training and upward mobility.

     MR. CARNEY:  Ann.

     Q    Thank you.  I apologize, maybe I should have looked this up.  Are there people -- I understand this is for contractors.  Are there federal government employees who earn less than $10.10 an hour now, people at the Justice Department or Labor Department or in the White House complex who are earning less than that $10.10 figure now?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  I’m not sure the answer to your question, so I’d have to get back to you.  And to that extent that there are, we’re certainly looking into ways to address those issues as well.

     Q    At the end of last month, the President talked about helping out the long-term unemployed by encouraging companies to overlook their employment history and also their credit scores.  Aside from doing a solid for the people that are affected by that, why is that good business practice?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, I’ve met with so many long-term unemployed in the course of the last few months.  And what I saw was these are people with immense talent.  They find themselves in a predicament that is no fault of their own.  They’re in the quintessential Catch-22 -- I can't pay my bills right now, and I need a job to pay my bills.

And so what we did and what the President did in meeting with the CEOs and getting the pledges of over 300 companies was, again, to use his convening authority to help address this issue.  And it was a fascinating conversation, because what we realized is that there are so many companies who have practices that are benign, such as a credit check.  I can understand why someone would want to do a credit check for somebody, but the reality is, if you’ve been unemployed for two years, you’ve probably missed a couple payments.  And what we saw in that room was a willingness from companies to look at people’s abilities and take a fresh look.

     And we also compared and highlighted many best practices, including the fact that we have the authority and are actually involved in some very promising work where we subsidize wages.  So if an employer hires someone who is long-term unemployed right now, we’ll pay half the wage over six to eight months, and sometimes even more.  And what we have found is that program really works well.  So that convening really helped us to shine a light on this issue.  And we have a $150 million grant solicitation that is going out imminently to further promote those best practices.

     Q    If two employees who are otherwise equally qualified, one of whom currently has a job or has been unemployed for a day, another one who has been unemployed for 13 months, the company shouldn’t look at that?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, again, this -- what we’re trying to do in this program is have the company appreciate that that person who has been unemployed for 13 months has tremendous talent.  And what we heard from companies was that, you know what, I used to look skeptically on that person who had been out for 13 months.  We took a risk, and they're some of our most productive employees.  And so that's what we were trying to communicate is that sometimes we put in place certain filters that prevent us from seeing potential in people, and that's what this initiative is about.

     And I was really heartened at the spirit of the enterprise. It’s very similar to our actions in hiring veterans where employers have really stepped up in a big way.  And I’m confident that we’re going to see the same thing happen here.

     Q    I just am wondering why if the administration feels so strongly about this it didn't do it before?  So is this something --

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  What is the “this” in your sentence?

     Q    Oh, I’m sorry -- the executive order.  Going back to the executive order.  So is this something that you pushed for personally?  Or is it something that would have had a negative impact on the economy when it was more fragile a couple of years ago?  Or how do you explain --

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, the President has been very, very strong in stating that we have to reward work with a fair wage.  And he has continued to work with stakeholders across the aisle in an effort to raise the minimum wage.  And over the course of the last year, that has been unsuccessful to date.  I’m confident that the winds are changing in that context. 

But the President felt that it was important for the federal government to model behavior.  We can't go out and tell the private sector that they need to raise the minimum wage if we’re not practicing what we preach.  And so that’s what this executive order is about:  practicing what we preach; modeling best practices; and demonstrating that you can pay a fair wage, have an efficiently run government, and help put money in people’s pockets, which stimulates consumption, which stimulates job growth.

     MR. CARNEY:  Chris.

     Q    Speaking of executive orders, there’s been a lot of discussion recently about a potential executive order that would bar federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.  If the President were to sign such an executive order, could the Labor Department implement it?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, I can’t get into what-ifs.  I’m certainly aware of the executive order that was proposed that you’re talking about.  And the President takes a backseat to no one in his commitment for equal access to opportunity for people regardless of race, religion, sexual orientation or gender identity.  And it’s an issue that we continue to contemplate and work on.

     Q    On a related note, there’s also been talk about implementing existing order -- Executive Order 11246, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of gender, and apply that to transgender workers to prohibit discrimination against them in the wake of Macy v. Holder.  Will the Labor Department take that step?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  That issue is under review in the aftermath of the Macy decision.  And I’ve asked my staff to expedite that review so that we can bring that issue to conclusion at the Department of Labor.

     Q    When will the review come to an end?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  I’m hoping it will come to an end as soon as possible.

     Q    Just following, in terms of -- the President has been in office now for more than five years.  Why is this coming now -- now, and not in 2009 or 2010?  What has changed?  Now is just the broader focus on the issue of income inequality?  Or is there --

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  I think it’s important to put us back in context.  In 2009, we were dealing with the Great Recession, bleeding 800,000 jobs a month.  The President was I think appropriately focused on the Recovery Act and all the issues that were involved in trying to stop the bleed and prevent this economy from going into a depression.  And he succeeded in doing that.  There are so many things -- and Jay is far more conversant in things happening around the world.

     The President has taken multitasking to new levels in this administration.  And so it certainly doesn’t reflect a lack of interest in this, it reflects the fact that we were confronting in 2009 a crisis.  As we move forward, as the economy continues to grow -- and we’ve seen 47 consecutive months of private sector job growth to the tune of 8.5 million private sector jobs -- the time is now, in the President’s judgment, to really act on the minimum wage.  It’s a way to put more money in people’s pockets, stimulate consumption, stimulate job growth, and really address this issue of fairness.

     And so I think now is the right time, and the President is going to continue to do his level best to ensure not only the effect of implementation of this EO, but also to ensure passage of a federal minimum wage hike.

     Q    Can I just get two clarifications, just very quick, on the hundreds of thousands?  Is this 200,000; 900,000?  How many hundreds of thousands will this benefit?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Well, again, as we develop the regulations we will have a better sense of that.  And as soon as we have that better sense we will let you know.

     Q    Let me make sure I got what you said -- I think it was to Chuck -- correct.  So you’re saying we’re going to -- contractors will pay more money to their employees but this won’t cost any more money?  Is that what you’re saying?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  The federal agencies --

     Q    It won’t be more expensive?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Federal agencies will be doing this within their existing budgets.  And again, I think there’s a pretty robust body of evidence that demonstrates that when you have a workforce that receives a fair wage, you lower attrition, you increase efficiency and you can do more.  And that’s why Costco pays a fair wage.  That’s why the Ace hardware store in Northwest D.C. that I just visited pays above the minimum wage.  I think there’s a very strong body of evidence that demonstrates that.  And we will be efficient here and --

     Q    But we are going to close the loop on something.  I guess what you’re saying is it’s not going to cost the budgets more, but the contracts themselves, could they cost more?  You say they got to work within their own budget, but it could it mean, say, instead of 10 contracts it’s going to be nine because of --

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Again, agencies are going --

     Q    So the contracts could end up costing more?

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  No.  Well, again, we don’t know that, because we don’t know what -- first of all, agencies, as I said before, are operating within their existing budgets.  And businesses will bid on these contracts, and frankly, many of them already pay the minimum wage or a higher minimum wage in other contexts.  And so this won’t be an increased cost for them.

     So I think it would be inaccurate to suggest without further evidence that that would happen, because we already see a lot of employers out there.  Remember, we have prevailing wage laws that have been in effect for decades that require employers to pay prevailing wages, which are far above the minimum wage.  We haven’t seen contracting dry up or go away.  When I was Labor Secretary in Maryland we implemented the nation’s first living wage law.  We saw an increase in the number of contractors.

     So when you promote efficiencies like we’re doing here, good things happen.

     MR. CARNEY:  Thank you, Mr. Secretary.

     SECRETARY PEREZ:  Thank you.  Take care.

     MR. CARNEY:  I’d like to thank the Secretary for joining us today and I will take your questions after I make a couple of points at the top. 

First of all, as you know, according to the National Weather Service, a very complex weather pattern will continue to affect the southern United States through Thursday.  Yesterday, President Obama declared an emergency for 45 counties in Georgia at the request of Governor Nathan Deal, authorizing FEMA to support the state in its efforts to respond to the storm. 

The President was briefed yesterday morning and updated during today’s presidential daily briefing.  He directed his team to stay in close touch with our federal partners as well as the state and local officials leading the response.  FEMA has deployed an incident management assistance team to the Georgia emergency operations center, and additional teams are on alert for deployment as needed. 

FEMA has liaisons in the emergency operations centers of South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia, and has identified liaisons for other impacted states ready to deploy, should they be requested.  FEMA has activated its national response coordination center in Washington, D.C. and its regional response coordination center in Atlanta.  And later today, FEMA will activate in Philadelphia to help coordinate any requests for assistance from affected states. 

In addition to providing around-the-clock staffing support to FEMA’s distribution centers in Atlanta, FEMA has also activated an incident support base to pre-stage commodities, including generators, meals, water, blankets, and cots in Augusta, Georgia.  We encourage residents and visitors in the track of the storms to follow the instructions of state, local, and tribal officials; to monitor NOAA weather radio, and to monitor their local news for updates and directions provided by local officials. 

Secondly, I wanted to let you know that due to the severe weather that I just mentioned and that is forecasted to hit this area, the D.C. area tonight and tomorrow, and acting out of an abundance of caution, we will reschedule the event at the White House tomorrow to launch the “My Brother’s Keeper” initiative.  We are working to find a new date for this event and we’ll share more information about that as soon as we can.

And now to your questions.

Julie.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  Just to move the minimum wage debate into the legislative realm, what has the White House been asking of Senator Reid and Democrats on the Hill in terms of a timeline for bringing this up?  Do you now see this, especially with immigration perhaps moving to the background a bit, as the most realistic legislative priority for the White House?

MR. CARNEY:  It is a very high priority for the reasons that Secretary Perez just outlined.  In America, you shouldn’t work full-time and live in poverty.  It’s as simple as that.  And I think a broad majority of Americans support that idea; certainly the President does. 

So we’re going to work with both houses of Congress and leaders in both houses of Congress to press this issue.  I would not agree with the premise that immigration is moving to the background. 

Q    Well, Speaker Boehner said he’s not planning to bring it up any time soon.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think that the Speaker identified the fact that this has long been a difficult issue for the Republican Party, but the fact is there has been significant progress on comprehensive immigration reform, including the principles that the leadership of the House put out just a few weeks ago.  That’s a giant step in the direction of comprehensive immigration reform becoming a reality -- well, maybe not a giant step, but a reasonably large step given where the House had been in the past. 

     So we are certainly not of the opinion that we can’t get this done in 2014.  We’re still optimistic that comprehensive immigration reform can get done this year -- not because we want it, not because the President says it should happen, but because businesses across the country say it, Republicans and Democrats across the country say it; labor groups, faith-based groups and law enforcement groups say it should happen.  So we’re going to continue to press on that. 

On the minimum wage, we’re going to work with leadership to have the Congress take this matter up.  And we want to see Congress raise the minimum wage. 

     Q    But have you set any kind of timeframe for that?  Because you wanted them to do this last year and obviously that didn’t happen.  So I’m wondering if you’re putting a timeframe around it or something to try to ratchet up the pressure.

     MR. CARNEY:  I don’t have a timeframe to describe to you today.  But we are in active conversations with leaders on the Hill about how to move this issue forward.  Because, again, this is broadly supported by the American people.  The evidence that the Secretary was talking about with Jon about the fact that raising the minimum wage does not have a discernable effect on job creation and creates efficiencies across the board, and injects energy into the economy, because you’re paying people a living wage.  And especially, when you’re at that minimum wage, you tend to be spending what you earn and that has positive economic impact.  So there are a lot of reasons to get this done, and we think it will get done. 

     Q    And then, a bit of a logistical question.  King Abdullah of Jordan has been in Washington for most of the week, and he met with the Vice President today.  Why couldn’t the President have met with King Abdullah in Washington?  Why does he have to go out to California to do that?

     MR. CARNEY:  Well, we’ve announced the schedule and the fact that he is meeting with the King out in California, and the President looks forward to that meeting.  The King has a lot of partners that he has conversations with, including in the administration the Vice President, the Secretary of State and others, as well as I’m sure on Capitol Hill -- Jordan being an important partner in the region for the United States. 

