50 Years in the Making: The President and First Lady Reflect on Their Trip to Selma

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Last week, the First Family traveled to Selma, Alabama to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the marches from Selma to Montgomery. They honored the men, women, and children who marched that route in 1965, to help ensure the most fundamental right that we have as Americans isn’t obstructed or denied to anyone because of their race or where they live. The right to vote is at the core of our democracy, and this weekend in Selma served as a reminder to us all what was sacrificed to earn us this hallowed responsibility.  

Amidst Saturday’s events, the President and First Lady took a moment to reflect on their experience in Selma -- walking the bridge, addressing that emotional crowd on such a historic day, visiting the National Voting Rights Museum, and most importantly, greeting some of the surviving foot soldiers who bravely risked everything on that Bloody Sunday 50 years ago, and who walked alongside the President of the United States and his family along that same route this past weekend.

Take a moment to reflect with the President and First Lady. Watch their video above, share it with your family and friends, and think through the causes that will move you to #MarchOn for the betterment of your community and our country.

Related Topics: Civil Rights, Alabama

President Obama Announces the Student Aid Bill of Rights

March 10, 2015 | 26:04 | Public Domain

On March 10, 2015, President Obama delivered remarks at Georgia Tech to announce the Student Aid Bill of Rights and outline his actions to increase college opportunity for every student. Sign on to the Student Aid Bill of Rights here: www.whitehouse.gov/collegeopportunity

Download mp4 (963MB) | mp3 (63MB)

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:

  • Edward L. Ayers – Member, National Council on the Humanities
  • David Hale – Ambassador to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Department of State
  • Kathryn Matthew – Director, Institute of Museum and Library Services
  • Carol Fortine Ochoa – Inspector General, General Services Administration
  • Eric Satz – Member, Board of Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority 

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

  • Edward Douglas Dunson, Jr. – Member, Commission of Fine Arts
  • Lisa Ling – Member, President’s Commission on White House Fellowships
  • Jose Rodriguez – Member, Board of Directors of the Border Environment Cooperation Commission and the North American Development Bank
  • Eric D. Schwerin – Member, Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad
  • Delia Haak – United States Commissioner, Arkansas-Oklahoma Arkansas River Compact Commission
  • Joel West Williams –United States Alternate Commissioner, Arkansas-Oklahoma Arkansas River Compact Commission

President Obama said, “These individuals have demonstrated knowledge and dedication throughout their careers.  I am grateful they have chosen to take on these important roles, and I look forward to working with them.”

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

Dr. Edward L. Ayers, Nominee for Member, National Council on the Humanities

Dr. Edward L. Ayers is the President of the University of Richmond, a position he has held since 2007.  He is also a co-Host of BackStory with the American History Guys, a public radio show he has been a part of since 2008.  Dr. Ayers previously held various positions at the University of Virginia, including the Buckner W. Clay Dean of the College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences from 2001 to 2007, Hugh P. Kelly Professor from 1993 to 2007, and Professor from 1992 to 1993.  Dr. Ayers has written four books on nineteenth-century America and edited seven more, which earned him the Bancroft Prize.  He was also a finalist for both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize.  In 2013, Dr. Ayers was awarded the National Humanities Medal by President Obama, and he was named Outstanding Doctoral and Research Universities Professor of the Year by The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching in 2003.  He previously served as a Member of the National Council on the Humanities and currently chairs the Steering Committee of The Future of Richmond’s Past.  Dr. Ayers received a B.A. from University of Tennessee, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Yale University.

Ambassador David Hale, Nominee for Ambassador to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Department of State

Ambassador David Hale, a career member of the Foreign Service, Class of Career-Minister, is the Ambassador to the Lebanese Republic, a position he has held since 2013.  He previously served as the Special Envoy for Middle East Peace from 2011 to 2013, and as Deputy Special Envoy for Middle East Peace from 2009 to 2011.  From 2008 to 2009, he was a Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs at the Department of State.  Prior to that, Ambassador Hale served as U.S. Ambassador to Jordan from 2005 to 2008.  Previously, he served at the U.S. Embassy in Jordan as Charge d’Affaires from 2004 to 2005 and as Deputy Chief of Mission from 2003 to 2004.  Ambassador Hale has also served as Director of the Office of Israel and Palestinian Affairs, Executive Assistant to the Secretary of State, and in other positions overseas in Bahrain, Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia.  Ambassador Hale joined the Foreign Service in 1984.  He received a B.S.F.S. from Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service.

Dr. Kathryn Matthew, Nominee for Director, Institute of Museum and Library Services

Dr. Kathryn Matthew is Chief Science Educator at the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis, a position she has held since 2014.  She was a Principal Consultant and a Product Manager at Blackbaud, Inc. from 2008 to 2013, a Director at Historic Charleston Foundation from 2006 to 2008, and an Exhibits Consultant at Chemical Heritage Foundation from 2005 to 2006.  Dr. Matthew was a Vice President at Please Touch Museum from 2003 to 2005 and a Director at The Nature Conservancy from 2001 to 2002.  She was a Director at Reebok International from 1998 to 2001.  Dr. Matthew also held senior positions at various museums, including a Director at Science City at Union Station from 1996 to 1998, Executive Director at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science from 1991 to 1994, Deputy Director at the Virginia Museum of Natural History from 1988 to 1990, and an Assistant Director at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History from 1986 to 1988.  Dr. Matthew received a B.A. from Mount Holyoke College, an M.B.A. from the University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management, and a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania.

