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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
April 21, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT SIGNING OF THE EDWARD M. KENNEDY SERVE AMERICA ACT
The SEED School of Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C.
3:56 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Please be seated. Thank you.
Well, what an extraordinary day. It is good to be here with
all of you.
I want to, first of all, thank President Bill Clinton for
joining us here today -- where’s President Clinton?
-- (applause) -- for his lifetime of service to our country,
but also the fact that he created AmeriCorps, and that not
only made this day possible, it has directly enlisted more
than half a million Americans in service to their country;
service that has touched the lives of millions more.
Now, it just so happens that one of those people who have
been touched by AmeriCorps was FLOTUS, otherwise known as
First Lady of the United States -- (laughter) -- Michelle
Obama, who ran a AmeriCorps-sponsored program, Public Allies,
in Chicago. (Applause.)
I also want to thank former First Lady Rosalynn Carter
for being here -- (applause) -- for her advocacy on behalf
of those with mental illness, and for her husband’s
continued good works that inspire us all. I am thrilled
to have Caroline Kennedy here -- (applause) -- for carrying
on her family’s long legacy of service.
To my congressional colleagues who did such a fantastic
job on a bipartisan basis ushering this through, starting
with the two leaders of the House and the Senate, Nancy
Pelosi and Harry Reid, I’m grateful to them, and obviously
to Barbara Mikulski and Orrin Hatch, George Miller, the
entire delegation who helped to shepherd this through --
please give them a huge round of applause. (Applause.)
To my outstanding Vice President, Joe Biden. (Applause.)
To Dr. Jill Biden. (Applause.) A couple of outstanding public
servants in their own right, please, a warm welcome for
General Colin Powell and his wonderful wife, Alma. (Applause.)
For the outstanding Mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg.
(Applause.) And I’ve got to give some special props
to my fellow Illinoisan, a great friend, Dick Durbin. (Applause.)
Finally -- and I know that I’ve got some prepared
remarks -- but I just want to go ahead and say it now. There
are very few people who have touched the life of this nation
in the same breadth and the same order of magnitude than
the person who is seated right behind me. And so this is
just an extraordinary day for him. And I am truly grateful
and honored to call him a friend, a colleague, and one of
the finest leaders we’ve ever had -- Ted Kennedy.
(Applause.)
All right. I want to thank the students and the faculty
of the SEED School -- (applause) -- our hosts for today
-- and their headmaster, Charles Adams. Where’s Mr.
Adams? Is he here? (Applause.) A shining example of how
AmeriCorps alums go on to do great things. This school is
a true success story -- a place where for four of the last
five years, every graduate from the SEED School was admitted
to college -- every graduate. (Applause.)
It’s a place where service is a core component of
the curriculum. And just as the SEED School teaches reading
and writing, arithmetic and athletics, it also prepares
our young Americans to grow into active and engaged citizens.
And what these students come to discover through service
is that by befriending a senior citizen, or helping the
homeless, or easing the suffering of others, they can find
a sense of purpose and renew their commitment to this country
that we love.
And that is the spirit in which we gather today, as I sign
into law a bill that represents the boldest expansion of
opportunities to serve our communities and our country since
the creation of AmeriCorps -- (applause) -- a piece of legislation
named for a man who has not only touched countless lives,
but who still sails against the wind, a man who’s
never stopped asking what he can do for his country, and
that’s Senator Edward M. Kennedy. (Applause.)
In my address to a joint session of Congress in February,
I asked for swift passage of this legislation, and these
folks on the stage came through. So, again, I want to thank
wide bipartisan majorities in the House and the Senate who
came together to pass this bill -- especially Barbara Mikulski,
Mike Enzi, Chris Dodd, John McCain, who’s not here,
Thad Cochran, as well as, on the House side, Representatives
Miller and Carolyn McCarthy, Buck McKeon and Howard Berman.