     So the President will meet with the King out in California, and I don’t have a readout yet of the Vice President’s meeting with him this morning, but I know that was an important part of his time here in D.C. 

     Q    I guess I just don’t understand, though, if the King has been here where the President is for three, almost four days, why do they both have to go --

     MR. CARNEY:   Well, as you know, I think we put out a schedule for California that includes the President is going to Fresno, where he is going to discuss the effects of this historic drought in California.  The King is also going to go out to California.  The President and the King can meet there and will meet there as part of this trip.

     Jeff.

     Q    Jay, two questions.  One, I’d like to follow up on something that Secretary Perez said in response to Chris’s question.  Is the administration contemplating executive action on LGBT workplace non-discrimination?  That was the word that he used.

     MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think what I can say to that is what I’ve said in the past, is that I don’t have any updates for you on obviously the discussion in Washington and beyond about that kind of executive action.  What our position is and has been is that we strongly support the Employment Non-Discrimination Act.  We note the progress made in the Senate, the fact that there’s been movement in the Senate on this, and I think against some of the conventional wisdom we've seen movement on this. 

     On the broader range of issues around LGBT rights, we've seen dramatic progress, and we're going to keep pressing Congress to catch up with the country on these issues.  Turning the Employment Non-Discrimination Act into law would be a huge step forward by Congress, and the President looks forward to that happening.  But I just don't have any update on the discussion around other hypothetical EOs, and I think that's what Secretary Perez was indicating.

     Q    It wasn’t a hypothetical, so I just wanted to clarify, should we read into that any sort of a shift in the position of maybe going away from just a congressional push back to the possibility of an executive order?

     MR. CARNEY:  I think broadly speaking, the administration looks at all opportunities to advance an agenda that expands opportunity, that levels the playing field, that sustains equal opportunity for all that is part of the President’s vision.  That's as a broad matter.  On specific -- would the President do this executive action or that executive action, I mean, that list could be endless, and I don't have any update for you on that kind of proposition.

     What I can tell you is that it is our policy position that the House ought to and the Congress ought to send the Employment Non-Discrimination Act to the President’s desk so he can sign it into law.

     Q    Just one question on the debt ceiling.  Is it the White House’s view, or your view, that what happened yesterday is the end of debt ceiling fights with the Republicans?  Or is this a temporary blip for 2014?

     MR. CARNEY:  It’s our view that yesterday represented a victory for the American economy and the American middle class. An end to that kind of brinksmanship for now is a very welcome thing.  As a sort of starting principle, Washington should not be causing harm to the American economy.  And that's what Washington and Congress, Republicans in Congress had been doing through the kinds of brinksmanship that we've seen in the past over shutting down the government or threatening default.

     So obviously, yesterday was a very positive development.  It says something about the expectations that the American people have of Congress that people notice when Congress actually doesn’t do direct harm to the economy.  And by Congress I mean Republicans in Congress.  This has been an effect brought about entirely by the ideological passions of House Republicans in particular.  And it’s a good thing that we’re not seeing it happen again. 

I can't predict the future.  What I can say is this will be the third time now, hopefully, that the debt ceiling has been raised without drama or delay.  And it would be hard to argue in the future that somehow having done it three times doesn’t matter; now we’re going to threaten to shut the government down again.  Let’s threaten to default on the full faith and credit of the United States again.  I think that argument becomes harder to sustain in the future, but it’s hard to know what the future will bring.

     Brianna.

     Q    Thanks, Jay.  On the debt ceiling, does the President think that this came about because of taking this position of we will not negotiate on the debt ceiling?  Does he think it has to do with election-year politics?  What does he attribute this development to?  Maybe speaking to a certain --

     MR. CARNEY:  I think what happened yesterday reflects the fundamental soundness of the position the President has taken, which is that the President of the United States -- whether he or she is a Democrat or a Republican -- should not pay on behalf of the American people a ransom to Congress so that Congress authorizes the bills that Congress racked up to be paid.  You engage in that practice and you undermine the faith that the world has in the American economy, and you do enormous harm to the American economy and the American middle class -- all out of ideological pique.

     So the President held firm to the position that he’s had, feeling very confident that it was the right position.  Again, it’s not a reward to any President, as Democrat or Republican, for Congress to do its fundamental responsibility.  It is the least that Congress can and should do -- and in this case, Republicans can and should do -- on behalf of their constituents, which is not to throw the American or global economy into chaos.  So it’s an important milestone in our view.

     Q    Do you worry at all, having sort of gone out in this move to go around Congress where he can -- I mean, if this is a sign of maybe slightly -- you had the budget deal, you have this -- I mean, did maybe he jump the gun on sort of talking about going around Congress when maybe there is a sign that right now it’s a little easier to --

     MR. CARNEY:  You left out the farm bill.  I think that what that reflects -- no, but I think it’s an important question.  It reflects that the President’s proposition was never that he was, from now into the future, only going to act using his administrative authority or executive authority.  He was making clear that where Congress would not work with him on behalf of expanding the economy and rewarding hard work and responsibility, he would take actions that he could to advance that agenda. 

But he’s always eager, as demonstrated by the bipartisan farm bill that he signed into law, by the budget deal and the funding that went along with the budget deal, and by the prospects for immigration reform and the prospects for raising the minimum wage, that he’s absolutely eager to work very hard with lawmakers of both parties to advance an agenda that helps the middle class. 

And it’s never been an either/or proposition.  We have seen a lot of obstructionism in Congress and that’s been to the detriment of the American economy and the American people.  So where that continues to be a problem, the President is going to act using the authority that he can.  He is certainly not going to allow Congress to prevent him from doing the very best he can do on behalf of the American people and the economy.  But he can’t, he fully recognizes, do everything that needs to be done by himself.  Some of the actions that we need to take here to solidify our recovery, to further secure the middle class, to advance innovation has to be done with Congress.  And he looks forward to working with Congress. 

Q    Last one.  Can you just comment on Senator Paul and FreedomWorks have filed a class-action lawsuit against President Obama and the FBI Director, NSA Director, DNI when it comes to the phone metadata program that was revealed by Edward Snowden.  Do you have a reaction to that?

MR. CARNEY:  Sure.  Obviously, about a specific matter of litigation I’d refer you to the Department of Justice.  And while I’m not in a position to speak to a pending lawsuit, what I can say is that in January the President emphasized that, “in an extraordinarily difficult job, one in which actions are second-guessed, success is unreported, and failure can be catastrophic, the men and women of the intelligence community, including the NSA, follow protocols designed to protect the privacy of ordinary people.  They are not abusing authorities in order to listen to your phone calls or read your e-mails.” 

And to the extent that the question you ask refers specifically to the Section 215 bulk metadata collection program, as we’ve said previously, we believe that the program, as it exists, is lawful.  We’re not alone.  It has been found to be lawful by multiple courts and it receives oversight from all three branches of government, including the Congress.

So, again, I can’t speak to the specific litigation, but I can speak to what the President’s views are and what the administration’s views are about the program in question.

Let me move around a little bit.  Dan.

Q    Thanks.  Clearly, Syria was on the agenda.  Biden talked with King Abdullah, and will be as well in California.  I know you don’t make a habit of commenting on everything that Senator McCain says, but he had a fairly broad attack this morning in the Senate floor on the President.  He cited the Directive on Mass Atrocities, of Holocaust Museum comments, U.N. speech.  He said, how can a leader of a free world who says it’s the moral obligation to do what we can to prevent worst atrocities -- how can it be that he’s not doing more to prevent atrocities occurring every single day in Syria.  Is the President still feeling pretty fulfilled -- everything he said about atrocities in all of these venues in terms of --

MR. CARNEY:  The United States is doing more than any other country in an effort to provide humanitarian relief to the Syrian people, in an effort to help bring parties together and help bring the two sides together to resolve this conflict in the only way it can ultimately be resolved, which is through a negotiated political settlement and the creation of a transitional governing authority.  That’s the only way out for Syria. 

The President has made clear, as he did just yesterday in his press conference with President Hollande, that he understands how terrible the situation has been and continues to be in Syria.  And that is why it is so important to continue to press for progress in the talks and to continue to keep the pressure on the Assad regime so that it is held responsible for the brutality that it has inflicted on the Syrian people.  That's why we support the opposition.  That's why we provide aid to the opposition.

     I didn't see Senator McCain’s remarks, and I’m not sure what exactly he’s advocating.  If he’s advocating a U.S. invasion of Syria, I don't know.  Is he advocating a bombing campaign?

The President has spoken clearly about his views on these issues.  He, as he made clear yesterday, doesn't take options off the table as a general principle as President.  But it has certainly been his view that the course of action that we’ve taken when it comes to Syria has been the right one.  And we’re going to continue to press for a resolution through the only means that one can be achieved.

Q    Just a follow-up briefly on NSA.  Why hasn’t the President actually visited NSA?  We had all those reports about morale -- damage to morale there because of the controversy over the surveillance.  Is he planning a visit?

MR. CARNEY:  I think the President has spoken clearly in a very high-profile speech about his high regard for the professionals, largely anonymous professionals, Americans who, in our intelligence community and specifically at the NSA, work under enormous amounts of pressure to keep us safe and do so following protocols that ensure the privacy of ordinary Americans, and do so knowing that their successes -- because of the nature of their work -- will go unnoticed and unreported upon by and large, and that any failures, any mistakes, any misses can result in calamity.  That's a lot of pressure to put on any American, and we should remember -- and the fact that so many of our fellow citizens are doing that work on our behalf.

Major, yes.

Q    Would you agree that the import of today’s executive order, at least for the short term, is political symbolism, not economic vitality?

     MR. CARNEY:  Not if you’re one of the families that’s affected.

     Q    But they’re not going to be affected until next year, at the very earliest.

     MR. CARNEY:   Well, I think as Secretary Perez said, yes, the executive order takes effect on January 1st.  And then as contracts become --

     Q    Contracts have to come in, be approved.  So it’s a considerable amount of time after. 

     MR. CARNEY:  Well, you can diminish or dismiss --

     Q    I’m just asking.

     MR. CARNEY:  -- the effect for that family where the father or the mother is now going to be making $10.10 an hour instead of a lower wage and the effect that will have on that family.  There’s no question that it doesn’t resolve the problem or the need to raise the minimum wage across the country.  That’s why we’re calling on Congress, in the same breath, to take action.

     Q    But that’s one of the reasons for it -- to create this political symbol of you taking this action to jumpstart that debate.

     MR. CARNEY:  I think symbols by definition are not substantive -- that this has a substantive effect on federal contractors and those who make below $10.10 an hour.  And there’s no question -- and I think we stated clearly -- that our projections fall into a range of hundreds of thousands, not millions.  We’re not suggesting otherwise.  But those are real people for whom this will mean a very positive change.

     And it demonstrates the President’s commitment to do everything he can using his authority to advance an agenda that expands opportunity, that rewards hard work, that follows the basic principle that if you work full-time, you shouldn’t live in poverty.

     So we have more work to do.  And in order to have every American benefit from placing that principle into law, we need Congress to act.  Meanwhile, we’re going to continue to encourage states to take action, as many have, to raise state minimum wages.  And we’re going to implement this executive order.

     Q    Let me ask you about Afghanistan.  There was a lengthy principals meeting here last week on that topic.  There’s been some reporting in the aftermath that the administration has sort of come to the grudging conclusion that this BSA is not going to be signed by Karzai before the elections, and that it is important within the Pentagon and the larger NATO communications to reassess and begin planning for a post-2014 troop presence, because that is not going to be signed before April and you just have to accept that reality and move ahead.  Is that true?

     MR. CARNEY:   I think two things --

     Q    -- shift in the conversation?

     MR. CARNEY:  -- two things are true.  And these are good questions.  Two things are true.  We continue to seek to conclude the bilateral security agreement.  We continue to press the Afghan government to sign the agreement.  We continue to make clear that absent a BSA signed, we cannot plan for U.S. or NATO troops in Afghanistan beyond 2014.  And planning has to take place around the contingencies that exist with either a signed BSA or a BSA that is not signed.  And as time progresses into this year, it becomes more difficult to plan for a post-2014 troop presence that would be there to focus on two missions absent a signed BSA.

     So on the broader question, what is the Pentagon planning? I think you can take to the bank that the Pentagon is planning for more than one outcome, as they always do.