Carol Fortine Ochoa, Nominee for Inspector General, General Services Administration

Carol Fortine Ochoa serves as Assistant Inspector General in the Oversight and Review Division of the Office of the Inspector General at the Department of Justice (DOJ), a position she has held since 2005.  From 2002 to 2005, she was the Director of the Office of Oversight and Review at DOJ.  She served as Assistant United States Attorney for the Office of the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia from 1989 to 2002.  From 1987 to 1989, Ms. Ochoa was an Associate Independent Counsel in the Office of Independent Counsel James C. McKay.  She was a Litigation Associate at Covington & Burling from 1984 to 1989, and from 1983 to 1984 she was a Law Clerk for Chief Judge Charles C. Clark on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.  Ms. Ochoa received a B.A. from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and a J.D. from The George Washington University National Law Center.

Eric Satz, Nominee for Member, Board of Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority

Eric Satz serves as a Managing Member of the Tennessee Community Ventures Fund, LLC (TNCV), a company he co-founded in 2009, and is Executive Chairman to three TNCV portfolio companies.  From 2010 to 2014, he served as Investor, Advisor, and Vice President of Business Development for Panopto, Inc.  Mr. Satz co-founded and was Chief Executive Officer of Plumgood Food, LLC from 2004 to 2008.  Earlier in his career, Mr. Satz served in various investment banking roles, including as Vice President in the Technology Investment Banking Groups at Credit Suisse First Boston and Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette.  In 1999, Mr. Satz co-founded Currenex, an online global foreign currency exchange company.  Mr. Satz received a B.A. from Amherst College.

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

Edward Douglas Dunson, Jr., Appointee for Member, Commission of Fine Arts

Edward Douglas Dunson, Jr. is an Associate Professor of Architecture at the Howard University School of Architecture and Design, a position he has held since 1989.  He has been Chairman of the Howard University Department of Architecture since 2007.  Mr. Dunson is a licensed architect and design consultant with over 30 years of experience in architecture and architecture education.  He is a member of the National Organization of Minority Architects and the American Institute of Architects.  Mr. Dunson previously served on the District of Columbia Historic Preservation Review Board from 1992 to 2001.  He received a B.Arch. from Howard University and an M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design from Columbia University.

Lisa Ling, Appointee for Member, President’s Commission on White House Fellowships

Lisa Ling is the Executive Producer and Host of This is Life with Lisa Ling on CNN, a program that began airing in 2014.  She was the Executive Producer and Host of the documentary television series Our America with Lisa Ling on the Oprah Winfrey Network from 2011 to 2014, and was a Special Correspondent for the Oprah Winfrey Show from 2006 to 2010.  Ms. Ling was the Host of National Geographic Explorer from 2003 to 2010 and co-Hosted ABC’s The View from 1999 to 2002.  She was a Reporter for Channel One News from 1992 to 1999, and is the co-author of the book Somewhere Inside: One Sister’s Captivity in North Korea and the Other’s Fight to Bring Her Home.

Jose Rodriguez, Appointee for Member, Board of Directors of the Border Environment Cooperation Commission and the North American Development Bank

Jose Rodriguez serves as the Texas State Senator for District 29 and as a partner at Rodriguez & Associates, both positions he has held since 2011.  From 1993 to 2009, he served as a County Attorney for El Paso, Texas.  Mr. Rodriguez served as a Legal Advisor to the County Judge of El Paso in 1991.  From 1990 to 1992, he was a Shareholder at Rodriguez, Lewis and Collins.  Previously, Mr. Rodriguez was the Director, Managing Attorney, and Staff Attorney for Texas Rural Legal Aid, Inc from 1977 to 1988.  He also served as a Staff Attorney for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development from 1974 to 1977.  In 1973, Mr. Rodriguez served as a Summer Clerk for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.  Mr. Rodriguez received a B.A. from Pan American University and a J.D. from The George Washington University National Law Center.

Eric D. Schwerin, Appointee for Member, Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad

Eric D. Schwerin is Founding Partner and Managing Director at Rosemont Seneca Partners, LLC, positions he has held since 2008.  He has also been President of RSP Investments, LLC since 2013.  Previously, Mr. Schwerin was Partner at Oldaker, Biden & Belair, LLP from 2002 to 2008.  He worked in various roles at the Department of Commerce, including Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary for International Trade in the Office of Policy and Strategic Planning from 1999 to 2002, and International Trade Specialist in the Office of Business Liaison from 1997 to 1999 and in the International Trade Administration from 1994 to 1997.  Mr. Schwerin previously worked as Associate Director for Business Outreach in the Office of Public Liaison at the White House from 2000 to 2001, and as Policy and Outreach Coordinator for the China Trade Relations Working Group in 2000.  Earlier in his career, Mr. Schwerin spent a year as an English teacher with Students For Czechoslovakia from 1991 to 1992.  He was appointed to the Industry Trade Advisory Committee For Information and Communications Technologies, Services, and Electronic Commerce in 2003.  Mr. Schwerin received a B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania and an M.A. from the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University.

Delia Haak, Appointee for United States Commissioner, Arkansas-Oklahoma Arkansas River Compact Commission

Delia Haak is the Executive Director of the Illinois River Watershed Partnership, a position she has held since 2007.  From 1985 to 2005, she worked in various capacities at John Brown University, including Director of Graduate Business Programs from 1999 to 2005, Director of the Soderquist Center for Business Leadership and Ethics from 1997 to 2000, Associate Professor of Business from 1991 to 2006, Sam M. Walton Free Enterprise Fellow from 1991 to 1998, Coordinator of Marketing Support Services from 1988 to 1991, and Administrative Assistant to the President from 1985 to 1988.  From 2001 to 2005, she also served as an Adjunct Graduate Faculty member at Trinity Western University.  Ms. Haak participated in the Arkansas Governor’s Business Plan Competition from 2003 to 2006 and again in 2011.  Ms. Haak received a B.S. from John Brown University and an M.B.A. and Ed.D. from the University of Arkansas.

