Presidential Radio Address - 8 March 1997

Good morning. This week we learned that America's economy continues to grow, steady and strong, creating almost 600,000 new jobs in the first two months of this year alone, and about 12 million in the last four years. We can make this time one of enormous promise for America, but only if we make sure that all Americans who are willing to work for it have the chance to reap the rewards of our prosperity.

This morning I want to talk to you about what we can do to lift the permanent underclass into a thriving and growing middle class; and to announce new steps the national government will take to move people from welfare to work.

Four years ago, when I became President, I pledged to end welfare was we know it. We worked with states to launch welfare reform experiments to require work. We cracked down on child support enforcement, increasing child support payments by 50 percent. We required teen mothers to stay in school and live at home if they wanted to receive welfare. Today, I'm pleased to report that due to these efforts and our growing economy we've already moved 2.6 million people off the welfare rolls—a record number.

Last summer, we took the most dramatic step of all when I signed the bipartisan welfare reform legislation that imposed time limits, required work and extended child care and health care so that people can move from welfare to work without hurting their children. The new law ended the old welfare system when we said to those on welfare: responsibility is not an option, it must be a way of life.

Now, all the rest of us have our responsibility, indeed, our moral obligation, to make welfare reform work, to make sure that those who now must work, can work. We must move another 2 million more people off the welfare rolls in the next four years. And, frankly, we must recognize that many of these people will be harder to reach and will need more help than those who moved off the rolls in the past four years.

This cause must engage the energy and the commitment of everyone in our society—of business, houses of worship, labor unions, universities, civic organizations, as well as government at every level. Above all, we must harness the private sector to bring jobs and hope to our hardest-pressed neighborhoods. We are working with leaders of American business to help mobilize other businesses to hire people off welfare. My balanced budget plan would give businesses tax incentives to hire people and would give job placement firms a bonus for every person they place from welfare into a job.

States can do more, too. I have called upon every state to use the power that has now been given to them under the new welfare law, to turn welfare checks into private sector paychecks. And the national government must do its part and set an example. Our national government is now the smallest it has been in three decades—but it is still the nation's largest employer. We must do our part. So today I am committing a national government action plan to hire people off welfare.

I am formally directing the heads of each agency and department of our federal government to do everything they can to hire people off the welfare rolls into available jobs in government, consistent with the laws already on the books for hiring federal workers. Because this effort is so important, I am asking Vice President Gore, who has led our reinventing government effort and done so much to make our government work better as it costs less, to oversee this endeavor.

I want these agencies to use the Worker-Trainee program, which the government already has in place, to train workers quickly and move them into entry-level jobs. Then if the people do well for three years, they can join the civil service. And I am asking every member of my Cabinet to prepare a detailed plan for hiring welfare recipients—what jobs they will fill, how they will recruit welfare recipients, how they will make sure these people have the chance to work hard, perform well and, thereby, deserve to keep their jobs. The members of the Cabinet will present these plans to me in one month at a special Cabinet meeting.

The job of moving people from welfare to work as the law requires will not be easy. But we must help them as they help themselves. And we need to help all low income government workers. We need to make sure they take advantage of the Earned Income Tax Credit, the tax cut that already has helped 15 million of our hardest pressed working families. We should give these workers help with transportation to work, and we must help them to find affordable child care.

Government can help to move people from welfare to work by acting the way we want all employers to act—demanding high performance from workers, but going the extra mile to offer opportunity to those who have been on welfare and want to do something more with their lives. If we all do that we can, we can move into the 21st century strong, united and with the America Dream alive for all our people.

Thanks for listening