     Q    Right.  But I guess the central question is, do the discussions now sort of fall into a category of assuming after the election this is going to be resolved and so the U.S. and its NATO partners can begin planning with that assumption?  That Karzai is the single impediment here and he’s not going to be on the stage and not going to be an impediment past --

     MR. CARNEY:  I don't think that's the case.  We don't look at it as personality-based.  We can't -- this was an agreement negotiated with the Afghan government.  It was an agreement, and negotiated in good faith over a long period of time with the Afghan government.  It was an agreement that was endorsed by the loya jirga in Afghanistan, a significant milestone and hurdle cleared.  And it ought to be signed.  We're not renegotiating it, and we can't -- I think the answer to your question is I don't think that planners would start doing things based on the hope or prediction that a future government would take action.  I don't think that's how this works. 

It is the Afghan government that negotiated this agreement.  There is the reality that this is -- we're now in February of 2014 and we're having to look at, with our NATO allies, what the world looks like in terms of our troops beyond 2014.  And that's why it needs to be signed promptly if we're going to be able to fulfill our preferred approach here, which is to have a limited troop presence in order to continue to conduct CT operations and to train and support the Afghan security forces.

Q    One last one.  The Michael Sam story continues to generate a lot of comments on social media and elsewhere, and people are describing it as a significant moment not only for the NFL but sports in general.  When we asked this to you on Monday you hadn’t had a chance to talk to the President.  One, I wonder if you’ve had a chance to talk to the President about this, or if he’s made any effort to reach out to Michael Sam.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I don't have any details on the President’s conversations or phone calls.  I can tell you that I have spoken about this with him, and he, like the First Lady and like so many others, admires Michael Sam’s courage and believes that the action he’s taken is an important step, and looks forward to seeing him playing in the NFL.

Q    Jay, on health care, we're getting indications Secretary Sebelius may be announcing new enrollment numbers today.  Can you give us a sense of where the administration is?

MR. CARNEY:  My understanding is enrollment numbers will become available.  I'm not sure about the timing.  As has been the case in the past, what I am confident of is that after a very rocky start to healthcare.gov, we have seen a significant increase in enrollments, in signups, and we passed the 3 million mark, so I can predict that it will be above 3 million when the next figures are announced, and that we were seeing in December and January an increase in the demographic diversity of those who were enrolling, including a surge greater than the overall surge among younger enrollees. 

So when it comes to predictions about how many people will have signed up come March 31st, I don't have an exact number.  CBO has made predictions.  What we are confident about is that that will be a large number, and it will be a population that is diverse enough to allow the marketplaces to function effectively.

     Q    Since you’re saying there seems to be a surge in young people and the demographics are better, when we will see numbers beyond “enrollment,” see how many people are actually paying into the system?

     MR. CARNEY:  Well, as you know, payments -- this is private insurance -- not often characterized in some quarters as that, but it is private insurance.  It is a contract between an individual or -- well, an individual even representing his or her family -- and a private insurance provider.  So insurance companies obviously have data about when those payments are made.  But this would be no different from any other insurance contract that you would purchase.

     But as far as what data or what information we have about those who have paid their premiums, I would refer you to CMS.  But it is important -- this is not -- again, when people like to talk about it as government health care, it is profoundly not that.  When people write that the law was crafted by Democrats alone, they forget that it was based on a Republican law entirely; enacted and signed into law by a Republican governor; modeled in part off of a proposal in the mid ‘90s from a Republican senator.  And that's because it -- and as such, when you know that that's what it is, you’re not surprised to learn that it’s based on the private insurance market.

     Q    Two other quick things.  Republicans are holding up a McKinsey & Company study that suggests only about 11 percent of the enrollees are actually new people getting insurance, that it’s a lot of people who have moved plans or are renewing, and that a lot of the Medicaid recipients are not new Medicaid recipients.  Do you have any sense of the breakdown?  Is that study anywhere close in terms of --

     MR. CARNEY:  I haven’t seen that study.  I think there are several areas that fall into that question.  There are those who have enrolled through the marketplace, either the state-run marketplaces or the federally run marketplaces on behalf of the states.  And that figure is over 3 million.  It will continue to grow, and we’ve seen steady growth in enrollments.

     Separately, the 6.3 million individuals were determined eligible to enroll in Medicaid or CHIP between October and December.  That's a figure cited often.  We have said all along that those numbers include both Medicaid and CHIP new eligibility determinations in states that expanded coverage.  In other words, individuals who are eligible because of that expansion, as well as determinations made based on prior law, and some states Medicaid renewals in groups not affected by the health care law. 

So there’s a mix there, and I don't know what the breakdown of that mix is, but what is absolutely true is that there is a significant number of new Medicaid and CHIP and enrollees because of the expansion in those states where Medicaid has been expanded under the Affordable Care Ac.  That number would be significantly larger if those hold-out Republican governors were to follow the lead of other Republican governors and expand Medicaid on behalf of their constituents.

     Q    Last one.  The Washington Post has a pretty tough editorial on the President’s latest executive action on health care.  To be clear, they criticize Republicans at the beginning in saying that they shouldn’t be trying to gut the individual mandate.  They say that's a bad idea.   But “none of that excuses President Obama’s increasingly cavalier approach to picking and choosing how to enforce the law.”  That's The Washington Post editorial.  How do you respond to the notion that this has been cavalier?

     MR. CARNEY:  Well, because this is a common-sense approach to phasing in an aspect of the law and its implementation for some employers.  Often not noted in reporting on this is that we’re talking about 2 percent of employers when we talk about those employers with between 50 and 99 employees.  That’s 2 percent.  Ninety-six percent of employers in America are unaffected by the so-called employer mandate because they have 50 or fewer employees.  Those with more than 100, larger companies, are not affected by the moving of or the phasing in of the deadline over 2015 and 2016. 

And this phase-in is reflected by the phase-in you have for individuals, where the penalty -- if you can afford insurance, you don’t qualify for the hardship exemption, but choose not to buy it -- that penalty is phased in over several years.  And that’s what you’re seeing, again, with 2 percent -- 2 percent of the employers in the country.

     Q    Jay, I want to just follow up quickly on Syria.  You said something in response to the question that you got earlier on McCain’s comments.  You said the President believes he’s got sort of the right policy right now.  And yet, yesterday, the President sounded as if he knows the policy is not working.  He said the situation on the ground is horrendous, acknowledging that Geneva is just -- the only good of Geneva is they showed up.  Other than that, nothing else.  Can you really classify this as the right policy if it’s not working?

     MR. CARNEY:  The right isn’t -- I was trying to contrast that with those who I think honestly come by and support a different position, which involves in some cases the use of U.S. troops or other U.S. military assets.  I’m not assigning that position to any specific individual.  There are obviously a broad range of opinions about the approach that should be taken in Syria. 

The President readily acknowledges and did yesterday how difficult the situation continues to be in Syria, but he continues to believe that the only path out of that conflict is through a negotiated political settlement.  And as we press for progress on that front with our partners, we continue to be the leader in providing humanitarian aid.  We continue to press for a United Nations Security Council resolution to open up corridors for the provision of humanitarian aid.  We continue to call on Russia to stop blocking the passage of a United Nations Security Council Resolution that would achieve that -- because it is unfathomable to argue that you care about the welfare of the Syrian people and block a resolution that would ensure that humanitarian aid prevented Syrians from starving to death.  So we’re pressing forward on all fronts. 

I think that the point I was making -- and I appreciate the opportunity to clarify -- was not that the situation in Syria is not serious, but that when contrasted with an approach that might involve a U.S. military presence, for example, in Syria, or directly engaging in a civil war in Syria, the President believes this is the right approach.

     Q    But you can’t sit here and say that this approach is working right now, since it’s not, right?  I mean, this policy is not working.

     MR. CARNEY:  Can I say that the Syrian civil war has ended?  No.  Can I say that the two sides have met for the first time?  Yes.  That’s modest progress to be sure, with an emphasis on “modest.”  But it is an improvement over where we were a few weeks and months ago.  And, meanwhile, we continue to press for the ability to provide more direct humanitarian aid to Syrians, and we continue to --

     Q    The President himself didn’t sound confident yesterday that this policy is the right one, but he said at the same time he doesn’t believe there’s a military solution now.  And he said that there isn’t a military solution either.

     MR. CARNEY:   Well, I think that the President --

     Q    It sounds like he is still searching for a better policy.

     MR. CARNEY:  The President reflected that this is an extremely difficult problem; that the path forward here is complicated and will be long, but that the only resolution here is through a negotiated political settlement.  That’s the only way this civil war is going to end and that’s why we’re working with our partners.  We’re pressing everybody involved in this to help bring that about.  But it’s not going to come easy, there’s no question.

     Jon.

     Q    To follow up on that, acknowledging that there may not be a better policy out there right now, certainly that there could be policies that would be worse, isn’t it time to acknowledge that when it comes to easing the humanitarian crisis in Syria, that the President’s policy has been an absolute failure?  I mean, you had the Director of National Intelligence tell Congress that the situation on the ground was an “apocalyptic disaster.”  How can we look at the policy towards Syria as anything other than a failure?

     MR. CARNEY:  Jon, we provide more humanitarian aid to the Syrian people than any other nation on Earth.  And we are --

     Q    That’s greatly admirable, but what I’m talking about is in terms of ending the crisis within Syria.  The crisis has gotten worse.  Assad’s grip on power has not weakened at all over the past year.  And we have our own top intelligence officer saying it’s an “apocalyptic disaster.”  How is that anything but a failure?

     MR. CARNEY:  The crisis in Syria is a crisis.  The circumstances on the ground are horrific.  That is why we have to bring the parties together to try to compel them towards a negotiated political settlement, because there isn’t a military solution here.  The Assad regime is not going to win militarily.  And the Assad -- the opposition, the Syrian people are not going to abide by a future in which Assad continue to govern them.  That creates a stalemate, and that’s why it has to be negotiated.  There has to be -- based on the Geneva principles, there has to be a negotiated political settlement. 

     There is no question that the circumstances on the ground are terrible and they are exacerbated by a failure of those countries who could help improve the humanitarian situation on the ground from taking action to do that through the United Nations Security Council.  So we’re going to continue to press for that kind of action.  We’re going to continue to provide assistance to the opposition.  And we’re going to continue to be the leader in providing humanitarian assistance to the Syrian people.

     Q    Can I ask, while the French flags are flying, why is it that the President still hasn’t nominated a U.S. ambassador to France?  I mean, that post has been vacant since November.  I assume he knew long before that, that the post was going to become vacant.  Why have we not nominated -- or why has he not nominated a U.S. ambassador to France?

     MR. CARNEY:  I’m still being vetted.

     Scott.

     Q    No, a serious question.  I mean, it’s an important post.

     MR. CARNEY:  When the President has a nomination for that post we’ll make an announcement.

     Q    And will it be somebody who has donated or bundled or helped raise $500,000 or more for the Obama campaign?

     MR. CARNEY:  Jon, as you know, being a donor to the President’s campaign does not guarantee you a job in the administration but it does not prevent you from getting one.  And the fact of the matter is the President has made nominations to ambassadorial posts and other posts from the ranks of the private sector, from government service, and has put in place qualified nominees across the board.  So I don’t have an answer for you on that particular nomination.  When I do, we’ll make it.

     Q    But more than half of the political appointees he has made to ambassadorial posts gave more than -- or bundled, helped raise more than $500,000 for his reelection campaign.  Is that a coincidence?

     MR. CARNEY:  Look, the President takes an approach where he finds qualified nominees for these posts from a variety of walks of life.  And in that, he’s not different from his predecessors.

Q    Didn’t he promise it would be different than his predecessors on that point?

MR. CARNEY:  And what I can tell you that being a donor does not get you a job in this administration nor does it preclude you from getting one.  And I would note that some of our non-career Foreign Service ambassadors, like Ambassador Rivkin in France and Ambassador Roos in Japan, have been widely noted as enormously effective and successful in those jobs. 

     Cheryl.

     Q    Thanks.  A budget question.  Does the White House support the military COLA bill that just passed, even though it’s paid for by extending the sequester?

