Tuesday, February 6, 2007
Lieutenant Governor Cherry, Speaker Dillon, Majority Leader Bishop, Secretary
of State Land, Attorney General Cox, members of the Legislature, State Board
of Education, judiciary and Cabinet, fellow citizens, my beloved family: good
evening.
I begin by thanking those courageous sons and daughters of Michigan in our
armed forces - particularly those who are at this moment serving us in parts
of the world torn by war. And we honor the memories and the families of those
129 Michigan servicemen and women who have fallen. Joining us is Doug Szczepanski,
a soldier I met two years ago when his National Guard unit returned to Lansing
from Iraq. Sgt. Szczpanski was wounded in an explosion. He says his only regret
is that his injuries forced him to leave the Guard. But he's now taking a new
route to service - following in his father's footsteps - training to work in
law enforcement. Doug and his father, Doug Sr., a sergeant with the Michigan
State Police, are with us tonight. I ask you to recognize our men and women
serving in the armed forces, those who keep us safe here at home, and all our
public servants.
Thank you.
My friends, tonight we are at a turning point - a decisive moment in
Michigan's journey. The decisions we make in the weeks ahead will shape
Michigan's future for decades to come.
This moment begs us to set aside partisan politics and put the best interests
of our state first.
Though many of you are new lawmakers and have barely found your desks in these
chambers, a crisis has already found you, an economy in crisis that demands
you answer swiftly and that you answer with courage.
This moment demands bold action for one simple and undeniable reason.
The world around us has changed, and it is not changing back. In this fiercely
competitive world, every day that Michigan is not advancing, we are retreating.
You know the new reality. Our auto industry - the anchor of our economy
- has been battered as never before.
Jobs have been outsourced by the tens of thousands to low wage countries.
Trade agreements go unenforced.
Industrial giants and small manufacturers have declared bankruptcy, shedding
workers and slashing wages.
So this is the heart of our challenge: Will we invest in our people so they
and their children can compete and win in the new world economy? Will we invest
in our people so they can build great lives here in Michigan? Will we? Or will
we fail them?
Tonight I say we must choose success for our people.
Over the last four years, we have charted a course toward recovery by deliberately
constructing the nation's most aggressive and comprehensive economic plan.
It began as my plan.
But today, it is Michigan's plan - the major planks laid down by
strong bipartisan majorities in our Legislature and sealed into place by the
voters this fall.
Our plan transforms Michigan by diversifying our economy and investing in our
people. Now this economic crisis demands that we build upon it.
Our destination is crystal clear: The Next Michigan - an unrivaled place
to live, learn and earn. A Michigan of in-migration and innovation, a state
that goes from the list of the most challenged to the most improved.
Our economic plan has put us on the right course to reach that destination.
Now we will dramatically increase our pace. We will build on every success and
aggressively go after new opportunities. When we see something working, we'll
multiply it. We will increase our efforts to diversify the economy, reform government
to cut costs, strengthen our schools, retrain displaced workers, expand access
to health care, and revitalize our cities. And we will finally put our fiscal
house in order.
And we will act with urgency, urgency, urgency.
In just this last year alone, despite the rancor of a partisan election, we
came together to move this plan forward.
Together, we created the new 21st Century Jobs Fund and in this year we sparked
67 cutting-edge companies and projects with the promise of over 3,000 new jobs.
We mandated high school standards that are among the toughest in the nation.
We established a $4,000 college scholarship - the Michigan Promise -
for every single child in the state of Michigan.
We accelerated $1.2 billion in building and infrastructure projects across
the state to put thousands of people to work making Michigan work better.
We placed 112,000 workers in new jobs across Michigan and trained many of them
for new careers.
We adopted cutting-edge laws to attract alternative energy companies.
Together, we raised the minimum wage for the first time in eight years.
All of this and more in one year. Together. We did it by putting people ahead
of petty partisanship.
We can take pride in these achievements, but we will not rest.
The pace of change in this global economy is not slowing down, it's speeding
up.
