THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release November 13, 1997 10:29 A.M. EST
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT BILL SIGNING CEREMONY
The East RoomThank you, Philip and Tina Israel. Thank you, Kikuyu Shaw. Mr. Vice President, Secretary Riley, Secretary Herman, Deputy Secretary Thurm, all the members of Congress who are here; and Mrs. Udall, thank you for coming.
Ladies and gentlemen, before I make my remarks about this legislation that we have all worked on, I'd like to say a few words about yesterday's United Nations Security Council resolution on Iraq.
Plainly, it sent the right message: comply now with the U.N. resolutions and let the UNSCOM inspection team go back to work. Iraq's announcement this morning to expel the Americans from the inspection team is clearly unacceptable and a challenge to the international community.
Let me remind you all again -- I will say this every time I discuss this issue -- these inspectors, in the last six years, have uncovered more weapons of mass destruction potential and destroyed it than was destroyed in the entire Gulf War. It is important to the safety of the world that they continue their work. I intend to pursue this matter in a very determined way.
I think it's fair to say that this is one of those days in public service that these members of Congress in both parties work for and live for and put up with a lot of the hassles of public life for. We have been on a journey for the last five years to a new century that is now just around the corner, driven by a vision to provide opportunity to everybody who is responsible enough to work for it, to continue to lead the world for peace and freedom and prosperity, and to bring our people together across all the lines that divide us into one America. And we're clearly making progress.Our economy is the strongest in a generation; crime, welfare and unemployment are falling.
I think all of us believe that the best way to sustain and build on that progress is to make sure that all of our people have a world-class education. In my State of the Union address, I challenged our people to join me in a nonpartisan effort to make sure that every eight-year-old can read, every 12-year-old can log on to the Internet, every 18-year-old can go on to college, every adult can continue to learn for a lifetime. For the very first time, I feel that we are determined to finish that part of our journey.
Congress and the United States of America have answered the call. When I sign this bill into law, I will have the privilege of signing into the record books what is plainly the best year for American education in more than a generation. (Applause.)
First, we are taking historic steps to make sure that every child in America can meet the high national standards of academic achievement that the Israels spoke about so that every children can master the basics. This bill represents a genuine breakthrough in what is now quite a long effort by many people to achieve national academic standards in the United States.
For the first time we will have workable and generally agreed-upon standards in math and reading. And for the very first time, Congress has voted to support the development of voluntary national tests to measure performance in 4th grade reading and 8th grade math. The tests will be created by an independent, bipartisan organization and will be piloted in schools next October.
The importance of this cannot be overstated. Our children rise with the expectations we set for them. We know that every child can meet high standards if we set them and measure our progress against them. I want to especially thank Senate Bingaman and Representative Miller and everyone else who worked on this particular part of the legislation.
This legislation also takes concrete steps to help our children meet the standards, and indeed, to achieve all our national education goals. It will help every 8-year-old in America read on his or her own by funding the America Reads challenge and expanding national service so that our Americorp members can recruit trained literacy tutors four our schools. Already, over 800 colleges and universities and numerous other organizations are providing tens of thousands of volunteer tutors that are going into our schools every week to help make sure our children can read. We can give our children the extra attention and practice they need so that we can assure that they'll be able to read independently by the end of the 3rd grade if we continue to pursue this.
Second, the bill takes significant steps to ensure that every 12-year-old can log on to the Internet. I must say, I had ambivalent feelings when I realized that Mr. Israel was logging on to the Internet and reading what was on the Web site about the exam. Some day somebody may figure out how to find the actual exam on the Web site. (Laughter.) But I was glad to know you were.
This measure nearly doubles -- nearly doubles -- our national investment in education technology. It puts us well on the way to connecting every classroom and library to the Information Superhighway by the year 2000, something the Vice President has made a particular commitment to.
And I want to emphasize something else, because I met with a group of young people yesterday in their 20s who were hammering me on this. They said, what difference will it make if you connect every classroom in the country to the Information Superhighway if the teachers aren't trained to use the technology and the kids know more than they do? So I want to emphasize that a big part of this legislation provides investments to make sure that our teachers have the training they need to maximize the use of this new technology.