     MR. CARNEY:  Cheryl, the Defense Department spoke to this a few weeks ago.  And while we need to make some important reforms in this area, we are supportive of efforts to grandfather current recipients so they are not affected.  In addition to dealing with this issue, the President continues to urge congressional Republicans to stop blocking efforts to extend unemployment insurance to 1.6 million hardworking Americans.  So on this bill, it’s consistent with the position that the DOD took a few weeks ago.

     Scott.

     Q    You mentioned the President’s trip to Fresno.  Can you talk about what he hopes to achieve there and what the administration is doing?

     MR. CARNEY:  I’m sure we’ll have more details on it.  I think as we’ve talked about a little bit in the past, the situation with the drought in California is quite serious and the President is concerned about it.

     Alexis.

     Q    One quick question.  As you know, OFA is raffling off the President for the purpose of ginning up public, I guess, enthusiasm for enrollment in ACA.  Can you describe what the policy goal is that the President hopes to achieve by being the prize in OFA since he’s no longer a candidate and we tended to think of them as a political organization but now they’re trying to advocate for policy?  What’s the purpose of it?

     MR. CARNEY:  To get people to enroll. 

     Q    But how does he being the prize, how does that help?

     MR. CARNEY:  Look, I mean, I think you’ve seen a broad array of efforts aimed at reaching people who are important to get enrolled, especially young people.  And there have been a range of efforts, some of them I think quite novel, that have been designed around that principle -- that calling on moms to tell their kids that they should do the right thing and get insured, that it’s the right thing to do.  They may not be sick today but they could get sick tomorrow. 

And so I think that -- I’m not specifically familiar with this particular effort, but this is reflective of I think the kind of approach that’s being taken to ensure that we get that information out there so that folks know this opportunity is available to them -- that quality, affordable health insurance is available in a way that it never has been before.  Because it’s absolutely important that we get not just a large number of people enrolled in the exchanges but that that mix of people is diverse and that there’s a sizeable portion of young Americans as part of that group.  So that’s what the effort is about.

     Thanks very much.

END                 

1:59 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Barack Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individuals to key Administration posts:

  • Todd Batta – Assistant Secretary for Congressional Relations, Department of Agriculture
  • Maria Cancian – Assistant Secretary for Children and Families (Family Support), Department of Health and Human Services  
  • Julia Atkins Clark – General Counsel, Federal Labor Relations Authority
  • Victoria Reggie Kennedy – Governor, Board of Governors of the United States Postal Service
  • D. Nathan Sheets – Under Secretary for International Affairs, Department of the Treasury
  • Mark Sobel – United States Executive Director, International Monetary Fund
  • Francis X. Taylor – Under Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis, Department of Homeland Security
  • Juan Carlos Iturregui – Member, Board of Directors of the Inter-American Foundation
  • Roberta S. Jacobson – Member, Board of Directors of the Inter-American Foundation
  • Annette Taddeo-Goldstein – Member, Board of Directors of the Inter-American Foundation

President Obama said, “I am grateful that these talented and dedicated individuals have agreed to take on these important roles and devote their talents to serving the American people.  I look forward to working with them in the coming months and years.”

President Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individuals to key Administration posts:

Todd Batta, Nominee for Assistant Secretary for Congressional Relations, Department of Agriculture
Todd Batta is currently Senior Advisor to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), a position he has held since 2012.  In this role, he is responsible for providing strategic advice and guidance to the Secretary regarding USDA’s budget, legislative, and regulatory agenda.  From September 2011 to April 2012, Mr. Batta served as Special Assistant in the Congressional Relations office at USDA.  Prior to his work at USDA, Mr. Batta served as a Legislative Assistant to U.S. Senator Herb Kohl from 2009 to 2011, as a Professional Staff Member of the U.S. Senate’s Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee from 2005 to 2009, and as a member of U.S. Senator Tom Harkin’s staff from 2001 to 2005.  Mr. Batta received a B.A. from Winona State University in 2001.

Dr. Maria Cancian, Nominee for Assistant Secretary for Children and Families (Family Support), Department of Health and Human Services
Dr. Maria Cancian is a professor and university administrator at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW).  She has served as Associate Dean for Fiscal Initiatives at UW’s College of Letters and Science since 2012, and Associate Dean for Social Sciences since 2011.  She has been a professor at UW’s La Follette School of Public Affairs and School of Social Work since 1993.  Dr. Cancian was a W.T. Grant Distinguished Fellow in residence at the Wisconsin Department of Children and Families in 2010.  From 2004 to 2008, Dr. Cancian was the Director of UW’s Institute for Research on Poverty and from 2001 to 2002, she was a Visiting Scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation.  She was a Visiting Fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California in 1999.  Dr. Cancian received a B.A. from Swarthmore College and an M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Michigan.

Julia Akins Clark, Nominee for General Counsel, Federal Labor Relations Authority
Julia Akins Clark is currently the General Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA), a position she has served in since August 2009.  From 1995 to 2009, Ms. Clark was the General Counsel at the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, AFL-CIO (IFPTE).  She previously served as Counsel for Federal and Legislative Affairs at IFPTE from 1988 to 1995.  Prior to this, Ms. Clark was a Staff Counsel at the National Coalition for the Homeless from 1987 to 1988.  From 1985 to 1987, Ms. Clark was an associate at Blumenfeld and Cohen and, from 1980 to 1985, a Trial Attorney at the Department of Justice.  She served on the Obama-Biden Transition Agency Review Team for FLRA in 2008 and 2009.  Ms. Clark received a B.A. from Oklahoma Baptist University and a J.D. from American University. 

Victoria Reggie Kennedy, Nominee for Governor, Board of Governors of the United States Postal Service
Victoria Reggie Kennedy is an attorney and strategic consultant for VR Kennedy Strategies LLC.  She is also the co-founder and President of the Board of the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate in Boston.  She was appointed to the Board of Trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in 2010.  She serves on the Board of Overseers at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Board of the National Leadership Roundtable on Church Management, and is a member of the Bipartisan Policy Center’s Commission on Political Reform.  She is on the Advisory Board of Houlihan Lokey, and previously was a partner at the law firm of Keck, Mahin & Cate.  Ms. Kennedy received a B.A. from Newcomb College and a J.D. from Tulane University Law School.

D. Nathan Sheets, Nominee for Under Secretary for International Affairs, Department of the Treasury
D. Nathan Sheets is currently the Global Head of International Economics at Citigroup, a position he has held since September 2011.  Prior to joining Citigroup, Mr. Sheets worked at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System for 18 years in a variety of positions, including Director of the Board’s Division of International Finance and Economist to the Federal Open Market Committee.  From 2006 to 2007, while on leave from the Federal Reserve, he served as a Senior Advisor to the U.S. Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund.  Mr. Sheets received a B.A. from Brigham Young University and a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Mark Sobel, Nominee for United States Executive Director, International Monetary Fund
Mark Sobel is currently the Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Monetary and Financial Policy at the Department of the Treasury, a position he has held since 2000.  Prior to this, Mr. Sobel was a Senior Advisor to the United States Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) from 1996 to 2000.  Before that, he held a number of positions at the Department of the Treasury from 1978 to 1996, including Director of the Office of the Former Soviet Union Nations and Eastern Europe, Director of the Office of International Monetary Policy, and Assistant Treasury Financial Attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Bonn, Germany.  Mr. Sobel received a B.A. from Princeton University and an M.A. from the John Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

Francis X. Taylor, Nominee for Under Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis, Department of Homeland Security
Francis X. Taylor is President & CEO at FXTaylor Associates, a position he has held since November 2013.  Previously, from 2005 to 2013, he served as Chief Security Officer at the General Electric Company.  From 2002 to 2005, he served as Assistant Secretary of State for Diplomatic Security and Director of the Office of Foreign Missions.  He served as Coordinator for Counterterrorism with the rank of Ambassador at Large for the Department of State from 2001 to 2002 and he was Commander for the Air Force Office of Special Investigations from 1996 to 2001.  From 1995 to 1996, he was Director of Special Investigations in the Office of the Secretary of the Air Force Inspector General.  From 1970 to 2001, he served numerous command and staff positions in the Air Force, rising to the rank of Brigadier General in September 1996.  He received a B.A. and an M.A. from the University of Notre Dame.

Juan Carlos Iturregui, Nominee for Member, Board of Directors of the Inter-American Foundation
Juan Carlos Iturregui is Senior Advisor and Counsel to the law firm Dentons, LLP, a position he has held since 2007.  He is also Managing Director of Milan Americas, LLC, a consulting firm he founded in 2005.  Previosuly, he was a Director at Quinn Gillespie & Associates and a Senior Director at Hunton & Williams.  Mr. Iturregui is a Board Member of the American Red Cross for the National Capital Region and served on the President’s Export Council from 2007 to 2009.  From 2006 to 2008, he was President of the Hispanic Leaders Association.  He is a member of the Greater Washington Chamber of Commerce, the District of Columbia Bar, and the Hispanic National Bar Association.  Mr. Iturregui received a B.A. from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and a J.D. from The Catholic University of

Roberta S. Jacobson, Nominee for Member, Board of Directors of the Inter-American Foundation
Roberta S. Jacobson is Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, a position she has held since 2012.  Previously, she served in several other roles at the Department of State, including Acting Assistant Secretary for Western Hemisphere Affairs from 2011 to 2012 and Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Western Hemisphere Affairs from 2010 to 2011.  She also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Canada, Mexico and NAFTA from 2007 to 2011, and Director of the Office of Mexican Affairs from 2002 to 2007.  Previously, she served as Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Lima, Peru from 2000 to 2002, and as Director of the Office of Policy Planning and Coordination in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs from 1996 to 2000.  Ms. Jacobson received a B.A. from Brown University and an M.A. from the Tufts University Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

Annette Taddeo-Goldstein, Nominee for Member, Board of Directors of the Inter-American Foundation
Annette Taddeo-Goldstein is CEO of Language Speak, a company she founded in 2001.  In 2008, she was the Democratic candidate for Florida’s 18th Congressional District.  From 1995 to 2001, she was Co-Founder and Director of The Language Specialists.  Currently, she is the host of Taddeo2Day, a political show on CNN Latino.  In 2006, she chaired the Miami-Dade coalition of Chambers of Commerce and was the first Latina to chair the Women’s Enterprise National Council’s Leadership Forum.  She is Chair of the Miami-Dade Democratic Party and Vice-Chair of the Florida Democratic Party.  She is a member of the Executive Committee of the Democratic National Committee, where she also serves as Chair of the Hispanic Caucus for Southern States and Vice-Chair of the Small Business Council.  In 2005, she received the Minority Business Champion of the Year award from the U.S. Small Business Administration.  Ms. Taddeo-Goldstein received a B.A. from the University of North Alabama.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Signs South Carolina Emergency Declaration

Today, the President declared an emergency in the State of South Carolina and ordered federal aid to supplement state and local response efforts due to the emergency conditions resulting from a severe winter storm beginning on February 10, 2014, and continuing.

The President's action authorizes the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), to coordinate all disaster relief efforts which have the purpose of alleviating the hardship and suffering caused by the emergency on the local population, and to provide appropriate assistance for required emergency measures, authorized under Title V of the Stafford Act, to save lives and to protect property and public health and safety, and to lessen or avert the threat of a catastrophe in all counties of the State of South Carolina.

Specifically, FEMA is authorized to identify, mobilize, and provide at its discretion, equipment and resources necessary to alleviate the impacts of the emergency.  Emergency protective measures, limited to direct federal assistance, will be provided at 75 percent federal funding. 

W. Craig Fugate, Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Department of Homeland Security, named Joe M. Girot as the Federal Coordinating Officer for federal recovery operations in the affected area. 

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION MEDIA SHOULD CONTACT:  FEMA NEWS DESK AT (202) 646-3272 OR FEMA-NEWS-DESK@DHS.GOV

President Obama: "What I Signed Today"

Earlier today, the President sent the message below to the White House email list, describing the Executive Order he signed today and asking Americans to let him know they're ready for a year of action in 2014.

Didn't get the email? Join millions of other Americans and make sure you're in the loop.


Hello everyone,

Earlier today, I signed an Executive Order to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 for federal contract workers.

It's the right thing to do. But what's more, companies have found that when their employees earn more, they're more motivated, they work harder, and they stick around longer. You should expect the same of your federal government.

The bottom line is this: We are a nation that believes in rewarding honest work with honest wages. And America deserves a raise.