Joel West Williams, Appointee for Alternate United States Commissioner, Arkansas-Oklahoma Arkansas River Compact Commission

Joel West Williams serves as Staff Attorney for the Native American Rights Fund, a position he has held since 2013.  From 2011 to 2012, Mr. Williams was Senior Legislative Officer for the Cherokee Nation.  He served as Assistant Counsel in the Governor’s Office of General Counsel for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania from 2003 to 2011.  Mr. Williams is a citizen of the Cherokee Citizen and is also the president-elect of the Native American Bar Association of D.C.  Mr. Williams received a B.A. from Naropa University and a J.D. from Widener University School of Law.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President Announcing Student Aid Bill of Rights

Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, Georgia

1:51 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Atlanta!  Hello, Yellow Jackets!  (Applause.)  This is a pretty good-looking crowd here!  (Applause.)

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Thank you!

THE PRESIDENT:  He says thank you.  (Laughter.)  I wasn’t directing it specifically at you, but you do look pretty good -- what do you think?  (Laughter.)  I mean, I may not be the gauge -- you should ask some of the ladies here.  (Laughter.)

Everybody have a seat who has got a chair.  If you don’t have a chair, don’t sit down.  (Laughter.)  Now, I understand George P. Burdell was supposed to introduce me today.  (Laughter and applause.)  But nobody could find him.  (Applause.) 

So I want to thank Tiffany for stepping in.  What she did not mention is that her letter to me was not just to express her concern about student loans, she said -- in her letter she said, it was also to procrastinate from doing her Thermodynamics homework.  (Laughter and applause.)  That’s a true story.  That is true.  That’s okay.  (Laughter.)  I procrastinate sometimes.  (Laughter.)  As long as you got it done, Tiffany.  Where is Tiffany?  Did you get it done?

TIFFANY:  I got it done!

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.  (Laughter and applause.) 

Let’s give it up for Buzz and the Georgia Tech Band for getting us fired up.  (Applause.)  Also give it up for Governor Nathan Deal, who is here.  (Applause.)  Congressmen Hank Johnson and David Scott.  (Applause.)  Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed.  (Applause.)  And the President of this great institution, Georgia Tech, Bud Peterson.  (Applause.)  That’s good.  You’ve got a high approval rating.  (Laughter.)  You do.  Absolutely. 

We also have a special guest with us -- this is a proud Georgia Tech alum, who just happens also to be the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Sandy Winnefeld is here.  Where’s Sandy?  There he is.  (Applause.)  Before he was the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, he was a Navy fighter pilot, which is cooler.  Now he just goes to meetings.  (Laughter.)  What’s up with that?  I told him he’s got to get back on a plane. 

It is great to be at one of the finest technical institutes in the world.  (Applause.)  One of the finest in the world.  I mean, you’ve got to be if the Ramblin’ Wreck is still running after all these years.  (Applause.)  That’s a Georgia Tech reference that some of you may not know.  (Laughter.)  I also know that Georgia Tech is terrific because we’ve actually worked with you on several fronts -– from promoting advanced manufacturing to unlocking the mysteries of the brain to helping more students become entrepreneurs.  (Applause.)

And the reason I wanted to come here today is because I believe that higher education, as you believe, is one of the best investments that anybody can make in their future.  And it’s also one of the best investments you can make in our country’s future.  So I’m here to say thank you and to tell you I’m proud of you, because I know that it’s not always easy to do what you’re doing.  It takes perseverance.  A lot of late nights in the library and the lab, and you’re wrapping your minds around complex formulas and concepts that, frankly, I don’t understand.  (Laughter.)  But I know they’re complex.  (Laughter.)  And some of you are holding jobs down at the same time, which makes it even harder. 

But as frustrating as it may be, and Tiffany expressed some frustrations on occasion, it is worth it.  Higher education has never been more important.  And the message I want to deliver today, not just to you but to the entire country, is the entire nation has to treat it as a priority.

Right now, our economy is growing steadily.  It's creating new jobs.  You’re going to be going into a job market that’s much better than the one that existed when I came into office six years ago.  (Applause.)  After the worst economic crisis of our lifetimes, over the past five years, our businesses have now created 12 million new jobs.  Unemployment continues to come down, and obviously that’s good news for those of you who are graduating soon.  (Applause.)  Yes, that’s right, you want a job.  (Laughter.)  Your parents also want you to have a job.  They don’t want you on the couch.  (Laughter.)

  But I didn’t run for President just to get us back to where we were -– I ran for President to get us to where we need to go.  (Applause.)  And where we need to go is a growing middle class with rising incomes and opportunities for everybody who’s willing to work hard.  An America where no matter who you are, what you look like, where you came from, how you started, who you love, what faith you’re a part of, you can make it in this country if you try.  (Applause.)  That’s what America is all about.  (Applause.)

And today, a college degree is the surest ticket to the middle class and beyond.  It’s the key to getting a good job that pays a good income.  And it offers a measure of security, because a college degree tells employers that you don’t just have one set of skills; that you’ve got the continuous capacity to learn new skills, which is going to be particularly important for your generation because the economy is going to churn and change in ways that none of us can even anticipate.

Before we came out here, I was talking to a group, including Sandy Winnefeld, and your Mayor Kasim Reed, Tyler Perry buddies -- (laughter) -- he wasn’t in Madea, he was Tyler.  (Laughter.)  And we were talking about how rapidly the technology is transforming everything we understand, everything we know --everything from drones, to artificial intelligence, to driver-less cars.  And we don’t yet know how all that is going to shape the nation that you inherit, but we know it's going to shape it dramatically.  And in order for you to be able to be successful, you’re going to have to adapt, continuously.  The days where you work at one place for 30, 40 years, those days are over.