Third, the bill, along with college tuition tax credits I signed into law this summer and the improvements in the college loan program we have been implementing since 1993, will make it possible for every 18-year-old who's willing to work for it to go on to college. And it gives us a chance to make the 13th and 14th years of education as universal as a high school diploma is today. This measure includes the largest increase in Pell Grant scholarships in two decades, raising the maximum grant and serving an additional 220,000 students.
I might add that the Congress -- and I thank the members of this committee who are here -- has added in the last two budgets another 300,000 work-study positions as well.
The bill also promotes innovation and expands public school choice, helping parents, teachers and community leaders to open some 500 new charter schools and clearing the way for 3,000 such schools by early in the next century. It recognizes that learning begins in the earliest years of life and significantly expands investment in Head Start. It challenges teachers to reach higher standards along with students and honors those who do by helping 100,000 more teachers seek certification for the National Board of Teacher Standards as master teachers.
Let me emphasize the significance of the 100,000 figure. The year before last, there were only 500 teachers in the entire country who had been certified as master teachers. Because of the unique training and performance required to gain this certification, it is our firm belief -- and I know Secretary Riley believes this --if we can get one master teacher certified in every school building in America, it will change the entire culture of teaching across the country and elevate the quality of education dramatically. So this is very important.
The bill brings more to our efforts to build discipline and order and safety and positive activity into the lives of our children, with $40 million to help schools stay open late, on the weekends and in the summer, to help keep young people off the streets and out of trouble, along with job training for out-of-school youth. Now, let me emphasize the importance of this. Most juvenile crime is committed between the hours of 3:00 in the afternoon and 7:00 at night. While the crime rate has dropped in America dramatically, it's only in the last two years that it's begun to level off among young people.
But we ought to look at this in a positive way. This is an opportunity to take kids who otherwise don't have the institutional support they need, who are capable of getting a good education and being good, productive citizens and giving them the institutional framework within which to do that. It also helps a lot of them whose parents have to work until later in the evening and cannot be at home.
So it may sound like a little money, but a little money given to a school on a tight budget for this purpose can make all the difference in the world in the lives of a lot of our young people. So I'm very pleased by that. And again I want to thank all the members who are here for what they have done.
I hope now we will use this momentum in education to take some new steps, to pass finally a G.I. Bill for America's Workers that would enable us to give a certificate to any American who needs it to take to the nearest educational institution to learn new skills to re-enter the work place, and to meet the quiet crisis of crumbling and crowded school buildings across America. We have more children in our schools than at any time in our history, with serious overcrowding problems and serious building deterioration problems, which I believe we should help to address.
Let me say finally that this bill continues our efforts to strengthen families on many other fronts. It expands educational opportunity for recent immigrants, children with disabilities, children growing up in our poorest neighborhoods. It significantly increases funding for biomedical research, from cancer to Parkinson's Disease -- and we're particularly glad to have Mrs. Udall with us today -- to the astonishing human genome project. And I would like to thank Congressman Porter and Congressman Obey and Congressman Spratt for the work that they have done on this particular thing. And I would like to especially thank Congressman Upton for the work that he's done on the Parkinson's issue. This is a remarkable, remarkable bill with an astonishing bipartisan commitment to keep our country on the front ranks of medical research.
Finally, it will help to make new, very powerful AIDS therapies more available to needy patients. Along with the FDA reform legislation this Congress has passed that we will be signing in the next several days, moving promising medical therapies to market more quickly in a more efficient way and then making them more available to the people that need them can change the lives and improve the quality as well as the length of lives for many, many tens of thousand of our fellow Americans.
And believe it or not, with all these issues on the education checklist and all the things I just mentioned in health care, these are just some of the important provisions in this bill that honor our duty to prepare our people for the future. As much as any bill I have signed, as much as any bill the Congress has passed in recent years, this bill genuinely does fulfill our strategy of opportunity for all, responsibility from all, a community of all Americans. I am very proud to sign it into law. And again, let me thank every single person in this room who had anything to do with this enactment, but especially, let me thank the members of Congress who are here for working together in good spirit and honest and principled compromise to hammer out this truly remarkable bill. Thank you very much.
Now, I'd like to ask the members of Congress and the people from the executive departments and our speakers to join me up here while we sign the legislation. (Applause.)
(The bill is signed.) (Applause.)
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