If you agree, let me know you're standing with me -- and take a look at what else we're going to do in 2014.

Related Topics: Jobs, Economy

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Background Briefing on the Launch of the Cybersecurity Framework

Via Conference Call

11:06 A.M. EST

MS. LUCAS MAGNUSON:  Hi, good morning, everyone.  We're just delighted today to launch the Cybersecurity Framework in an event at 1:00 p.m.  This call will be to preview that event and the framework itself.  Just as a reminder, the information in this call is embargoed until that event begins at 1:00 p.m.  All information is attributable to senior administration officials. 

With that, I will go ahead and turn it over for opening comments to senior administration official number one.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thank you.  Good morning, everyone.  Thank you for joining us on this call.  We're very excited to be here today.  This is a major milestone achievement for us.

Just to set the context for the discussion, last year the President issued Executive Order 13636 on improving critical infrastructure cybersecurity.  Some of you were probably on this press call a year ago when we launched the framework.  But if you recall, that EO directed the administration to take three broad steps in partnership with critical infrastructure stakeholders in industry and in government.  One was to improve information sharing with the private sector; two was to raise the level of cybersecurity across U.S. critical infrastructure by encouraging the adoption of cybersecurity standards and best practices; and three, to enhance privacy and civil liberties while undertaking these actions.  The cybersecurity standards and best practices were to also be supported by the development of a voluntary program to encourage the use of the framework.

So working with and in partnership across government and industry, we have made significant progress in each of these areas.  So today, exactly one year later, we are pleased to announce the release of the framework and the launch of the voluntary program.  And from our perspective, this is really a very major turning point in cybersecurity discussions.  We believe that from today on we'll have a new shared vocabulary about cybersecurity that will allow CEOs, boards of directors and policymakers -- not just here in the U.S., but around the world  -- to set baselines and chart the course for improvement and actually make those improvements.

Both NIST and DHS have played incredibly pivotal roles in the development of these products and they’ve worked very diligently to deliver these efforts with quality and substance, and I should say, and on time -- which is a major achievement as well -- and in a manner that is responsive to industry’s needs as well.

So with that, I'm going to turn it over to senior administration official number two to discuss the Cybersecurity Framework.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thank you, everybody, and I want to thank everybody who’s joining today’s call.  So my role is to discuss version 1.0 of the NIST framework for improving critical infrastructure cybersecurity.  A year ago today, the President issued the executive order calling on NIST to convene with the private sector to identify a set of industry standards and practices that could help organizations that are managing cybersecurity risks.  That executive order was an important step to raise consciousness among the broader business community and initiate a public-private partnership on a national scale to protect our critical infrastructure and supporting structures.

The 39-page Cybersecurity Framework document and its accompanying road map represents the beginning of what I hope will be a continuing, common-sense conversation about how to protect these critical assets.  One of the biggest cybersecurity issues facing critical infrastructure companies in all of these sectors -- transportation, financial, health care, communications, energy -- is simply this:  When are you doing enough?  When do you know you’ve done the best you can to protect your company, your suppliers, your customers from the adverse effects of cybersecurity threats? 

As technology and innovation drive increase complexity in our daily lives, coupled with a collection of threats that are increasingly varied and changing -- that includes criminal gangs in foreign countries to disgruntled insiders -- doing your best in cybersecurity can, frankly, be quite overwhelmingly for many organizations.  So NIST’s approach to our charge in the executive order was to adopt a partnership and collaboration approach.  So working with industry we’ve developed a structure that any company, large or small, and any one of the very critical infrastructure sectors can voluntarily use to make improvements in their current cybersecurity systems or to create a credible cybersecurity approach if they don’t already have one.

The key message is that cybersecurity is not something you just put in place and walk away.  There’s no prescription or magic bullet for cybersecurity.  There are only well conceived, proven ways of continuously managing the risk.
 
The other key message today is that we wanted this framework to be voluntary.  And that was important because it encourages the widest possible set of stakeholders to come to the table and work with us.  It also ensures that the muscle in this approach comes from the companies themselves.  Voluntary standards are a tradition in the United States because they work.  When industries get together and determine for themselves what standards describe a quality of a product, these standards are much more likely to be adopted quickly and implemented fully.

The heart of this process was to listen to industry to be sure we knew what industry needed from this framework.  So we held five workshops around the country with thousands of participants.  We provided draft versions of the framework and supporting material multiple times at our website.  We encouraged comments on the draft, and we carefully considered all of the feedback we received.

The result is a flexible tool that allows diverse industries and stakeholders to talk about and describe how they would take actions to improve cybersecurity.  It lays out the critical elements of any cybersecurity program and then links those elements to proven standards and protections for companies to consider using.  The framework describes the key functions of cybersecurity as identify, protect, detect, respond and recover. And then it further describes categories and sub-categories of actions a company can take to carry out those functions.

And finally, it offers a list of known publicly vetted standards and practices that address these categories.  By relying on those practices already proven and used throughout industry we can focus on the more pressing problems instead of driving apart an already fractured system of standards, regulations, policy and law.

We can also say definitively, based on the large number of companies both in critical infrastructure and in the broader economy that have suffered losses in revenue and business productivity in the last year, it is time to try something new.

So what we’ve done, what’s really new, is we’ve integrated many complement pieces that organizations need to address cybersecurity risk management in a way that makes it easier to implement a strong approach.  And we’ve done it in a way that it’s accessible to a broad audience of stakeholders -- because it’s really critical that all levels of an organization, all the way from the top in the C suite down to the construction supervisor, they need to understand how and why they protect their company from cyber threats.

The new framework does three important things.  First, it jumpstarts a vital conversation between critical infrastructure sectors with the various regulatory authorities related to them about what cybersecurity issues they have in common and how these issues can be addressed cost-effectively and voluntarily without reinventing the wheel.

Secondly, it provides a consensus description of what’s needed for a comprehensive cybersecurity program, and in the process provides a powerful tool for companies to seek competitive advantage by improving cybersecurity and lowering risk.
 
And finally, it helps companies prove to themselves and to their stakeholders that good cybersecurity can be the same thing as good business.  By mapping their individual cybersecurity programs against the full list of functions, categories and specific standards a company can identify gaps and tailor improvement plans to their specific needs.  And we hope they will create metrics that document those improvements.

Some smaller companies may discover in the process that their entire cybersecurity effort consists only of passwords and anti-virus software with no real-time detection capability, even though automated tools are widely available and affordable.  Another example could be a larger company may find that the framework is a useful tool for holding their cybersecurity contractors accountable, or for purchasing these services in a more systematic way in the marketplace.
 
The bottom line is that we all need an agreed upon way to talk clearly to one another about cybersecurity issues and solutions and to hold each other accountable.  And this is really the start of that conversation.  I’m looking forward -- all of us at NIST are looking forward to continuing to work collaboratively with industry and government to lower cybersecurity risks so we can better protect our economy and our national security.

Let me turn it over to senior official number three.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thank you.  And let me add my thanks to all of you on this call for your interest in this.  As you know, our nation’s critical infrastructure, both physical and cyber, is the backbone of America’s national security and economic prosperity.  But that infrastructure faces a variety of risks to its functionality, including acts of terror, natural disasters and cyber attacks.  And because the majority of our national critical infrastructure is owned and operated by private companies, both the government and the private sector have a shared responsibility to reduce the risks to that critical infrastructure. 

To address these challenges, the President issued not only the executive order on improving cybersecurity critical infrastructure a year ago today, but also Presidential Policy Directive 21 on Critical Infrastructure, Security and Resilience. Today, the Department of Homeland Security and its colleagues at the Departments of Commerce and Energy will talk about the very real and tangible steps that we have taken to implement the executive order and the PPD. 

The executive order directed the Department of Homeland Security to establish a voluntary program for critical infrastructure cybersecurity, to serve as a federal coordination point for cybersecurity resources, and support increased cyber resilience by promoting the use of the framework that was developed under the leadership of NIST.

DHS is announcing this afternoon the creation of that program, which we call Critical Infrastructure Cyber Community -- or C-Cubed -- Voluntary Program.  The C-Cubed Voluntary Program stands for Critical Infrastructure Cyber Community, but it also emphasizes another three c’s:  convergence, converging resources to support cybersecurity risk management and resilience through the use of the framework; connecting critical infrastructure stakeholders to the national resilience effort through cybersecurity resilience advocacy, engagement and awareness; and, finally, coordinating critical infrastructure cross-sector effort to maximize national cybersecurity resilience.
 
The C-Cubed Voluntary Program represents a long-term goal for cybersecurity, encouraging organizations of all sizes to establish or improve their cyber risk management processes, and to take advantage of available resources made available by the United States government. 

For example, the program supports the use of the Cybersecurity Framework through the Cyber Resilience Review, CRR. The CRR is an assessment to evaluate an organization’s information technology resilience.  The CRR may be conducted as a self-assessment or as an in-person, facilitated assessment.  The goal of the CRR is to develop an understanding and measurement of key capabilities to provide meaningful indicators of an organization’s operational resilience and their ability to manage cyber risk to their critical services during normal operations and at times of operational stress and crisis. 

To date, DHS has conducted more than 330 CRRs at the request of critical infrastructure entities nationwide.  The inherent principles and recommended practices within the CRR align closely with the central tenants of the Cybersecurity Framework.  Organizations can use the CRR to conduct an analysis of their current practices and how they compare to the principles of the Cybersecurity Framework.

DHS also currently offers a range of other cybersecurity resources to public and private sector organizations, including information on cyber threats and vulnerability; cybersecurity incident resources such as through the National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center, or the NCCIC; or the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team, the US-CERT; or the Industrial Control Systems Computer Emergency Response Team, the ICS-CERT. 

We also have software assurance programs and other technical resources, such as cybersecurity strategy development, cybersecurity assessment tools, cyber exercise planning, cybersecurity risk management training, cybersecurity resilience review, a national vulnerability database, and road maps to enhance cybersecurity in certain specific sectors.

Speaking of our sectors, DHS will work with sector-specific agencies and other federal agencies to identify the suggested offerings and provide assistance best suited to address a particular sector’s industry capability gaps.  For example, the NIST Cybersecurity Center of Excellence plans to work with owners and operators to develop sector-specific use cases that build out security platforms based on the framework and existing standards and best practices.  And the Energy Department is offering guidance and assistance through their program that supports the energy sector cybersecurity capability maturity models, or C2M2. 

The C-Cubed Voluntary Program is an innovative public-private partnership led by DHS to help align critical infrastructure owners and operators with existing resources that will assist their efforts to use the Cybersecurity Framework to manage their cyber risks.

We’ve already seen strong interest from the private sector in partnering with us on this effort, and it aligns closely with the partnership effort reflected in the National Infrastructure Partnership plan 2013 -- 2013 Partnering for Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilience.

It boils down to this.  In cybersecurity, the more systems we secure, the more secure we all are.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thank you.  And I just wanted to hit on two other topics as we move forward.  One is what’s happening with the regulatory environment and then what’s happening with the incentives that we’ve been working on developing.

With respect to the regulatory environment, I just want to be clear that for the administration, the goal is not to expand regulation.  Rather our goal is to streamline existing regulations wherever possible and to bring those regulations into alignment with the framework.  So, to that end, executive branch agencies are reviewing their existing regulatory or voluntary programs in this area.  And then in May of this year, consistent with the executive order, these agencies will also propose prioritized risk-based efficient and coordinated actions to mitigate cyber risk. 

We’re encouraging those agencies to focus on voluntary efforts and programs to support adoption of the framework.  For those sectors where regulations already do exist, agencies could engage in existing rulemaking processes to support efforts to harmonize and align current regulations with the framework.  And we have invited our independent regulatory agencies to follow the same process.

And then we are continuing to work and develop incentives to encourage the use of the framework in coordination with both NIST and DHS.  We do believe that developing incentives around a framework is a key endeavor and we intend to keep moving forward with this process, and it’s going to be done in partnership and engagement with industry.

Back in 2013, we released a potential set of incentives that we intended -- that we said at the time that we’d review further, and that's what we’ve been working on.  The relevant agencies have further defined the scope and path forward for some of those incentives, including technical assistance and process preference, cyber insurance, grants, cost recovery, public recognition, regulatory streamlining and government procurement.

As these plans develop, they’ll be shared publicly over the next few months and will include details on how to get engaged in the process.

