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Obama in Fort Myers


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President Obama Speaks at Town Hall in Fort Myers, Fla.

Gov. Charlie Crist Introduced President Obama at Town Hall

 

CQ Transcripts Wire

Tuesday, February 10, 2009; 12:57 PM

 

 

 

SPEAKERS: PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

 

 

GOV. CHARLIE CRIST, R-FLA.

 

 

[*] CRIST: Well, Mr. President, welcome to Fort Myers, Florida.

 

 

(APPLAUSE) Just a couple of points I wanted to make to you, Mr. President. Our -- our budget is in balance here in Florida. We have some people that have worked very hard in our Florida Senate and our Florida House to make that possible. In fact, we've had to cut about $7 billion over the past two years, and we haven't raised taxes, and we're still in balance.

 

CRIST: But to be candid, it's getting harder every day. It's getting harder every day, and we know that it's important that we pass a stimulus package. It's important...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

It is important that we do so to help education, to help our infrastructure...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

... and to help health care for those who need it the most, the most vulnerable among us.

 

 

And let me finish by saying, Mr. President, we need to do it in a bipartisan way.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

This issue of helping our country is about helping our country. This is not about partisan politics. This is about rising above that, helping America, and reigniting our economy.

 

 

You know, a great president once said, "The government ought to be of the people, by the people, and for the people." That was Abraham Lincoln, whose birthday we celebrate later this week.

 

 

Ladies and gentlemen, please give a warm Florida welcome to President Barack Obama.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

OBAMA: Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you, everybody. Thank you. Thank you.

 

 

All right, everybody, thank you so much. Please, have a seat. I -- it is good to be in Florida.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

Especially in February.

 

 

(LAUGHTER)

 

 

I want to acknowledge a number of people who are here who are just great friends and outstanding public servants. We've got Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink. Give Alex a big round of applause.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

We have your own Mayor Jim Humphrey. Thank you, Mayor.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

Representative Alan Grayson, Representative Allen Boyd, Representative Corrine Brown, Representative Kathy Castor, Representative Kendrick Meek, Representative Ron Klein, Representative Suzanne Kosmas, Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and Representative Robert Wexler.

 

 

It's as fine a set of congresspeople as you can imagine. Florida, you're lucky.

 

 

I want to give a special thanks to your governor, Charlie Crist, for joining us here today.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

The thing about governors is they understand our economic crisis in a way that maybe sometimes folks a little more removed don't understand. They're on the front lines dealing with the economy every single day. They're having to make choices about the budget every single day. They know what it means to balance a budget when revenues are short and more and more people are asking for help.

 

 

And Governor Crist shares my conviction that creating jobs and turning this economy around is a mission that transcends party. And when the town is burning, you don't check party labels. Everybody needs to grab a hose, and that's what Charlie Crist is doing right here today.

 

 

Governor Crist and governors across the country understand that. Mayors like Mayor Humphrey understands that. And I think that you understand it, too, which is what I want to talk about today.

 

 

You know, last night, I addressed the nation to explain why I believe we need to put the economic recovery plan that is before Congress in motion as soon as possible. But during the day, I spent some time in Indiana, talking to folks in Elkhart.

 

 

In Elkhart, the unemployment rate went from 4.7 percent last year to 15.3 percent this year. One year, and the unemployment rate tripled. Today, I want to come to Florida, and I wanted to visit all of you in Fort Myers because you have seen hardship, as well.

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

OBAMA: You've seen a change in the economic conditions of your community.

 

 

You see, all too often in Washington, what happens is, is that people think in terms of numbers and statistics. They think about it in abstract terms.

 

 

But when we say we've lost 3.6 million jobs since this recession began, nearly 600,000 in the past month alone, when we say that Lee County has seen its unemployment rate go from 3.5 percent to nearly 10 percent in less than two years, when we talk about the plummeting home prices and soaring foreclosure rates that have plagued this area and the layoffs at companies like Kraft Construction and Chico's (ph), companies that have sustained this community for years, we're not just talking about faceless numbers.

 

 

We're talking about families. We're talking about some of the people in this town hall meeting today, your neighbors, your friends. We're talking about people like Steve Atkins (ph), who joins us today with his wife, Michelle (ph), and their son, Bailey (ph), and daughter, Josie (ph).

 

 

Steve's the president of a small construction company in Fort Myers that specializes in building and repairing schools, but work has slowed considerably, like it has across the board in the construction area. Now, he's done what he can to reduce overhead costs, but he still has been forced to lay off half his workforce, which means that many of those people may now be trying to figure out how are they going to pay their mortgage, how are they going to pay for the basic necessities of life, which puts us on a downward economic spiral.

 

 

Steve and Michelle have made sacrifices of their own. They've sold their home and moved into a smaller one.

 

 

And that's what this debate is about: folks in Fort Myers and all across the country who have lost their livelihoods and don't know what will take its place, parents who've lost their health care and lie awake at night praying their kids don't get sick, families who've lost the home that was the foundation of their American dream, young people who put that college acceptance letter back in the envelope because they can't afford it.

 

 

(APPLAUSE) That's what's behind the numbers; that's what's behind the statistics; that's the true measure of this economic crisis. Those are the stories I heard every time I came to Florida, because this isn't new. When we were campaigning down here, before the election, I was hearing about Florida suffering the first recession that it had in 16 years.

