THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the First Lady
_______________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                          April 29, 2009

REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY AND DR. BIDEN
AT CAPITAL AREA FOOD BANK EVENT WITH CONGRESSIONAL SPOUSES:
PART ONE

Capital Area Food Bank
Washington, D.C.

2:14 P.M. EDT

DR. BIDEN:  Hello, everybody.  This event is really a reflection of Michelle Obama and the administration and all of you. 

You know, this is not something new to Michelle, because when she was in Chicago, she worked with AmeriCorps and she worked with the University of Chicago to set up a volunteer program on a massive scale.  And then when she became our First Lady, she went to -- she worked with YouthBuild, and she went to Miriam's Kitchen, and she also started her own community garden at the White House.  (Applause.)

So I can think of no better way than to celebrate the 100th day than to do a service event.  So the woman who made this all possible is our remarkable First Lady Michelle Obama.  (Applause.) 

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, we've got a goal, a thousand bags, so I'm not going to talk long because we need to get to work.  This is shift number one.  Shift number two is going to come in, and they're going to try and beat shift number one -- (laughter) -- which will never happen, of course.  And when shift number two comes in, we'll say the same thing.  (Laughter.)

But I just want to thank all of you all for being here.  This is -- I think this is a very special day, because I think this is a very special group of people, the spouses of the leadership of Congress coming together.  We're going to have a wonderful lunch tomorrow.  But we talked about this.  I've talked about this with many of you; that each of us in our roles, in our leadership roles, we have an opportunity to shine a bright light on service and the possibility of what service can do.

Today is just an example of how just a few of us -- and it's not just a few of us; this is a really good number of us that have come together.  Over 150 congressional spouses signed up to be involved in this day of service, and that's just amazing.  (Applause.) 

And one of the things that we can illustrate to the rest of the world is that it doesn't take a lot to do something major.  We're going to spend a couple of hours of our time packing up food, and it's going to feed a thousand children over the weekend here in Washington, D.C.  And I know that each and every one of us feels that this is so -- such a small sacrifice to make, that we would do it again and again.  And many of you, I know, are doing this same type of service and much more in your own districts, in your own cities and towns and communities. 

I just think it's important for America to see you all here doing this and for us doing it together, not as Republicans or Democrats or Independents.  There is no ideology; these are just all of us people who care about our country and want to make service a core part of the work that we do.

So I'm grateful to all of you for taking the extra time to come.  Many of you have brought your children, and that's always a wonderful legacy to pass on. 

We're going to do these kind of events continuously, if possible.  When we come together, whether it's for a luncheon or a picnic, whatever we do over the course of the year, we're going to do our best to organize these types of service opportunities, because it gives us a chance to get to know each other outside of sort of the work setting.  And we can give something back to the D.C. community that oftentimes don't get to see us.  And that's important, too.

So I just want to thank you all.  I want to thank the food bank for making this possible.  It's not easy to pull together a service project for 160 people, and we don't ever give them enough time. 

I also want to thank Jill Biden.  You know, she says this is all me.  This is both of us.  This is all of us, quite frankly.  We couldn't do this if you weren't willing to make it happen.

So I just want to thank you guys and make sure that we hit our goal, a thousand bags.  Let's get going.  Thanks again.  And we'll see you tomorrow at lunch.  (Applause.)

END
2:18 P.M. EDT
 

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the First Lady
_______________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                       April 29, 2009

REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY AND DR. BIDEN
AT CAPITAL AREA FOOD BANK EVENT WITH CONGRESSIONAL SPOUSES:
PART TWO

Capital Area Food Bank
Washington, D.C.
 

3:09 P.M. EDT

DR. BIDEN:  Hi, everybody.  Gosh, thanks for being here.  We just did this just now, so now we're going to have another competition.  And this event really is a reflection of Michelle Obama and the administration and all of you. 

You know, Michelle is not new to this.  She's done community service all of her life.  When she was in Chicago she worked with AmeriCorps and at the University of Chicago.  She set up a volunteer program on a massive scale.  And then when she became our First Lady, she helped with Miriam's Kitchen and YouthBuild, and now she has a community garden at the White House. 

So really I can think of no better way to celebrate our 100th day than to be here with everybody with this service project.  And it's all due to Michelle and the wonderful job that she has done.  Our First Lady Michelle.  (Applause.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Yay!  Fired up, ready to go!  Thank you, Jill.  Jill is being modest.  It's not me; it's -- Jill has been a partner in this from the very beginning.  She has been just a true blue supporter in every endeavor, and I am grateful to have her as my partner.

We wouldn't be here without all of you.  This is something that we talked about when we came into the administration.  We've been having lunches, we've been talking, and one thing I said was that it would be great for us to start coming together across party lines, and using our power, our visibility, to get some things done but also to highlight just how simple service can be. 

I -- you know, my background, I've built a career on volunteerism and community service.  It is something that I am passionate about, and I wanted to bring that to the work of the First Lady, into the administration.  And this is just one very important, very visible example of how a group of people can come together and feed thousands of kids, which is what we're doing here today. 

And it's not just coming here together, but, as Lynne mentioned, everyone has food banks in their communities.  Many of you are -- have important, passionate projects.  It doesn't matter what it is.  It's just that we do it and that we support one another in those efforts and that we pull our communities in to this work, that we pull our kids in.  I see that some of us have brought our children, and that's such an important message to send to the next generation:  that even if you're 10, five, seven, I don't care how old, you're never too young, you're never too old to serve.

So I'm grateful to all of you.  This will not be the last time we come together, because I also think what we do when we come together is that we build relationships, we get to know one another outside of a luncheon, we get to share our passions together.  And it just sort of breaks the barriers, if there are any, that exist.

So it is so important that you all have made this commitment.  Over 150 spouses committed to serve today, and that's an incredible number. 

You are the second group.  We had group one in.  And as Lynne mentioned, we had a goal of trying to get to a thousand bags.  We hit our goal in the first group.  (Laughter.)  So now the challenge begins.  And I have to tell you that Paul Pelosi, who was in the first group, said, well, if you talk longer -- (laughter) -- then you'll slow down their progress.  That was Paul.  So you get him when you see him tomorrow.  You make sure that -- (laughter) -- and so that means we're going to work a little harder and surpass the thousand-bag mark.

So thank you all once again.  Thanks for coming.  Thanks for your energy, your spirit.  And I look forward to seeing you all tomorrow at lunch.  So let's get to work.  (Applause.

END
3:13 P.M. EDT

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
___________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                         April 29, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
IN ARNOLD, MISSOURI TOWN HALL

Fox Senior High School
Arnold, Missouri

10:25 A.M. CDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much.  Thank you.  Everybody please have a seat.  Have a seat.  Thank you so much.  What a wonderful introduction.  It's good to be out of Washington, good to be back in the Midwest. 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We love you!

THE PRESIDENT:  Love you back.  (Applause.)

Let me, first of all, ask everybody to give a huge round of applause to Linda for the great introduction and everything that she's been doing in the community.  Thank you so much.  (Applause.)

I've got a few other friends who are here -- you may know them, I want to make sure that I acknowledge them.  One of, I think, the finest members of Congress that we have and somebody who's just been a great friend of mine, she is somebody you want in the foxhole with you when you got a tough fight -- please give a huge round of applause to Claire McCaskill.  (Applause.)

We've got one of the finest new governors in the country, Jay Nixon.  (Applause.)  Where did Jay go?  There he is.  An outstanding Secretary of State and somebody who I think may turn out to be pretty good in Washington if she just so decides -- Robin Carnahan.  (Applause.)  We've got Attorney General Chris Koster here.  (Applause.)  State Treasurer Clint Zweifel.  (Applause.)  A great friend who was with me from the start -- Susan Montee, your State Auditor.  (Applause.)  We have our outstanding host today, Mayor Ron Counts, of Arnold.  (Applause.)

We've got Congressman Russ Carnahan, who is voting on the budget today, but I want everybody to give him a big round of applause anyway.  (Applause.)

I want to thank everybody here at Fox High School for their hospitality.  (Applause.)  I want to thank your lovely school superintendent, who is just doing an outstanding job. Please stand up.  (Applause.)  I want to thank the Warriors for the basketball jersey -- (applause) -- which I will wear with pride -- yeah!  (Applause.)  If I ever get to play basketball again -- (laughter) -- they've been keeping me a little busy.

It is great to be back in the middle of America, where common sense often reigns.  (Applause.)  And this reminds me of why I like to get out of Washington now and again.      

The last time I was in Missouri was just under six months ago, at a high school a lot like this one.  We were in Springfield; it was two days before the election, and I was making my final case to the American people.  And it was just an unbelievable crowd, bigger than anything anybody had expected.  And so we're here in Missouri to -- we were here in Missouri at the end of a long journey to the White House, and so now I want to come back and speak to you at the beginning of another long journey.  Today marks 100 days since I took the oath of office to be your President.  (Applause.)  One hundred days.  It's a good thing.  Thank you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

Now, back in November, some folks were surprised that we showed up in Springfield at the end of our campaign.  But then again, some folks were surprised that we even started our campaign in the first place.  (Laughter.)  They didn't give us much of a chance.  They didn't think we could do things differently.  They didn't know if this country was ready to move in a new direction.

But here's the thing -- my campaign wasn't born in Washington.  My campaign was rooted in neighborhoods just like this one, in towns and cities all across America; rooted in folks who work hard and look after their families and seek a brighter children -- future for their children and for their communities and for their country.

It was driven by workers who were tired of seeing their jobs shipped overseas, their health care costs go up, their dreams slip out of reach.  (Applause.)  It was grounded in a sense of unity and common purpose with every single American, whether they voted for me on Election Day or voted for somebody else.  It was energized by every citizen who believed that the size of our challenges had outgrown the smallness of our politics.  My campaign was possible because the American people wanted change.

I ran for President because I wanted to carry those voices -- your voices -- with me to Washington.  (Applause.)  And so I just want everybody to understand:  You're who I'm working for every single day in the White House.  I've heard your stories; I know you sent me to Washington because you believed in the promise of a better day.  And I don't want to let you down.

You believed that after an era of selfishness and greed, that we could reclaim a sense of responsibility on Wall Street and in Washington, as well as on Main Street.  You believed that instead of huge inequalities and an economy that's built on a bubble, we could restore a sense of fairness to our economy and build a new foundation for lasting growth and prosperity.  You believed that at a time of war, we could stand strong against our enemies and stand firmly for our ideals, and show a new face of American leadership to the world. 

That's the change that you believed in.  That's the trust you placed in me.  It's something I will never forget, the fact that you made this possible.

So today, on my 100th day in office, I've come to report to you, the American people, that we have begun to pick ourselves up and dust ourselves off, and we've begun the work of remaking America.  (Applause.)  We're working to remake America. 

Now, we've got a lot of work to do, because on our first day in office we found challenges of unprecedented size and scope.  Our economy was in the midst of the most serious downturn since the Great Depression.  Banks had stopped lending.  The housing market was crippled.  The deficit was at $1.3 trillion.  And meanwhile, families continued to struggle with health care costs, too many of our kids couldn't get the education they needed, the nation remained trapped by our dangerous dependence on foreign oil.

Now, these challenges could not be met with half-measures.  They couldn't be met with the same old formulas. They couldn't be confronted in isolation.  They demanded action that was bold and sustained.  They demand action that is bold and sustained.  They call on us to clear away the wreckage of a painful recession, but also, at the same time, lay the building blocks for a new prosperity.  And that's the work that we've begun over these first 100 days.