However, I do want to say that we believe that the best drivers for adoption or use of the framework will ultimately be market based.  Don't get me wrong, I think the government-based incentives are really important for us to pursue.  But at the end of the day, it’s the market that's got to drive the business case for the Cybersecurity Framework.  The federal government is going to do its best to make the costs of using the framework lower, and the benefits of the framework higher, but it’s the market that's going to ultimately make this work.

So, with that, I will close.

Q    My question is, first of all, can you point to a couple specific things that would encourage companies to adopt these voluntary guidelines or best practices aside from that specific regulatory agency synchronizing their regulations with the framework?  And then, secondly, some experts have told me that they felt that this set of standards embraces the status quo to a large extent.  Is there flexibility for these things to be updated as new threats or industry best practices change?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I’m happy to answer that question.  I think the question on why an organization looks to adopt and use the framework stems from, in many respects, enlightened self-interest.  There’s a couple of key things.  One is the framework explicitly makes the tie to risk management.  And so protecting the information in these organizations, protecting how that information is used to provide critical infrastructure services, is something all of these companies want to do.  It’s very much in their interest to know how to adopt what’s considered best practice and to put it in a framework where it can be effectively used. 

The other benefit actually comes from the fact that since this is a shared infrastructure, it gives them great advantages of scale where there are dependencies.  The contractors that they depend on -- there’s a common way of defining how they support the overall cybersecurity effort.  It means that they can turn to services and vendors to provide security services and security products.  And those are very powerful reasons why companies are looking at this and I think you’ll be seeing that in the days ahead.

With regard to the continuous improvement, I would say it’s twofold.  It’s actually in the process itself.  The framework defines ultimately the risk management and continuous improvement cycle within companies.  In fact, the tiers describe increasing levels of maturity in that approach, where you become more self-aware and more self-improving all the time as you adjust your profile to changes in technology.  But also the framework is designed to be continuous. 

We do not consider this to be done.  One of the road map documents that’s being released today describes the steps we are going to continue to take to support the framework.  We think the bringing together of all of these industries to work and update and address gaps and improvements is essential to this overall approach.  This is a living framework.

Q    Thank you very much for taking my question.  Regarding the metrics, is there going to be any effort to place any consistency in the metrics by which private sector adopters measure their conformance to the framework?  If there is consistency, then how can you assure the adopters that they won’t be held liable for adoption of the framework?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  It’s a great question.  And as you know, it’s been a very active area of discussion throughout the entire framework process.  The way the framework is laid out has each individual organization developing a profile and using that profile to identify next steps.  So the metrics are really internal and unique to the organization that’s adopting.

As this gets used and you start looking at dependency, there clearly will have to be some shared understanding of how to approach the issue of metrics.  And that’s already been identified by the companies working with us as something that they would like to continue to work on in the next version of this framework as well.

So I would consider that the metric discussion is one that’s going to mature over time.  Remember, this is explicitly a voluntary program, and so it’s really about companies setting their own level of care, not having some one-size-fits-all approach from the outside.

Q    Hey, everybody.  Thanks so much for doing this.  I just want to look at the congressional picture here.  It’s always been the case that the administration has said it has to go back to Congress to fill in quite a good number of holes, whether it’s on information sharing, or on the issue of incentives, or so forth. So what should we expect from the administration going forward when it comes to these very unresolved issues that remain with the framework?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, I think a couple of things, one of which is I think we believe that the framework stands on its own and can be an incredibly powerful tool for enabling the kind of conversations that need to happen between CEOs and boards, and between the government and industry.  So we think that regardless of what happens between the administration and the Hill and up on the Hill, the Cybersecurity Framework is an incredibly powerful tool that we can leverage to make real improvements across our critical infrastructure regardless of what happens from there.

Of course, we do believe that we continue to need to engage with the Hill, and, in fact, we have.  We’ve briefed congressional staff on the framework and have gotten a lot of really good support from both sides of the aisle.  And you’ll see some of that in some of the quotes that come out later today from some of our congressional engagements as well.  But I do think that the administration will continue to engage Congress on improving our ability to do information sharing, on updating the statutes that govern how we actually do cybersecurity within the federal government, DHS’s authority in this space.  All of our legislative agenda will continue.  But none of that I think detracts from the fact that the framework is going to be a really significant advance in critical infrastructure cybersecurity. 

Q Sure, can I just quick follow?  I just wanted to clarify something.  This is a very different approach than what the administration had thought in legislation as far back as 2011 and 2012, when there was what seemed to be a greater belief that regulation was the way to do this, or a more regulatory-minded approach was the way to bring about these changes in cybersecurity.  And that led to a huge debate between businesses who just didn’t like that, but the administration seemed to feel very strongly about it.  So when you compare where you guys were in 2011, 2012 versus now, what has you more confident that this approach is going to produce the right changes in cybersecurity?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, I think what gives me a lot of the confidence is the degree of engagement with industry that has happened over the development of the Cybersecurity Framework.  We have had just an unbelievable level of participation that NIST can speak to in greater detail, and an enormous participation from across a huge range of companies both in terms of the sectors that have been involved as well as the size of the companies that have been involved.

And because of the result of such a participatory effort, that really points at what is the acknowledged set of best practices and standards in this space I think it really does become kind of the gold standard for how to approach and talk about cybersecurity -- not just for our critical infrastructure, but for any organization that wanted to use the framework as a way to tackle its cybersecurity problems.  And so that’s what gives me great confidence that this document will be both usable and relevant to the organizations actually trying to do cybersecurity.
 
Q    I have two quick questions.  Do you have a cost estimate of what the current cybersecurity threat is here in the United States?  And also, how can we get a copy of the framework?

MS. LUCAS MAGNUSON:  I’ll answer the second question first just quickly.  The framework will be online a little bit before the 1:00 p.m. event, and we’ll have links to that in a press release that we plan to send around that time.  So everyone will get access at the same time. 

And on question number two --

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I think that getting a cost estimate on exactly what the cyber threat actually costs the United States on an annual basis is incredibly difficult, especially because a lot of people never report that they’ve been hacked.  Companies don’t report that; individuals don’t report that.  And then, even a lot of times assessing what the value of the damage that’s been done or the information that has been stolen is incredibly difficult to do. 

For example, it’s often very difficult to put a price tag on intellectual property that you’ve never even brought to market yet that’s been siphoned off and taken to a competitor, for example.

So I think it’s very difficult to provide cost estimates with any sort of fidelity in there.  But we know from the scope of activity that is reported, from the scope of activity that we can see, that the numbers are very large and that this is a very real and significant problem to a lot of businesses and individuals, as well as the government across the country.

Q    Is there a range of numbers then?  And also, does the framework include any sort of suggestion or incentive for companies to report to the government when they have a loss?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I think that even getting into ranges is just a very -- it’s such a squishy territory and art that I just don't even think that that's a viable conversation to have.

In terms of encouraging the reporting, I don't think that's really -- the framework is not really aimed at that.  What the framework does point to is it says that you need to think about not just the protection part of cybersecurity but also the response and recovery part, meaning that you will face incidents as a company, no matter how good your protection and detection capabilities are, so you need to be prepared to be able to respond when you detect an incident, and you need to be able to recover from that.  Now, in the process of figuring out that you need to be able to respond and recover, that encourages more companies to be more proactive, that would be a side benefit, but it’s not really the driver behind the framework.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  We think that voluntary programs also may help encourage companies to come forward simply by giving them information about who to call and how to come forward.  And so putting up resources about the NCCIC and the US-CERT and ICS-CERT, for example, may help facilitate some of that interaction and sharing of information.

Q    Just getting back to incentives, so what can the administration or the executive branch do on its own without going to Congress for legislative proposals?  And then, what specifically would you want to see from Congress in the area of legislation related to incentives?  I realize you said that you expect the market to be the driver here for the most part, but still, I think people are looking to see what can the federal government do both from the executive branch standpoint and the congressional point of view.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, I think that in multiple areas, there’s actually a fair amount the executive branch can do on its own.  For example, we’ve been engaged in very serious discussions with the various insurance companies to talk about what’s needed to actually get a cyber insurance market really thriving.  Public recognition efforts, even talking in the field of cost recovery, that's often done at the state level, and that involves a lot of discussion with regulators both at the federal and state level, not even necessarily going back to Congress.  So there’s actually a broad array of what we want to pursue in that space.

In terms of what we actually want from Congress, I think that's actually something that we’re still working on.  I think that's actually something that, particularly as we work on the incentives and as companies begin to use the framework, that we actually want to get a better sense of what incentives would really matter and then what of those incentives are really, in fact, actually held back by some sort of statutory limitation, that congressional action would actually be beneficial in changing or enabling something to happen. 

So it’s no surprise that legislation doesn’t move very fast through Congress right now, so I don’t think that we are hinging our strategy in this space on congressional action, but we’ll get back there when we think it’s necessary.
 
   Q    Just one quick follow-up on what you guys can do on your own -- and maybe this will come out in the coming months -- but just, again, when it comes to federal procurement policy, sort of embedding some of these best practices and standards in what is being supplied to you, somehow requiring that in your acquisition processes.  I don’t know if you can speak to that.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, I think that if you take a look at what was in that report, the joint report produced between the Defense Department and GSA, it really outlines how we can start to bring cybersecurity requirements more into our acquisition process across the board.  And I think you will see us continue to do that.  Just as the private sector is, the federal government is under enormous pressure from cybersecurity threats in all sorts of directions, and so I think we’re going to be exploring how to do that and how to put that report into practice.

But, of course, there are other things that we can do in the technical assistance side and in other areas that you’ll see even starting today with the voluntary program launch.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  As was noted earlier, there’s an enlightened self-interest here that we’re counting on with regard to businesses’ interest in improving their cybersecurity.  And part of making that business case is providing information to inform their risk assessment.  And so there’s been a great deal of work done to reach out to the various critical infrastructure sectors to make sure they understand the nature of the threat, vulnerabilities and consequences.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  A lot of these steps are going to be outlined in the road map itself, how we’re going to look at the government side of this in the context of the framework.

Q    I wanted to ask how you plan to track the success of the program or how widely adopted these standards are, or how widely adopted the framework is going be?  And also, one of the experts, or a couple of the experts I spoke with mentioned a concern that the framework was over-focused on privacy and data security, not as focused on sort of the industrial interest, particularly safety and kind of resilience of the physical infrastructure.  Can you address that as well, please?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  On the tracking of success
of adoption, we may not ever know how widely the framework has been adopted, because obviously there’s no requirement for companies to tell the government that they’re using the framework to improve their cybersecurity.

But we are hoping through the C-Cubed Voluntary Program to be able to have some interaction with companies that are looking for assistance in adopting the program.  We also are designing a way for companies to provide us with feedback on how helpful the C-Cubed Voluntary Program is for them so that we can continue to improve that program.  And we’ll be working closely with NIST to make sure that they’re getting the feedback on the framework itself.  So that will hopefully give us a sense of -- certainly of how useful it is, if not how widespread the adoption is.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Yes, I think that’s right. I think a lot of the adoption that you’re going to see is going to be evident as these companies push this into the market, into their practices.  I think you’re going to hear a lot of companies talking about this.  You’re going to see it in business-to-business relationships in a whole host of other ways.  And so there will be a lot of indicators about activity -- and also, in the participation of these companies as they come back and work to improve the framework process, because, remember, a key part of that is looking at what are the things we’re learning as we’re using this.  And so we’re expecting these active participants to be working with us as the framework improves.
 
With regard to the balance, this is something that the framework process has dealt with all along.  We’ve been very careful to reflect comments like that in the public and to react to those.  We think we’ve really taken that seriously, and we hope that the overall consensus is that this is a very balanced document.  Remember, a lot of these issues -- whether it’s data privacy and security, whether it’s industrial controls -- are designed to be integrated into the framework approach.  There are things that come out as an organization looks at their own structure through the profile and defines this.

And so you have to be a little bit careful that you’re not looking at the top-line framework and the language that is there as the overall barometer of how committed we are to this or to that.  It really does come out as you apply the framework.  And we think the balance is pretty good.
 
Q    This is on federal procurement.  You said that vendors who adopt the framework might stand a better chance of winning contracts.  The earlier version seemed to encourage incident reporting as part of an effective response.  That’s new for a lot of contractors who are outside of the defense industry.  So I’m wondering how the government might help them implement that part of the framework.
 
