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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release February 23, 1999
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AND THE FIRST LADY AT
CHILDREN'S HEALTH OUTREACH EVENT
The East Room
2:40 P.M. EST
MRS. CLINTON: Good afternoon. Thank you, please be seated. We are
delighted to welcome you to the White House, to be part of this very
exciting announcement and program. We have a number -- well, actually,
everyone here is a distinguished guest, and we have a number of members
of Congress, representatives of many businesses and not-for-profit
organizations. We're pleased to have representatives of the states,
both governors, governors' spouses and staff from the National Governors
Association.
This has been an extraordinary effort that has brought together
literally every part of America. And I'm honored to join the President
and all of you as together we take another important step forward in our
efforts to make quality health care a reality for all of America's
children.
The progress we've already made would not have been possible without
many of you here in this room. I want to thank the Secretary of HHS,
Secretary Donna Shalala, for her tireless leadership. I want to thank
the two governors who are here with us on the stage, Governor Leavitt
and Governor Carper, for making health care a bipartisan effort. And
I'm particularly pleased to see a number of congressional leaders --
some are en route and I believe the President will recognize everyone
who is eventually here; but I know that Senator Hatch is here and
Representative Sheila Jackson Lee is here and others, I'm told, are
coming.
I'm also delighted that this effort has brought together advocates and
business leaders in one common goal: to try to make sure that all of
our children have the health care that they need.
I would like especially to acknowledge the health care advocates, the
community leaders, the education groups, the business leaders, the
not-for-profits, and especially the work of our religious groups, like
Catholic Charities, who are doing such valuable work on behalf of
children's health issues today.
Nothing better explains why we are here than the story of a woman I
just met. Mary Smith is here with her two sons, Samuel Jr. and Thomas.
And the Smith family really represent millions and millions of American
families. Mary and her husband have both been working, but their
employers either didn't provide health care coverage, or offered them
private coverage they could not afford. So for three long and wearisome
years their children had no health insurance. And every single day --
particularly in the afternoons, when she knew her sons were out playing
sports -- Mary felt, in her words, that she was walking on eggshells,
hoping and praying that nothing would happen to her boys.
Now, every parent can imagine how Mary and her husband felt. When our
children are sick or hurt, the last thing we should have to worry about
is whether we will have the financial resources to take care of their
pain, to heal their wounds, lower their fevers, put them back on their
feet.
Yet, as shocking as it may sound, almost 11 million children in America
have no health insurance. Thanks to you, and with the support of the
President, who made it a priority, and a bipartisan majority in
Congress, that situation began to change on August 5, 1997, when the
President signed into law the largest expansion in health care in over
30 years. That day, our nation committed $24 billion to insure millions
of uninsured children, and their parents, through a federal-state
partnership. Today, more of America's families, including Mary's, are
breathing easier because their children are covered under the Children's
Health Insurance Program, known as CHIP.
Creating CHIP was the critical first step in ensuring that our children
receive the health care they need, from check-ups to immunizations to
complicated surgery. But we recognized that fulfilling the promise of
this legislation would not be done when the President signed it -- in
fact, that would just be the beginning of the hard work to make sure it
could be implemented.
At least half of all uninsured children are eligible for federal-state
health insurance programs, but too often their parents don't know or
don't believe they qualify. As successful, for example, as Medicaid
has been, an estimated 4 million eligible children are still not
enrolled. Millions of others, like Mary's sons, have working parents
and didn't know where to turn for health insurance. Sometimes people
lose their coverage when a parent loses a job; sometimes the long,
complicated forms just really seem too much for any family to face.
So over the past year we've carried on a sustained outreach effort in
communities nationwide to help educate families about CHIP. And I'm
very grateful for the work that all of you have done. I'd like to
describe a particularly successful effort.
Last November, Chicago's public schools launched an aggressive,
school-based outreach campaign aimed at the estimated 170,000 students
who were eligible but not enrolled in the Illinois KidCare program.
First they sent out enrollment information to every family who had
children in the city's public schools. Then, on the day that Chicago
requires parents to come to school -- which I think is a very good idea
-- to pick up their child's report card, 3,000 volunteers were on hand
to help eligible parents fill out the forms to get their children
enrolled.
Everyone was involved, from teachers to social workers to counselors;
from private corporations to advocacy groups. And they also had
advertisements that were public service, on the media and the TV and the
radio, translated into five different languages, including Cantonese and
Arabic. And the result of this concerted campaign? About 14,000
children in Chicago applied for KidCare during that time period. And I
know Paul Vallas, who is the CEO of Chicago's public schools, is here
with us, and I want to congratulate him for creating such a model
program.