 

 

We didn't know then how deep it was going to go. Well, it's gone deep. It's gotten worse. And the stories that I've heard here in Florida and in Indiana and all across the country I carried with me to the White House.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

I promised you back then that, if elected president, I would do everything I could to help our communities recover, that I would not forget. And that's why I've come back here today to tell you how I intend to keep that promise to make communities like Fort Myers stronger.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

So the situation we face could not be more serious; I don't have to tell you that. We've inherited an economic crisis as deep and as dire as any since the Great Depression.

 

 

And economists across the spectrum have warned, if we don't act immediately, then millions more jobs will disappear, the national unemployment rates will approach double digits, more people will lose their homes and their health care, and our nation will sink into a crisis that at some point is going to be that much tougher to reverse.

 

 

So we cannot afford to wait. We can't wait and see and hope for the best. I believe in hope, but I also believe in action.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

We can't afford to posture and bicker and resort to the same failed ideas that got us into this mess in the first place.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

That's what the election was about. You rejected many of those ideas because you know they didn't work. You didn't send us to Washington because you were hoping for more of the same; you sent us there to change things. And that's exactly what I intend to do as president of the United States.

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

OBAMA: The problems that led us into this crisis are deep, they're widespread, and so we're going to have to do a lot of different things to get the economy moving again. We need to stabilize and repair our financial system.

 

 

We need to get credit flowing again to families and businesses. We need to stem the spread of foreclosures that are sweeping this country.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

My treasury secretary, Tim Geithner, outlined a plan to address these challenges just this morning. And we know that, in order to address our economic crisis, we're going to have to help homeowners, not just banks, but homeowners, as well.

 

 

Fort Myers had the highest foreclosure rate in the nation last year. Entire neighborhoods are studded with foreclosure signs. Families across the city feel like they're losing their foothold on the American dream, so -- because when one person loses their home to foreclosure, that doesn't -- doesn't just affect that family. Property values across the board start declining.

 

 

So we're going to do everything we can to help responsible homeowners here in Fort Myers and other hard-hit communities stay in their homes. If we want to truly turn this around, we've got to remember that the stronger our communities are, then the stronger the financial system would be.

 

 

And change can't just happen from the top down. It's going to have to start from the bottom up.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

In addition to the housing situation, what we have to do is put people back to work.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

Last week, we saw 1,000 men and women stand in line for just 35 Miami firefighter jobs; 35 jobs, 1,000 people standing in line. It's a story repeated across the country. There's so much demand for jobs that just aren't there. That's both the paradox and the promise of this moment. At a time when so many Americans are looking for work, there's so much work that America needs done. That's why we put forward this plan for recovery and reinvestment.

 

 

It's the simple idea at its core that we put people back to work doing the work that America needs done. It's a plan that will save or create up to 4 million jobs over the next two years.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

It will ignite spending by businesses and consumers alike. It will make the investments necessary for lasting economic growth and prosperity. And we'll begin by ensuring that Americans who have lost their jobs, through no fault of their own, can receive greater unemployment benefits and continue their health care coverage.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

That means that an additional -- that means an additional $100 per month to more than 760,000 Florida workers who've lost their job in this recession. It means extended unemployment benefits for another 170,000 folks who've been laid off and are looking for work but can't find any right now.

 

 

That's not just a moral responsibility to help -- give a lending hand to our fellow Americans in times of emergency. It makes good economic sense, because if you don't have money, you can't spend it. And if you don't spend it, that means businesses don't have customers. Our economy will continue to decline.

 

 

For that same reason, this recovery plan includes $1,000 of badly needed tax relief for middle-class workers and families, putting money back in the pockets of nearly 6.9 million workers and their families here in Florida.

 

 

And we will provide a partially refundable $2,500-per-student tax credit to help 195,000 Florida families send their kids to college, relieving your household budget.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

That provides household budgets relief right now, but it also awards America in the long run with a highly skilled workforce.

 

 

And most importantly, this plan will put people to work right now by making direct investments in areas like health care, and energy, and education, and infrastructure, investments that save jobs and create new jobs and new businesses and help our economy grow again.

 

OBAMA: Now, more than 90 percent of the jobs created by this plan will be in the private sector, 90 percent.

 

 

And they won't be make-work jobs. They'll be jobs that lay the groundwork for a lasting economic boom, jobs that put people to work today preparing America for tomorrow, jobs building wind turbines, and solar panels, and fuel-efficient cars...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

... doubling our investment in clean energy, helping end our dependence on foreign oil...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

... jobs upgrading our schools, jobs creating 21st-century classrooms and libraries and laboratories for millions of children across America...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

... jobs computerizing our health care system, which saves billions of dollars and countless lives, jobs constructing broadband Internet lines that reach Florida's rural schools and small businesses so they can connect and compete with their counterparts anywhere in the world...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

... jobs rebuilding our roads and our bridges and repairing our dangerously deficient dams and levees so we don't face another Katrina...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

... and the jobs that Charlie Crist has to worry about, the jobs of firefighters and teachers and nurses and police officers, that would otherwise be eliminated if we don't provide states some basic relief.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

Now, of course, there are some critics -- always critics -- who say we can't afford to take on these priorities, but we have postponed and neglected them for too long. And because we have, our health care still costs too much. Our -- our schools still fail too many of our children. Our dependence on foreign oil has actually grown since the 1970s, still threatens our economy and our security.