To jumpstart job creation and get our economy moving again, we passed the most ambitious economic recovery plan in our nation's history.  And already, we're beginning to see this change take hold.  In Jefferson City, over 2,500 jobs will be created on Missouri's largest wind farm, so that American workers are harnessing clean, American energy. (Applause.)  Across the state, roughly 20,000 transportation jobs will be supported by the Recovery Act, so that Missourians are rebuilding your roads, your bridges, your rails.

To restore fairness to our economy, we've taken several steps with Congress to strengthen the middle class.  We cut taxes for 95 percent of American households through a tax cut that will put $120 billion directly into your pockets.  (Applause.)  We finally signed a law long overdue that will protect equal pay for equal work for American women.  (Applause.)  We extended health care to millions of children across this country.  (Applause.)

We launched a housing plan that has already contributed to a spike in the number of homeowners who are refinancing their mortgages, which is the equivalent of another tax cut for them.  And if you haven't refinanced, you might want to take a look and see if it's possible, because that can save people a lot of money.  We've taken steps to unfreeze the market for auto loans and student loans and small business loans.  And we're acting with the full force of the federal government to ensure that our banks have the capital and the confidence to lend money to the families and business owners who keep this economy running.

Now, even as we cleared away the wreckage, I've also said that we can't go back to an economy that's built on a pile of sand -- on inflated home prices and maxed-out credit cards; on over-leveraged banks and outdated regulations that allowed the recklessness of just a few people to threaten the prosperity of all of us.

So that's why I introduced a budget and other measures that build on the Recovery Act to lay a new foundation for growth -- a foundation that's built on five pillars that will strengthen our economy and help us compete in the 21st century:  number one, new investments in education that will equip our workers with the right skills and training; number two, new investments in renewable energy that will create millions of jobs and new industries; number three, new investments in health care that will cut costs for families and businesses; number four, new savings that will bring down our deficit; and number five, new rules for Wall Street that reward drive and innovation.  (Applause.)

Now, I've got to say that some of the people in Washington have been surprised -- they said, boy, he's so ambitious; he's been trying to do so much.  Now, maybe they're not accustomed to this, but there's no mystery to what we've done.  The priorities that we've acted upon were the things that we said we'd do during the campaign.  (Applause.)  I mean, it's not like anybody should be surprised.  The policies we've proposed were plans we talked about for two years, in places like this, all across the country with ordinary Americans.  The changes that we've made are the changes we promised.  That's what you should expect from a President.  You may not always agree with me, but if you take a look at what I said I was going to do when I was running for office, and you now look at what we are in the middle of doing -- we're doing what we said we'd do.  (Applause.)

Now, after 100 days, I'm pleased with the progress we've made, but I'm not satisfied.  I'm confident in the future, but I'm not content with the present -- not when there are workers who are still out of jobs, families who still can't pay their bills; not when there are too many Americans who can't afford their health care, so many of our children being left behind and our nation is not leading the world in developing 21st century energy.  I'm not satisfied. And I know you aren't either.  The crisis that we're confronting was many years in the making; it will take us time to overcome it.  We've come a long way, we can see the light on the horizon, but we've got a much longer journey ahead.

And one of the encouraging things for me is the fact that the American people know this.  You know that our progress has to be measured in the results that we achieve over many months and years, not the minute-by-minute talk in the media.  And you know that progress comes from hard choices and hard work, not miracles.  I'm not a miracle worker.  We've got a lot of tough choices and hard decisions and hard work ahead of us.  The 100th day might be a good time to reflect on where we are, but it's more important to where we're going that we focus on the future, because we can't rest until our economy is growing and we've built that new foundation for our prosperity.

We can't rest until we reform those outdated rules and regulations that allowed this crisis to happen in the first place.  And that's why I've called for tough, new, common-sense rules of the road that punish abuse and reward drive and innovation in the financial sector.  I expect a bill to arrive on my desk for signature before this year is out.  We are going to make sure this kind of crisis does not happen again.  (Applause.)

We can't rest until we have schools that prepare our children for the challenges of the 21st century.  And we've already made historic investments in education and college affordability.  I was talking to your superintendent about all the wonderful things that she's going to be able to do with some of the money that came out of the recovery package.  We're going to continue to help our schools meet high standards and close achievement gaps.  And we're going to reward teachers for performance and give them new pathways for advancement.  (Applause.)  We are going to seek the goal of once again having the highest proportion of college graduates in the world -- we're going to do it by 2020.  (Applause.)

We can't rest until we harness the renewable energy that can create millions of new jobs and new industries.  The Recovery Act will double the supply of renewable energy, but the only way to truly spark an energy transformation is through a gradual, market-based cap on carbon pollution so that energy, clean energy is the profitable kind of energy. And we can do this in a way that creates jobs.  That's how we can grow our economy, enhance our security, and protect our planet at the same time.

I don't think we can rest until we have a 21st century health care system that makes sense -- (applause) -- one that cuts costs for families and businesses across America. That's why we invested in preventative care, we've invested in electronic records; that's why my budget makes a down payment on reform that will finally make quality health care affordable for every American.  And I look forward to working with both parties in Congress to make this reform a reality in the months to come.

And we can't rest until we restore the fiscal discipline that will keep us from leaving our children with a mountain of debt.  And working with people like Claire McCaskill, we have already put forward a budget that will cut the deficit in half by the end of my first term.  We've launched a procurement reform effort that will greatly reduce no-bid contracts and will save $40 billion.  We're going through the budget line by line, page by page; we've already identified more than 100 programs to reduce or eliminate because they don't work.  And I've personally asked the leadership in Congress to pass into law rules that follow the simple principle:  You pay for what you spend -- so that government acts the same way any responsible family does.  If you want a tax cut, you got to pay for it; if you want a new program, you got to pay for it.  Tell the American people the truth -- how are you going to pay for it?  (Applause.)

And finally, we can't rest until America is secure and our leadership is restored.  And that's why I've begun to end the war in Iraq through a responsible transition to Iraqi control.  It is their country, they need to take control.  (Applause.)  That's why we have a new strategy to disrupt and dismantle and defeat al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan.  That's why we've renewed our diplomacy to reduce the spread of nuclear weapons, to speak directly to our adversaries, and strengthen relations in the hemisphere. 

And that's why we have rejected the false choice between our security and our ideals.  That's why I ordered the closing of the detention center at Guantanamo; that's why I prohibited the use of torture -- (applause) -- because America is stronger than any enemy -- and we always have been -- precisely because we do what's right not just when it's easy, but when it's hard.  That's what sets us apart.

We're living through extraordinary times.  We didn't ask for all the challenges that we face, but we're determined to answer the call to meet them.  That's that spirit I see everywhere I go. That's the spirit we need to sustain, because the answer to our problems will ultimately be found in the character of the American people.  We need soldiers and diplomats, scientists, teachers, workers, entrepreneurs.  We need your service; we need your active citizenship.  That's why I recently signed a bill that will create hundreds of thousands of opportunities for the American people to serve.  That's why I will continue to ask for your help and your ideas and your support to make the changes that we need.

I want to warn you, there will be setbacks.  It will take time.  But I promise you I will always tell you the truth about the challenges that we face and the steps that we are taking to meet them.  I will continue to measure my progress by the progress that you see in your own lives.  And I believe that years from now we are going to be able to look back at this time as the moment when the American people once again came together to reclaim their future.  (Applause.)  That's what this is about.

Thank you, everybody.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

All right, this is the fun part.  Everybody sit back down.  I'm going to take questions.  There are no rules, nobody has been pre-screened.  And we're not going to be able to get through all of the questions that people want to ask, so if you can raise your hand I will try to call on you.  We're going to go girl-boy-girl-boy, so nobody thinks I'm biased.  (Laughter.)  I'll try to just go around the gym and we'll get to as many as we can.  If you can stand up, introduce yourself when the question has been asked, and we should have some microphones in the audience -- right?  Where are microphone people?  Raise up your mics.  Okay, so we've got a few here.  So wait for the microphone so everybody can hear your question.

All right, this gentleman right here -- right there.  Yes, you.  I guess we're going boy-girl.  (Laughter.)  You can go ahead and hand him the mic.

Q    I'm a retired auto worker from General Motors.  And I was just curious, with all the -- what's going on in the news and with the contracts and everything, where is this all eventually going to leave the retirees' pensions and our health care?  I mean, we also are considered middle class -

THE PRESIDENT:  Keep the mic near you.

Q    Oh, I'm sorry.  We're also considered middle class and it seems like they keep constantly wanting to take it away from the auto worker and prosecuting us, instead of the corporate that brought us to this. 

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, it's a good question.  Let me talk about what's happening with autos, because obviously this is a big concern for everybody.  I believe that the U.S. should have a strong auto industry.  I believe that.  (Applause.)  One of the things, one of the transitions I want to make, I want us to get back to making things, not just shuffling paper around.  (Applause.)  And so the auto industry is a major part of that.

Now, what is also true is that the decisions that were made over decades put the U.S. auto industry in a bad spot. We used to build the cars that consumers wanted, and at a certain point those weren’t the cars that were being designed.  Now, in fairness to the auto industry, a lot of the cars that are coming out of Detroit have gotten really good; they are on par with foreign imports.  But the problem is, is that because of a lot of those bad decisions catching up, even though there's some very good products out there, overall the companies were in really bad shape.

Now, the Bush administration had already given several billions of dollars worth of aid, and GM and Chrysler were told to come up with a plan.  When they presented the plan to us, my responsibility to taxpayers is to look at those plans in a realistic way and figure are these plans going to work in order to put these auto companies on a firm, solid footing where they can operate without government subsidies and succeed, and compete in the marketplace.  Because we've got the best workers; we just need the best plans.  Right?  (Applause.)

Unfortunately, the plan that they presented just weren’t realistic.  I mean, we did a pretty thoroughgoing analysis of this thing and you couldn't -- what they were doing wasn’t painting a picture of how they could be viable over the long term -- without being wards of the state.  And, frankly, there's no way that we were going to get taxpayers to just, every few months, just give a few more billion dollars, because there are a lot of other industries that would love to have those kinds of subsidies.

So we are now at the point where Chrysler is supposed to report back to us in the next day or two about their plans for a potential merger with Fiat -- and the Fiat management has actually done a good job transforming their industry.  We're hoping that you can get a merger where the taxpayers will put in some money to sweeten the deal, but ultimately the goal is we get out of the business of building cars, and Chrysler goes and starts creating the cars that consumers want.  And one of the potential advantages of a merger is new technologies where Chrysler starts making fuel-efficient clean-energy cars that will meet the needs of the future market.

We don't know yet whether the deal is going to get done.  I will tell you that the workers at Chrysler have made enormous sacrifices -- enormous sacrifices -- to try to keep the company going.  One of the key questions now is, are the bond holders, the lenders, the money people, are they willing to make sacrifices, as well?  We don't know yet, so there's still a series of negotiations that are taking place.

I can tell you that no matter what happens, we want to provide certain protections to retirees for their health care and their pensions.  That will also be expensive for taxpayers.  But my attitude is we got here not because our workers didn't do a great job trying to build a great product; it was because management decisions betrayed workers. 

There are going to be some long-term adjustments that have to be made, though, both for Chrysler and GM.  GM, by the way, has 30 more days, because their restructuring is more thoroughgoing than what was required with Chrysler.  But I can guarantee you I will -- I look at this from the perspective of how can I create a strong, viable, competitive auto industry that is giving workers an opportunity to build a great product, take pride in that product, and continue to support their families and build communities that are strong. 

That's my entire orientation, and how do I do that in a way that doesn't waste taxpayer money -- because, as I said, people in other industries would love help, as well, and I've got to be fair to people who aren't in the auto industry.  If we're going to do it, it's got to be because we think that we've got a long-term plan that actually makes sense.  I think we can get there, but we've still got a little more work to do.  (Applause.)  

