Dear Mr. Chairman:
I am transmitting herewith a
draft of proposed legislation which would authorize immediate initiation
of a $600 million capital improvements program in those sections of our
country - which have failed to share fully in the economic gains of the
recovery from the recession of 1960-61. This proposal is in the form of
an amendment to the proposed Stand-by Capital Improvements Act of 1962,
which I transmitted to the Congress on February 191
and which has since been referred to your Committee as H.R. 10318 (S. 2965)
and other identical bills.
The proposed Stand-by Capital
Improvements Act, together with the recommended stand-by temporary tax
reduction authority and the pending bill to strengthen permanently our
Federal-State system of unemployment insurance, would constitute a new
and powerful arsenal of weapons to combat the recessions which periodically
sap the vitality of our economy. The waste and distress which characterize
these periodic recessions can and must be abated. Passage of the recommended
legislation will make possible timely and effective action to reduce the
severity and duration of future recessions.
Our present problem is not,
of course, one of nation-wide recession. We have been making a strong recovery
from the recession of 1960-61. Gross national product rose from $501 billion
in the first quarter of last year to $542 billion in the last quarter.
Industrial production has risen 12 percent over the last is months. Disposable
personal income per capita has passed the historic $2000 milestone. Unemployment
in the last year has declined from 6.9 percent of the labor force to 5.6
percent, and the number of persons at work has increased by more than a
million over a year ago. The recovery still has considerable distance to
go before full employment is restored. But, despite the fact that our economic
performance of the last two months has fallen below expectations, we look
for a strong and continued expansion throughout the year and into 1963.
Although we do not today face
a problem of general recession, the two recessions of the last five years
- interrupted only by a short and incomplete recovery - have left in their
wake serious problems of prolonged large-scale unemployment and economic
distress in hundreds of communities in all sections of the country. The
roster of these communities includes large cities, smaller cities, and
rural areas. The causes of their troubles are manifold - exodus of industry,
displacement of labor by technological change, excessive dependence on
declining industries, influx of job-seekers, changing weapons requirements
in military procurement, and chronic rural poverty. Whatever the cause,
the results are the same - high and persistent urban unemployment or rural
underemployment. Continued economic expansion for the Nation as a whole
will in time help to restore the prosperity of many of these areas. But
their needs are urgent now, and further help should not be delayed until
another recession threatens the whole economy.
There are 852 localities which
have been designated as redevelopment areas under the Area Redevelopment
Act of 1961, and a further 106 communities which have been designated for
12 months or more as areas of substantial unemployment. These 958 localities
account for 38 percent of our population. In these areas, taken together,
one out of 13 members of the labor force is unemployed, and the average
unemployment rate is 33 percent higher than in the rest of the country.
Most of these areas are eligible
for assistance under the Area Redevelopment Act of 1961. Although the area
redevelopment program is less than a year old, assistance has already been
extended to 82 communities in 26 states. As this program gathers momentum,
more and more communities will be aided in their efforts to build a durable
foundation for sustained local prosperity.
The area redevelopment program,
however, is a continuing effort to help communities to attract new and
permanent jobs to solve their long-range economic problem; it is not primarily
designed to provide immediate relief of distress caused by unemployment,
or to assist in the general rehabilitation and improvement of public facilities.
I believe that a further Federal effort is necessary, both to provide immediate
useful work for the unemployed and the underemployed, and to help these
and other hard-pressed communities, through improvement of their public
facilities, to become better places to live and work.
Accordingly, I urge that we
initiate as soon as possible a $600 million capital improvements program
in the redevelopment areas and in the communities which have been designated
for 12 months or more as areas of substantial unemployment. Actual expenditures
will depend upon the timing of Congressional action. If legislation and
the supporting appropriation are enacted promptly, expenditures under this
program would be approximately $25 million in the remaining months of fiscal
1962, $350 million in fiscal 1963, and $225 million in the early months
of fiscal 1964.
These funds would be allocated
for Federal capital improvements projects in economically depressed areas
and for grants and loans to eligible States and localities for improvement
of community facilities. Federal grants to States and localities would
range up to 50 percent of the cost of each project, and could be higher
in certain exceptional cases. Loans would be available to assist hard-pressed
communities which would otherwise be unable to meet promptly their share
of project costs.
Projects under this program
would be limited to those which could be initiated or accelerated within
a reasonably short period of time and completed within 12 months after
initiation. Other limitations of the stand-by bill would also apply: for
example, projects could be approved only if they were capable of meeting
an essential public need, if they would contribute significantly to the
reduction of unemployment, and if they were not inconsistent with locally
approved comprehensive development plans.
State and local capital improvements
under this program would include such projects as water supply improvement;
parks and other recreational development; sewerage systems and water pollution
control; construction, rehabilitation and modernization of public buildings,
such as hospitals and civic buildings; and road, street, airfield, and
port improvement. Examples of Federal projects and programs would include
conservation activities to improve our public land, water, timber, fish
and wildlife resources, and construction or improvement of laboratories,
research and training facilities, and other public buildings.
The stand-by capital improvements
bill, and this proposal for an immediate public facilities program, are
in my judgment of equal importance to the economic welfare of our Nation.
The former would enable us more effectively to combat the waste and hardship
of future recessions; the latter would bring new public facilities, new
jobs, and new hope to those communities whose economic troubles have resisted
the rising tide of national economic expansion.
Sincerely,
JOHN F. KENNEDY
NOTE: This is the text of identical letters addressed
to the Honorable Charles A. Buckley and the Honorable Dennis Chavez, Chairmen
of the House and Senate Committees on Public Works, respectively. On September
14 the President approved the Public Works Acceleration Act of 1962. For
his statement upon signing the bill, see Item
380.