 

 

We've seen the tragic consequences when our bridges crumble and our levees fail. They say we can't afford to take on these tasks? Florida, you know we cannot afford not to.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

Now, I'm not going to tell you that this plan is perfect. I mean, it was produced in Washington.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

No plan -- no plan is perfect. I also can't tell you with 100 percent certainty that everything in this plan will work exactly as we hope.

 

 

But I can tell you with complete confidence that a failure to act in the face of this crisis will only worsen our problems. Doing nothing is not an option. You didn't send me to Washington to do nothing.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

So -- so we've had a good debate. We've had a good debate. That's part of what democracy is all about. But the time for talk is over.

 

 

Folks here in Fort Myers and across America, they need help, they need action, and they need it now. Americans I've met understand that, even with this plan, our economy will likely be measured in years, not weeks or months. You know...

 

 

(UNKNOWN): (OFF-MIKE)

 

 

(LAUGHTER)

 

 

(APPLAUSE) OBAMA: You know -- for our TV audience, somebody said I had eight, which we're not clear about yet. But...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

But here's -- here's -- you know, the American people, all of you -- you've got -- you've got common sense. You understand it took us a long time to get into this fix. It's -- we're not going to get out of it overnight.

 

 

But what you don't have patience for is just listening to a bunch of bickering in Washington and nothing getting done.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

And I know that there are a lot of folks here in Fort Myers and across Florida that are struggling, but I also know -- because I spent a lot of time in this state -- that you got some of the best workers in the world here. You got some of the best neighbors in the world who step up, who help each other, who make sacrifices when times are tough.

 

 

I know that all that people are asking for is a chance to work hard. They're not looking for a handout. They just want to be able to work hard and translate that hard work into a good life for themselves and their families.

 

OBAMA: So you're doing your part down here. It's time that Washington did its part, too.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

This is a responsibility that we did not ask for, but it is a responsibility we will accept, for the sake of our future and our children's.

 

 

And being here in Fort Myers with all of you, I am more confident than ever that we can set aside our differences, that if we commit ourselves to the work ahead and come together, then I guarantee you, we can meet the great test of our times.

 

 

So thank you very much for your attention. Thanks for your attendance. And now we're going to start opening this thing up for some questions. Thank you, Fort Myers. Thank you. Thank you.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

Testing, one, two, three. All right, everybody have a seat.

 

 

Now, the -- here's -- here's -- here's how we're going to work this. There are folks in the audience who have microphones. Raise your microphones, guys. They will be going around, and I will be just calling on folks as they raise their hands.

 

 

If you could introduce yourself when you -- before you ask your question or make your comment. Because we've got a lot of people here and we've got a limited amount of time, try to keep your question relatively brief and I'll try to keep my answer relatively brief.

 

 

And -- and I think I'll go girl, boy, girl, boy, so that I avoid any trouble, all right? And stand up when you ask your question, as well, so we can all see you. All right?

 

 

So let's see. There's a young lady right there. Yes, right there.

 

 

QUESTION: Hi. My name's Jodi Ni (ph). I work for Edison State College. And I was wondering -- I was wondering how much stress you're putting in your economic stimulus plan for higher education? Because vocational training helps lower unemployment.

 

 

OBAMA: Well, it's a great question. And we've put a huge emphasis on education generally and higher education in particular. Now, I already mentioned one provision that's in there, which is to provide a tax credit to help young people go to college and afford it. Now, that is not only helpful to the young person; it's also, obviously, helpful to household budgets, which means that there will be money that those households can spend on other things and people will be accumulating less debt.

 

 

We're also -- when we talk about money for school construction in the plan, we are not just talking about elementary schools or high schools. We're also talking about community colleges and public universities. There's a lot of unmet -- undone work that needs to be done.

 

 

And for us to be able to fund some of that work will not only improve, let's say, the science lab in a particular school, or a vocational training facility, but it also will upgrade over time the skills of the workforce here in Fort Myers and in the surrounding community.

 

 

So we are going to be putting a lot of emphasis on job training, on school construction, and on financing of higher education. I think that's the highest priority.

 

 

It's an example of how we can use a crisis and turn it into an opportunity, because if we use this moment to address some things that we probably should have been doing over the last 10, 15, 20 years, then, when we emerge from the crisis, the economy's going to be that much stronger.

 

 

If people who've been laid off of work are able to get a tax credit or a voucher to retrain so that now they have upgraded their skills, then they're going to be that much -- that much stronger when it comes to finding a job in the future. They'll boost their earnings, boost productivity in the community.

 

 

So I think it's very important for us to think both short term, as well as long term, and that's going to be one of my highest priorities as president. OK?

 

 

All right, gentleman in the tie right behind you.

 

 

QUESTION: Welcome to Fort Myers, Mr. President.

 

 

OBAMA: Thank you, sir.

 

QUESTION: My name is Adam Palmer (ph). So many of the lenders these days are unwilling to discuss any possibility of doing a loan modification program unless you're currently in default.