`All right.  Young lady up there in the pink, right there.  There we go.

Q    I'm a school counselor in the Fox T6 district.  President Obama, what do you feel is the biggest challenge facing our educational system today, and how do you plan on meeting those challenges?

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay, excellent question.  I believe that we've got a multitude of challenges.  So rather than just isolate on one, let me talk about several. 

Our children are coming out of high school -- in some cases, they're not even graduating high school, but even if they graduate from high school -- ranked lower on math and science scores than many other advanced industrialized countries.  Nations like China and India are starting to turn out more engineers, more scientists.  If we aren’t able to compete technologically we're not going to be able to compete, because this is a knowledge-based economy.  We can have some people who are really willing to work hard, but if the technology is coming from overseas and all we're competing for is just our labor, then over time those countries will get richer, our countries will get poorer.

So we've got to upgrade across the board -- not just in poor, underprivileged schools, but across the board -- we've got to upgrade the performance levels of our young people.  Now, in order to do that, the single-biggest ingredient is the quality of our teachers; single most important factor -- (applause) -- single most important factor in the classroom is the quality of the person standing at the front of the classroom.  And that's why our recovery package put a lot of emphasis on teacher training, teacher recruitment, teacher retention, professional development. 

And I've got a terrific young Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, who is -- (applause) -- and he is so passionate, but he's tough, and he wants to push school districts to really do what it takes to give teachers the support that they need.

Now, that involves a whole range of things.  It means that how we train and recruit teachers in the first place, how do we match them up with master teachers so that they learn best practices; how do we make sure that if they're coming in and they don't have all the professional background they need in something -- a subject area like science, that we give them the training they need; and how do we recruit people who might be great teachers but didn’t go through the conventional channels.  If there's a chemist out there somewhere who wants to teach, we should be able to get him into the classroom in an expedited way, because he or she is bringing skills that we need.

I just gave an award to the Teacher of the Year, who was a police officer, a cop -- had gone to the -- had become a captain in the New York City Police Department and then decided that he wanted to pursue his lifelong love of learning and went back to teach -- and asked for the toughest-to-teach kids.  Well, we want to encourage people like that who have a passion for teaching.

Now, I also want to increase teacher pay so that a lot more people want to go into teaching.  (Applause.)

The deal I've got to strike with teachers, though -- I may not get as much applause on this -- (laughter) -- is I would like to work with teachers and the teachers unions, because I'm a union guy, but I do believe -- (applause) -- but I do believe that it's important for the unions to work flexibly with school districts in a consensual fashion to find ways so that if you've got a really excellent teacher, after 15, 20 years, they can get paid a little bit more -- right? -- if they're doing a really good job.  (Applause.) 

And now the flip side -- I'm telling you, I'm getting to the point where I'm not going to get applause.  (Laughter.)  If you've got a bad teacher who can't -- after given all the support and the training that they need is just not performing up to snuff, we've got to find that person a new job.  (Applause.)

Just a couple more comments on education generally.  A lot of schools still aren't using technology as well as they could in the classroom.  And one of the things we're trying to do with the Recovery Act is to help schools get broadband, get computers, but then also train people to use it properly.  I think we can do more with technology.  Once kids get out of high school, making college affordable is absolutely critical.  (Applause.)  We have to redesign the college experience so that -- not everybody is going to go to school for four years right in a row when they're 18.  Some people are going to work for two years, then go back to school for two years once they figure out something they're interested in; go back to work, maybe five years down the road they need to retrain.

We've got to create a pathway for lifelong learning for young people -- and not-so-young people -- so that all American workers are continually upgrading their skills.  (Applause.)  So we want to put a lot more emphasis on community colleges and how they are working effectively together.

Let me make a last point because I don't want to -- I could talk about this stuff forever.  One last point which I always have to remind people of -- I said that the biggest ingredient in school performance is the teacher.  That's the biggest ingredient within a school.  But the single biggest ingredient is the parent.  (Applause.)  So this is an example where, people are always trying to say, oh, Obama, is he liberal?  Is he conservative?  Well, I want government to do what it should do, but there's some things government can't do.  That's where I'm conservative.  Government can't force parents to turn off the TV set and tell your kid to sit down and do their homework.  I can't do that.  (Applause.)  That's not my job.  That's your job.  Well, it is my job with Sasha and Malia.  (Laughter.)  Those two, I'm responsible for.

But the other part of it is it's not just making sure your kids are doing their homework, it's also instilling a thirst for knowledge and excellence.  It's been noted widely that there are a lot of immigrant students who come from very modest backgrounds economically that end up doing very well.  And why is that?  Well, the difference is, is that in their families and in their communities a lot of times they've got that attitude that used to be prevalent, but sometimes we're losing -- sometimes I worry we're losing -- and that is, boy, it is a privilege to learn,  it's a privilege to discover new things, it's cool to be smart.  (Applause.)  We want to reward kids for doing well in school.  (Applause.)

And the community can help the parents.  Listen, I love basketball.  But the smartest kid in the school, the National Science Award winner should be getting as much attention as the basketball star.  (Applause.)  That's a change that we've got to initiate in our community. 

All right, gentleman in the tie there, since he wore a tie. That was really nice of him.  (Laughter.)  We appreciate that.  Thank you.

Q    I'm the junior class vice president of Fox High School.  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  All right. 

Q    I was just curious to what policies you're going to put into place in order to protect Social Security for the upcoming generations.

THE PRESIDENT:  That's a good question.  (Applause.)  Let me, first of all -- a lot of people know this, but I always want to try to explain how Social Security works so that you have a better sense of what we have to do, going forward.

Social Security is not an individual account.  When you pay your payroll tax, it doesn't go into -- I'm sorry, what was your name?  Jay?  It doesn't go into Jay's account.  Your Social Security tax goes to pay for current retirees.  And hopefully when you retire, young people who are working then, their money will go to pay for your retirement. 

So it's an intergenerational commitment that we make to each other.  What we say is, look, all of us are going to grow old, so we're going to make sure that there's enough money in there for your retirement; and those of us who are currently working, we pay into the kitty to make sure that that happens, and then we expect that the next generation is going to do the same.  All right?

Now, here's the problem that we confront -- and this is a solvable problem.  I've got -- there are some problems that are really hard to solve; this is actually one that we can solve.  And that is -- the problem is that the baby boomers -- there were a lot of them, and they're getting older.  Even though they deny it, they're getting older.  (Laughter.)  So what's happening is you're getting a big bulge of people who are retiring and you've got fewer workers supporting more retirees.  That means you got more money going out, less money coming in -- and so you get a mismatch.

Now, what's been happening is, up until very recently we've been running a surplus in the Social Security account. So there should be enough money -- and if we were wise then all that money would be there and then we -- we're going to start running a deficit as the baby boomers start retiring, but we would have accumulated all this money and everything would be fine.

But a couple of things have happened.  Number one is that the Social Security trust fund -- there wasn't a fence around it so people started borrowing out of it for other things.  That's not helpful.  But the other part of it is, is that there's still going to be a gap if we don't do anything -- even if we repay all the money into the trust fund, there's still a gap because there are too many retirees.

So it's not that Social Security would go away, Jay; the problem would be that by the time you retire, you'd be getting 75 cents for every dollar that was promised to you. So you'd get cheated out of a little bit of your Social Security.  That's why -- when people say Social Security is going bankrupt, that's not true.  The problem is not that it's going bankrupt; the problem is just that your benefit -- it would be the equivalent of a benefit cut of about 25 percent if we don't start making some changes.

Now, there are only a handful of ways to make these changes. Number one, you could just keep on trying to borrow a trillion dollars, or a couple trillion, or however much it takes from China.  But that's not such a good solution, because you'd end up having to pay interest on it and at some point they're just going to be tired of lending to us because they've got their own senior citizens that they want to take care off.

Second option is to gradually raise the retirement age.  Now, I don't think this is the best option just because we just talked to an auto worker over here -- that's hard work. And if people's -- if the retirement age is already 67, and now you want to get it up to 68 or 69, if you're working on an assembly line, and you've been doing that for 50 years, or 40 years, that's some tough stuff.  If you're a senator, you can work until, you know -- (laughter) -- but if you're doing real work -- (laughter and applause) -- now that's -- except for Claire.  Claire does some real work.  Claire is a hard worker.  Claire is a hard worker.   (Applause.)

You could cut benefits.  You could raise the tax on everybody, so everybody's payroll tax goes up a little bit. Or you can do what I think is probably the best solution, which is you can raise the cap on the payroll tax.  (Applause.)

Now, let me explain one last point about this.  Whether you are Bill Gates, or you are Jay, a junior at Fox High School, you pay the same rate on your payroll tax, but what happens is, is that it gets capped out at $102,000.  Now, the majority of people here, for almost everybody here, what that means is, is that you pay a payroll tax on every dime that you earn.  But if you're Bill Gates, that means you're only paying payroll tax on 1/10th of 1 percent of what you earn, because you earn so much more -- $100,000, that's just the first fraction of what you earn, and then you stop paying it.

So what I've said is look, for wealthier people why don't we raise the cap?  (Applause.)  Make them pay a little more payroll tax.  (Applause.)  Not everybody is wild about this idea, not surprisingly.  (Laughter.)  And so what I would like to do -- I had a fiscal responsibility summit where I brought together Republicans, Democrats, experts on all these issues -- how do we start dealing with our long-term deficits, our long-term debt.  I actually think that we could get all those folks together, and we could come up with a solution that would ensure stability of the Social Security system for a long, long time to come.

Let me just make this last point though.  The big problem we have with entitlements is not Social Security, it's Medicare.  Medicare and Medicaid, the two health care programs that the federal government helps support, those are the things that are really breaking the bank. 

I know you’ve been hearing all these arguments about, oh, Obama is just spending crazy, look at these huge trillion-dollar deficits, blah, blah, blah.  Well, let me make a point.  Number one, we inherited a $1.3 trillion deficit -- that wasn’t from my -- that wasn’t me.  (Applause.)  That wasn’t me.  Number two, there is almost uniform consensus among economists that in the middle of the biggest crisis -- financial crisis since the Great Depression, we had to take extraordinary steps.  So you’ve got a lot of Republican economists who agree that we had to do a stimulus package and we had to do something about the banks.  Those are one-time charges, and they're big, and they'll make our deficits go up over the next two years.  But those aren’t the problem that we face long term.

What we face long term, the biggest problem we have is that Medicare and Medicaid -- health care costs are sky-rocketing, and at the same time as the population is getting older, which means we're using more health care -- you combine those two things, and if we aren’t careful, health care will consume so much of our budget that ultimately we won't be able to do anything else.  We won't be able to provide financial assistance to students; we won't be able to help build green energy; we won't be able to help industries that get into trouble; we won't have a national park system; we won't be able to do what we're supposed to do on our veterans.  Everything else will be pushed aside because of Medicare and Medicaid.  That's the problem that we really confront.

That's why I've said we've got to have health reform this year -- (applause) -- to drive down costs and make health care affordable for American families, businesses and for our government.  (Applause.) 

So, you know, when you see -- those of you who are watching certain news channels that -- on which I'm not very popular -- (laughter) -- and you see folks waving tea bags around -- (laughter) -- let me just remind them that I am happy to have a serious conversation about how we are going to cut our health care costs down over the long term, how we're going to stabilize Social Security.  Claire and I are working diligently to do basically a thorough audit of federal spending.  But let's not play games and pretend that the reason is because of the Recovery Act, because that's just a fraction of the overall problem that we've got. 

We are going to have to tighten our belts, but we're going to have to do it in an intelligent way, and we've got to make sure that the people who are helped are working American families.  And we're not suddenly saying that the way to do this is to eliminate programs that help ordinary people and give more tax cuts to the wealthy.  We tried that formula for eight years. It did not work, and I don't intend to go back to it.  (Applause.)