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  So I think that really that’s kind of -- part of the reason that we’re creating a voluntary program is because one of the themes that has clearly emerged is oftentimes a confusion about if you do have a cybersecurity incident, who do you reach out to?  Who can you call?  And in fact, we’re trying to make sure that there is no wrong door for coming into the federal government, and that wherever you come in we can get you to the right place, to the right people that should be able to help a company deal with a particular incident, whether it turns out to be one that they want to deal primarily as a mitigation exercise and work with DHS, whether it’s a criminal activity and it’s in the lane of FBI or Secret Service.  But really what we want to do is encourage companies to be able to get to the right information so they can figure out who they can call on that.  

Q    I understand that the Appendix B on privacy has been removed, it won’t be in this first version.  Can you talk a little bit about how the privacy issue is addressed throughout the document?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:   Sure.  In response to a comment we received through the process, the section on privacy has not been removed as much as integrated into the framework.  And so stakeholders have always and consistently identified privacy needs as essential to this framework.  There was not support, or there was certainly not sufficient support for a standalone Appendix B.  We received comments that it needed to be integrated and so, in response, that has been integrated into the main body of the framework and into its core.

Q    I’m wondering what’s next in terms of how does a company actually join the program and when?  And then, to follow up on the measuring success piece, how many companies are you expecting to or hoping will join the program?  And you talk about raising the level of security.  How do you measure that, and will this program make critical infrastructure more secure?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:   On your question of how to join the program, really it’s as simple as visiting the website.  And we’re going to have a very easy entry point at dhs.gov, and then more detail at a link through that to us-cert.gov. 

And there’s no magic –- you don’t have to sign up, you don’t ever have to let us know even that you’ve been to the website.  But if you would like to avail yourself of some of those resources, again, we’re going to make it very easy for you to know how to do that and how to interact with the folks in the government who might be able to provide varying degrees of assistance in this option of the framework.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:   Let me just also point that there’s –- just for clarification, there’s the voluntary program, which is I assume what you’re referring to in the program.  But the framework itself can be used by organizations, independent of whether or not they’re participating in that program.  Those are decisions being made.  Internal to these organizations, based on feedback, we’re expecting rather widespread use of this right away.  We know that organizations are looking at this seriously.

So I didn’t want you to be confused about using the framework within an organization and participating in the C-Cubed Voluntary Program.

Q    Sorry, the part about the measuring success piece?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:   So, again, I think the success of -- well, again on the program side, the program is designed to support use.  So I think the real test of that is going to be are we doing things that -- are we providing tools and resources and things that support organizations of all sizes, of all different backgrounds, to put this framework into use.

On the framework itself, we’re going to measure success by is it being put into practice; is it driving these improved cybersecurity behaviors that lead to better outcomes.  And that's something we’re going to see and continue to work on extensively as the framework process continues.

Q    Thanks very much.  I wanted to tag back to something that bachelor number one -- I mean, administration official number one said at the very end there about the regulatory environment.  Can you talk a little bit about what agencies are doing as they're reviewing the current regulations and how they're going to update them?  Can you give me a sense of the process behind that?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, of course, it varies depending on which executive agency you’re talking about.  But I think really -- they're engaging in their normal processes they have to engage with their stakeholders and with how they do their oversight process in their various sectors.  And they're taking a look at whether or not they have cybersecurity regulations or requirements, guidance -- there’s all sorts of names for it -- how that currently stacks up, how that stacks up against the framework, and then how to move forward from there. 

So I think it really -- it varies a lot depending on the particular sector and agency that's involved.  That work is going on right now across the different regulatory agencies.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Also they’ve worked with us throughout the entire process.

Q    So DNI James Clapper was on the Hill yesterday to discuss major threats facing the nation, and one of them that he pointed out was vulnerabilities to the supervisory control and data acquisition programs.  These are programs that run a lot of areas of critical infrastructure.  And I’m wondering if you can address how the framework handles some of those vulnerabilities.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I’d be happy to.  So the framework includes standards and approaches for SCADA and other industrial control systems.  This has been a key part of the process from the very beginning.  And so we agree.  This is obviously something that many critical infrastructure sectors deal with.  And it was important that it integrate both what you would consider traditional IT-type infrastructure in the organizations, but also dedicated industrial control-type systems. 

So, again, it’s most clear when you get right into the profiles and look at the underlying categories, sub-categories and references, but it’s quite integrated in the approach.  And again these organizations have worked with us all the way through.  In fact, standards organizations were immediately responsive in aligning what they’ve been doing as part of the framework process. 

So I’ll end there.

MS. LUCAS MAGNUSON:  All right.  Well, thanks, everyone, for joining.  Just a couple of reminders here before we close.  The event will begin here -- the launch event -- it will be live-streamed on whitehouse.gov starting at 1:00 p.m.  This call and the information is embargoed until that time.  Again, all of the information is attributable to senior administration officials. 

Right before the event begins at 1:00 p.m., we’ll have a press release from here.  And some of you have also asked about what others are saying about the framework, and we’ll be distributing some of the comments that we’ve received from the private sector and others for your information. 

And with that, I’ll just thank you all for joining and we appreciate your time this morning.

END
11:57 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on Signing of Executive Order

East Room

2:18 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, welcome to the White House, everybody. I know you had to come here before you go buy some shovels and some salt.  (Laughter.)  It sounds like we may get a little snow. But I very much appreciate everybody being here.  I want to thank, first and foremost, the workers who are with me here this afternoon.  (Applause.)  And I want to thank two champions for all hardworking Americans:  We've got Secretary of Labor Tom Perez -- (applause) -- he’s in the house.  Where is Tom?  Right here.  Tom is right here.  (Applause.)  I didn’t know where he was.  And we've got an outstanding Congressman -- who’s used to snow because he’s from Minnesota -- Congressman Keith Ellison.  (Applause.)
 
Now, it’s been just over two weeks since I delivered my State of the Union address, and I said this year would be a year of action, and I meant it.  Over the past 14 days I’ve ordered an across-the-board reform of our job training programs to train folks with the skills that employers need, and then match them up with good jobs that are ready to be filled right now. 

I’ve directed the Treasury to create something we're calling “MyRA” -- sort of like an IRA, but it's MyRA.  And that's a new way for Americans to start saving for retirement.  And you can start with as little as $25, $50 and start building up a little bit of a nest egg and get tax benefits for doing it so. 

We’ve rallied the leaders of some of America’s biggest high-tech companies to help us make sure that all of our kids have access to high-speed Internet and up-to-date technology in their classroom so that they’re learning the skills that they need for the new economy.

We’ve brought together business leaders who are committed to hiring more unemployed Americans, particularly long-term unemployed who oftentimes are discriminated against.  They’re in a Catch-22 -- they haven't had a job for a while and then the employer is not willing to look at their resume because they haven't had a job for a while. 

So the point is I’m eager to work with Congress whenever I can find opportunities to expand opportunity for more families.  But wherever I can act on my own, without Congress, by using my pen to take executive actions, or picking up the phone and rallying folks around a common cause, that’s what I’m going to do.  (Applause.)  

And so that brings me to the issue we're going to talk about today.  After the worst economic crisis in generations, our economy has been growing for the past four years.  (Applause.)   And our businesses have created 8.5 million new jobs.  Unemployment rate has come down.  But while those at the top are doing better than ever, -- corporate profits have been high, the stock market has been high -- average wages have barely budged.  So you’ve got too many Americans who are working harder than ever before just to get by, but they can't seem to get ahead, can't seem to make all the ends meet. 

And that’s been true since long before the recession hit.  We’ve got to reverse those trends.  We’ve got to build an economy that works for everybody, not just the fortunate few.  And we’ve got to restore opportunity for everybody, so that no matter who you are, no matter how you started out, no matter what you look like, no matter what your last name is, you can get ahead in America if you're willing to work hard and take responsibility for your life.  (Applause.)  Right? 

So the opportunity agenda I’ve laid out is going to help us do just that.  Part one of this agenda is more new jobs that pay a good wage -- jobs in manufacturing, and exports, and energy, and innovation.  Part two:  We've got to train the folks with the skills to fill those jobs.  Part three:  We've got to make sure every child gets a world-class education.  And part four:  We've got to make sure that the economy rewards hard work for every American.

Making hard work pay off with economic security and decent wages and benefits is what we’re about here today.  It means making sure women earn equal pay for equal work.  (Applause.)   It means making sure workers have the chance to save for a dignified retirement.  (Applause.)  It means access to affordable health insurance that gives you the freedom to change jobs or be your own boss, and the peace of mind that it will be there for you when you get sick and you need it most.  (Applause.) 

So if you know anybody who doesn’t have health insurance right now -- (laughter) -- send them to healthcare.gov.  The website is working.  (Laughter.)  Sign them up.  You can get health care for less than your cellphone bill for a lot of folks.

But it also means that in the wealthiest nation on Earth, nobody who works full-time should have to live in poverty.  (Applause.)  Nobody.  Not here in America.  (Applause.)

Now, it was one year ago today -- one year ago today -- that I first asked Congress to raise the federal minimum wage -- a federal minimum wage that in real terms is worth about 20 percent less than it was when Ronald Reagan took office -- 20 percent less, a fifth less. 

So this afternoon, I’ve invited some of the folks who would see a raise if we raised that federal minimum wage.  They happened to join me here at the White House.  And like most workers in their situation, they’re not teenagers -- they look like teenagers, some of them are very young looking.  (Laughter.) But they’re not teenagers taking on their first job.  They’re adults -- average age is 35 years old.  A majority of lower-wage jobs are held by women.  Many of them have children that they’re supporting.  These are Americans who work full-time, often to support a family, and if the minimum wage had kept pace with our economic productivity, they’d already be getting paid well over $10 an hour. 

Instead, the minimum wage is still just $7.25.  And when Congress refuses to raise it, it loses value -- because there’s a little bit inflation, everything else starts costing a little bit more -- even though inflation has been pretty low, it’s still costing a little bit more each year.  That means each dollar isn’t going as far and they’ve got a little bit less.  So over the past year, the failure of Congress to act was the equivalent of a $200 pay cut for these folks -- for a typical minimum wage worker.  That’s a month worth of groceries, maybe two months’ worth of electricity.  It makes a big difference for a lot of families.

Now, the good news is that in the year since I first asked Congress to raise the minimum wage, six states went ahead and passed laws to raise theirs.  (Applause.)  We appreciate that. You got more states and cities and counties that are taking steps to raise their minimum wage as we speak.  And a lot of companies are doing it, too -- not out of charity, but because they’ve discovered it’s good business. 

Two weeks ago, I visited a Costco store in Maryland.  Now, Costco is a very profitable company.  Its stock has done great.  It’s expanding all over the place.  But their philosophy is higher wages are a smart way to boost productivity and reduce turnover.  If employees are happy and feel like the company is invested in them, then they’re going to do more for the company. They’re going to go above and beyond. 

And when I was over at the Costco store I was meeting folks who had started off at the cash register and now were in supervisory positions, and had been there for 20 years, and you could see the kind of pride that they had in the company because the company cared about them.  I even received a letter the next day from a woman who saw my visit on TV -- she decided to apply for a job at Costco.  (Laughter.)  She said, let me apply for a job at Costco.  They look like they can do a good job. 

So across the country, owners of small and large businesses are recognizing that fair wages and higher profits go hand in hand; it’s good for the bottom line.

And as America’s chief executive, I agree.  So while Congress decides what it’s going to do -- and I hope this year, and I'm going to work this year and urge this year that they actually pass a law -- today, I’m going to do what I can to help raise working Americans’ wages.  (Applause.) 

So today, I’m issuing an executive order requiring federal contractors to pay their employees a fair wage of at least $10.10 an hour -- (applause) -- $10.10 an hour.  (Applause.)

This will make a difference for folks.  Right now, there’s a dishwasher at Randolph Air Force Base in Texas making $7.76 an hour -- $7.76 an hour.  There’s a fast-food worker at Andrews, right down the street, making $8.91 an hour.  There’s a laundry worker at Camp Dodge in Iowa making $9.03 an hour.  Once I sign this order, starting next year, as their contracts come up, each of them and many of their fellow coworkers are going to get a raise.  And by the way, that includes folks who get paid in tips -- they’ll get a raise, too.  (Applause.)  A tip wage has gone up even slower than the regular minimum wage.