 

 

Subsequently, this is penalizing responsible Americans who have lost all the equity in their property.

 

 

OBAMA: Right.

 

 

QUESTION: What can be done to change that?

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

OBAMA: Well, you're making a really important point. My treasury secretary, Tim Geithner, announced much of our financial restructuring plan. He's going to increase oversight, transparency. Some of you may have heard we're going to condition any taxpayer assistance to banks on them doing something serious about executive compensation. No more enormous bonuses for companies that taxpayers are helping out.

 

 

But what he also pointed out is that we've got to provide some direct relief to homeowners. Now, we didn't want the story about what we're doing with homeowners to be buried in this larger story today about how we're dealing with the financial system, so I'm going to be personally making an announcement in the next couple of weeks about what our overall housing strategy is going to be.

 

 

But I think you identified the key issue, which is -- look, if we're honest, there are probably some folks who bought homes that they couldn't afford. And no matter -- and no matter how much we help, they're not going to be able to make their mortgage payments.

 

 

But the larger group of folks are folks who have made their mortgage payments, but, because of foreclosures, property values have declined, they're now what's called "underwater," where the mortgage is worth more than the price of the home -- the current value of the home.

 

 

And people may have been -- people may be getting squeezed on their job, their incomes are lowering, and they're still doing what they're supposed to do. They're still making these payments every day, but it's getting harder and harder and harder.

 

 

So the question is, can we work to design a system where the banks recognize it's in their interest to avoid foreclosure, because the bank's only going to get 40 cents on the dollar if there's a foreclosure.

 

 

On the other hand, the borrower is going to have to probably, if they get some assistance, agree to give up some equity once housing prices recover, so that both sides are giving a little bit, but you avert the foreclosure. That's good not only for the homeowner, but it's good for the entire community, and it's good for property values throughout the state.

 

 

Now, there are a couple of wrinkles in order for us to accomplish this. For example, unfortunately, it used to be that, when you took out a mortgage, you went to the local bank, they gave you the loan, and they kept the mortgage right there in the bank. As I think a lot of people know, these days what happened was they took these mortgages, they wrapped them up in a big bundle, they sold slices of them on the stock market, and so you don't have any one person who actually owns the mortgage, which makes negotiations on a lot of this stuff very difficult.

 

 

Part of what we may have to do is to make some changes in the law that make it easier for the servicers -- the people who take your check every day and are managing these portfolio of mortgages on behalf of a bunch of people who own bits and pieces of the mortgage -- to make it easier for them to engage in these negotiations in an efficient way. And -- and those are some of the issues that we'll be laying out over the next couple weeks.

 

 

But this is absolutely vital. No place is seeing tougher times because of the mortgage crisis than the people here in Florida and the people here in Fort Myers. And unless we address this in a serious way, we are not going to be able to get the economy back to where it needs to be. All right?

 

 

All right, let's see. This side of the room. Young lady right here who's standing right up front. She's waving at me, right -- right over there. Are we getting her -- well, I was actually pointing at her right there in the blue, but now I feel bad. You were -- I'll call on you, I promise. I promise you. You just -- you just don't worry. I know you've got a great question, too. I didn't even see you down there.

 

 

QUESTION: Hello, Mr. President.

 

 

OBAMA: How are you?

 

 

QUESTION: Welcome to southwest Florida. In light of the fact that you've inherited an economic crisis, where does your priority lie with health care reform?

 

OBAMA: Well, it's a great question.

 

 

And I think it is -- there are some people who are making the argument that, well, you can't do anything about health care because the economy comes first. They don't understand that health care is the biggest component of our economy and, when it's broken, that affects everything.

 

 

I mean, we've got a system right now where the average person has seen -- even if they've got health insurance, the average family has seen their premiums double over the last eight years. Folks are paying twice as much. Co-payments have gotten higher; deductibles have gotten higher. And now, with people losing their jobs, they're also losing their health care.

 

 

Businesses are also less competitive because of the fact that, here in the United States, we spend more than anybody else does. Any other nation on Earth per capita we spend more on health care, but we don't get better results, and companies are paying for that.

 

 

So when they're competing against -- you know, if a U.S. carmaker is competing against a foreign carmaker, they've got all these extra health care costs that they've got to deal with.

 

 

And, finally, Medicare and Medicare -- or Medicare and Medicaid are draining state budgets and federal budgets in a way that's unsustainable over the long term. So health care has to be part of the solution.

 

 

Now, in the recovery package, there are a couple of things that we do immediately. Number one, we're providing some help to Governor Crist and the state, because now they are getting more Medicaid claims and we've got to make sure that they can just meet the basic needs of citizens here in Florida.

 

 

Number two is, what we have in this bill is a mechanism so that we will subsidize people to keep their health care even if they lose their job. How many people here know what COBRA is?

 

 

All right, now, COBRA is the law that says that, if you lose your job, you can keep your health care and you go through COBRA. Here's the only problem: If you've lost your job, who can afford $1,000 a month or $1,200 a month for health care? You can't afford it.

 

 

(APPLAUSE) So part of this plan says we will subsidize a significant portion of what your health insurance costs so that you can actually afford to keep your health care. That's number two.