More than anyone else, the new era of service we enter
in today has been made possible by the unlikely friendship
between these two men, Orrin Hatch and Ted Kennedy. They
may be the odd couple of the Senate. (Laughter.) One is
a conservative Republican from Utah; the other is, well,
Ted Kennedy. (Laughter.) But time and again, they placed
partnership over partisanship to advance this nation even
in times when we were told that wasn’t possible. (Applause.)
Senator Hatch was shaped by his experience as a young missionary
serving others, a period he has called the greatest of his
life. And last year he approached Senator Kennedy to share
his ideas about service. Out of that conversation came this
legislation. And last month, at Senator Hatch’s selfless
request, the Senate unanimously chose to name this bill
after his dear friend, Ted. (Applause.) That’s the
kind of class act that Orrin Hatch is.
Now, Ted’s story and the story of his family is known
to all. It’s a story of service. And it’s also
the story of America -- of hard work and sacrifice of generation
after generation, some called upon to give more than others,
but each committed to the idea that we can make tomorrow
better than today. I wouldn’t be standing here today
if not for the service of others, or for the purpose that
service gave my own life.
I’ve told this story before. When I moved to Chicago
more than two decades ago to become a community organizer,
I wasn’t sure what was waiting for me there, but I
had always been inspired by the stories of the civil rights
movement, and President Kennedy’s call to service,
and I knew I wanted to do my part to advance the cause of
justice and equality.
And it wasn’t easy, but eventually, over time, working
with leaders from all across these communities, we began
to make a difference -- in neighborhoods that had been devastated
by steel plants that had closed down and jobs that had dried
up. We began to see a real impact in people’s lives.
And I came to realize I wasn’t just helping people,
I was receiving something in return, because through service
I found a community that embraced me, citizenship that was
meaningful, the direction that I had been seeking. I discovered
how my own improbable story fit into the larger story of
America.
It’s the same spirit of service I’ve seen across
this country. I’ve met countless people of all ages
and walks of life who want nothing more than to do their
part. I’ve seen a rising generation of young people
work and volunteer and turn out in record numbers. They’re
a generation that came of age amidst the horrors of 9/11
and Katrina, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, an economic
crisis without precedent. And yet, despite all this -- or
more likely because of it -- they’ve become a generation
of activists possessed with that most American of ideas,
that people who love their country can change it.
They’re why the Peace Corps had three applications
for every position available last year; why 35,000 young
people applied for only 4,000 slots in Teach for America;
why AmeriCorps has seen a 400-percent increase in applications
in just the past four months. And yet, even as so many want
to serve, even as so many are struggling, our economic crisis
has forced our charities and non-for-profits to cut back.
What this legislation does, then, is to help harness this
patriotism and connect deeds to needs. It creates opportunities
to serve for students, seniors, and everyone in between.
It supports innovation and strengthens the nonprofit sector.
And it is just the beginning of a sustained, collaborative
and focused effort to involve our greatest resource -- our
citizens -- in the work of remaking this nation.
We’re doing this because I’ve always believed
that the answers to our challenges cannot come from government
alone. Our government can help to rebuild our economy and
lift up our schools and reform health care systems and make
sure our soldiers and veterans have everything they need
-- but we need Americans willing to mentor our eager young
children, or care for the sick, or ease the strains of deployment
on our military families.
That’s why this bill will expand AmeriCorps from
75,000 slots today to 250,000 in less than a decade. (Applause.)
And it’s not just for freshly minted college grads.
As I said, my wife Michelle left her job at a law firm to
be the founding director of an AmeriCorps program in Chicago
that trains young people for careers in public service.
And Michelle can tell you the transformation that occurred
in her life as a consequence of being able to follow her
passions, follow her dreams.
Programs like these are a force multiplier; they leverage
small numbers of members into thousands of volunteers. And
we will focus their service toward solving today’s
most pressing challenges: clean energy, energy efficiency,
health care, education, economic opportunity, veterans and
military families.
We’ll invest in ideas that help us meet our common
challenges, no matter where those ideas come from. All across
America, there are ideas that could benefit millions of
Americans if only they were given a chance to take root
and to grow -- ideas like the one that Eric Adler and Raj
Vinnakota had that led to this school and expanded its model
to others.