So just as it’s good for companies across the country, this will be good for America’s bottom line -- for contractors and for taxpayers.  The opponents of the minimum wage have been using the same arguments for years, and time and again they’ve been proven wrong.  Raising the minimum wage is good for business, and it's good for workers, and it's good for the economy.  Put more money in these folks’ pockets, that means they got some money to go shopping, which in turn means the business has more customers -- (applause) -- which means they may hire more workers and make more of a profit.  (Applause.) 

And let’s not forget -- not only is it good for the economy, it’s the right thing to do.  (Applause.)  There’s a simple moral principle at stake -- if you take responsibility and you work as hard as these folks work, if you work full-time, you shouldn’t be living in poverty.  Not in America.  We believe that.  (Applause.)  

And this executive order will cover Americans with disabilities -- (applause) -- because this principle doesn’t just apply to some of us; it applies to all of us.  (Applause.) 

So I’m going to keep doing whatever I can to raise working Americans’ wages.  And I would ask any business leader out there, any governor, any mayor, any local leader listening, do what you can to raise your employees’ wages; to work to raise the wages of citizens in your jurisdiction.  They’ll support these efforts.  A majority of Americans -- not just Democrats, not just independents, but Republicans, too -- support raising the minimum wage.  (Applause.)  It's the right thing to do.  So that’s something Congress should keep in mind this year. 

There’s a bill right now in front of both the House and the Senate that would boost America’s minimum wage to $10.10 an hour -- just like I'm doing with this executive action.  It’s easy to remember:  10-10 -- 10-10.  Let’s get that done.  Raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 wouldn’t just raise wages for minimum-wage workers, its effect would lift wages for about 28 million Americans.  It would lift millions of Americans out of poverty immediately.  (Applause.)  It would help millions more work their way out of poverty -- without requiring a single dollar in new taxes or spending.  (Applause.)  It's the right thing to do.

Just last month, 600 economists, including seven Nobel Prize winners, wrote the leaders of houses of Congress to remind them that the bill before Congress would have little or no negative effect on hiring, on jobs.  So it's not going to depress the economy.  It will boost the economy.  (Baby says, “Yes!”)  Yes!  (Laughter and applause.)  It will give more businesses more customers with more money to spend.  It will grow the economy for everybody.  So -- yeah!  (Laughter.)  He’s excited about it.  (Laughter.) 

So members of Congress have a pretty clear choice to make right now:  Raise our workers’ wages, grow our economy -- or let wages stagnate further, and give workers what amounts to another pay cut this year.  Restore unemployment insurance for Americans still looking for that job -- (applause) -- or expose them further to hardship.  (Applause.)  Members of Congress, you can help people make progress in their own lives, or you can hinder that progress.

And every American deserves to know where your elected representative stands on this issue.  So ask your senator; ask your representative in the House:  Do you support raising the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour?  If they say, yes, tell them “good job.”  (Laughter.)  They don’t hear that that often so -- (laughter) -- give them a pat on the back, give them a hug, let them know “way to go.”  That's the right thing to do.  If they say, no -- be polite, I mean, don't just yell at them, but say, “Well, why not?”  Ask them to reconsider siding with an overwhelming majority of Americans.  Encourage them to say yes.  Give America a raise.  

So I’m about to sign this executive order.  When you hear me talking about my pen and my phone to make a difference for middle-class Americans and those working to get into the middle class, this is exactly what I mean.  I’m doing to do what I can. Congress should do what it needs to do.  I will not give up on this fight, no matter how long it takes.  America deserves a raise.  (Applause.)  Working families deserve to know some more economic security in their own lives.  (Applause.) 

We've got to create new jobs, strengthen the middle class, build new ladders of opportunity for folks working their way into the middle class -- just like these folks are doing right here.  There are millions of Americans who could just use a little bit of boost -- millions of Americans outside Washington who are tired of the old, stale political arguments, or tired of folks just looking out for people who can afford big lobbyists and big campaign contributions.  There are folks out there who want to see us restore an economy that works for everybody, and get back to our founding vision of opportunity for all.

So I know you guys will work with me.  But go out there and organize some more.  Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)  Let’s give Americans a raise right now.  I’m going to sign this.  (Applause.)

END  
2:30 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Executive Order -- Minimum Wage for Contractors

 EXECUTIVE ORDER

- - - - - - -

ESTABLISHING A MINIMUM WAGE FOR CONTRACTORS

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act, 40 U.S.C. 101 et seq., and in order to promote economy and efficiency in procurement by contracting with sources who adequately compensate their workers, it is hereby ordered as follows:

Section 1. Policy. This order seeks to increase efficiency and cost savings in the work performed by parties who contract with the Federal Government by increasing to $10.10 the hourly minimum wage paid by those contractors. Raising the pay of low-wage workers increases their morale and the productivity and quality of their work, lowers turnover and its accompanying costs, and reduces supervisory costs. These savings and quality improvements will lead to improved economy and efficiency in Government procurement.

Sec. 2. Establishing a minimum wage for Federal contractors and subcontractors. (a) Executive departments and agencies (agencies) shall, to the extent permitted by law, ensure that new contracts, contract-like instruments, and solicitations (collectively referred to as "contracts"), as described in section 7 of this order, include a clause, which the contractor and any subcontractors shall incorporate into lower-tier subcontracts, specifying, as a condition of payment, that the minimum wage to be paid to workers, including workers whose wages are calculated pursuant to special certificates issued under 29 U.S.C. 214(c), in the performance of the contract or any subcontract thereunder, shall be at least:

(i) $10.10 per hour beginning January 1, 2015; and

(ii) beginning January 1, 2016, and annually thereafter, an amount determined by the Secretary of Labor (Secretary). The amount shall be published by the Secretary at least 90 days before such new minimum wage is to take effect and shall be:

(A) not less than the amount in effect on the date of such determination;

(B) increased from such amount by the annual percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (United States city average, all items, not seasonally adjusted), or its successor 2

publication, as determined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics; and

(C) rounded to the nearest multiple of $0.05.

(b) In calculating the annual percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index for purposes of subsection (a)(ii)(B) of this section, the Secretary shall compare such Consumer Price Index for the most recent month, quarter, or year available (as selected by the Secretary prior to the first year for which a minimum wage is in effect pursuant to subsection (a)(ii)(B)) with the Consumer Price Index for the same month in the preceding year, the same quarter in the preceding year, or the preceding year, respectively.

(c) Nothing in this order shall excuse noncompliance with any applicable Federal or State prevailing wage law, or any applicable law or municipal ordinance establishing a minimum wage higher than the minimum wage established under this order.

Sec. 3. Application to tipped workers. (a) For workers covered by section 2 of this order who are tipped employees pursuant to 29 U.S.C. 203(t), the hourly cash wage that must be paid by an employer to such workers shall be at least:

(i) $4.90 an hour, beginning on January 1, 2015;

(ii) for each succeeding 1-year period until the hourly cash wage under this section equals 70 percent of the wage in effect under section 2 of this order for such period, an hourly cash wage equal to the amount determined under this section for the preceding year, increased by the lesser of:

(A) $0.95; or

(B) the amount necessary for the hourly cash wage under this section to equal 70 percent of the wage under section 2 of this order; and

(iii) for each subsequent year, 70 percent of the wage in effect under section 2 for such year rounded to the nearest multiple of $0.05.

(b) Where workers do not receive a sufficient additional amount on account of tips, when combined with the hourly cash wage paid by the employer, such that their wages are equal to the minimum wage under section 2 of this order, the cash wage paid by the employer, as set forth in this section for those workers, shall be increased such that their wages equal the minimum wage under section 2 of this order. Consistent with applicable law, if the wage required to be paid under the Service Contract Act, 41 U.S.C. 6701 et seq., or any other applicable law or regulation is higher than the wage required by section 2, the employer shall pay additional cash wages sufficient to meet the highest wage required to be paid.

Sec. 4. Regulations and Implementation. (a) The Secretary shall issue regulations by October 1, 2014, to the extent permitted by law and consistent with the requirements of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act, to implement the requirements of this order, including providing 3

exclusions from the requirements set forth in this order where appropriate. To the extent permitted by law, within 60 days of the Secretary issuing such regulations, the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council shall issue regulations in the Federal Acquisition Regulation to provide for inclusion of the contract clause in Federal procurement solicitations and contracts subject to this order.

(b) Within 60 days of the Secretary issuing regulations pursuant to subsection (a) of this section, agencies shall take steps, to the extent permitted by law, to exercise any applicable authority to ensure that contracts as described in section 7(d)(i)(C) and (D) of this order, entered into after January 1, 2015, consistent with the effective date of such agency action, comply with the requirements set forth in sections 2 and 3 of this order.

(c) Any regulations issued pursuant to this section should, to the extent practicable and consistent with section 8 of this order, incorporate existing definitions, procedures, remedies, and enforcement processes under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. 201 et seq.; the Service Contract Act, 41 U.S.C. 6701 et seq.; and the Davis-Bacon Act, 40 U.S.C. 3141 et seq.

Sec. 5. Enforcement. (a) The Secretary shall have the authority for investigating potential violations of and obtaining compliance with this order.

(b) This order creates no rights under the Contract Disputes Act, and disputes regarding whether a contractor has paid the wages prescribed by this order, to the extent permitted by law, shall be disposed of only as provided by the Secretary in regulations issued pursuant to this order.

Sec. 6. Severability. If any provision of this order, or applying such provision to any person or circumstance, is held to be invalid, the remainder of this order and the application of the provisions of such to any person or circumstance shall not be affected thereby.

Sec. 7. General Provisions. (a) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:

(i) the authority granted by law to an agency or the head thereof; or

(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.

(b) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.

(c) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.4

(d) This order shall apply only to a new contract or contract-like instrument, as defined by the Secretary in the regulations issued pursuant to section 4(a) of this order, if:

(i) (A) it is a procurement contract for services or construction;

(B) it is a contract or contract-like instrument for services covered by the Service Contract Act;

(C) it is a contract or contract-like instrument for concessions, including any concessions contract excluded by Department of Labor regulations at 29 C.F.R. 4.133(b); or

(D) it is a contract or contract-like instrument entered into with the Federal Government in connection with Federal property or lands and related to offering services for Federal employees, their dependents, or the general public; and

(ii) the wages of workers under such contract or contract-like instrument are governed by the Fair Labor Standards Act, the Service Contract Act, or the Davis-Bacon Act.

(e) For contracts or contract-like instruments covered by the Service Contract Act or the Davis-Bacon Act, this order shall apply only to contracts or contract-like instruments at the thresholds specified in those statutes. For procurement contracts where workers' wages are governed by the Fair Labor Standards Act, this order shall apply only to contracts or contract-like instruments that exceed the micro-purchase threshold, as defined in 41 U.S.C. 1902(a), unless expressly made subject to this order pursuant to regulations or actions taken under section 4 of this order.

(f) This order shall not apply to grants; contracts and agreements with and grants to Indian Tribes under the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (Public Law 93-638), as amended; or any contracts or contract-like instruments expressly excluded by the regulations issued pursuant to section 4(a) of this order.

(g) Independent agencies are strongly encouraged to comply with the requirements of this order.

Sec. 8. Effective Date. (a) This order is effective immediately and shall apply to covered contracts where the solicitation for such contract has been issued on or after:

(i) January 1, 2015, consistent with the effective date for the action taken by the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council pursuant to section 4(a) of this order; or

(ii) for contracts where an agency action is taken pursuant to section 4(b) of this order, January 1, 2015, consistent with the effective date for such action.5

(b) This order shall not apply to contracts or contract-like instruments entered into pursuant to solicitations issued on or before the effective date for the relevant action taken pursuant to section 4 of this order.

(c) For all new contracts and contract-like instruments negotiated between the date of this order and the effective dates set forth in this section, agencies are strongly encouraged to take all steps that are reasonable and legally permissible to ensure that individuals working pursuant to those contracts and contract-like instruments are paid an hourly wage of at least $10.10 (as set forth under sections 2 and 3 of this order) as of the effective dates set forth in this section.

BARACK OBAMA