 

 

Number three -- and this is an example of using a crisis and converting it into an opportunity. One of the problems with our health care system, it is so inefficient, you go into the hospital, and what's the first thing you've got to do? You've got to -- even if you've got insurance, what do you have to do? You've got to fill out so many forms, and there's paperwork, and there's this, there's that.

 

 

Then you go and you get your examination, and they've got a clipboard with all this paper on it. And then the doctor's writing out something and the nurse can't read it.

 

 

And, you know, the fact is, is that it causes huge amounts of medical errors. We've got all this bureaucracy. One of the simplest, most effective things that we could do is to convert from a paper system to an electronic data system.

 

 

Now, think about it. Health care's the only area where we still use paper. I mean, the banks, that's all computerized. So if you've got a credit card, that's all on a computer so they can find you any time you don't make a payment, and that computer's calculating every dime of interest you've got to pay and -- right? It's all very efficient.

 

 

But when it comes to health care, it's a disaster. So what we did is -- in this plan, in the House bill that -- that passed, one of the things that we do is we say we are going to computerize our health care system, institute health I.T. That creates jobs right now for people to convert from a paper system to a computer system, but it also pays a long-term dividend by making the health care system more efficient.

 

 

So, now, those are things that we're doing immediately. We are also then -- got to deal with the long-term problem of both cost and coverage. You've got over 45 million people who don't have health insurance and people who do have health insurance are seeing their costs rise too fast.

 

OBAMA: And so, in addition to -- to computerizing the health care system, we've got to emphasize prevention. We've got to make sure that people have regular checkups.

 

 

We made a down payment on it this week -- and I did it, by the way, with the help of a lot of these members of Congress -- by passing a new SCHIP -- that's the children's health insurance bill -- that provides millions of children, who didn't have health insurance, health insurance.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

My hope is, over the course of the year, I'm going to be able to work with Congress to move forward a bill that gets us on track to every single person in America being able to get affordable, decent health care coverage.

 

 

We are a wealthy enough country to do it, and that's going to be one of my top priorities as president of the United States.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

All right. It's a guy's turn. It's a guy's turn. Let's see. This gentleman in the cap right here. That's you. Who else got -- oh, I didn't see that one. All right, well, this guy right here. This guy. Hold on. No, no, I'm calling on this guy right here.

 

 

QUESTION: Also, welcome, Mr. President.

 

 

OBAMA: Thank you.

 

 

QUESTION: And my question to you today is, as you stated earlier, there are many of us here in the area that are unemployed and have been unemployed for some time, and probably some people here have large families.

 

 

And we have had the opportunity to receive unemployment, but yet we have not been able to get any other type of governmental assistance to help us during this crisis so that we can kind of be able to take the funds that we do have from unemployment to pay our bills.

 

 

Usually what happens is, is when you apply for governmental assistance, they say, "Well, you make too much money." How -- if you go from making $3,000 a year -- a month to $1,100 a month, how are you able to take care of your families? Why can't we have that to be automatic, that goes along with your unemployment tenure, that you can get government assistance, that's an automatic for you?

 

 

OBAMA: Well -- well, look, unemployment insurance is not ideal. People want a job. They don't want unemployment insurance. But when the jobs aren't out here, it's tough.

 

 

But I want to be honest with you. We are bumping up unemployment insurance. As I said, tens of thousands of people will be getting an extra $100 a month, which doesn't sound like a lot, but that means an extra bill that you can pay.

 

 

I'll be honest with you, though: We're not going to be able to take it from $1,100 up to $3,000. So our priority has to be on job creation.

 

 

We can reform unemployment insurance to make it more efficient. We have extended it. But, ultimately, people want to work. And -- and the priority of this package is to create jobs, create jobs in construction, create jobs in the health care system, create jobs in energy.

 

 

Something that we haven't talked about is the whole -- the whole opportunity around clean energy. I mean, this package proposes to double -- double our use of alternative fuels. It proposes that we weatherize homes all across the country.

 

 

It proposes that we are starting a smart grid that allows energy -- let's say you have solar energy produced in Florida. The smart grid would allow us to transport that energy to other states so that Florida could be an energy exporter. But right now we don't have the infrastructure in place to get that done.

 

 

So my priority is going to be on job creation; that is priority number one.

 

 

One other point that I want to make, because it hasn't come up. It came up a little bit with respect to the issue of housing. This recovery package, even if we pass it, is just one leg in the stool. In order to get the economy moving, we're also going to have to deal with the foreclosure crisis.

 

 

We're also going to have to start getting banks and financial institutions to lend again, because right now there's a credit crunch out there, and a lot of small businesses that are out there, they're having trouble making payroll just because they can't get loans.

 

OBAMA: So we've got to get lending moving again, and that's part of what my treasury secretary talked about today, working with the banks, tracking what they're doing. You know, we already spent $350 billion, and that averted catastrophe, but what it didn't do is to create a clear, consistent, transparent credit process whereby we could see small businesses, consumers actually getting loans.

 

 

And we're going to have to make that a top priority as we move ahead. It's going to take some time, because, frankly, the banks borrowed a lot of money, and they risked it on a lot of bad investments, and unwinding that and re-stabilizing the system is going to take some time.

 

 

And I know how frustrating it is for taxpayers when they're looking and they're saying, "Let me get this straight: You've got a guy who's making $20 million a year who ran his bank into the ground, and now we've got to come in and clean up the mess?"