So in the year ahead, we are going to put our economic plan into overdrive.
Let me tell you how.
Central to our plan is diversification, and we will speed that up in four ways.
DIVERSIFYING THE ECONOMY: GOING ANYWHERE AND DOING ANYTHING TO CREATE JOBS
First, I will continue to go anywhere and do anything to bring new jobs to
Michigan.
My trips to Japan and Germany have resulted in more than $230 million worth
of new investments and more than eleven hundred new Michigan jobs.
So I'm going to turn up the burners in our pursuit of new international
investment in Michigan.
This year I will venture again to bring jobs back to Michigan. I will focus
on the companies and the countries that can create high-wage jobs in automotive
research and development, advanced manufacturing, and alternative energy.
Our state is home to scores of international companies that have chosen to
grow in Michigan in the past three years alone. Companies like Toyota, Mitsubishi,
Denso, BMW, Hyundai, Nissan, Mahler, Tokai Rika, Karman, Konica Minolta, Nippon
Piston Ring, Grupo Antolin, Siemens, Hi-Lex, Sohner, and others. Literally from
A to Z, from Aisin to ZF Lemforder. We thank these companies for choosing Michigan
and for creating jobs for our Michigan workers. We will take advantage of a
global economy, not be victimized by it.
DIVERSIFYING THE ECONOMY: MARKETING THE STATE
A second way we will accelerate diversification of our economy is to increase
our investment in marketing Michigan both for tourism and business.
Maybe you've heard the "Pure Michigan" travel ads narrated
by Tim Allen that so perfectly capture this magical state of ours.
Or the "Michigan will give you the Upper Hand" business marketing
ads featuring Jeff Daniels touting the business benefits of locating in our
Great Lakes State.
They've been playing across the Midwest and this year, we'll expand
their reach. We'll tell business executives and travelers that Michigan
is the place to be and we'll do it more aggressively than Michigan has
ever done in its history.
DIVERSIFYING THE ECONOMY: SUPPORT FOR SMALL BUSINESS & ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Third, we will continue to do everything we can to nurture the growth of small
businesses and entrepreneurs across our state. And we're stepping on the
gas.
We are making more capital and start-up funds available to Michigan's
small businesses than ever before - low-interest loans, venture capital,
incubator space, a small business ombudsman, and technical assistance.
We're making entrepreneurship part of the curriculum in 262 schools,
19 community colleges, and 6 universities.
I also urge you to finally pass the small business retirement plan I introduced
at this podium last year. It will make it easier and more affordable for small
businesses to offer their employees a retirement plan. Rep. Bieda and Sen. Thomas
have introduced bills to turn this good idea into law. I urge you to pass them
now.
DIVERSIFYING THE ECONOMY: ALTERNATIVE ENERGY
Fourth, we'll continue to diversify our economy by pursuing growth in
four promising sectors: the life sciences, advanced manufacturing, homeland
security, and alternative energy.
And make no mistake about it, this diversification pays off.
While our auto sector is contracting, other sectors are clearly seeing growth.
Economist David Sowerby documents that outside the auto industry, he sees Michigan-based
companies regularly posting double-digit growth.
We have been shrewd about attracting automotive R&D companies - because
that kind of high-end diversification takes advantage of our strengths. So we
now have 215 automotive R&D centers in Michigan. Two hundred and fifteen
- that's more than all of the other states, plus Canada, plus Mexico,
combined!
This year, we'll see more jobs created through that kind of diversification.
Last year, there were 505 applications for grants from our 21st Century Jobs
Fund - each offering to turn new ideas into new business growth and new
jobs. This fund is a deep and broad 10-year, $2 billion investment in diversifying
our economy. No other state can compare.
Now, from these 505 applicants, the top 67 companies and projects were funded
and are now moving forward.
And this year, we'll fund even more that meet our high standards.
One sector I'm particularly bullish on is alternative energy.
This new industry, so critical to our economy, our national security, and our
environment is already setting up shop in Michigan. With other states clamoring
for this opportunity, Michigan cannot afford to wait.