All right, it's a young lady's turn.  It's your turn? (Laughter.)  No, I'm going to call on her.  I might call on you later, though.

All right, go ahead.  

Q    I'm a licensed acupuncturist and licensed massage therapist in Florissant.  And so --

THE PRESIDENT:  I could use one right now.  (Laughter.)  My back is stiff.  I've been working hard.

Q    I'll be happy to help you.  (Laughter.)  And this kind of fits into what you were just talking about as far as health care.  I'm wondering, as a practitioner of Oriental medicine, knowing that the National Institutes of Health and the World Health Organization has discovered through their studies that alternative medicine often is more cost-effective and very effective, how will alternative medicine fit in your new health care program?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, look, my attitude is that we should -- we should do what works.  So I think it is pretty well documented through scientific studies that acupuncture, for example, can be very helpful in relieving certain things like migraines and other ailments -- or at least as effective as more intrusive interventions.

I will let the science guide me.  We just swore in an outstanding new Secretary of Health and Human Service, Kathleen Sebelius, former governor of Kansas.  (Applause.)  It's good to see that a Jay Hawk got applause on this side of the border here. (Laughter.)  But she's going to do an outstanding job.  And my charge to her is, as we're going through health care reform let's find out what works.

I think one basic principle that we know is that the more we do on the prevention side, the more we can obtain serious savings down the road.  So giving children early checkups, making sure that they get immunized, making sure that they are diagnosed if they've got eyesight problems, making sure that they're taught proper nutrition to avoid a life of obesity -- those are all issues that we have some control over.  And if we're making those investments, we will save huge amounts of money in the long-term.

Unfortunately, the hardest thing to do in politics -- and certainly in health care reform -- has been to get policymakers to make investments early that will have long-term payoffs.  Because people -- their attitude is, well, I'll be out of office by the time that kid grows up; and, the fact that they're healthy, that doesn't help me.  And in the private sector insurance system, oftentimes insurers make the same calculation. Their attitude is, well, people change jobs enough for us to pay for the preventive medicine now when the problem may not crop up for another 20 years and they'll be long out of our system, so we don't want to reimburse it because it will make things more costly.  That's the logic of our health care system that we're going to have to change.

The recovery package put a huge amount in prevention.  We are, in our budget, calling for significant increases in prevention.  And my hope is, is that working in a bipartisan fashion we are going to be able to get a health care reform bill on my desk before the end of the year that will start seeing the kinds of investments that will make everybody healthier.  All right?  (Applause.)

Okay, it's a man's turn.  It's a guy's turn, it's a guy's turn.  This gentleman right here, he raised his hand. Go ahead. Yes, sir -- hold on, wait for your -- now, are you an elected official, by the way?

Q    No, sir.

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay, good.  Because elected officials, you guys can't hog the mic right now.

Q    No, sir.  I'm a pastor.

THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, God bless you.  (Laughter.)

Q    Mt. Sinai Baptist Church in the City of St. Louis.  My question has to do with foreign policy.  While we spend so much money with Afghanistan and in other parts of the world, fighting and what have you, on the continent of Africa -- Sudan, Darfur and other places -- the poverty level is so high, so many people are dying.  Is there a chance in your administration that we would be able to build in that area?  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  It's a good question.  Let me, first of all, say that whatever arguments we had about Iraq, I think we've been able to build a consensus that it is time for us to bring our troops home and give responsibility over to the Iraqis.  (Applause.)

We are doing it in a careful way, because we don't want the country to collapse -- that would not be in our strategic interests.  There's been recent flare-ups of violence in Iraq that are highly sensationalized, and that indicates the degree to which this is a ramp-down that is conducted over the course of 18 months.  I think that's the right thing to do.

In Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan, we do have real problems with the Taliban and al Qaeda.  They are the single most direct threat to our national security interests.  And I had some grumblings and complaints from certain factions in the Democratic Party when I made a decision to send 17,000 additional troops there.  I understand people's concerns.  But as Commander-in-Chief it is my responsibility to make sure that bin Laden and his cronies are not able to create a safe haven within which they can kill another 3,000 Americans or more.  That's an obligation that I have.  (Applause.)

Now, having said that both on Iraq and Afghanistan I think we're doing the right thing, I think it's difficult; it's going to require a new strategy that mixes not just military action, but also includes diplomacy and development.  We can't neglect these other parts of the world.  So I've appointed a special envoy, a Major General Scott Gration, a very close friend of mine, was one of the top fighter pilots in our military, in our Armed Forces, and somebody who's also an expert on development issues.  He just returned from Sudan.  We are trying to find a way to create peace and stability that will allow the kind of humanitarian assistance that's needed to take effect in that country.

But you're making a broader point, which is there are a lot of countries, not just in Africa, but in Asia, and Eastern Europe, et cetera, that need our help.  And sometimes people ask me, why should we help other countries when we've got so much to do here at home?  I mean, foreign aid is very unpopular.  I'm telling you, it's probably the single most unpopular thing.  If you just ask the average American, they'll say, why should we be giving money to other countries?

And people usually grossly overestimate how much our foreign aid budget is.  If you ask people, they'll say, well, we give 10 percent of our federal budget away in foreign aid.  Actually, it's 1 percent.  We give less in foreign aid than any other wealthy country as a percentage of our GDP.

Here is the reason why it's important.  The reason why it's important is that a lot of times we can advance our national interests more effectively by showing that we are interested in the well-being of the people of other countries.  That makes those countries more predisposed to work with us on a whole range of issues that are very important to us.  It's an important tool for us to be able to meet our national security interests.

So, for example -- let me just give you one very specific example.  If in Latin America, where I just returned, people see that we are sending doctors and teachers and Peace Corps workers into these communities, then that's the face of America; when it come time for them to help us on drug interdiction, it's a lot easier for the President of a Colombia or a Mexico to ally themselves with us because we're known to the Mexican people or the Colombian people as good friends, as people who care about them.  And that may actually then ultimately save us money in the long term because we don't end up having to send troops in and do some things ourselves, because we've got allies to work with us.

So not only is it the right thing to do from a ethical and moral perspective, but it is also good strategy.  And so I have said to the Congress, even in these difficult times we need to do some additional work in terms of foreign assistance, because it will save money for us -- and lives, blood and treasure for us -- in the long term. 

I mean, right now everybody is concerned about the swine flu, and properly so.  This is a potentially serious issue, and we've got to monitor it very carefully.  But think about it.  If Mexico has a good strong public health system that is catching these things early, ultimately that's going to save us money, because flu gets contained.  And a lot of the threats that we're going to be facing, whether it's international terrorism, cyber terrorism, nuclear proliferation, pandemic, climate change  -- a lot of these issues, they cross borders.  So it's not like we can just draw a moat around America, and say, I'm sorry, don't bother us; keep your problems outside.  It just doesn't work that way.

People get on planes from Africa, and will bring a disease right here to our doorstep, because we weren't concerned about whether or not they had a public health system that could catch these diseases early.  So this is all part of our interests, and not just other people's.

All right.  Okay.  I was told that I have time for one more question.  I want to -- I'm sorry guys, but I'm going to go with a student -- (applause) -- because young people, this is their school.  But I want a young lady, because it's a young lady's turn.  This young lady right here, this is the one, the one with the lei on here.

All right, there you go.  She looks ready with a good question.  (Applause.)

Q    It's an honor to meet you, President Obama.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much.  What is your name?

Q    I'm a fourth grader.  I was curious, how is your administration planning to be more environmentally friendly? (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, that is just a great question.  You're a very poised and articulate fourth grader.  (Applause.)  Yes, isn't she impressive?  (Applause.)  Yes, absolutely.  We might have to run you for President some day.  (Applause.)

Well, there are some short-term things we can do, and there are some long-term things we can do.  On the short-term list, we already, for example, passed a historic public lands bill that creates many more acres of public space that is environmentally protected -- (applause) -- from logging and from other -- from mining and from other uses.  And that I think is going to be very important.

Now, in some cases what we do is we balance the need for economic growth, but we do it in a sustainable way.  There doesn't have to be a contradiction between jobs and the environment, we just have to be thinking a little smarter.  So, for example, when it comes to forestry, there's nothing wrong with us cutting down some trees for timber, as long as you make sure that it's done in a sequence and is spaced properly so that the forest itself is sustained. 

Sometimes these debates become this all-or-nothing thing:  either commercial interests can do anything they want -- dump stuff in the oceans and tear down all the forests, and that's the only way we can get economic growth; or alternatively, everybody is hugging trees and you can't cut a tree.  You know, there's a balance that can be struck, and the key principle is sustainability.  Are what we are doing -- will it ensure that you have this incredible treasure we call America when you grow up, for your kids, so you can take them into a park, so sportsmen or fishermen can enjoy it.  That's the key.

Now, there is a long-term problem that we've got to deal with, and that's is a tough one.  And that is this issue of climate change.  I want to tell you the truth here because this is going to be a debate that we're going to be having over the course of the next year.  The average person probably thinks, yes, climate change, that's kind of a drag, but it's not one of my top priorities -- because you don't really see it or feel it, it doesn't hit your pocketbook, it doesn't have to do with your job directly.  And so the tendency is just to kind of push it off.  People think, well, this just has to do with polar bears, and I feel bad about polar bears but I've got other things to worry about.

I don't think people fully appreciate the potential damage

-- economic damage, as well as environmental damage -- that could be done if we are not serious in dealing with this problem.  If the temperature goes up a couple of degrees, well, it will change weather patterns pretty significantly.  It could create droughts in places where we haven't had drought; it could bring insect-born diseases up into places like Missouri that we haven't seen before.  But we can probably manage.  If the temperature of the planet goes up 5 degrees, you're now looking at coastlines underwater.  You're now looking at huge, cataclysmic hurricanes, complete changes in weather patterns.  Some places will get hotter, some places will get colder.  Our economy would be disrupted by tens of trillions of dollars.

So this is no joke.  And the science shows that the planet is getting warmer faster than people expected.  Even the most dire warnings, it's gotten -- it's moved forward faster than anybody expected.  They're talking about, just in a few years, during the summer, there won't be any ice in the Arctic, something we have never seen before.  So we have to do something about it.

Now, the question, again, is how do you do it in an intelligent way?  There are some people who would say this is such a big problem that you just got to shut everything down.  Well, I'm sorry, that's not going to happen.  People have got to go to work, and we've got to drive, we've got to fly places.  Our economy has to grow.

But there are ways that we can do it that are intelligent and smart.  And I think one of the best ways to do it is to say, in a gradual way, let's set a cap, a ceiling, on the carbon pollution that comes out of all sorts of places:  our utilities, our cars, our industries.  Let's take a look at all the carbon that's being sent into the atmosphere that's causing climate change, and let's say that each year we're going to reduce the allowable amount in total that is released.

And what we'll do to each industry is we'll say we're going to make a deal with you:  Come up with ways to improve your processes and bring pollution down, and you can make money by sending out less pollution; on the other hand, if you have more pollution than you were allowed, then you're going to have to pay money.  You start creating a market for the clean energy, and you start making it less economical to produce harmful energy.

Now, if we do that in a smart, gradual way and in a way that protects consumers from the initial attempts of utilities, for example, to pass on those costs to consumers -- which is what they'll try to do, so we've got to rebate some of that money to make sure that people are held harmless -- then I actually think that we can get control of this problem, we can save the polar bears, but more importantly we can make sure that we are preserving our economy.