 

 

Now, that's something that -- it just makes you mad. I understand that. But recognize that, whether we like it or not, credit is the lifeblood of our economy.

 

 

If -- if consumers can't borrow for a car loan, then cars don't move out of the dealership. And if the dealership can't move its cars, then Detroit and all those suppliers aren't going to be making cars. And on and on it goes.

 

 

So we've got to do something about getting credit flowing again, and that's going to be one of my top priorities as president.

 

 

All right, there's the young lady who I thought -- who thought I had called on her and I hadn't. Don't want her -- I don't want her mad at me. She'll talk about me.

 

 

QUESTION: Thank you for taking my question, Mr. President.

 

 

OBAMA: Sure, go ahead.

 

 

QUESTION: I'm just tickled pink that you came to visit us, believe me.

 

 

OBAMA: Oh, thank you.

 

 

QUESTION: Your stimulus package outlines, you know, over $800 billion.

 

 

OBAMA: Right.

 

 

QUESTION: And I know a huge portion of it is designated for giving individual states the money that they need to rebuild. Is there any provisions in your stimulus package that actually will give back to the taxpayers individually, that we'd all get stimulus checks to jump-start the economy?

 

 

OBAMA: Yes. Yes.

 

 

QUESTION: And what provisions or what amounts are they actually looking at for the tax cuts?

 

 

OBAMA: Here's what we're looking at is -- and this is actually a commitment that I made during the campaign. I said that we had to change our tax system where, instead of giving all the tax breaks to the wealthiest few, that we start giving tax breaks to middle-class families who are struggling to make ends meet. So I made that commitment even before the crisis.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

So in -- in the package that we've put forward, what we have is $1,000 for working families, $1,000 in additional immediate tax relief that would start flowing right away. And so it would -- it would offset a lot of the payroll taxes that people are paying.

 

 

And that would be -- again, $1,000 may not sound a lot -- like a lot to some, but I tell you what, if -- if you're making $30,000, $40,000, $50,000 a year, having an extra $1,000 during some tight times can really make a difference. So that is a central part of the package.

 

 

We've also got some other tax cuts that are targeted at small businesses, because, again, they're under enormous pressure right now as business is declining.

 

 

But part of what I hope to do is to show that, by providing tax cuts directly to the middle class, that's the best way to reinvigorate the economy when it comes to tax cuts, not just giving tax cuts and expecting it all to trickle down.

 

 

If you put it directly into the pockets of people who are really going to need it, then they spend it. And when they spend it, that means that the economy is moving. That's what we're going to try to do in this -- in this package. All right?

 

 

OK, a gentleman's turn.

 

 

By the way, I just wanted to announce that the Senate just passed our recovery and reinvestment plan.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

That's good. So that's good news. That's good news. That's because -- that's good news. That's -- that's good news. And I want to thank all the members of the Senate who -- who moved the process forward.

 

 

We've still got to -- we've still got to get the House bill and the Senate bill to match up before it gets sent to my desk, so we've got a little more work to do over the next couple of days, but it's a good start.

 

 

And you know why it passed? Because they knew I was coming down to Fort Myers. They didn't want to mess with folks in Fort Myers.

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

OBAMA: Right? They said -- they said, "We don't want folks in Fort Myers mad at us."

 

 

All right. Gentleman -- gentleman back there in the blue shirt and the tie, right there.

 

 

QUESTION: Good afternoon, Mr. President. First of all, I wanted to thank you very much for coming to listen to us today.

 

 

OBAMA: Thank you.

 

 

QUESTION: This has not happened in the last eight years.

 

 

(LAUGHTER)

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

My name is Andy Irvin (ph). I'm a local commercial contractor here in town. We have been building and remodeling schools for the last 10 years or so. How in your stimulus plan do you get money down to the states and down to the counties to continue that program?

 

 

OBAMA: Well, what -- what we would do -- and the fact that there's already a program in place will make it that much easier -- we would be working with Governor Crist, and Alex Sink, and others in the state government, as well as local school superintendents and county governments, and -- where there's a school that needs repair, we'd go in and repair it.

 

 

But what we'd also want to do -- we're not looking just to, you know, put on some new paint. I mean, that's nice. But -- but let me give you an example of some of the things that we can do.

 

 

There are a lot of schools in this country that don't have state- of-the-art science laboratories. And for us to not only modify the building, but also to go into some of these classrooms and redesign them in ways that allow kids to get state-of-the-art learning in science and math? I mean, that's a gift that keeps on giving.

 

 

So if there is a mechanism in place, if there's a mechanism in place, then what we're going to do is we're going to make sure that that money is funneled as quickly as possible to those local school districts and those schools that need -- that need help. And hopefully you'll be able to get some work, and you'll be able to keep your folks on payroll, and that will make all the difference in the world for the economy generally here -- here in Fort Myers. All right?

 

 

OK, this young -- this young lady's been waiting very patiently. And she's just been standing there and making me look all the guilty. You know, so -- so -- go ahead. You've got the microphone right behind you.

 

 

QUESTION: Thank you very much. I first want to say thank you, and I'm so grateful for you.

 

 

OBAMA: Thank you.