And so the skillsets you are getting now are going to keep you in that job market.  You’re going to have multiple jobs before you’re 30.  Some of you will have multiple careers.  And we live in a 21st-century economy, where your most valuable asset is your imagination, your knowledge, your ability to analyze tough problems.  And that’s not just true for individual Americans, it’s true for our whole country.

The ability to compete in the global economy depends on us having the world’s most skilled, best-educated workforce.  And by the way, let me just add, it’s also going to be critical for us to maintain our democracy in a complex, diverse society.  (Applause.) 

Understandably, when I come to college campuses, there’s a lot of just bread and butter, nuts and bolts, how does this translate into jobs, careers.  But part of what has made America the exceptional nation that it is, is our diversity and our ability to draw from every corner of the world -- all the talent, all the ideas -- and create this amazing stew.  And the more complex this society, the tougher that becomes.

And so to have all of you possess the ability to listen and to learn from people who aren’t like you -- that’s also what you’re learning here, and that’s going to make you more effective to every employer out there.  (Applause.)  But it’s also -- it’s going to make you better citizens, and it’s going to make our democracy function better. 

But back to the jobs thing.  (Laughter.)  Jobs and businesses will go wherever the best workers are.  And I don’t want them to have to look any further than the United States of America.  I want businesses investing here.  I want Americans getting those new jobs.  That’s how we’re going to lead the world in this century just like we did in the 20th century.  (Applause.)   

So here’s the challenge:  Higher education has never been more important, but it’s also never been more expensive.  The average undergrad who borrows money to pay for college graduates with about $28,000 in student loan debt.  That’s just the average; some students end up with a lot more than that -- you know who you are.  (Laughter.)  I’m not telling you anything you don’t know. 

And let me say that it’s been established time and time again that Georgia Tech is one of the best bargains around.  You are getting a great education for a great value.  (Applause.)  Which is one of the reasons I’m here; obviously, I wouldn’t go to a place that was a bad bargain and really expensive and no value.  That would not make sense.  (Laughter.) 

But even here at Georgia Tech, even with the great value it is, it’s expensive.  And I’m here to tell you, I’m with you.  I believe that America is not a place where higher education is a privilege that is reserved for the few.  America needs to be a place where higher education has to be available for every single person who’s willing to strive for it, who’s willing to work for it.  (Applause.) 

And I’ve said this before:  I take this personally.  My grandfather had a chance to go to college because this country decided that when veterans returned home from World War II, they should be able to go to college.  And this government stepped up.

My mother was able to raise two kids by herself, in part because she got grants that helped pay for her education.  And I am only standing here -– and Michelle is only where she is today –- because of scholarships and student loans and work study.  We did not come from families of means.  (Applause.)  We didn't come from families of means, but we knew that if we worked hard, there was help out there to make sure we got a great education.  That’s what this country gave to us.

And that’s why this has been such a priority for me.  I take it personally because when I look out at all of you, I see myself.  And I remember the fact that it took me 10 years to pay off all our student loans.  We were paying more for our student loans than our mortgage, even after Malia and Sasha were born.  We were supposed to be saving for their college education; we were still paying off ours.

And that's why we’ve acted again and again to make college more affordable.  Five years ago this month, we enacted the largest reforms to the student loan program in history.  (Applause.)  We cut out the big banks that were taking taxpayer dollars and serving as middlemen in the student loan game, and we said, well, let’s just give the money directly to the students like you.  (Applause.) 

So as a result of that change, we saved billions of dollars.  We were to expand tax credits and Pell grants, and put college within reach for millions more middle-class and low-income students across the country.  Then we fought to keep interest rates on student rates -- interest rates on student loans low and capped how high those rates can rise.  And as a result, the typical undergrad is saving about $1,500.  We also acted to let millions of graduates cap their loan payments at 10 percent of their incomes, so they don’t have to choose between paying the rent and paying back their debt.  (Applause.)

And by the way, everybody here, if you don't already know about the income-based repayment program, you need to learn about it because it’s still under-utilized.  But it gives you an opportunity to make sure that if you make a career choice that doesn't make tons of money, you're still able to do the responsible thing and pay back your loans at a pace that also allows you to build a family and buy a home and live your lives.

And graduates who go into lower-paying fields like social work or teaching, they're not going to pay a price for following their dreams because they're going to have even better options in terms of how they repay their loans.  (Applause.)  So that's what we did on the student loan side. 

Meanwhile, we’re working to hold down the cost of a college education.  So we’re partnering with schools like Georgia Tech on innovative ways to increase value -– like your online master’s program in computer science -- (applause) -- which costs just a fraction of the price of an in-classroom program. 
And I sent Congress a bold new plan to bring down the cost of community college to zero.  (Applause.)  Because not everybody may be prepared right away to start a four-year university.  But also, in some cases, even if they could, they may choose to get two years of college free, and then be able to transfer the credits for their four-year education.  We want to make community college, at minimum, just as free and universal as high school is today.  That should be our new baseline.  We want to get out ahead of the curve in terms of where we need to go.  (Applause.)

Earlier today, I took a new action to make it easier for students to pay for college and pay off their loans.  We’re creating a way for you to ask questions about your loans, file a complaint, cut through the bureaucracy, get a faster response.  That’s not just from the government, that’s also from the contractors who sometimes service your loans.  We’re going to require that the businesses that service your loans provide clear information about how much you owe, what your options are for repaying it, and if you’re falling behind, help you get back in good standing with reasonable fees on a reasonable timeline.  And if you’re paying stuff off, you should be paying off the high-interest loans first, not the low-interest ones.  We’re going to take a hard look at whether we need new laws to strengthen protections for all borrowers, wherever you get your loans from.

So we’re trying to tackle this problem from every angle.  There’s no silver bullet.  But we’re trying to make sure that across the board, more and more young people can afford to go to college, and then afterwards, aren’t so burdened with debt that you can’t do anything else.  We want to make this experience more affordable because you’re not just investing in yourselves, you’re investing in your nation.  (Applause.) 