This Chicago program shows what we can do when we work together, and
when we really reach out to families and children, to make good on the
promise that the President signed into law in August of 1997. There
isn't any more important mission than ensuring that every parent has the
peace of mind that Mary now has, to know her children are insured, and
has the resources to back up that peace of mind.
I want to ask Mary and her sons to stand, so that we can acknowledge
you. And I know teenage boys hate this so -- (laughter) -- we'll do it
really quickly, Samuel and Thomas, but I want to acknowledge the family.
(Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Let me begin by saying how very
much I appreciate all of you here who are a part of this historic day.
I thank my longtime friend, Governor Carper, for his generous remarks
and his great stories. He almost broke my concentration, though. I'll
spend the rest of the day trying to remember what my first answer was to
whether there was a noise when a tree falls in the forest. (Laughter.)
I thank you, Governor Leavitt, for your outstanding leadership, and
your concern for our children. I'd like to, again, acknowledge the
presence of Governor Angus King of Maine and Mary Herman; Governor and
Mrs. Knowles of Alaska; Governor Vilsack of Iowa; Mrs. Rossello from
Puerto Rico; Mrs. Underwood from West Virginia. And I thank all the
members of the Governors' Conference who are here.
There's one private citizen here I would like to acknowledge, and that
is Bud Chiles, the son of the late Governor Lawton Chiles of Florida,
who has been very active in this endeavor, as well. I thank him.
(Applause.)
We have a distinguished bipartisan delegation from the United States
Congress here. Senator Hatch, here supporting his governor from Utah;
Senator Specter from Pennsylvania; Congresswoman Diana DeGette from
Colorado; Congresswoman Anna Eshoo from Northern California;
Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee from Texas; Congressman Bart Stupak
from the upper peninsula of Michigan. He is the only person in the room
who thinks it is warm outside today. (Laughter.)
I'd also like to thank the Smith family for coming, and I hope the boys
weren't too embarrassed to stand up. They look very healthy to me, and
that's reassuring. (Laughter.) And I'd like to thank these beautiful
children for being here -- over here, and their families. When you
think about what this is all about, just kind of look over there.
I want to thank the National Governors Association. I want to thank
Secretary Shalala, who is indefatigable. If I ask her to do something,
sooner or later I will come to regret it. (Laughter.) Because she will
do it, and I will wind up doing whatever it is I'm supposed to do to
make sure it gets done. She is not only the longest-serving person in
her position ever, she is also the most energetic; and that is no
disrespect to her predecessors. I have never known anybody with as much
energy as she has -- (applause) -- with the possible exception of her
mother, who I understand is still winning tennis tournaments in her 80s.
(Laughter.)
I'd also like to thank the First Lady, without whom I probably would
not know very much about these issues. When I met her in 1971, she was
already obsessed with them. She took an extra year when we were in law
school to work at the Yale Child Studies Center and the Yale University
Hospital so that she could put her legal learning to work to help the
health of our children.
When you talked about our home state having 38,000 people signed up, we
have less than one percent of the population. That means if everybody
was doing that well, we'd already have 4 million kids signed up for this
program, and that is in no small measure due to a group called The
Arkansas Advocates for Families and Children, which Hillary founded over
20 years ago now. So I thank her for all that she has done.
(Applause.)
When the Congress passed the bipartisan balanced budget in 1997, it was
a truly historic act, and most of the publicity that surrounded that
endeavor came from the sheer relief the country felt that finally we had
done something about the deficit. But it's important to point out that
there were a lot of very important provisions within that very large
law, but none more important than the $24 billion allocated to provide
health insurance. We estimated at that time -- to up to 5 million kids,
which we estimated were at that time about half the uninsured children
in our country.
It is inconceivable that a country with as much economic prosperity as
we now enjoy, and the best health care system in the world, would leave
10 million -- now nearly 11 million -- children without health
insurance. We know many of them are eligible for Medicaid, but their
parents don't know it. We know there are a lot of hard working families
now whose incomes are too high to qualify for Medicaid, but they apply,
or qualify, for the Children's Health Insurance Programs now that the
states are operating around the country. But they don't know it.
Now, we knew when we signed this law into effect -- I'll never forget
Donna Shalala telling us, you know, we can pass this law, but we've
already got -- at that time -- over 3 million kids eligible for Medicaid
who don't sign up and don't know it. So we knew then that, to make the
tree heard in the forest, to extend the governor's metaphor -- to make
the health insurance program more than an empty promise, we'd have to
somehow get the word out to parents.