Already, eleven ethanol or biodiesel fuel manufacturing plants companies have
chosen Michigan. Let me introduce to you some of the people who are making Michigan
an alternative energy center right now:
- Daniel Russo of American Electric Car in Ferndale.
- Nick Cappa from the Global Hybrid Development Team in Troy.
- Charles Cauchy from Tellurex in Traverse City.
Please give them the kind of Michigan welcome that shows our enthusiasm about
their work in alternative energy.
Tonight I am announcing that we will begin an aggressive, three-year effort
to attract even more alternative energy companies to Michigan through more than
$100 million in combined public-private investments. This will include the green
technology companies that will make Michigan a leader in building the products
that reduce the emissions that cause global warming.
Next, I will ask this Legislature to set ambitious goals for our state, so
that within eight years, a minimum of 10 percent of our energy will come from
renewable sources. And we will double that goal in the decade after that.
I will also ask you to expand alternative energy renaissance zones to attract
new solar and wind energy companies. .
Finally, by 2008 we will have 1,000 ethanol and bio-diesel pumps at gas stations
across the state so you can put ethanol in your gas tank;
In the 20th century, we were the state that put the nation on wheels.
In the 21st century, Michigan can be the state that breaks our nation's
dependence on foreign oil!
Just as we seek diversity in our economy, we must embrace human diversity in
our communities, schools and workplaces.
There's no question, diversity matters. It defines the global marketplace.
When we bring together people of different backgrounds and different ways of
seeing the world, we spark innovation...and innovation creates huge dividends.
If we fully embrace the mosaic that is Michigan, our diversity will help fuel
our economic transformation.
And do you know what else? As we face these economic tides, we have to remember
that we are all in this state together.
We did not arrive here in the same way or at the same time, but we are all here
together, headed toward the same destination.
We are One Michigan.
REFORMING GOVERNMENT TO SAVE MONEY, WORK BETTER
As we diversify and transform our economy, we must continually transform government
as well. Government must be lean but not mean.
So in state government, we are redoubling our efforts to root out inefficiencies
and do more with less.
In addition, we've saved hundreds of millions of dollars through initiatives
like bulk purchasing of prescription drugs, new protections against food stamp
fraud, and forcing state departments to share services. We've saved $524
million alone by renegotiating state contracts and ending no-bid contracting.
Since just 2002, the state has 7,000 fewer employees. In fact, the size of
the state government workforce is smaller today than it was in 1973, yet these
state employees are serving over a million more citizens today than they did
in the 70s.
Because of our continual streamlining, Governing magazine said Michigan was
tied for the third best-managed state in the nation. Michigan has been rated
as the top state for using technology to serve citizens, putting permits online,
having the best website - for two years in a row.
Since I became governor, I have resolved more than $4 billion in budget deficits.
To bring new jobs here, we will continue to wage our war on waste and find new
efficiencies that allow government to work better for less.
I will propose reforms; you will have ideas too. But we must work fast if we
are to resolve the state's fiscal crisis.
And our local partners must do the same. Michigan's counties, cities
and villages, townships, and school districts all must do more to share and
consolidate resources.
In Michigan, we love our hometowns and our school home teams, but we also like
saving a buck whenever we can.
This year we will find ways to do both.
Tonight I am proposing a change to revenue-sharing payments to local governments.
Cities and townships that want to see their revenue sharing increase this year
will need to show us they are sharing services or consolidating with other units
of government to save taxpayers money.
It's simple. When they show us they're consolidating or sharing,
we'll "show them the money."
We will also ask our school districts to cut costs by consolidating services
at the county or regional level.
My budget proposal will include incentives for districts to consolidate their
business services in the coming school year.
A year from now, I'll submit a budget that will penalize those who haven't
embraced this common sense way to put more dollars in the classroom. For example,
it just doesn't make sense to have 10 school districts in a single county
buying separate software when they can save dollars and cents buying it together.