But here’s the thing:  We’ve got more to do, all of us -- universities, students, parents, financial institutions and, yes, the government, to make sure that you’re not saddled with debt before you even get started in life.  That’s something that’s in all of our interests. 

Now, my friends, the Republicans in Congress, are planning to unveil their budget soon.  I’m hoping they have something to offer that will help hardworking young people.  So far, the education bill that they put forward a couple weeks ago is not a good template, it’s not a good start.  I’m hoping it will improve because right now, the way it’s structured, it would let states and cities shuffle education dollars into things like sports stadiums or tax cuts for the wealthy instead of schools.  And it would allow states to make even deeper cuts into school districts that need the most support, send even more money to the most well-off school districts.  We’d invest less per child by the end of the decade than we do now.  So it’s the wrong approach.  We’ve got to be working to make sure every child gets a quality education, every student can afford college.  (Applause.) 

And so we’re going to be reaching out to them, trying to get them to see this is a good investment in our economy, it’s a good investment in our national security.  The way that you keep America safe, one of the best, most important ways is to make sure we’ve got a strong economy with a strong workforce.  And all of us have a role to play in making that happen. 

So in order to spur more of a conversation to get more folks engaged, we’re going to try something new to help do this.  It’s not a fancy new program.  It’s not -- it doesn’t have a complicated acronym.  It doesn’t involve new spending or bureaucracy.  It’s just a simple organizing principle that I want all of us to sign onto, a declaration of values –- what I’m calling a Student Aid Bill of Rights. 

And it says every student deserves access to a quality, affordable education.  Every student should be able to access the resources to pay for college.  Every borrower has the right to an affordable repayment plan.  Every borrower has the right to quality customer service, reliable information, and fair treatment, even if they struggle to repay their loans. 

It’s a simple set of principles that if everybody signed onto -- Republicans, Democrats, state legislators, university presidents, members of Congress -- it can focus our attention, all these different things that we’re doing, into one simple, basic idea, which is, make sure that when you’re doing the right thing, that your society has got your back and is looking out for you.  (Applause.) 

So based on this principle, we’re going to make sure universities are using technology to help students learn at lower costs.  We’re going to make sure that loan servicers can find better ways to help borrowers keep up with monthly payments that they can afford.  We as a country can do more to invest in Pell grants and community college to make sure quality education is affordable for everybody. 

So we’re going to just keep on moving on every front.  And we want everybody who agrees with these principles to sit down and work with us, and figure out how they can make these student rights real.  And you’ve got a part to play as well. 

We had the great honor of being at Selma this past weekend for the 50th anniversary of the March from Selma.  (Applause.)  And one of the main points I think that all of us made was change doesn’t happen by itself; it happens because people get organized and mobilized and focused, and they push, and sometimes they disrupt and they make folks uncomfortable, and they ask questions about why is it this way instead of that way. 

And I want us to think about access to higher education and affordability of higher education in that same way.  I want us to all organize together -- not on a partisan basis, it’s not organizing around an election, it’s organizing around a simple idea that everybody should be able to get behind. 

And you’re going to have to play the part.  Because what we also made the point of this past weekend is young people typically lead the pack with new ideas, with new initiatives, with new focus, with a new vision.  (Applause.)

So if you agree with the basic values that I outlined, if you believe in a Student Aid Bill of Rights that will help more Americans pay for a quality education, then sign your name to this declaration. 

You can go to a website, because you guys like tech stuff.  (Laughter.)  You go to: WhiteHouse.gov/CollegeOpportunity -- WhiteHouse.gov/CollegeOpportunity.  Tell your families and classmates and professors to do it.  I’m going to ask members of Congress, and lenders, and as many business leaders as I can find to sign up.

We’re going to mobilize a coalition around this country to get this process moving, because there are a lot of good ideas right now but they’re stalled, or they’re happening piecemeal, or they’re happening in one university, or they’re happening in one state, and they have to happen everywhere.  And we’ve got to mobilize the entire nation to make that happen.  And it's going to start with students themselves, because if you aren’t asking for something different, if you aren’t asking for help, if you’re not getting mobilized, then folks aren’t going to help you, and then you’ll just be complaining -- especially once you graduate and you start having to write those checks.  (Laughter.) 

So don’t stop engaging in this issue, even after you graduate, because you’ll be still impacted by it.  And in the meantime, you’ve got to study hard, and work hard, and have fun.  Make some new discoveries.  Inspire us.  Lead us.  Be the Americans that we need you to be. 

Every American should have the right to go as far as their talents and hard work will take them.  That is what college is all about.  That is what America is all about.  And you embody that basic notion.  You are that talent.  You are an embodiment of what we hope for:  A country that says that everybody, rich, poor, black, white, Hispanic, Asian, gay, straight, man, woman, with disabilities, without -- no matter who you are or where you come from, not only can you succeed but you can help everybody else succeed.  That’s the promise that helped us become the greatest nation in the world.  That’s the promise that I need you working for. 

Thank you, everybody.  God bless you.  Thank you, Georgia. 

END 
2:18 P.M. EDT

The Student Aid Bill of Rights: Enhancing Protections for Student Loan Borrowers

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The single most important investment anyone can make in their future is to pursue higher education. But the one thing I often hear from families is that they are worried about the cost.

Too many students are graduating from college feeling burdened by their student loan debt. The Obama Administration has – and will continue to – make college more affordable through increased Pell Grants and education tax credits, while improving transparency so that students and families have the information they need to select schools that provide the best value. Today, we are building on the Administration’s success helping students manage their debt and stay on track. 

