White
House press release, June 6, 2000
THE
WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release June 6, 2000
PRESIDENT CLINTON CALLS FOR
IMMEDIATE ACTION ON SUPPLEMENTAL FUNDING, PROGRESS ON AMERICA'S AGENDA
Today, as Congress returns
from its Memorial Day recess, President Clinton will call on Congressional
Leaders to break the logjam that has neglected crucial needs such as disaster
relief, the war against drugs, military readiness, LIHEAP cooling assistance,
and air safety. The President will insist that Congress immediately pass
supplemental emergency funding that has languished in the Senate for months.
The President will also call on Congress to complete work on a fiscally
responsible budget that invests in the American people and to finalize
bipartisan legislation to pass common sense gun safety legislation, a
strong, enforceable Patient's Bill of Rights, a clean $1 increase in the
minimum wage over two years, and an affordable, voluntary Medicare prescription
drug benefit.
End Delays on Urgent Disaster
Relief, Military and Other Crucial Needs
In February, President Clinton
sent Congress an urgent $5.5 billion supplemental funding request to pay
for pressing national needs that could not wait for next year's budget.
After quick, bipartisan House action, the Senate has now dragged its feet
for three months. Among other serious consequences, further delays will
result in:
- Reduced Air Safety Inspections
And Air Traffic Control System Maintenance: Without $77 million in additional
funding contained in the President's request, the FAA will have to complete
the summer travel season without hiring 170 safety inspectors, resulting
in 10,000 fewer safety inspections and 100 fewer substance abuse inspections.
Continued Congressional delay would also force the FAA to reduce maintenance
of critical air traffic control systems, which will cause more system
outages and increased flight delays during peak vacation times.
- Delayed Relief To Victims
Of Hurricane Floyd: In September 1999 Hurricane Floyd destroyed homes,
farms and businesses along the east coast, hitting North Carolina especially
hard. Thousands of disaster victims are still waiting for promised assistance.
The President's supplemental request contains $347 million to allow families
to move or rebuild, help farmers replace equipment and buildings lost
in the storm, and help small businesses repair damage. Further delays
could postpone home construction until next spring, forcing families to
spend a second winter in trailers or temporary shelters and preventing
farmers from producing a successful crop again this year. The request
contains housing assistance for up to 10,000 households through FEMA,
HUD and the Department of Agriculture.
- Insufficient Firefighting
Resources on National Parks and Public Lands: Department of Interior funding
to fight fires will be exhausted by mid-June, just as peak fire season
is beginning. The President has supported another $200 million to maintain
the ability to respond to fires on National Parks and other public lands,
and complete emergency rehabilitation tasks for this year and next.
- No emergency LIHEAP Cooling
Assistance for Low Income Families: Winter fuel needs exhausted the emergency
reserve for low-income heating and cooling assistance. The National Weather
Service is predicting a hotter than average summer, but there is no emergency
fund to provide cooling assistance for low income and elderly Americans.
The President requested $600 million for LIHEAP to protect vulnerable
low-income individuals from heat-related illness and death.
- Weakened Anti-Drug Efforts
in Colombia: Colombia supplies 80 percent of the cocaine entering the
U.S. The President's request for $955 million to support Colombia's sweeping
anti-drug efforts has been pending for four months, restricting counter
narcotics efforts in Colombia to small operations and giving drug traffickers
an upper hand in the area. Congress' lack of support has been a setback
to the international anti-drug effort, hampered Colombia's domestic reforms
and economic recovery. Further delays will weaken the Colombian government
and erode U.S. credibility in the global counter-narcotics battle while
strengthening illegal armed groups and drug kingpins.
- Delaying International Debt
Relief. Last year, the United States led the way in reaching an historic
international agreement to provide greatly expanded relief to heavily
indebted poor countries in order to help them reduce poverty. The President
has requested $210 million to finance our participation in a global initiative
that leverages $20 in foreign contributions for every dollar we contribute.
While Congress fails to act, countries undertaking reforms in Latin America
and Africa are likely to continue paying millions in interest to foreign
creditors rather than investing in the health and education of their people.
In many of these countries, one in ten children dies before their first
birthday, one in three is malnourished, and the average adult has had
only three years of education.