And here is the great opportunity.  Everybody knows that we're going to have to do this.  The country that gets there fastest, the country that's the first one to figure out really good battery technology for a plug-in hybrid car, the first country that perfects wind power and solar power and knows how to get it from one place to another in an efficient way, that country will dominate the economy of the 21st century the same way that America dominated the 20th century.  I want that to be America.  That's what we're fighting for.  (Applause.)

All right, everybody, I had a good time.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END
11:36 A.M CDT
 

THE WHITE HOUSE
 
Office of the Press Secretary
___________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                        April 29, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE SWEARING-IN CEREMONY OF
SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES KATHLEEN SEBELIUS
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Oval Office
 8:02 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Congratulations, Madam Secretary.
SECETARY SEBELIUS:  Thank you, sir.
THE PRESIDENT:  Here we go.  We're just going to make a brief statement.  I am thrilled to have Kathleen Sebelius as my new Secretary of Health and Human Services. 
Obviously, we have a lot to do to make sure that health care is affordable for the American people, to deal with critical issues like food safety.  But we wanted to swear her in right away because we've got a significant public health challenge that requires her immediate attention, and that is the H1N1 flu outbreak that we've seen initially in Mexico and we now see over at -- got some cases here in the United States. 
It is something that we have to monitor very carefully.  The officials who have been in charge, including the Acting Director at the CDC, those at Department of Homeland Security, have done an outstanding job, a superb job, in managing the situation up to this point.
But we need all hands on deck, and so I am thrilled that we have Secretary Sebelius taking the reins.  She is going to be immediately briefed on the issues that we're working on right now.  I expect her to hit the ground running, and I have every confidence that given her experience as a governor who's managed crises before, who's worked on public health issues since she's been in public life, she is the right person at the right time for the job. 
So congratulations.  We are thrilled, and you are going to do a great job.
SECRETARY SEBELIUS:  Thank you.  Honored to serve.
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you. 
All right, thanks, guys.
 
END
8:04 P.M. EDT                                                                                      
THE WHITE HOUSE
 
Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                              April 29, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
THE VICE PRESIDENT,
AND SENATOR ARLEN SPECTER
Diplomatic Reception Room
8:00 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Good morning, everybody.
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Mr. President, as we used to say in the Senate, I hope you’ll excuse a point of personal privilege here. I -- Arlen Specter has been my friend and my confidant and my partner, and I his partner, in scores and scores of major, major pieces of legislation and issues for a long time.  And beyond that, Mr. President, he’s been there for me every time things have been tough for me, and I hope I have been there for him.
And it gives me great pleasure, great pleasure, Mr. President, to now officially be in the same caucus with Arlen Specter.  We’ve ridden the train for so many years, we’ve visited each other’s homes, our families, that it is -- it’s just, as, again, a point of personal privilege, it’s just a delight to have no separation.
Mr. President, I’m even more pleased that Arlen’s independence, integrity and piercing intellect will now be sitting in a Democratic caucus.  I think it will be a real added value.  Anyone who thinks that Arlen is going to cash in his independence politically has another thing coming, but I think our caucus and our party will be better for it, and as a consequence, I think we’ll be able to serve the country even better than we have.
And the people of Pennsylvania are going to continue to benefit from his fierce -- and I emphasize and I need not tell you, Mr. President -- his fierce commitment to the people of Pennsylvania and to this country.
So, Mr. President, I am pleased to introduce a man of immense personal courage and unmatched integrity, my friend, Arlen Specter.
SENATOR SPECTER:  Thank you.
Thank you, Mr. Vice President, and thank you, Mr. President, for your support and encouragement. 
I was unwilling to subject my 29-year record in the United States Senate to the Pennsylvania Republican primary electorate, but I am pleased to run in the primary on the Democratic ticket and am ready, willing and anxious to take on all comers in a general election.
I have not represented the Republican Party; I have represented the people of Pennsylvania.  And I will continue to do just that.  As I said yesterday, I will not be an automatic 60th vote.  There have been positions, which I talked about yesterday and will not re-enumerate, where I stand in a different position from the traditional position of the Democrats, and I will continue that independence.  
I do think, Mr. President, that I can be of assistance.  You have projected an administration that I feel very comfortable with.  I felt comfortable, frankly, in talking to my Republican colleagues yesterday, which I did, to have them hear from me personally what my thinking was and my reasons for what I was undertaking to do.  And that wasn’t an easy conversation, but I felt comfortable with it.
And I think I can be of assistance to you, Mr. President, in my views on centrist government.  There are a lot of big issues which we’re tackling now that I’ve been deeply involved in -- issues which go beyond my own personal interests.  And I do want to serve in a sixth term; I make no bones about that.  But I’ve been deeply involved in health care reform, and global warming, climate control, and immigration, and will continue to be so.  And I am mindful of the deficit and the national debt as we balance a lot of competing interests. 
One matter that especially concerns me is medical research. I think it is scandalous that we have not done more to harness the scientific know-how in America, with the gross national product we have, to do more to cure the maladies of the world.  And I’ve taken the lead with Senator Tom Harkin on a bipartisan basis in increasing NIH funding, and I think that has saved or prolonged lives, including mine.  And that’s a big reason why I’m so anxious to stay in the Senate and carry that work forward.
But most of all, I’m appreciative of what Senator Biden has said.  We have talked over every problem under the sun and under the moon.  We’ve ridden that train together again and again, and we’ve supported that train.  We’ve helped finance it.  And I appreciate what you have in the stimulus package, Mr. President.
When I talked to the President yesterday, I said, I haven’t seen you in the elevator lately.  His office used to be right down the hall from mine on the 7th floor of the Hart Building, and he hadn’t come back lately, so I said I was calling him up just to -- just to chit-chat.  And I got to know the President to some extent in the Senate -- I talked to him already, but that’s -- Joe taught me how to do that.
Just one personal comment.  The President approached me when he was Senator Obama, before the Democratic primary.  And he said, "Tell me, Arlen, if a Jewish kid from Kansas can carry Pennsylvania, how can a black kid from Kansas carry Pennsylvania?"  And I gave him some advice, and he became -- (laughter) -- he became President of the United States of America. 
THE PRESIDENT:  That’s how it worked.  Thank you so much, Arlen.  Thank you.
Well, let me start off by just saying I’m thrilled to have Arlen in the Democratic caucus.  I have told him that he will have my full support in the Democratic primary.  Joe Biden has said the same thing.  We are confident that Arlen Specter is going to get a 6th term in the Senate and the American people are going to be better off for it.
I’d like to say a few more things about Arlen, but before I do, I’d like to briefly address the ongoing challenge posed by the H1N1 flu virus.
We are closely and continuously monitoring the emerging cases of this virus throughout the United States.  Overnight we also received confirmation that an infant in Texas has died as a result of this virus.  And my thoughts and prayers and deepest condolences go out to the family, as well as those who are ill and recovering from this flu.
This is obviously a serious situation -- serious enough to take the utmost precautions.  Secretary Napolitano, Secretary Sebelius and our entire team are in close contact with state and local authorities around the nation.  But I would also urge health agencies in local communities to be vigilant about identifying suspected cases of this virus in your areas and reporting them to the appropriate state and federal authorities in a timely way.  We need your assistance.
It’s also the recommendation of our public health officials that schools with confirmed or suspected cases of H1N1 should strongly consider temporarily closing so that we can be as safe as possible.  If the situation becomes more serious and we have to take more extensive steps, then parents should also think about contingencies if schools in their areas do temporarily shut down, figuring out and planning what their child care situation would be.
If we ended up having a school closure, a child was sick, just sending a child from the school to a day care center is not a good solution.  So we would have to think through, and each parent, I think, would have to think through what options would be available to them in the event that this became more serious.
Yesterday, I also requested from Congress an immediate $1.5 billion in emergency funding.  This funding will ensure that we have adequate supplies of vaccines and the equipment to handle a potential outbreak.  It will ensure that these vaccines and equipment get to where they need to go around the country.  And it will provide for sufficient planning and preparation at the state and local levels.
Every American should know that the federal government is prepared to do whatever is necessary to control the impact of this virus.  But there are also steps that Americans can take individually.  They’re the same steps that you would take to prevent any other flu:  Keep your hands washed, cover your mouth when you cough, stay home from work if you are sick, keep your children home from school if they are sick. 
I’ll continue to get constant updates on the situation from the responsible agencies, and we will continue to offer regular updates to the American people about the steps they need to take and the steps that we are taking.  And I can assure you that we will be vigilant in monitoring the progress of this flu, and I will make every judgment based on the best science available.
Now, part of the reason we have such an outstanding array of scientists and researchers is because of the tireless efforts of the gentleman standing to my right.  Having courageously battled multiple life-threatening diseases of his own -- and let me tell you, Arlen Specter is one tough hombre -- he has become a champion for public health in this country. 
He’s most recently responsible for the increase in funding for the National Institutes of Health so that it can continue to discover the cures and treatments that will save countless lives. 
And that brings me to why we’re here today.  Today I have the honor of standing next to the newest Democrat from the state of Pennsylvania.  I know the decision Senator Specter made yesterday wasn’t easy.  It required long and careful consideration, and it required courage.  But I know that it also reflects an independence that has been the hallmark of Arlen Specter’s career since the days he arrived in Washington.  He has never been in the Senate to fight for any particular party, but rather for the men and women of Pennsylvania who sent him here. 
This is also why I don’t expect that Senator Specter will agree with every decision I make and support every single one of those policies.  I don’t accept -- I don’t expect Arlen to be a rubber stamp.  I don’t expect any member of Congress to be a rubber stamp.  In fact, I’d like to think that Arlen’s decision reflects a recognition that this administration is open to many different ideas and many different points of view; that we seek cooperation and common ground; and that in these 100 days we’ve begun to move this nation in the right direction.
As I told Senator Specter yesterday, he has my full support, my full commitment to work with him on those areas where we do agree -- areas like health care, education, expanding America’s manufacturing base, and medical research.  I look forward to working with the Senator on these and other issues in the coming weeks and months.  I’m eager to receive his counsel and advice, especially when he disagrees.  And I have great respect and admiration for the decision that he has made.
Senator Specter often tells the story about his father, Harry Specter, who came to this country from Russia nearly a century ago.  He fought in World War I and was seriously wounded in action.  Later, he became one of the thousands of veterans who never received the bonus that our government promised in return for the brave service that they had rendered to our nation.  Many of these veterans would later march on Washington because of that broken promise, and some were shot at by their own government because they were voicing dissent.
Arlen Specter has said that his career in public service has been one long journey to get his father’s bonus.  And until he does, he plans to keep on running.  It’s a metaphor that’s particularly apt today as he begins the next chapter in his proud effort to fight for all those men and women who need and deserve a voice in Washington. 
And so I’m grateful that he is here.  And I’m also grateful that Joe Biden paid him a little attention on the train.  (Laughter.)  Thank you much, everybody.
END                                                        
8:14 A.M. EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE
 
Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                              April 28, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT NATIONAL AND STATE TEACHERS OF THE YEAR EVENT
 Rose Garden
3:25 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Please, everybody, have a seat on this beautiful day.  Welcome.  This is our first official Rose Garden ceremony -- a place where so many -- yes, that's worth applause, sure, why not -- (laughter and applause) -- this is place where so many Presidents have honored so many citizens who've made extraordinary contributions to the life of our nation.
Before I get to the main event, I want to make sure that we acknowledge, first of all, somebody who I think will end up being written up as one of the greatest Secretaries of Education we've ever had -- please give a round of applause to Arne Duncan.  (Applause.)  An outstanding educator in her own right, Dr. Jill Biden.  (Applause.)  And I want to give credit to Representative Jim Hines, who's here, and he represents the Fourth District of Connecticut, which includes Mr. Mullen's school district.  So, Jim -- (applause.)
You know, we've got a lot of teachers here today and I'm a big fan of teachers because every single day in classrooms all across America, you are making a difference.  You don't always get the recognition that you deserve.  We don't always value the teaching profession like we should.
But every once in a while, I think people start to understand not just in their own lives but in the lives of the nation how important the teaching profession is and how we've got to do a better job of lifting it up.  In a global economy where the greatest job qualification isn't what you can do but what you know, our teachers are the key to our nation's success; to whether America will lead the world in the discoveries and the innovations and economic prosperity of this new century.
And that's why as President I'm committed to doing everything I can to support the work of teachers.  That's why we're working to create better standards and assessments that teachers can use in their classroom.  That's why we're promoting innovation in teaching and learning, making critical investments in early childhood education, and helping more Americans walk through the door of higher education.
And it's why we're taking ground-breaking steps to recruit, prepare, support and reward outstanding teachers -- to encourage our best and brightest young people to follow in the footsteps of folks just like you.  This is especially critical right now, as so many teachers from the baby boom generation are preparing to retire -- although they all look pretty young back here -- (laughter) -- we're not worried about that.  And recent evaluations of student performance show that while we're making progress, we still have a long way to go.
I know personally, Michelle knows that what teachers do is not easy.  My sister, Maya, is a teacher; Jill Biden, a teacher.  We know how hard teachers work.  And I know what all of you do by staying past that last bell; staying up late grading those papers; putting together lesson plans; spending your own money on books and supplies; and going beyond the call of duty.  You do it because you know that's what will make a difference, because you believe that there's no such thing as a child that can't learn; that every child has their own gifts, and it's up to us to discover them -- and it's up to us to see in our children what they can't yet see in themselves.
And for you, those teachers who are in attendance today and for so many of your colleagues across this country, teaching is not just about a paycheck -- it's a passion and it's a calling.
Now, nobody, I think, exhibits that more than our honoree today, our Teacher of the Year, Tony Mullen.  (Applause.)  You know, Tony knew early on in life that he wanted to be a teacher.  But his parents passed away when he was young, and he had to find work -- first at a factory, then at the New York Police Department, where he rose from police officer all the way to captain.
But Tony never lost sight of his dream, attending college while he worked, becoming the first in his family to get a degree, and going on to get a Masters Degree in education.
And during his time on the force, Tony saw a lot of young people who'd gotten themselves in trouble, and he knew he wanted to give kids like that a second chance.  So when he left the NYPD, Tony actively searched for a job description that included phrases like "working with students with severe behavioral and emotional problems" -- kids whom others might see as difficult, or impossible, or "lost causes."  Tony didn't see them as lost causes.  As his superintendent put it, Tony "* considers working with these students an honor and a privilege."
In his application for this award, Tony emphasized the importance of passion which, as he puts it, "ignites a flame too bright to be ignored by students."  That is the passion Tony brings to his classroom every day, striving to engage every student, connecting with those no one else can reach, spending hours counseling students individually, listening compassionately, giving them his fullest attention.
And that's just the beginning.  In his spare time, Tony mentors fellow teachers, he leads a program to provide academic support to students who've been expelled -- and he's the volunteer commissioner for a youth baseball league that grew from 200 to 1,000 children under his leadership, giving so many young people the self-confidence and teamwork skills they need to succeed.
Tony doesn't ask for anything in return.  As he put it, "A teacher can receive no greater reward than the knowledge that he or she helped recover a lost student."
Each of us carries with us in life the love and wisdom of people like Tony -- the special few who were there for us when we needed it most:  who pushed us when we were afraid; who pulled us back when we were headed in the wrong direction; who refused to give up on us, no matter how difficult we were.  I know that's certainly true for me.  I was telling Tony and his family in the office, Michelle and I don't come from a fancy background.  The only reason that we're here is because at some point there were people like Tony who helped steer us in the right direction.
In recognizing Tony and all of you today, we're also recognizing countless others who make the lives of our young people a little bit better.  And for that, we honor you, we thank you -- today and every single day.
So Tony Mullen, God bless you and God bless the United States of America.  Give Tony a big round of applause.  (Applause.)
MR. MULLEN:  Thank you, everybody.  What an amazing day to be a teacher.  (Laughter.)  We are actually at the White House in the Rose Garden standing next to the President of the United States and the Secretary of Education.  It doesn't get much better than that.  Thank you, Mr. President, for recognizing America's teachers and inviting us to your home.  I know our lives will be forever changed for the better.
I would like to thank my fellow State Teachers of the Year.  The path that led us to this beautiful Rose Garden was not an easy journey.  Rather, it required much hard work and the highest level of commitment to the education of our nation's children.  We all share the honor and privilege to stand here today and help represent teachers, and more importantly, our students.
When I was named Connecticut State Teacher of the Year, a local reporter approached me and asked me what makes a good teacher.  I told him that passion, professionalism, and perseverance are three main traits a good teacher must display in the classroom -- and they are.  But as I drove home that day, the reporter's question began to nag at me because I knew good teachers possess some other special quality that make them able to connect to students, to make students feel important and wanted.
I pondered the question because, although he may not have realized at the time -- the reporter got a 10-second sound bite and I was handed a Rubik's Cube -- the question did not seem to have an easy answer, because good teachers use a variety of teaching techniques to help children learn well.  But the investigator in me was looking for a common thread that linked all good teachers.  And I finally came to realize that the very best teachers have one common quality:  They know how to read a story.  They know that each and every child arrives at their classroom door with a unique and intriguing, yet incomplete story.
The really good teachers are able to read a child's story, and recognize the remarkable opportunity to help author that story.  The really good teachers know how to script confidence and success onto the blank pages.  They know how to edit the mistakes.  And they want to help write a happy ending.  Really good teachers know they have the ability to make a child happy or sad, to make a child feel confident or unsure, to make a child feel wanted or discarded.  And students know when we care, when we care enough to read their stories.
I teach and mentor at-risk teenagers, because too many of the pages of their stories are filled with anxiety, depression, substance abuse, academic failure, and despair.  They feel disconnected from school, community, and often their own families.  I teach these young adults because they are among the most complex population to educate, and therefore challenge my ability as an educator.  And I teach them because they provide me plenty of opportunity to help rewrite their stories, to help them compose a happy ending.
And that is what all the really good teachers have in common.  They know how to read a child's story, and understand that students who suffer from academic, emotional, or physical disabilities need the type of positive relationships teachers can provide, because too often we are the only functional adult in their lives.  They want us to colorize their black and white world, and they want to be given something much more than an education -- they want us to help heal their pain.  And, yes, teachers are amazing healers.  We help speed the healing process every time we compliment a student, or make them laugh, or spend a few private moments listening to their story.
I thank you all, my fellow teachers, for taking the time to read your student's stories.
And, Mr. President, Secretary Duncan, I know you will join all of us in finding the courage, the strength, and the wisdom to teach all people how to read a child's story.  Thank you.  (Applause.)
Thank you very much.  Now I'd like to spend a moment, if I may, to introduce my family.  They are my rocks.  My wife, Susan -- (applause); my daughter, Andrea -- (applause); my son, Thomas -- (applause); and two very special people who have been really my surrogate parents for over 30 years, my father-in-law and mother-in-law, Joe and Joan.  (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you everybody.  And with that, enjoy the day.  I'm going to shake a few hands, and I'm sure the First Lady will, as well.  (Applause.)
END                                          
3:38 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                April 28, 2009
                             
 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT NATIONAL AND STATE TEACHERS OF THE YEAR EVENT
 Rose Garden
3:25 P.M. EDT
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Please, everybody, have a seat on this beautiful day.  Welcome.  This is our first official Rose Garden ceremony -- a place where so many -- yes, that's worth applause, sure, why not -- (laughter and applause) -- this is place where so many Presidents have honored so many citizens who've made extraordinary contributions to the life of our nation.
Before I get to the main event, I want to make sure that we acknowledge, first of all, somebody who I think will end up being written up as one of the greatest Secretaries of Education we've ever had -- please give a round of applause to Arne Duncan.  (Applause.)  An outstanding educator in her own right, Dr. Jill Biden.  (Applause.)  And I want to give credit to Representative Jim Hines, who's here, and he represents the Fourth District of Connecticut, which includes Mr. Mullen's school district.  So, Jim -- (applause.)
You know, we've got a lot of teachers here today and I'm a big fan of teachers because every single day in classrooms all across America, you are making a difference.  You don't always get the recognition that you deserve.  We don't always value the teaching profession like we should.
But every once in a while, I think people start to understand not just in their own lives but in the lives of the nation how important the teaching profession is and how we've got to do a better job of lifting it up.  In a global economy where the greatest job qualification isn't what you can do but what you know, our teachers are the key to our nation's success; to whether America will lead the world in the discoveries and the innovations and economic prosperity of this new century.
And that's why as President I'm committed to doing everything I can to support the work of teachers.  That's why we're working to create better standards and assessments that teachers can use in their classroom.  That's why we're promoting innovation in teaching and learning, making critical investments in early childhood education, and helping more Americans walk through the door of higher education.
And it's why we're taking ground-breaking steps to recruit, prepare, support and reward outstanding teachers -- to encourage our best and brightest young people to follow in the footsteps of folks just like you.  This is especially critical right now, as so many teachers from the baby boom generation are preparing to retire -- although they all look pretty young back here -- (laughter) -- we're not worried about that.  And recent evaluations of student performance show that while we're making progress, we still have a long way to go.
I know personally, Michelle knows that what teachers do is not easy.  My sister, Maya, is a teacher; Jill Biden, a teacher.  We know how hard teachers work.  And I know what all of you do by staying past that last bell; staying up late grading those papers; putting together lesson plans; spending your own money on books and supplies; and going beyond the call of duty.  You do it because you know that's what will make a difference, because you believe that there's no such thing as a child that can't learn; that every child has their own gifts, and it's up to us to discover them -- and it's up to us to see in our children what they can't yet see in themselves.
And for you, those teachers who are in attendance today and for so many of your colleagues across this country, teaching is not just about a paycheck -- it's a passion and it's a calling.
Now, nobody, I think, exhibits that more than our honoree today, our Teacher of the Year, Tony Mullen.  (Applause.)  You know, Tony knew early on in life that he wanted to be a teacher.  But his parents passed away when he was young, and he had to find work -- first at a factory, then at the New York Police Department, where he rose from police officer all the way to captain.
But Tony never lost sight of his dream, attending college while he worked, becoming the first in his family to get a degree, and going on to get a Masters Degree in education.
And during his time on the force, Tony saw a lot of young people who'd gotten themselves in trouble, and he knew he wanted to give kids like that a second chance.  So when he left the NYPD, Tony actively searched for a job description that included phrases like "working with students with severe behavioral and emotional problems" -- kids whom others might see as difficult, or impossible, or "lost causes."  Tony didn't see them as lost causes.  As his superintendent put it, Tony "¼ considers working with these students an honor and a privilege."
In his application for this award, Tony emphasized the importance of passion which, as he puts it, "ignites a flame too bright to be ignored by students."  That is the passion Tony brings to his classroom every day, striving to engage every student, connecting with those no one else can reach, spending hours counseling students individually, listening compassionately, giving them his fullest attention.
And that's just the beginning.  In his spare time, Tony mentors fellow teachers, he leads a program to provide academic support to students who've been expelled -- and he's the volunteer commissioner for a youth baseball league that grew from 200 to 1,000 children under his leadership, giving so many young people the self-confidence and teamwork skills they need to succeed.
Tony doesn't ask for anything in return.  As he put it, "A teacher can receive no greater reward than the knowledge that he or she helped recover a lost student."
Each of us carries with us in life the love and wisdom of people like Tony -- the special few who were there for us when we needed it most:  who pushed us when we were afraid; who pulled us back when we were headed in the wrong direction; who refused to give up on us, no matter how difficult we were.  I know that's certainly true for me.  I was telling Tony and his family in the office, Michelle and I don't come from a fancy background.  The only reason that we're here is because at some point there were people like Tony who helped steer us in the right direction.
In recognizing Tony and all of you today, we're also recognizing countless others who make the lives of our young people a little bit better.  And for that, we honor you, we thank you -- today and every single day.
So Tony Mullen, God bless you and God bless the United States of America.  Give Tony a big round of applause.  (Applause.)
MR. MULLEN:  Thank you, everybody.  What an amazing day to be a teacher.  (Laughter.)  We are actually at the White House in the Rose Garden standing next to the President of the United States and the Secretary of Education.  It doesn't get much better than that.  Thank you, Mr. President, for recognizing America's teachers and inviting us to your home.  I know our lives will be forever changed for the better.
I would like to thank my fellow State Teachers of the Year.  The path that led us to this beautiful Rose Garden was not an easy journey.  Rather, it required much hard work and the highest level of commitment to the education of our nation's children.  We all share the honor and privilege to stand here today and help represent teachers, and more importantly, our students.
When I was named Connecticut State Teacher of the Year, a local reporter approached me and asked me what makes a good teacher.  I told him that passion, professionalism, and perseverance are three main traits a good teacher must display in the classroom -- and they are.  But as I drove home that day, the reporter's question began to nag at me because I knew good teachers possess some other special quality that make them able to connect to students, to make students feel important and wanted.
I pondered the question because, although he may not have realized at the time -- the reporter got a 10-second sound bite and I was handed a Rubik's Cube -- the question did not seem to have an easy answer, because good teachers use a variety of teaching techniques to help children learn well.  But the investigator in me was looking for a common thread that linked all good teachers.  And I finally came to realize that the very best teachers have one common quality:  They know how to read a story.  They know that each and every child arrives at their classroom door with a unique and intriguing, yet incomplete story.
The really good teachers are able to read a child's story, and recognize the remarkable opportunity to help author that story.  The really good teachers know how to script confidence and success onto the blank pages.  They know how to edit the mistakes.  And they want to help write a happy ending.  Really good teachers know they have the ability to make a child happy or sad, to make a child feel confident or unsure, to make a child feel wanted or discarded.  And students know when we care, when we care enough to read their stories.
I teach and mentor at-risk teenagers, because too many of the pages of their stories are filled with anxiety, depression, substance abuse, academic failure, and despair.  They feel disconnected from school, community, and often their own families.  I teach these young adults because they are among the most complex population to educate, and therefore challenge my ability as an educator.  And I teach them because they provide me plenty of opportunity to help rewrite their stories, to help them compose a happy ending.
And that is what all the really good teachers have in common.  They know how to read a child's story, and understand that students who suffer from academic, emotional, or physical disabilities need the type of positive relationships teachers can provide, because too often we are the only functional adult in their lives.  They want us to colorize their black and white world, and they want to be given something much more than an education -- they want us to help heal their pain.  And, yes, teachers are amazing healers.  We help speed the healing process every time we compliment a student, or make them laugh, or spend a few private moments listening to their story.
I thank you all, my fellow teachers, for taking the time to read your student's stories.
And, Mr. President, Secretary Duncan, I know you will join all of us in finding the courage, the strength, and the wisdom to teach all people how to read a child's story.  Thank you.  (Applause.)
Thank you very much.  Now I'd like to spend a moment, if I may, to introduce my family.  They are my rocks.  My wife, Susan -- (applause); my daughter, Andrea -- (applause); my son, Thomas -- (applause); and two very special people who have been really my surrogate parents for over 30 years, my father-in-law and mother-in-law, Joe and Joan.  (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you everybody.  And with that, enjoy the day.  I'm going to shake a few hands, and I'm sure the First Lady will, as well.  (Applause.)
END                                            
3:38 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
 