My team at the U.S. Department of Education been working with our federal partners to make sure that student loan borrowers are getting accurate information about how to avoid – or get out of – delinquency and default. And we’ve been doing more to improve student loan servicing and protect borrowers so they receive the treatment and respect they deserve, regardless of the type of loan they have. 

But across the Administration, we want to do more. 

That’s why today, President Obama has proposed a new Student Aid Bill of Rights that outlines a series of new actions that direct the Department of Education, Department of Treasury, Office of Management and Budget, Office of Science and Technology Policy and Domestic Policy Council, working with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Social Security Administration, to make paying for higher education an easier and fairer experience for millions of Americans.

Arne Duncan is the Secretary of the Department of Education

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Letter from the President -- Russian Fisheries

Dear Mr. Speaker: (Dear Mr. President:)

In accordance with the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.), I transmit herewith an Agreement between the Government of the United States and the Government of the Russian Federation Extending the Agreement Between the Government of the United States and the Government of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on Mutual Fisheries Relations of May 31, 1988, with annex, as extended (the "Mutual Fisheries Agreement").  The present Agreement, which was effected by an exchange of notes in Moscow on July 31, 2013, and December 10, 2013, extends the Mutual Fisheries Agreement until December 31, 2018.

Sincerely,

BARACK OBAMA

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Gaggle by Deputy Press Secretary Eric Schultz En Route Atlanta, Georgia

Aboard Air Force One
En Route Atlanta, Georgia 

11:03 A.M. EDT

MR. SCHULTZ:  Good afternoon.  Welcome aboard Air Force One. As you know, we are en route to Atlanta, where the President is going to talk about the rising challenge in this country of helping students afford a higher education and manage their debt.

Right before we left, the President did sign a memorandum directing the Department of Education and other federal agencies to work across the federal government to do more to help borrowers afford their monthly loan payments through 19 new executive actions.  That memo requires a new single system for student complaints, contractors to respond when borrowers fall behind in their payments, and recommendations for other policy changes to protect borrowers.

The actions we’re announcing today will help reach our goal of providing an affordable, quality education for all Americans, underscored in the Student Aid Bill of Rights, based upon the fundamental principle that every student in this country deserves access to a quality, affordable education at an institution that’s cutting costs and increasing learning.

With that, I am happy to take your questions.

Q    Eric, the Admiral who joined the President this morning -- what can you tell us about him?

MR. SCHULTZ:  The Admiral is a proud and active alum of Georgia Tech University, so he is joining us in that capacity.

Q    And on a different topic, Hillary Clinton is going to give some remarks today publicly for the first time since the whole swirling email controversy.  Is there anything specific you’re hoping to hear from her?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I don’t have anything for you on a press conference that hasn’t happened yet.

Q    Can I ask some Hillary follow-ups?  Is the expectation that in her disclosure of all the emails that she has asked the State Department to turn over that we’ll be seeing emails between her and the President?

MR. SCHULTZ:  As Josh acknowledged yesterday, there are some emails that were sent and received between the Secretary of State and the President of the United States in that first term.  Those emails, A, would have been preserved, as Josh has said, under the Presidential Records Act, based on the President’s email; and, two, have now been turned over to the State Department for review for release.  So the State Department, by matter of course, goes through those documents and judges for a host of criteria what’s appropriate for release.  So I’m going to let that process play out before I prejudge it.

Q    But one of the criteria would be if the President exerts privilege over them in some way.  Is that something that you guys plan to do, or do you think you’re happy with the State Department releasing any email between the President and Secretary Clinton?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Justin, I think you’re jumping about 10,000 steps ahead of where we are, so let’s just let the State Department review that process under their regular order and then we can make a determination from there.

Q    Eric, the Democrats that are on the House Benghazi panel have asked -- there is some 800 or so pages of emails that have already been turned over to the Benghazi committee -- they want those emails to be prioritized and released -- reviewed for release first, before the other 55,000 pages.  Is that a request that the White House supports?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Josh, I hadn’t seen that.  But, again, the review of that set of documents has to go through the State Department, so I’m going to defer to their folks and their team so they can evaluate it under the proper criteria before releasing those.

Q    Does the President have his own private email, a nongovernmental email that he uses occasionally or at all?  And has he used it to conduct government business?  And if so, would he be subject to the policies that Josh outlined?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Mike, both the President and my colleague, Josh Earnest, have addressed this in the past couple of days.

Q    -- addressed it.

MR. SCHULTZ:  Well, in engaging questions on the security and integrity of the President’s email, we have made clear that part of the security precautions we take around that email account is not talking about it much publicly.  So I’m not going to be --

Q    I’m not asking you to talk about the email account.  I’m asking about whether he has a private email account.  That’s a different question than asking about the secured -- and I’m not asking for what it is, although if you want to give it to me, I’m fine with that.

MR. SCHULTZ:  Mike, again, I’m not going to be in a position to discuss the President’s email account.  I will tell you that anything sent or received there is preserved for a couple of different reasons.  One, nobody understands more the scholarly value of that material than the President of the United States.  As you saw a few days ago, the President took his family to see President Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address.  So we understand the scholarly value.  We also understand the rules and guidelines that dictate this sort of material and we abide by them.

Q    Yesterday the President -- Josh said that the President had, in fact, received those emails, as you mentioned today.  When he is receiving emails from other members of government or other world leaders that are from .gov or other official accounts, was it not at all weird to him or questionable that his emails from Secretary Clinton were not as such?

MR. SCHULTZ:  The President’s expectation when sending or receiving an email from any Cabinet Secretary is that’s going to be preserved, maintained, and archived in accordance with the Federal Records Act.

Q    But given he knew it was a personal email, that didn't seem weird to him that someone was emailing the President of the United States from a Clintonmail server address?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Again, the President’s expectation in real time is that those emails are archived and preserved.