Consolidation of services makes sense, and it saves money. And whether it's
by using a carrot or a stick, we are going to make it happen.
In the year ahead, we'll make other investments that make government
work better.
We've all felt the pain when vulnerable children suffer at the hands
of those entrusted with their care.
That is why we are making fundamental changes to protect abused and neglected
children.
To do this we are stepping up background checks for any adult who lives in
a foster care home and adding more child protective services workers to our
ranks.
We'll add more workers to ensure that children are placed in safe, permanent
homes. We will aggressively monitor foster homes, and we will demand more accountability
from anyone who plays a role in this system.
For the sake of Michigan's children, we will make the investments that
are necessary to keep them safe.
We will reform our prison system as well. Today our efforts to keep Michigan
competitive are threatened by rising costs in our Department of Corrections.
Let me be very clear - we will do whatever it takes to keep dangerous
criminals off the streets. But we can and will find ways to reduce our prison
population without compromising public safety.
The budget I present in two days will include lower-cost ways to deal with
non-violent offenders. We will accelerate our efforts to help those who are
paroled become productive members of society instead of running-up an expensive
tab behind bars that the rest of us have to pay.
And, my friends, this is why we will focus on educating our children; because
we know it's much wiser to invest taxpayer dollars educating people on
the front-end of life, rather than incarcerating them on the back-end.
HIGH QUALITY EDUCATION & TRAINING FOR ALL
Economists and experts across the country agree that education is the single
most effective strategy for stoking a state's economic growth. That means
we all must create a culture of learning that is unprecedented in Michigan's
history.
It is the foundation of our economic plan. And we are about to torque it up.
Hear me loud and clear - I refuse to slash school funding in the middle
of this year.
And for next year, I will propose an increase in our investment in education.
At the same time, I will increase our expectations of schools.
We will build on the giant steps we have already taken.
When you have high expectations coupled with investment, you get what you pay
for.
So two years ago, we implemented new standards for our K-8 schools that are
considered to be in the top three in the nation.
For the first time, at every grade level, kids were taught the same high standards
curriculum, whether they lived in Bloomfield Hills or Detroit or Marquette.
We believed that Michigan kids would improve if we set the bar high and if
we were consistent in every district across the state.
And we were right. Three weeks ago, we saw significant increases in reading
and math scores across the state. In fact, almost every district in the state
saw improvement.
That was K-8. Last year, we pushed standards again to the next level -
high school.
With strong bipartisan support, we established new high school standards that
are among the most rigorous in the nation.
This year, we will continue to set the bar high for our schools.
We'll begin with an important expansion of early education. We'll
provide new funding to school districts to offer a full day of pre-school to
some 26,000 four-year-olds in districts that provide full day kindergarten.
For many students, this will mean a quadrupling of their learning experiences
in these two critical years before they enter first grade.
At the same time, I'll ask this Legislature to require all students to
attend kindergarten. It's hard to believe - in fact, it's
ridiculous - that we don't require it today.
I'd also like you to fix another absurd law by requiring all students
to attend school until they are 18. A law enacted in 1895 says it's okay
to drop out when you turn 16. Maybe it was okay then, but it is not okay now,
and we all know it. I hope you will join with me and support the bills sponsored
by Senator Brater and Representative Lemmons.
We need to keep at-risk kids in school, but we also need to do more to help
them succeed.
This fall, we will open the first of a series of revolutionary new high schools.
They will allow students to earn in five years both a high school diploma and
a community college degree that will prepare them to fill job vacancies in our
health care industry. For example, Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit is sponsoring
one of these schools. They are helping to develop the health care curriculum
and will be placing the students in careers in the Henry Ford health care system.
Five such schools will be opening across Michigan this fall and will be followed
by five more schools a year later.
Even with the best of schools, some of our children lack the kind of personal
attention they need to get on track or to reach for a big goal like college.
Mentor Michigan continues to help fill that void. Between September of 2004
and 2006, we increased the number of youth being mentored by nearly 12,000.