Last week -- you've heard all these stories -- last week, I had an
incredible experience at a health care forum in New Hampshire. I met a
woman named Christine Monteiro, who has run a small business with her
husband -- a solar energy business -- for 11 years. And, like all small
businesses, she had her ups and her downs. But the hardest times came
when her kids needed health care and they couldn't afford the health
insurance.
She found out about it the way we don't want people to have to find out
about it -- even though better that she found about it than not. She
had to take repeated visits to the doctor, with her child. And finally,
a health care worker at the medical clinic told her that she might be
eligible for New Hampshire's CHIP program. She applied immediately and
found that her daughter's visits were all covered and she saved up to
$1,000 a month for a very serious illness for her child.
Christine and her family were lucky. Not everybody, even who would
come into a medical facility, might know. This should not be a matter
of luck. We're here because all of us, in our various roles in life,
recognize that we have an obligation to use every possible tool, every
possible response, to reach more of the hard working families like those
you've heard about and seen today.
Government has a role to play; Secretary Shalala talked about it. Our
national campaign is called "Insure Kids Now." We've already heard
about the remarkable National Governors Association effort, working with
our administration and Bell Atlantic. The national toll-free number --
I'm going to say it again -- I like to say toll-free numbers, you know,
there's some chance it'll get on television if I say it. (Laughter.)
One of the few things I can think of to say that is subject to
absolutely no controversy. (Laughter.) I could stand up here for 10
minutes and just repeat the toll-free number. I'll say it again:
1-877-KIDSNOW. Not hard to remember and important not to forget.
As you've heard, because of the work of the NGA, you can get
state-specific information. Because when the Congress set this program
up in the Balanced Budget Act, and we strongly supported this, we
realize we couldn't possibly design a program in Washington that would
cover all the different circumstances that existed from state to state.
So all these programs were set up and then approved state by state. So
this is very, very important that we get this information out to people
in the form in which it is most usable. And again, I want to thank
Governors Carper and Leavitt for their leadership in this critical past
year, and all the other governors for their support.
Secretary Shalala told you about some of the things we're doing at the
federal level to reach more uninsured children. But let's be frank: to
reach them all -- to reach them all -- everyone who can touch the life
of a child or the child's parents needs to be involved in this effort.
Today, we're here to announce an unprecedented commitment, from media
to business, from the health care industry to grass-roots organizations,
all over our nation, to inform families of these new health insurance
options. We begin with an all-out media campaign to reach as many
families as possible. NBC is unveiling a new prime-time PSA to raise
awareness about Children's Health Insurance Program. Epatha Merkerson,
one of the stars of NBC's "Law and Order," who appears in the PSA, is
here with us today. Thank you very much for being here. (Applause.)
ABC and Viacom/Paramount will soon begin airing a PSA the First Lady
made to inform families about the Insure Kids Now toll-free number.
They have representatives here, I thank them. The National Association
of Broadcasters will make the First Lady's PSA available to all of its
member stations. Black Entertainment Television and Turner Broadcasting
will also run the ad.
Before I go forward, I would just like to unveil the two PSAs here, for
the first time. Let's take a look at them.
(The PSAs were played.) (Applause.)
I'd also like to thank the representatives from Univision here. They
will run a PSA in Spanish, made by HHS.
And we're not stopping there. Major corporations, from K-Mart and
Ralph's Grocery to McDonald's, to General Motors; from the American
Medical Response to Blue Cross/Blue Shield Association, to Pfizer, all
of whom are represented here. It will help make sure that the Insure
Kids Now toll-free number appears on grocery bags and restaurant place
mats, on school buses and in doctors' offices. Even on the toothbrushes
that dental hygienists give their patients.
And with the help of organizations like America's Promise, the United
Way and a host of community-based groups, families will hear about
health insurance from the people they trust the most -- from teachers
and principals, doctors and nurses, rabbis and ministers. Ultimately,
of course, parents must take responsibility for their children's health.
Our message must be: what you don't know about your children's health
insurance options can hurt them.
It's up to you to find out if your child is eligible for this health
insurance. So call the toll-free number: 1-887-KIDSNOW. Working
together, we can reach those kids. Look at those kids there. There's
over 10 million of them. They deserve to be as healthy as we feel
today. And we can do it for them.
Thank you and God bless you. (Applause.)
END 3:17 P.M. EST
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