That’s why this bill includes a new Social Innovation
Fund that will bring nonprofits and foundations and faith-based
organizations and the private sector to the table with government
so that we can learn from one another’s success stories.
We’ll invest in ideas that work, leverage private-sector
dollars to encourage innovation, expand successful programs
to scale and make them work in cities across America.
Because we must prepare our young Americans to grow into
active citizens, this bill makes new investments in service
learning. And we’ve increased the AmeriCorps education
award and linked it to Pell Grant award levels, another
step toward our goal of ensuring that every American receives
an affordable college education. (Applause.)
Because millions of Americans are out of school and out
of work, it creates an Energy Corps that will help people
find useful work and gain skills in a growing industry of
the future.
Because our boomers are the most highly educated generation
in history, and our seniors live longer and more active
lives than ever before, this bill offers new pathways to
harness their talent and experience to serve others.
And because this historic expansion of the Corporation
for National and Community Service requires someone with
both bold vision and responsible management experience,
I have chosen Mary* Eitel -- where’s Mary*? There
she is, stand up, Mary -- as its new CEO. (Applause.) The
founder and first president of the Nike Foundation, Maria
is a smart and innovative thinker, and a leader who shares
my belief in the power of service. And I also wanted to
thank the acting CEO, Nicky Goren -- where’s Nicky?
-- (applause) -- for guiding the corporation through this
transition.
A week from tomorrow marks the 100th day of my administration.
In those next eight days, I ask every American to make an
enduring commitment to serving your community and your country
in whatever way you can. Visit whitehouse.gov to share your
stories of service and success. And together, we will measure
our progress not just in the number of hours served or volunteers
mobilized, but in the impact our efforts have on the life
of this nation.
We’re getting started right away -- this afternoon,
I’ll be joined by President Clinton and Michelle and
Joe Biden and Dr. Biden to plant trees in a park not far
from here. It’s as simple as that. All that’s
required on your part is a willingness to make a difference.
And that is, after all, the beauty of service. Anybody can
do it. You don’t need to be a community organizer,
or a senator, or a Kennedy -- (laughter) -- or even a President
to bring change to people’s lives.
When Ted Kennedy makes this point, he also tells a story
as elegantly simple as it is profound. An old man walking
along a beach at dawn saw a young man pick up a starfish
and throwing them out to sea. “Why are you doing that?”
the old man inquired.
The young man explained that the starfish had been stranded
on the beach by a receding tide, and would soon die in the
daytime sun. “But the beach goes on for miles,”
the old man said. “And there are so many. How can
your effort make any difference?” The young man looked
at the starfish in his hand, and without hesitating, threw
it to safety in the sea. He looked up at the old man, smiled,
and said: “It will make a difference to that one.”
(Laughter.)
To Ted, that’s more than just a story. For even in
the midst of his epic fights on the floor of the Senate
to enact sweeping change, he’s made a quiet trek to
a school not far from the Capitol, week after week, year
after year, without cameras or fanfare, to sit down and
read with one solitary child.
Ted Kennedy is that young man who will not rest until we’ve
made a difference in the life of every American. He walks
down that beach and he keeps on picking up starfish, tossing
them into the sea. And as I sign this legislation, I want
all Americans to take up that spirit of the man for whom
this bill is named; of a President who sent us to the moon;
of a dreamer who always asked “Why not?” --
of a younger generation that carries the torch of a single
family that has made an immeasurable difference in the lives
of countless families.
We need your service right now, at this moment in history.
I’m not going to tell you what your role should be;
that’s for you to discover. But I’m asking you
to stand up and play your part. I’m asking you to
help change history’s course, put your shoulder up
against the wheel. And if I -- if you do, I promise you
your life will be richer, our country will be stronger,
and someday, years from now, you may remember it as the
moment when your own story and the American story converged,
when they came together, and we met the challenges of our
new century.
Thank you very much, everybody. I’m going to sign
this bill. (Applause.)
(The bill is signed.) (Applause.)
END 4:14 P.M. EDT
/*Maria Eitel
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