Q    Eric, are you and your colleagues sick of answering questions about Hillary Clinton and what emails she did or didn't send?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Again, our view is that we take these guidelines seriously.  We take compliance very seriously, so we are happy to engage you in questions on this today or tomorrow.

Q    Can I ask about the college thing?

MR. SCHULTZ:  You can.

Q    Wait till you hear my question.  Seems like small potatoes.  I mean is this because Congress is in the hands of the Republicans and you can't really do much more than create a new complaint system?  That doesn't seem to address in any sort of fundamental way the challenges of somebody paying back a $50,000 loan.

MR. SCHULTZ:  I guess I would disagree with your characterization of this.  I don't think the 1.4 million student loan borrowers in the state of Georgia, for example, who have accumulated more than $44 billion left in outstanding student loan debt would call these sorts of improvements small potatoes. I do agree with you there is lots more to be done in addition to what we're talking about specifically today.  I think that's why the President has called on Congress to support his plan to allow for a free community college for two years for responsible Americans.  That is why we’ve called for an expansion of the Pell program.  That is why we're looking for increased investments in our first in the world expansion, where we seed innovation and scaling what works in higher education. 

So I agree with you this is a priority.  I agree with you there’s lots to be done.  We think the steps being announced today are an important step.  But surely -- hopefully those in Congress share your drive to do more.

Q    Can I ask about Iran real quick?  Foreign Minister Zarif today said that the letter sent by Republicans was evidence that the U.S. was unreliable in the negotiations.  This was sort of a break from what we had heard from him yesterday where he had sort of dismissed the Republicans’ letter.  So I’m wondering if you guys interpreted that as him sort of playing to the hard line audience that he was speaking to, or if you guys are worried that this letter has not tangibly damaged or jeopardized the negotiations?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think we feel like this was a blatant, flagrant, and partisan attempt to interfere with the negotiations.  As my colleagues have said, we have one President at a time in the United States, and that President is charged with conducting our foreign policy.  As the Vice President said quite eloquently last night, the letter that was released yesterday is without precedent from the past two centuries based on the role that the United States Senate has played.  So we feel like that letter was reckless, was irresponsible, was misguided, was a partisan attempt to undermine the President’s ability to negotiate with a foreign government.

Q    Has it been effective in that goal, though?  Are you guys seeing tangible concerns being expressed through the negotiating?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I haven’t seen any data on that.  I don't have a real-time update on the actual negotiations, which, again, are sort of happening in real time.  So I don't have any update for you on that.

Q    Let me tackle that from a different direction.  The President’s argument to Congress has been that if these talks are unsuccessful there shouldn’t be any excuse for Iran to say this is on the U.S. as opposed to on Iran.  But between the Bibi speech and this letter and the sanctions legislation in Congress, if these talks now fail, doesn't Iran already have a pretty persuasive argument that it’s because of Congress that this deal fell apart, not because Iran walked away from the table?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Well, I do think you’ve raised an important point, Josh, that the negotiations that the United States is a part of are not bilateral with just Iran.  We are involved in a complicated, sensitive negotiation with Russia, with the United Kingdom, with France and Germany, the European Union, and China.

So you are right that these are sensitive and these are complicated.  And so if there’s going to be 47 members of the same political party who attempt to inject themselves in an attempt to undermine the negotiation, we do feel like it’s misguided.

Q    So what is the White House doing, particularly with its partners in these talks, to sort of address any concerns the White House has about what’s happened?  Like are partners asking questions about what does this mean?  What is the White House actively doing to sort of talk to people about this?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I don’t have any conversations or communications specifically with the P5-plus-1 group to read out to you.  I can say that through the State Department, the negotiations to reach a deal continue, they continue in earnest, and they continue with an urgency as the deadline approaches.

Q    It’s obvious there’s a real rift here now between Republicans in the Senate and the White House.  What is the White House going to do for its part to try to address this rift or repair this rift, if anything?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Well, I think a couple of things.  One is it’s important to realize that, historically, the President has the role of executing on our foreign policy.  So whether that’s looking at basing agreements for troops around the world, whether that is the agreement to rid Syria of chemical weapons -- a framework that we establish with Russia -- or whether that is a withdrawal of troops in Afghanistan, those are agreements that the President of the United States, the executive branch, worked on and coordinated with foreign governments around the world.  So I think that’s an important piece of history.

And then the second thing I’d say is that there is a robust role for Congress.  There’s an oversight role, there’s a consultative role.  The reason we have such severe sanctions right now on Iran that brought them to the negotiating table is because of those sanctions.  So we are on constant communication with the Hill, but what we don’t think is a good idea is a partisan attempt to undermine the negotiations.

Q    Can I ask about Senator Menendez really quickly?  I know that -- I’ve heard Josh’s spiel about how you guys can’t comment on whether or not an indictment is coming, but we heard from Kathleen Sebelius last night that she had been interviewed by prosecutors about Senator Menendez and the donor in question. I’m wondering, do you know if anybody on the White House staff has been interviewed by federal prosecutors?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I don't.

Q    Would the White House cooperate with such an investigation, or is that a situation where if a meeting between a donor and a White House staffer had come up that you guys would exert any sort of privilege?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think you are presupposing a lot of facts that aren’t necessarily been stipulated, so I’m not going to have anything to engage you on that hypothetical.

Q    Eric, on the situation in Myanmar and the protestors that have been beaten by police while demonstrating against an educational law.  This is the country that the President has repeatedly held up an as example of moving towards democratization, so is Myanmar still on the right track?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I saw those reports.  We, of course, deplore any violence.  The values of human rights and fundamental freedoms are something that the President holds dear, something that this White House takes very seriously, and something that we work to spread around the world.