 

 

QUESTION: I've been praying for you.

 

 

OBAMA: I believe in prayer, so I appreciate that.

 

 

QUESTION: I have an urgent need, unemployment and homelessness, a very small vehicle for my family and I to live in. We need urgent. And the housing authority has two years' waiting lists, and we need something more than the vehicle and the parks to go to. We need our own kitchen and our own bathroom. Please help.

 

 

OBAMA: Well, I -- listen. What's your name? What's your name?

 

 

QUESTION: Henrietta Hughes (ph).

 

 

OBAMA: OK, Ms. Hughes, well, we're going to do everything we can to help you, but there are a lot of people like you. And we're going to do everything we can, all right? But the -- I'll have my staff talk to you after this -- after the town hall, all right?

 

 

All right. Back here, these folks have been neglected back here. The gentleman right here. Just go ahead and give him the mike, because I don't want him to fall over.

 

 

QUESTION: Mr. President, I'm a retired high school teacher, and I have this question. Last night, I was so impressed by your news conference. I haven't heard this in eight years.

 

 

My question was about your stimulus package. You said we have to be patient. The American people are notorious for not being patient.

 

 

(LAUGHTER)

 

 

How are you going to deal with that problem?

 

 

OBAMA: Well, look, my -- my -- first of all, I think that the American people understand, as I said before, that we didn't get into this fix overnight and we're not going to get out of it overnight.

 

OBAMA: I think people understand that it is a big and very complicated problem and that we're going to have to try a bunch of different things to get the economy moving again.

 

 

My hope is, is that the American people expect from me the same thing that I expect from myself, which is not to have every answer or to never make a mistake, but to feel like every day, me and my staff, that we are thinking about you and your lives, that we're talking to the most knowledgeable people on these problems, that we're making the best decisions for what's good for working families and middle-class folks and not just the powerful and the well-connected, that we are open to any idea, whether it comes from a Democrat or a Republican, or a vegetarian or a -- it doesn't matter -- and that we are going to be working as hard as we can to solve these problems.

 

 

Now, you know, that is how I judge myself every single day. I ask myself, did I work as hard as I could? Did I seek out the best possible advice? Did I stay focused on the people who sent me to Washington? And if I -- if something's not working and I make a mistake, am I open minded enough to admit it and then move on and try something else that works?

 

 

And that's -- that's -- that's the -- that's the best I can do. Now, look, I won't lie to you. If it turns out that a few years from now people don't feel like the economy's turned around, that we're still having problems, that folks are still unemployed, that our health care system's not more efficient, then, you know, you guys won't applaud me the next time I come down here. You know, there may be a couple of die-hard Obama folks out here, but...

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

But, you know, so -- I mean, I expect to be judged by results. And -- and there's no -- you know, I'm not going to make any excuses. If stuff hasn't worked and people don't feel like I've led the country in the right direction, then you'll have a new president.

 

 

But I -- but I do think the American people understand that these are some really big, tough problems and -- and it's going to take some time for us to get ourselves out of it. So -- and I have -- I have great faith in the American people and their basic wisdom, so -- all right.

 

 

We've got -- the gentlelady right here. Yes, go ahead.

 

 

QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. I'm so grateful to be able to call you that. I met you in -- in Boston in 2004 and was so impressed by you and got to speak with you.

 

 

OBAMA: Thank you so much. I appreciate that.

 

 

QUESTION: I'm now an elected official myself. I serve on the city council in Bonita Springs, Florida. And -- hey, Bonita. My mayor's here, as well -- he endorsed you...

 

 

(CROSSTALK)

 

 

OBAMA: Good to see you, Mr. Mayor. I like that in you.

 

 

QUESTION: Yes, he's a good man, and my fellow councilman. Cities throughout Florida are having a difficult time. Because of the mortgage crisis, growth has slowed.

 

 

We -- we fund our transportation infrastructure needs through impact fees. Now that we're not getting that, we're falling behind in our ability to keep up with roadwork, municipal water projects, being able to bring some solar panels down here to an inland port. We need commuter rail. We need lots of things for infrastructure in this state.

 

 

If we ran out of oil today, we would not be able to move anything around in this state, honest to God. And I hope you're going to help getting that thing in the Gulf, to turn that around. We don't want to drill oil in the Gulf, thank you. Right on.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

We've got a beautiful, pristine state. So I want to ask you, how will we get our state going again in transportation? I'm very worried about our dependence on foreign oil, and I don't want to drill in the Gulf. I want some commuter rail, and I want to improve our transportation system.

 

 

OBAMA: Well, the -- we have targeted billions of dollars at infrastructure spending. And states all across the country are going what Florida's going through.

 

OBAMA: There was a study done by the American association of engineers -- that might not be the exact title -- but engineers from all across the country. We got a D in infrastructure all across the country.

 

 

You know, we saw what happened in Minneapolis, where a bridge collapsed and resulted in tragedy. And not only do we need to rebuild our roads and our bridges, our ports, our levees, our dams, but we also have to plan for the future. This is the same example of turning crisis into opportunity.

 

 

This should be a wake-up call for us. You go to Shanghai, China, right now, and they've got high-speed rail that puts our railroads to shame. They've got ports that are state-of-the-art. Their airports are -- you know, compared to the airports that we -- you go through Beijing airport and you compare that to Miami airport?