We are gaining momentum and will continue to increase the reach of caring mentors
in the lives of children.
Because the fastest job-creating states are the states that have the most educated
workforces, our overriding education goal must be to double the number of college
graduates in Michigan.
That's why we created the Michigan Promise scholarship - $4,000
for every single child to give every student in Michigan the ability to earn
a two-year college degree.
This fall, the first class of Michigan Promise scholars will enter college
with the help of this new scholarship - funded not with tax dollars but
through tobacco settlement money.
This spring, we'll begin distributing these promissory certificates to
parents across Michigan. It is a ticket to a college education and all that
it brings. When you get it, talk about it, frame it, have your child sign it,
put it on the refrigerator - however you do it, but make college your
expectation and your child's goal.
As we increase our investment in our colleges and universities with the budget
I present in two days, I'll require them to keep tuition and costs affordable
for Michigan families.
We cannot let runaway tuition costs deny the opportunity of higher education
to the people of Michigan.
What I've just spoken about is largely focused on expanding educational
opportunity for our kids.
But we are also going to open the doors of opportunity to adults who are struggling
in this new economy.
We are about to make it much easier for the tens of thousands of displaced
workers to get the training they need for a new career.
For the next three years, a one-time offer: We will provide free community
college tuition to unemployed workers who want to learn the skills needed to
fill high- demand jobs.
We have 84,000 job vacancies in Michigan today. Most require some kind of training
or degree. Three years - take it or leave it. Get training or a degree
now, and we'll pay for it now.
There are more than 100,000 Michigan workers who will be eligible to participate
in this program, and we will do it largely through retooling our existing state
and federal workforce development dollars.
The federal government has No Child Left Behind. Work with me in Michigan to
have No Worker Left Behind.
One area that demands our special attention is nursing.
Today we have a nursing shortage in communities across our state.
Yet we have waiting lists of people who are anxious to become nurses. Something's
wrong with this picture, and we are going to fix it.
Tonight we are launching the Michigan Nursing Corps, an initiative to train
new nurses.
We will prepare 500 nursing educators to train 3,000 new nurses in just three
years.
AFFORDABLE HEALTH CARE
Training more nurses is just one of the things we will do to make health care
more affordable and accessible.
When I spoke in this chamber last year, I announced our plan for universal
access to affordable health care for Michigan citizens - the Michigan
First Healthcare Plan.
Since then, we have worked aggressively with the federal government to make
this happen.
We expect to have federal approval of our program this spring, insuring over
half a million uninsured Michigan citizens and reducing insurance premiums for
everyone else.
And insured or not, we know that working in a smoke-filled environment is bad
for your health and expensive for all of us. Tonight I call on you to take action.
The time has come for us to ban smoking in the workplace.
We can also improve the quality of health care in Michigan and give our economy
a boost by removing the barriers to embryonic stem cell research, which could
help thousands of people afflicted with life threatening and debilitating diseases.
It will also energize our emerging life sciences industry in Michigan. Today,
Michigan is at the back of the pack when it comes to allowing this important
research.
It's time to act on the issue. I can assure you, if the Legislature does
not allow this research, the people will be taking it to the ballot.
It's easy to forget that new technology cannot only save lives directly,
but it can also improve the quality, safety, and efficiency of medical care
for our citizens. Our Michigan Health Information Network has developed one
of the most comprehensive blueprints in the nation to make it easier for doctors
to get patient medical histories and other vital information, as well as allow
Michigan citizens to have improved access to their own information.
Our economic health in Michigan is directly affected by our physical health.
One recent estimate projected the economic cost to our state in lost productivity
due to physical inactivity to be a staggering $12.65 billion. For that reason,
I want to get Michigan back on the move and we have launched an initiative called
"One in a Million" to get one million people walking and running
this year. You can join me and your fellow citizens by signing up at www.michigan.gov/oneinamillion
and help ourselves and our economy back in shape.
VIBRANT CITIES
There is another important piece of our economic plan that will revitalize
Michigan. It is this: We must revitalize our cities.
