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THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary


For Immediate Release September 8, 1994
                       REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                 AT ALL-AMERICA CITIES AWARD CEREMONY
             
                           The Rose Garden

2:10 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, and welcome to the Rose Garden on this beautiful day. I want to acknowledge the presence of Secretary Cisneros, who was once Director of the National Civic League and whose city, San Antonio, a few years ago was an AllAmerican city under his leadership. Congresswoman Johnson, Congressman Borski, Congressman Blackwell, Congressman Thomas and Congressman Sharp are here.

I also want to say a word of special appreciation for the National Civic League because this is its centennial year. When the league was founded, Theodore Roosevelt said, "There are many ways in which a man or a woman can work for the higher life of American cities." Well, judging by what the mayors here and their citizens have shown us, that is just as true if not more true today than it was 100 years ago. We know, given the complex challenges that our cities face, we need that kind of commitment now even more than we needed it 100 years ago.

We are here to celebrate success on many fronts. Some of the cities are being honored for designing programs to get our children off the streets and into better lives. Others have expanded downtown business areas, opened free health clinics for the poor, smoothed the economic impact of a base closure. These 10 cities represent regions all over America and they're of different sizes with different problems and different challenges and different opportunities. They do teach us, however, one thing in common --when our citizens work in partnership, when they work business and labor and government, when they find ways to come together instead of being divided, they can do miraculous things.

The partnerships we celebrate here are a reminder that government can and must help, that businesses and volunteer organizations working with citizens themselves must do the hard work of restoring America's communities. Each and every one of us must be personally responsible for working in our communities and making a difference.

No one else will ever care about a community half as much as those who live there and raise their children there, who look forward to growing old there and being remembered there. And who knows how to solve the problems of a place better than those who call it home?

That's not to say that you should do all the work on your own. Our federal government must and will continue to help. Everything we do, even here, should ultimately be about empowering people at the grass roots; to assume responsibility for their own lives, their own communities, their own families; to be able to compete and win; to succeed in the complicated but exhilarating world toward which we are moving in the next century.

We've worked hard over the last 19 months to create that kind of framework -- in strengthening our economy, in reforming our education system, in following some of the initiatives Secretary Cisneros has set out for cities and for communities within cities all across America.

We have another great opportunity for partnership now that the crime bill has at last passed. (Applause.) If ever there was an example of the federal government reaching out to empower people at the grass roots level, the crime bill is it. It's paid for by reducing the size of the national government by 270,000 over the next six years giving all the money back to local communities to hire police, to build prisons, to build prevention programs, to reach out to young people, to give people something to say yes to, to put people to work and put people in responsible play as well.

These things can work in miraculous ways, but we're going to depend upon you to make them work. Getting the crime bill through Congress was difficult, all right. It took six years. But you don't have six years to make it work at the grass roots. The money is flowing in this fiscal year, and we have to depend upon all of you to reduce crime and violence and to increase the number of young people who have a better future.

The partnerships that we celebrate today and the ones our administration is committed to creating tomorrow -- all of them are the backbone of our future. The cities are leading the way, and those of you who are being honored today are truly outstanding. I can't wait to present the awards. I have already read the reasons why all of you are being acknowledged. It reminded me of a lot of the things that I did as a governor. It reminds me, too, here in Washington that very often the most important things we do receive the least publicity, especially if we do them hand in hand instead of fist against fist. But you keep on doing it, because in the end, the results will be the ultimate reward.

Now I'd like to introduce a person that it's my great honor to present -- one of our country's most distinguished citizens, the Chairman of the National Civic League, John Gardner.

MR. GARDNER: First order of business is to thank you, President Clinton, for giving us this memorable occasion -- and it really is memorable, and we're grateful. I've already congratulated the award winners, but I'll congratulate you again. We're very proud of you, and this occasion tells you that the country's proud of you.

I want to acknowledge the presence in the audience of Florence Mahoney, one of the great citizens of this nation. (Applause.) The National Institutes of Health are practically a monument to Florence Mahoney and Mary Lasker, two great Americans.

I also want to acknowledge the presence of Henry Cisneros, a hero to all of us who work on the cities, and my predecessor as Chairman of the National Civic League.

Mr. President, the awardees of whom you see before you are the kind of people who are going to save this nation. Thanks to them and to others like them around the country, we are seeing an extraordinary wave of innovation in social problem-solving at the grass roots. Almost every domestic concern -- early childhood education, school reform, job training programs, affordable housing, neighborhood economic development, community-oriented policing, you name it.

A good many Americans, as we all know, are in a somewhat sour and negative mood. But these folks are different. Hope and faith are required to move mountains. And you folks are mountainmovers. You have tackled your local problems with energy and spirit -- and I should add, with patience and persistence and more patience and more persistence. You all know what's required.

I mentioned the fact that the mood of the general public is considerably on the negative side. I don't think Americans even like themselves in that mood. We're a positive-minded people. We always have been. We're at our best when we're charging ahead. So, Mr. President, the folks you see before you are really role models for that kind of turn-around in mood -- great Americans.

It's now my great pleasure to introduce the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Allstate Corporation, Wayne Hedien. (Applause.) The Civic League has had a long and satisfying relationship with Allstate in sponsoring the All America Cities Awards.

Ladies and gentlemen, you're in good hands. (Laughter and applause.)

MR. HEDIEN: I couldn't have said it any better. Thank you, John. (Laughter.)

Allstate is certainly proud of the partnership that we share with the National Civic League. And I'd like to thank you, Mr. President, for taking part in this very important ceremony today.

Today we honor 10 cities and their dedicated citizens. These communities really exemplify what's important in America today and what's right in all of our cities. They epitomize the country's can-do spirit. They embody the ideals and the ideas that really built our nation.

Mr. President, it's my honor to introduce this year's All America City Award winners.

(The awards are presented.)

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Let me just say a word of thanks to Allstate and to its Chairman for their leadership. And thanks again to John Gardner. Thanks to all the members of Congress for coming here. And thanks to all of you.

The most important thing I think we can take away from here is what John Gardner said -- this is a can-do country. This is fundamentally an optimistic country. Just two days ago the international economic experts who every year rank the countries of the world in terms of how productive they are, ranked the United States number one again for the first time in nearly 10 years. (Applause.)

That happened because of what people are doing in the heartland and because we're getting our act together up here. And you should feel very hopeful about the future because of what you have done and because of what you have done.

Thank you, and God bless you all. (Applause.) We're adjourned, thank you. (Applause.)

END2:21 P.M. EDT