- Insufficient Funding for
Military Readiness and American Troops in Kosovo: The Department of Defense
has already been forced to take extraordinary action to avert a funding
crisis because Congress failed to make the $2.7 billion requested by the
President available in April. If Congress does not approve funds this
month, the Army and other services will likely have to curtail training,
damaging the readiness, capability and morale of our armed forces. The
President's supplemental request also contains vital funding to support
American troops in Kosovo.
Complete Work on America's
Priorities
President Clinton will also
call on Republican Congressional leaders to move forward on five key priorities.
In many cases, Congress has answered the President's request to act on
these items on a bipartisan basis, only to see progress blocked and the
interests of the American people take a back seat to powerful lobbyists
and special interests. The President will call on Congress to use the
weeks ahead to complete work on the following measures:
- Raise The Minimum Wage:
Congress has delayed increasing the minimum wage for over a year by attaching
costly and unnecessary tax cuts to this long-overdue measure. Each day
Congress delays, it takes money out of the paychecks of 10 million minimum
wage workers, many who are moving from welfare to work. The minimum wage
has not been increased in nearly four years. It now enjoys broad bipartisan
support and should not be held hostage to an irresponsible tax cut aimed
at helping special interests.
- Pass Permanent Normal Trade
Relations for China: The House passed permanent normal trade relations
in May. Now the Senate should clear this bill for the President's signature.
Granting permanent normal trade relations, along with China's entry in
the WTO, will open China's markets to the United States and will promote
the cause of openness, reform and accountability in China. While China's
entry into the WTO will slash barriers to the sale of American goods and
services in the world's most populous country, the United States will
be required simply to continue the trade policies that it already applies
to China. The agreement is a clear win for American farmers, workers,
manufacturers and high-tech businesses.
- Complete A Meaningful Patient's
Bill Of Rights: Over nine months ago, the House passed the Norwood-Dingell
Patient's Bill of Rights with overwhelming bipartisan support. However,
Republican Congressional leaders have stalled action. The delay has resulted
in unnecessary harm to thousands of patients whose insurance companies
refuse to pay for tests or diagnostic procedures, fail to cover a prescription
drug, or refuse to allow a doctor to refer the patient to a specialist.
Congress has just a few weeks remaining to demonstrate that the interests
of patients and doctors come before insurance company profits by passing
a meaningful bipartisan Patient's Bill of Rights.
- Provide Affordable, Voluntary
Medicare Prescription Drug Coverage For All Beneficiaries: Medicare beneficiaries
face prescription drug costs that are increasing at double the rate of
inflation, and a growing number of seniors are finding themselves with
inadequate prescription drug coverage or none at all. Congress should
act now to provide an affordable coverage option before even more seniors
are forced to choose between food and prescription drugs for all beneficiaries.
- Approve Common Sense Gun
Safety Legislation: Sensible gun safety legislation has languished in
Congress for nearly a year, while an estimated 30,000 Americans have lost
their lives to gun violence. In May 1999 the Senate passed common sense
gun safety measures, with Vice President Gore casting the tie-breaking
vote. Since then, Republican Congressional leaders have delayed and bottled
up this legislation at the behest of the gun lobby. The President will
call on Congress to come to consensus on a bill that closes the gun show
loophole, requires child safety locks to be sold with handguns, bans the
importation of large capacity ammunition clips and prevents violent juvenile
offenders from buying guns as adults.
- Pass A Fiscally Responsible
Budget That Invests In Our Priorities: The President proposed a balanced
and fiscally responsible budget that makes investments in key priorities
for the American people. The President's budget includes important investments
in education, including funds to modernize 6,000 schools, continue the
effort to hire 100,000 quality teachers to reduce class size, expand our
efforts to identify and turn around failing schools, and increase accountability.
However, in order to pay for fiscally irresponsible tax cuts, Congressional
Republicans have cut $24 billion from the President's domestic priorities.
This would result in fewer quality teachers for schools, fewer law enforcement
officers and prosecutors to fight crime, reduced environmental protection,
and less funding for National Science Foundation research. This year,
as he has for the past seven, President Clinton will insist that Congress
produce a responsible budget that honors our values and invests in the
American people.
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As of June 7, 2000, this document
is also available online at http://www.pub.whitehouse.gov/uri-res/I2R?urn:pdi://oma.eop.gov.us/2000/6/6/24.text.1