States with diverse economies and low unemployment have vibrant cities.
Cities that have strong neighborhoods, safe streets and downtowns, that have
loads of restaurants, lofts, charm and diversity will attract businesses big
and small.
From Port Huron to Detroit to Grand Rapids to Escanaba - Michigan's
cities will continue to be an integral part of our plan to build a strong economy
and create jobs.
And we will continue to use a variety of tools to help cities thrive.
For example, our College Graduate Homeownership program is using low-interest
mortgages and down-payment assistance as an incentive for new graduates to locate
in our major urban areas.
And MSHDA (our housing arm) has agreed to tear down 5,000 blighted homes that
make the neighborhoods in these cities unsafe.
And because strong cities must be safe cities, our budget this year will increase
our investment to hire more police officers and firefighters in Michigan cities.
This year, we will also help our cities use the promise of higher education
to fight poverty and high unemployment.
In Kalamazoo, private donors have promised free tuition to every single young
person in that city to attend any public university or community college in
Michigan.
These anonymous donors have decided to avoid the limelight, but the effects
of their Kalamazoo Promise are easy to see.
Kalamazoo was losing students. Now, it's gaining them.
People are moving in and property values are going up.
Kalamazoo's story is inspiring communities across Michigan to find ways
to make this same powerful "Promise" to their own children.
So tonight I am proposing legislation to establish "Promise Zones"
that will help our distressed communities create public-private partnerships
to replicate the generosity of the Kalamazoo Promise. I see a Flint Promise
and a Benton Harbor Promise and, Mayor Kilpatrick, a Detroit Promise stimulating
economic growth in those cities and giving all kids the greatest gift of all
- the chance to go to college.
College for all. Cities that are alive and magnetic. Stellar schools. A diverse
economy. No Worker Left Behind. Universal access to affordable health care.
These are the big pieces of our economic plan - linked together by one
essential idea: To grow Michigan's economy and create jobs, we must invest
in our people.
But to drive this plan forward, we must resolve our fiscal crisis, and we must
act with speed.
This is hardly rocket science.
When our Michigan economy falters, state revenues decline.
Yet families who have lost their jobs need retraining more, not less. They
need health care for their children more, not less. Our people need the critical
functions of government even more in a time of painful economic transition.
Last year, the previous Michigan Legislature took this bad fiscal situation
and made it worse. Much worse.
They eliminated the Single Business Tax, a tax that should have, instead, been
replaced long ago.
But they chose not to replace the SBT; they simply eliminated it - leaving
behind a gaping $2 billion hole in our budget.
As our auto-dependent economy sank further last year, that $2 billion hole
grew and now stands at an unprecedented $3 billion.
In the four years since I first took office, I resolved billions in deficits
- more than any governor before me.
But the deficit we face today is of a wholly different magnitude.
It can't be papered-over.
No cyclical upturn in the economy will erase it.
As your governor, I owe you many things. But most of all, I owe you the truth.
I've cut spending for four straight years to balance the budget with
40 percent less revenue than my predecessors.
The truth is another round of budget cutting alone cannot solve the fiscal
crisis; in fact, a cuts-only solution would destroy the state's ability
to recover.
Again this year, my budget will call for hundreds of millions of dollars in
spending cuts, many of them painful. But those cuts are necessary to be able
to afford the investment that will grow our economy.
Cuts are one piece of the solution.
And we will make important governmental reforms. That is another part of the
solution.
But I will not cut the things that will make Michigan competitive.
Nor will I devastate our most vulnerable citizens.
On Thursday, I will present a budget that fixes our broken tax system.
But taxes alone are not the answer, either.
My proposal will include a mix of solutions - cuts, reform and revenues.
The tax changes I will propose are simple, fair and progressive.
We'll ask some businesses to begin to pay their fair share, while some
paying too much will pay less.
Our new proposed tax system will be geared to job creation in the new economy,
not the old one.
It will end our debilitating fiscal crisis, and it will allow us invest in
our people.