Office of the First Lady
________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                           April 28, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY
AT THE SOJOURNER TRUTH BUST UNVEILING
U.S. Capitol
Washington, D.C.
12:13 P.M. EDT
MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you.  Thank you so much.  I'm not going to talk long because everybody has said just about everything that can be said.  But let me tell you something, I am proud to be here. 
I want to congratulate everyone who was a part of making this day possible:  the NCBW, all of the elected official, C. DeLores Tucker, her family, the family of Sojourner Truth.  It is just a sheer delight to have you here witnessing this.
But let's just think about this day and this gathering.  It is so good to see this hall filled with so many strong women -- a few brothers in here, a few people -- (applause) -- but such a diverse group of people crowding this hall.  And one can only imagine what Sojourner Truth, an outspoken, tell-it-like-it-is kind of woman -- and we all know a little something about that, right -- (applause) -- just to imagine what she would have to say about this incredible gathering, just looking down on this day, and thinking about the legacy she has left all of us -- because we are all here because, as my husband says time and time again, we stand on the shoulders of giants like Sojourner Truth.  (Applause.)
And just as Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott would be pleased to know that we have a woman serving as the Speaker of the House of Representatives, I hope that Sojourner Truth would be proud to see me, a descendant of slaves, serving as the First Lady of the United States of America.  (Applause.)  So I am proud to be here.  I am proud to be able to stand here on this day with this dedication.
And just as many young boys and girls have walked through this Capitol -- I see them now, and they see the bust of suffragists and hear the stories of the struggles of women, what they had to endure to gain the right to vote -- now many young boys and girls, like my own daughters, will come to Emancipation Hall and see the face of a woman who looks like them.  (Applause.)
And all the visitors in the U.S. Capitol will hear the story of brave women who endured the greatest of humanities -- indignities.  They'll hear the story of Sojourner Truth who didn't allow those indignities to destroy her spirit, who fought for her own freedom, and then used her powers, young people -- then she used her power to help others; who fought for the right to vote and for the rights of all women.
The power of this bust will not just be in the metal that delineates Sojourner Truth's face; it will also be in the message that defines her legacy.
Forever more, in the halls of one of our country's greatest monuments of liberty and equality, justice and freedom, Sojourner's Truth story will be told again and again and again and again.  So now let's get on with unveiling this statue.  Thank you so much.  (Applause.)
END                                                     
12:18 P.M. EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secrectary

For Immediate Release
April 28, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
BEFORE MEETING WITH SENIOR FBI OFFICIALS
FBI Headquarters
Washington, D.C.
11:10 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody. Good to see you. I'm really looking forward to having a chance to talk to Bob and the rest of his team. He has been integral in many of our national security conversations, our counterterrorism strategy. I am extraordinarily pleased with the job that the Director has done not just during my tenure in office, but preceding me.
By all accounts, the FBI has done an outstanding job of transitioning during an age of terrorism, cyber threats, a whole host -- identity theft -- a whole host of new challenges. They have been able to adapt. And with the Director at the helm, I have very, very great confidence that the FBI will continue to help keep the American people safe.
I'm also pleased to see that there's been, I think, greatly improved coordination between the FBI and state and local law enforcement officials -- something that had not always been there previously. I think it's been greatly improved over the last several years.
So this gives me basically an opportunity to hear directly from the FBI and to say "thank you" to all the dedicated agents and everybody who's out there working in the field to keep us safe each and every day.
All right.
Q Sir, what do think of the Air Force One incident --
THE PRESIDENT: No -- no questions --
Q -- over New York City yesterday, sir?
Q Are you concerned about New York City yesterday, sir, with the Air Force plane?
THE PRESIDENT: It was a mistake, as was -- as was stated. It was something we found out about along with all of you and it will not happen again.
Thank you.
END
11:13 A.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                              April 28, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
TO FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION EMPLOYEES

FBI Headquarters
Washington, D.C.

11:33 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  (Applause.) Well, it is a good excuse for you to be outside.  And it is a great honor to be here with the men and women of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.  I am grateful to the FBI for the T-shirts, for the teddy bear for the girls -- even though we've kept our promise on the dog, I wouldn't want to come home empty-handed.  (Laughter.)

I want to thank your outstanding Director, Robert Mueller -- (applause) -- not just for the introduction, but because Bob has led the Bureau during incredibly challenging times.  He became only the sixth director of the FBI just one week before the 9/11 attacks, and since then he has worked as hard as anybody to prevent additional attacks, and to carry out the FBI's enormous responsibilities.  So I appreciate him, and I appreciate all of you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

So last summer, the FBI celebrated its 100th anniversary.  I think it's safe to say that it has been an eventful century for the Bureau.  Back in 1908 -- oh, did somebody faint?  Do we have an EMT here?  Right down here.  Just give him a little bit of space.  This happened during my political campaign all the time.  I was talking too long, people would be falling out every which way.  (Laughter.)  They're usually fine, they just need a little bit of air and a little bit of water.  Right down here, right in the middle.  Not you -- (laughter.)  All right, I think they'll be all right.

So back in 1908 there were just 34 Special Agents reporting to Theodore Roosevelt's Attorney General.  Today, there are over 30,000 men and women who work for the FBI.  Back in 1908, those agents worked out of one building here in Washington.  And today, you work here at FBI Headquarters, and at field offices across America and in countries around the world.

So much has changed in the last 100 years.  Thank God for change.  (Applause.)  And part of what makes the FBI so unique is its ability to adapt to an ever-changing world.  Back in 1908, even the most imaginative of minds would have struggled to anticipate all of the challenges that would confront the Bureau -- from bank-robbers to bootleggers; from hate crimes to white-collar criminals; from public corruption to counter-intelligence; from international terrorism to cyber threats.

The challenges of the 21st century have called on us to think anew, and to act anew.  And in recent years, the Bureau has undergone a profound transformation to keep pace.

With the attacks of 9/11, your mission became focused more than ever before on prevention -- so that we have the capacity to uncover terrorist plots before they take hold.  With the spread of new technologies, you increasingly confront adversaries in unconventional areas -- from transnational networks to cyber crimes and espionage.  And through it all, you must continue to stay one step ahead of all who step outside of the law.

And I know that change means much more than moving around some boxes on an organizational chart.  You've set new priorities.  You've developed new capabilities.  You're working to use new technologies and teach new skills.  And because these challenges cross borders -- both seen and unseen -- you've developed new partnerships abroad, while sharing information more effectively with law enforcement here at home.

This is a tough business, but it is essential to protecting our country.  Because in the end, it's your hard work that makes the difference -- your decisions, your analysis, your action.  Because of you, the men and women of the FBI, the American people are safer and our country is stronger -- for that, you have my personal gratitude, but you also have the thanks of a grateful nation.

So I know that much has changed in the last 100 years.  But as your Director said, I know that some things have remained constant.  That starts with the values that we have sworn to uphold:  liberty and equality; opportunity and the rule of law.  That's the foundation upon which America is built.  That's the purpose that has always guided our power.  And that is why we must always reject as the false -- as false choices the choice between our security and our ideals.

In so many ways, the FBI is a unique institution.  You're unique because the FBI is both an intelligence agency and a law enforcement agency.  You must both prevent danger and help us pursue those who carry it out.  You protect us and you protect the civil liberties that we cherish.

But after all, that is why America is unique -- because of that fundamental belief that we are committed both to our security and to the rule of law; because of that hard-earned truth that we are always stronger when we act in concert with our most deeply held values.

I have no illusions that this is simple or easy.  Many of you made enormous sacrifices and are incredibly dedicated.  Living our values means that we must hold ourselves to higher standard than our enemies.  We face a long struggle against a determined adversary.  We know that al Qaeda is not constrained by a constitution, or by allegiance to anything other than a hateful ideology and a determination to kill as many innocents as possible.  But what makes the United States of America so special is precisely the fact that we are willing to uphold our values and our ideals not just when it's easy, but when it's hard; we've been called to serve in such a time.  (Applause.)