Q    And I guess on one other foreign policy question, the President and his aides have said that there hasn’t been a decision on whether to send lethal aid to Ukraine.  Germany’s ambassador to the U.S. told the AP yesterday that in the meeting with Merkel the President agreed to hold off and not to send lethal aid to Ukraine.  So was the German ambassador incorrect in that statement?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Josh, I saw the story from your colleague.  The truth is we do not have an update from when the President addressed this with most of you in the room with Chancellor Merkel there. 

The President believes, first and foremost, that this is a situation that is going to have to be resolved diplomatically.  That’s for a couple of different reasons.  First, increasing arms and lethal aid to the region would only increase bloodshed; two, nobody doubts Russia’s military capacity to expand its military presence in the region; and three, we don’t want to see increased bloodshed --

Q    It sounds like you’re making the case against sending lethal aid, so is that a conclusion that’s been reached by this administration?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I'm sorry, I didn’t get a chance to finish my answer.  But the President has also said we are constantly reevaluating the situation there, constantly looking at new options. And so I don’t have an update for you on that at this time, but --

Q    So when you said it remains where it was, where it was was he said that he hadn’t yet made a decision.  Right?  That is what he said during the Merkel thing.  So it remains that he has not yet made a decision? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Again, the President has said a couple of different times why he believes this is a conflict that has to be resolved at the negotiating table.  One, adding lethal aid only increases bloodshed; two, nobody doubts Russia’s ability to increase their military presence in the region.

So that’s why we’re trying to exhaust diplomatic agreements; that’s why we believe that Russia has to live up to its agreements in the Minsk agreements that were agreed to repeatedly, several times now.

Q    Senator’s Menendez and Corker sent the President a letter yesterday asking for a report that under law was due on February 15th, and the report is supposed to spell out the President’s strategy on defensive lethal aid to Ukraine.  And I'm wondering if you have any update about when that report might be delivered to Congress?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Roberta, I will be honest with you, I haven’t seen that letter.  Again, the President’s thinking on this I think is fairly well-known.  There’s nothing different than when he addressed this with Chancellor Merkel.  He also addressed this with CBS over the weekend.  And I think I tried to just outline where the President’s head is on this.

Q    May I ask real quickly about the statement on Scott Walker that came out last night?  Irrespective of the merits, is this going to be something that we’re going to see the President do more, kind of dip his toe into 2016 and the Republican primary process by talking about issues that are coming up with some of their candidates?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I'm not sure anything we’ve done is irrespective of the merits, so I sort of reject that framing of the question.  I think that this is an issue that the President has spoken out on repeatedly, whether it's in Wisconsin, whether it's been in Michigan, or Ohio.  The President believes that unions have been the backbone of our middle class and helped build our economy, our workforce, and that we should be doing everything possible to help workers join unions and build unions, not tear them apart.

Q    But this is at least the third time that the President has spoken about one of the potential Republican 2016 contenders. Is this something that he’s going to continue to do, to sort of inject himself into the 2016 race?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Roberta, I saw a lot of the political commentary speculating that that’s what we were doing, but our bottom line is this is an issue that we have spoken out whenever it rears its ugly head.  And the President believes that unions have played a central role in building the middle class and raising workers’ wages.  That’s why, instead of rolling back workers’ rights, states, including Wisconsin, should be expanding workers’ rights, like raising the minimum wage and paid sick leave. 

Thank you, guys. 

END
11:20 A.M. EDT

President Obama Signs a Presidential Memorandum on College Opportunity

March 10, 2015 | 01:01 | Public Domain

On March 10, 2015, President Obama delivered remarks on making college more affordable before singing a Presidential Memorandum that supports the President’s Student Aid Bill of Rights. Learn more: www.whitehouse.gov/collegeopportunity

Download mp4 (45MB) | mp3 (3MB)

President Obama Launches TechHire

Yesterday, speaking to nearly 2,000 local leaders at the National League of Cities annual meeting, President Obama announced his TechHire initiative, a new campaign to work with communities to get more Americans rapidly trained for well-paying technology jobs.

The United States has about 5 million open jobs today, more than at any point since 2001. Over half a million of those job openings are in information technology (IT) fields like software development, network administration, user-interface design and cybersecurity – many of which did not even exist just a decade ago. The average salary in a job that requires IT skills – whether in manufacturing, advertising, retail, or banking – is 50 percent higher than the average private-sector American job.  

In his remarks, the President emphasized that these open jobs are an economic development issue. When those jobs go unfilled, it’s a loss for American workers, for employers eager to hire, for our regional economies and for American competitiveness. Helping U.S. companies fill these critical jobs and empowering more Americans to train for and get these jobs is a key element of the President’s middle-class economics agenda. 

TechHire is a multi-sector effort and call to action for local communities to collaborate in helping employers fill critical local IT job gaps by empowering a diverse array of Americans to rapidly gain the necessary technology skills, including using nontraditional training options like “coding bootcamps” and high-quality online courses. 

Megan Smith is the U.S. Chief Technology Officer. Jeff Zients is the Director of the National Economic Council.
Related Topics: Jobs, Technology, Georgia

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Signing of Presidential Memorandum, A Student Aid Bill of Rights

Oval Office

10:13 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  This is an opportunity to get a head start on what we’re going to be talking about down in Atlanta, Georgia. One of the things that’s been uppermost on my mind is how do we make sure that every young person in this country who is willing to put in the effort can afford to go to college.  And as part of that overall process we’re going to be talking today about a Student Bill of Rights. 

This is part of it.  It’s an executive action that we’re able to take to streamline and improve the manner in which the federal government interacts with students when it comes to student loans, and it will be part of a broader overview that I talk about while we’re in Atlanta.

(The presidential memorandum is signed.) 

All right.  There you go. 

Thank you, everybody.  Let’s get on the plane.  Thank you.

END               
10:14 A.M. EDT