That investment - in education, in health care, in training, in revitalizing
our communities, in diversification - will grow our economy and create
jobs.
And that isn't some untested theory.
It is based on the cold hard facts of the world we live in.
The states that are thriving, adjusting to this fierce global economy, have
done it by diversifying and investing in their people.
Two of our Midwest neighbors illustrate the point perfectly.
Minnesota and Wisconsin both have higher taxes than Michigan.
And even on a day like today, they both have colder weather.
But they've both made significant investments in people-in education,
health care and infrastructure.
And they're both enjoying unemployment rates far below ours
The same is true in the private sector. Though Ford had its worst financial
year ever, the company is investing $6 billion to grow.
If we are to revitalize Michigan, we too must invest in our people and diversify
our economy.
Both my economic plan and my budget will allow us to do just that.
Now, the Naysayers haven't seen my budget yet, but they already know
they are against it.
Blinded by a narrow ideology, stubbornly fixed on old solutions that have failed
to work in a new economy, they'll say we can't afford new investment.
The truth is we can't afford not to.
The Naysayers will claim that changes in our tax system will send business
packing.
Even when the facts show that taxes aren't the reason we're losing
jobs.
They'll say there's no limit to how much we can cut spending.
Even when they can't tell you who they'd cut or who will feel that
pain.
And never mind the changing nature of our economy; the Naysayers have only
one solution: cut business taxes.
Ok. I've signed 93 business tax cuts into law since becoming governor.
Even before the Legislature eliminated the Single Business Tax, the tax rate
in Michigan was the lowest it's been since the business tax was adopted.
If cutting business taxes was all it took to get jobs, we'd have all
the jobs we need in Michigan.
Now as long as I am governor, I will continue to keep our business taxes competitive.
The Naysayers will tell you otherwise - don't believe them. When
my budget is adopted, Michigan's business taxes will still be below the
national average.
But taxes aren't the most important piece of this equation.
Don't take my word for it. Bill Gates summed it up like this: 21st century
businesses are "…far more sensitive to the quality of talent in
a location than they are about tax incentives."
These 21st century CEOs will tell you, no business wants to come to a state
that is making deep cuts in schools when their future business success depends
on having access to skilled workers.
No business is going to locate in a community that can't afford to send
a police car when their receptionist calls for help.
No business wants to drive its trucks over potholed streets and crumbling bridges.
High-tech companies like Google will not invest in a state that is slashing
funding for universities and colleges where they get their talent.
Let me be absolutely clear: I will not make cuts that destroy Michigan's
ability to compete for jobs and win.
And there is one other thing I will not do.
I will not leave our fiscal problems for some other governor to solve.
In an era of term limits, it may be tempting to push off the problem in hopes
that someone else will solve it.
Well, my friends, we were elected to solve it. And not with one-time fixes
and not with gimmicks. We need to solve the problem once and for all.
Michigan needs us to have the courage to act and to act now.
Republican Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska recently called on his colleagues
in Washington to take a stand on a tough issue. He told them: "If you
want a safe job, sell shoes."
Amen Senator.
You weren't elected to sit in a plush chamber and cast easy votes.
This Legislature has new leaders and plenty of new members.
You come from different regions and different walks of life, but I know you
share one thing in common - I know you share a deep and abiding love for
Michigan.
And it's that common commitment to Michigan that must guide you at this
moment of decision.
Forget Democrat or Republican. Forget political parties.
The choice we face right now in Michigan is not right or left. It is to advance
or retreat. I say advance, and I ask you to advance with me.
The choice is to take this hard and stubborn economy head-on and push forward
with confidence and courage, or to be sucked backwards on a path of failure
and fear. I say let us push forward together.
The choice is to invest in our people and grow, or disinvest and wither. I
say we must invest. And we must do it now.
I have made my choice. Now I ask you, those in this room and those watching
across our great state, to make yours.
I know you will choose Michigan.
God bless you, and God bless the great state of Michigan.