And I have to say that I am heartened but what I see here today.  Each of you has made the decision to serve your country, and you are dong so at a critical time.  And you know, none of us can know with certain [sic] what the future will hold.  But I do know that the FBI can and will continue to adapt to new dangers, that you will be critical in leading the way in keeping this country safe.  And we are counting on you.

There's much to celebrate from the FBI's first 100 days [sic].  We remember notorious criminals who have been caught, and public corruption that has been ended, and civil rights that have been protected, and terrorist plots that have been uncovered.  None of that would have been possible without the work of men and women like you, and we're calling on you again.

Behind me is the motto that you carry forward and that your Director alluded to:  Fidelity, Bravery and Integrity.  These are more than words etched into a building -- they're a signal of the character of the men and women who work here.  And I am confident that if you stay true to those words, no matter what challenge may come our way, we'll be able to look back a hundred years from now with the satisfaction that you advanced the cause of America's security and America's ideals in your time.  What an enormous gift that is to give back to your country.

Thank you, God Bless you, and God Bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)

END
11:43 A.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Vice President
For Immediate Release
April 27, 2009
REMARKS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT
AT THE RICHARD J. DALEY URBAN FORUM
University of Illinois at Chicago
Chicago, Illinois
12:00 P.M. CDT
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you very much. (Applause.) Mayor Daley, it's an honor -- it's an honor to be here with you. My first official visit to this city was -- I had the great honor of speaking with one of my mentors, Hubert Humphrey, at a political dinner here when your dad was still there. And this city has been guided wisely, with real wisdom by the Daleys for a long, long time.
Chancellor, thank you for the opportunity to be here at the university. And I also want to -- I will embarrass him, but I would like to say hello and acknowledge my good, close personal friend, former Secretary of Commerce, Bill Daley, who is here as well, and the whole Daley family. (Applause.) Billy. (Applause.)
I say to the mayors who abound here who come from the greatest cities, literally, in the history of mankind, that are represented here, I say to you all this is a daunting experience to come before all of you. And speaking of wisdom, the collective wisdom of the mayors, who every single day, every single day, make decisions that affect every single moment the quality of life of tens of millions of people, for me to come and speak to you about the state of the world and the state of the great cities of the world is somewhat presumptuous, because you all know so very much.
I admire -- I admire what you're doing. This forum though, I think, is a fitting tribute to a man who was a truly great mayor, and a man who had a great deal of wisdom. I think he understood human nature better than the vast majority of the women and men who I've had the pleasure over my 37-year career of coming to know. He was a man who knew the limits of men, but also, from my observation, never gave up on the aspirations of men and women he represented either as a state senator or as a mayor.
And if his leadership during that period Chicago became known as "the city that works," that Mayor Daley, the present Mayor Daley, I would say that your leadership will be known for making Chicago the city that inspires, with new and beautiful -- (applause) -- with new and beautiful public spaces, and the one thing every city in America yearns to see: a skyline full of construction cranes. (Laughter.)
Comptroller Dan Hynes is here I'm told, and all 32 of Chicago's aldermen are in attendance. That's more people than we have in Delaware. (Laughter.) But it's a delight to be with so many distinguished mayors from around the world.
And let me also say that it's many of you mayors, I would say all of you mayors have the most difficult job in governance, the scheme of governance. There's no one who has greater responsibility, and no one entity makes as many consequential decisions that affect the lives of our fellow citizens. So I compliment you for your willingness to take on these jobs. I was always -- I think the only thing that Bernie said that may be right when he said I had wisdom, I had the good wisdom never to want to be a mayor, because it's too tough. (Laughter.)
But it's been fewer than 100 days since President Obama and I came into office. And in that time, we -- (applause) -- in that time, we’ve responded to the economic challenge we’ve inherited with unprecedented scale and speed, some suggesting we're trying to do too much. We passed the largest recovery plan in our nation’s history, possibly the largest recovery plan in all of history, $787 billion, within a month after taking office. This plan is now in the process of creating or saving 3.5 to 4 million jobs over the next two years. It's putting money directly in people’s pockets with tax cuts for 95 percent of all working families in America.
And to cushion the blow of this recession, we've also extended unemployment benefits and help in health care coverage for Americans who have lost their jobs. And many -- too many have. We’ve moved aggressively to unfreeze the markets and jumpstart lending both inside and outside our banking system. To stabilize the housing market, we’ve launched a plan to save up to four million responsible home -- responsible homeowners from being faced with foreclosure, and helping millions more refinance their homes.
To coordinate a global response to this recession, President Obama, with many of the leaders in your countries, went to the G20 meeting in London, where he was able to help build a consensus on regulatory reforms and expanding the lending capacity of the International Monetary Fund.
Everything we have done has been with one goal in mind -- to move this economy, and the world's economy from recession to recovery, and ultimately, to prosperity, a true prosperity build on a real foundation, a prosperity that isn’t an illusion created by excessive debt or reckless speculation, but instead a lasting condition that comes from the efforts of skilled, productive workers.
In that strategy, we believe, unlike other administrations, that cities are a central element. Over two millennia ago, Aristotle recognized the defining advantage of cities. He wrote, and I quote, "Men come together in cities in order to live; they remain together in order to live the good life." That is as true today as it was then.
According to the Brookings Institution, the 100 largest metropolitan areas in the United States of America occupy just 12 percent of our nation’s land mass, but they generate two-thirds of America’s jobs and three-quarters of our Gross Domestic Product. These same 100 largest metro areas are responsible for nearly 80 percent of all the patents, 94 percent of all the venture capital funding in the United States. And because of the population density and public transportation, city dwellers have a much smaller carbon footprint than others in American. For all of these reasons and many more, successful cities are a key element to any plan to create a successful economy.
I’m often struck, when I visit your countries in South and Central America, Europe, Asia, at how young America is -- particularly Asia and our friends in Europe. Our cities are new –- they've grown up on the coasts and the plains out of ports and stockyards and trailheads. But around the world, you realize that so many great cities represented here today are really cities on top of cities -- cities built above the remains of what came before them. In that sense, history forms the foundation for the future.
When I grew up, cities were built on industry -– the rhythms of life were set by the shifts of the factories. Very few cities operate that way today. So as those jobs have left, the question for us has become what will we build on? What will be the foundation that in fact needs to be built -- a foundation that already existed?
I believe it begins with a true metropolitan investment strategy, a strategy that fills our cities with the resources they need not to survive merely, but to thrive, with innovations working on the next big ideas, because the innovators are in the cities, with highly trained and productive workers; with clean energy and smart growth; with an efficient public sector, providing a good environment for business and the "cradle-to-career" education and training opportunities for families.
We want to fill the steel and glass canyons not solely with people who can do complex financial calculations, but with scientists and engineers who build and make the things that will power a strong economic base, an economic future that will not be based on a bubble. That's why President Obama and I have created the White House Office of Urban Affairs. We’ve tasked that office with creating a new urban policy –- one that promotes economic competitiveness, equal opportunity, and sustainability. Already, you’re seeing the beginning of that strategy in the commitments we’re making to our cities just through the Recovery and Reinvestment Act, let alone our budget.
I want to discuss our investments in three key areas: in education and health, in strong communities with high standards of living, and, thirdly, energy and infrastructure. Let me discuss briefly each one of these. First, education and health. Recently, a group called CEOs for Cities looked at education and income in the 50 largest metropolitan areas in our country. What they found were that the differences in four-year educational attainment between cities account for three-fifths of the difference of income between those cities. Let me put that more simply: How educated your city is explains 60 percent of how wealthy your city is.
According to that analysis, if this city, Chicago, were able to increase the number of residents with four-year degrees by just 1 percent, it would add $7.2 billion to the local economy -- just 1 percent in the number of four-year college degrees held by city residents. Other cities showed similarly huge potential. That’s why our Recovery Act includes $125 billion in funding and tax measures to improve schools, raise the level of educational attainment, close achievement gaps, and upgrade workforce skills. And for many cities, those jobs will be in the field of health and health care.
We’re seeing many cities making the transformation from smokestacks to stethoscopes. The Recovery Act invests $19 billion in computerized medical records that will help to bring our antiquated health care system into the digital age, saving billions of dollars -- (applause) -- billions of dollars -- (applause) -- and not incidentally, improving the quality of health care.
We’re investing $10 billion in research at the National Institute of Health, and colleges and universities all across America. Studies show that roughly 80 percent of the funding from this $10 billion investment will go to cities. We’re investing $2 billion in community health centers, $500 million to help train the next generation of doctors and nurses. I believe that strong cities are going to be the hub of learning and the hubs of healing, and the faster we get on to it, the better off we'll be.
The second point I'd like to make is that improving communities and the quality of life is absolutely essential to do simultaneously. One of the legacies of our industrial past is the polluted land and dirty water. To truly reclaim our cities, we have to make them safe, appealing, and affordable places for families to be able to live, fit to be able to raise your family.
The Recovery Act invests $1 billion in strengthening policing, and making significant commitments to affordable housing and local economic development.
And third, and finally, we strengthen our cities through the investment in efficiency and infrastructure, which also has an impact on livability. The Recovery Act invests $126 billion in spending on transportation, energy, water and sewer, and other key infrastructure areas; $53 billion of this, the largest single share of funds in the act, will flow to transportation infrastructure; $3 billion of it is dedicated to smart grid grants to advance forward the smart meters and smart grid deployment, a new superhighway for renewable energy. We’ve already provided $11 billion to bolster state and local government energy efficiency programs and to weatherize low-income homes.
And just recently, the Department of Energy made a $300 million grant in funding available to state and local governments, and to transit authorities, to expand the nation’s fleet of clean, sustainable vehicles, saving tens of millions of gallons of gasoline and diesel fuel a year, and as well, funding for the fueling infrastructure necessary to support these vehicles. This money, awarded through the Clean Cities Program, will speed the transformation of our nation’s vehicle fleet, will help reduce carbon emissions, will increase energy security.
I know that's a whole lot of numbers. And you can go on to -- on to recovery.gov to find out exactly what is being spent, exactly where it's being spent, and exactly how rapidly it's being spent. But ultimately these numbers are an expression of our values. Let me say that again, ultimately, these numbers are an expression of our values.
My dad, who Bill knew, used to have an expression. He'd say, don't tell me what you value. Show me your budget, and I will tell you what you value. (Applause.) So don't tell me you value education, a clean environment, clean and rapid transportation, and then not invest in it. What we are doing is an expression of our values, how much we value cities, and what we believe will play a role in their success is what we're attempting to invest in.
I’d like to close by sharing a visit I just made to a factory with the Mayor right here in Chicago. One month ago before Christmas -- one month before Christmas I should say, over 200 people -- some with over 30 years of service –- were left jobless when a company called Republic Windows shut down. But the story didn’t end there. The energy efficiency -- an energy-efficiency company called Serious Materials has bought the plant, and started putting people back to work. It expects to put 600 to work.
I just had a chance to see them building some of the most energy-efficient windows in the world. If you ask the folks at Serious, they'll say that they're willing to take this risk, and their CEO stated it explicitly, they're willing to take this risk, buy this company and five others like it across the country, and expand at this moment of contraction, because of the investments we're making in energy efficiency. That's what we want to accomplish, to bring the next generation of industry to our cities, and to make the cities not just a place to live Aristotle’s good life, but to anchor the economy of a great nation.
That's our commitment. That's what we're going to attempt to do. And that's what I hope we'll be able to -- three years from now, if you invite me to address you, to say, we're well on our way of doing.
Thank you. Thank you for listening. And thank you all. (Applause.)
END
12:19 P.M. CDT