 

 

Now, look, the -- this is America. We always had the best infrastructure. We were always willing to invest in the future.

 

 

You know, somebody -- Governor Crist mentioned Abraham Lincoln. He -- in the middle of the Civil War, in the midst of all this danger and peril, what did he do? He helped move the intercontinental railroad. He helped to start land grant colleges. He understood that, even when you're in the middle of crisis, you've got to keep your eye on the future.

 

 

So transportation is not just fixing our old transportation systems, but it's also imagining new transportation systems. That's why I'd like to see high-speed rail where it can be constructed. I would like for us to -- to invest in mass transit, because, potentially, that's energy-efficient, and I think people are a lot more open now to thinking regionally in terms of how we plan our transportation infrastructure.

 

 

The days where we're just building sprawl forever, those days are over. I think that Republicans, Democrats, everybody recognizes that that's not a smart way to design communities.

 

 

So we should be using this money to help spur this kind of innovative thinking when it comes to transportation. That will make a big difference. All right?

 

 

OK, I've only got time for one more question. I feel bad about it. It's got to be a guy, so, women, you've got to all sit down. Women, you've got to all sit down. It's got to be a man. All right, I'm going to call on this guy, because -- because he has a cap and he thought I had called on him and I didn't. So, all right, right here, the guy with the cap. Last question. Of course, now it better be a good one. Go ahead.

 

 

QUESTION: Oh, this is such a blessing to see you, Mr. President. Thank you for taking time out of your day. Oh, gracious God, thank you so much.

 

 

OBAMA: All right. What's the question?

 

 

QUESTION: All right, Mr. President. My name is Julio Asegueda (ph). I'm currently a student at Edison State College in my second semester.

 

 

And, OK, I've been at the same job, which is McDonald's, for four-and-a-half years because of the fact that I can't find another job. Now, with the fact that I've been there for as long as I've been there, do you have any plan or any idea of making one that has been there for a long time receive any better benefits than what they've already received?

 

 

OBAMA: Well, I tell you what. First of all, a couple things I'd like to say. Number one, the fact that you are working as hard as you're working at a job that I know doesn't always pay as well as some other jobs, I think that's a source of pride for you. That shows that -- that you're doing the right thing.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

Now, the second thing is, is that you will actually benefit from the tax breaks that we're talking about, so you'll be able to keep a little bit extra money, because we're going to offset your payroll tax. That's going to help.

 

 

I don't -- I assume that you're not getting health care through your job, and so one of the things that we want to do is reform the health care system so that you will have access to health care in your job.

 

 

But the thing that I'm really interested in is -- you say you're going to school. What are you studying?

 

 

QUESTION: I'm looking to study and major in communications, hopefully being a broadcaster or a disc jockey.

 

 

OBAMA: Well, you sound like you've got good communication skills.

 

 

QUESTION: Thank you so much.

 

 

OBAMA: So -- so part of what we want to do is we want to make it easier for you to afford going to college by giving you this refundable tax credit for your tuition, because young people like Julio, who have that much enthusiasm and that much energy, we've got to make sure that we are giving them a pathway so that they can educate themselves and go as far as their dreams take them.

 

 

Thank you very much, Fort Myers. I appreciate you.

 

 

(APPLAUSE)

 

 

END

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...9021001418.html

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I wish I was there today, Zombo. Maybe he would have agreed to bail me out of the money pit I have there!!

 

 

PS I'm giving the guy the benefit of the doubt - supporting him, even on some accounts.

 

 

My sister and her husband are going to Naples next week. Anything special going on? Fort Myers Flyers (is that the HOCKEY team's name?).

 

I hope you are doing well, my boy.

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I wish I was there today, Zombo. Maybe he would have agreed to bail me out of the money pit I have there!!

 

 

PS I'm giving the guy the benefit of the doubt - supporting him, even on some accounts.

 

 

My sister and her husband are going to Naples next week. Anything special going on? Fort Myers Flyers (is that the HOCKEY team's name?).

 

I hope you are doing well, my boy.

 

Florida Everblades ... they changed coaches this year and they have a really strong, physical team and I believe they are in first place. I like to get tickets with access to the Pub, where you can watch the whole game while being served by a friendly bartender.

 

The Twins and Red Sox are arriving soon ... and this year the Rays are in Port Charlotte, so if they are baseball fans they can catch some practices and games up close.

 

Hockey and baseball are two sports that are definitely best served live ... and we've got them both.

 

Zombo

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Hockey and baseball are two sports that are definitely best served live ... and we've got them both.

Zombo

 

I agree about TV, Zombo, but I don't mind baseball for a few innings. Given the pace of the game, one can stop in once in a while and keep up on proceedings. Playoffs and WS are a different story as each pitch can make or break a game. Baseball is great live and up close.

 

Never a big hockey fan although, like you, I used to go to the Springfield Indians' games. They had a bar inside and the tickets to get in were only $5.

 

Stayed in the bar pretty much the whole game. $5 cover charge and a free hockey game for entertainment.

 

Hockey is fantastic live - especially playoff hockey.

 

 

Everblades.................that is one of the best and most appropriate team names I've ever heard!!

 

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