3/93 Defense Conversion
The materials in FOIA 2006-0466-F are a selective, not necessarily all inclusive, body of documents responsive to the topic of the FOIA. Researchers should consult the archivist about related materials. Jonathan Prince served in various capacities during the entire two terms o...
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OCR Page 1 of 6FOIA Number: 2006-0466-F
FOIA
MARKER
This is not a textual record. This is used as an
administrative marker by the William J. Clinton
Presidential Library Staff.
Collection/Record Group:
Clinton Presidential Records
Subgroup/Office of Origin:
Speechwriting
Series/Staff Member:
Jonathan Prince
Subseries:
OA/ID Number:
10440
FolderID:
Folder Title:
3/93 Defense Conversion
Stack:
Row:
Section:
Shelf:
Position:
S
91
7
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JONATHAN M. PRINCE: BOX ONE CONTENTS
3/93
Defense Conversion
1993 Year Wrap Up
5/93
Small Business Support
10/93
Kerrey Commission
12/93
Entitlements Conference
7/93
Wireless Demo at White House
12/16/93
Video Scripts
2/93
Econ Plan Announce
3/93
Review of Bush Bonuses
1993
Econ Plan Charts
Urban Task Force
1993
Ass'td Communications Memos
11/93
Thanksgiving Homeless Event
NAFTA -- Chamber of Commerce
Export Policy Announcement
CRA Reform
12/93
Pan Am 103 Anniversary Event
1/93
Exec Actions
7/93
CDFI
12/93
CRA Reform
5/93
Reemployment/Training
7/93
EITC Expansion
10/93
California
9/93
School to Work
5/93
Microloans
Mike McAlary Get-well Card
Videos
9/93
Community Empowerment Board Creation
1993
Economic Plan Materials
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
March 29, 1993
MEMORANDUM FOR:
RAHM EMANUEL
JEFF ELLER
GENE SPERLING
JONATHAN PRINCE
JEFF WATSON
STEVE SILVERMAN
AL MALDON
From:
Dorothy Robyn, NEC
Subject:
Regional Meetings on Defense Conversion
This is to follow up on Friday's discussion about the
outreach meetings on ARPA's $500 million "Technology Reinvestment
Project" (TRP). Since President Clinton announced the project at
his Baltimore speech on defense conversion, ARPA has received
5000 requests for the program information package; there is
significant interest from small businesses, colleges and
universities, chambers of commerce, and trade associations.
The outreach meetings are designed to brief potential
applicants about the TRP programs. Chris Coburn and the regional
governors' associations are setting up the meetings. (Coburn was
staff director of a recent Carnegie Commission study, chaired by
Richard Celeste, of "Science, Technology and the States in
America's Third Century." He is working out of a NASA technology
transfer center at Battelle Labs in Ohio.) Coburn thinks we may
get 700-1000 people at each meeting.
The meetings will occur the week of April 12 in the
following cities: New York, Detroit, Orlando, Dallas/Ft. Worth,
and Los Angeles. The cities were selected in consultation with
the regional governors' associations -- one city per region. The
key criteria were (1) proximity to dense concentrations of
defense industry, and (2) accessibility/population (CA, NY, TX
and FL are the four biggest states).
We agreed on Friday to tie the meetings closely to President
Clinton and, toward that end, to try to get the Vice President to
kick them off and a Cabinet official to lead the others. Where
possible, the Administration official will make a site visit to a
defense firm or lab that is diversifying into commercial markets
(a kind of mini-version of the President's Baltimore visit). The
political message is that the President's defense conversion
package -- and his investment package more broadly -- will help
create jobs and economic growth.
in
-2-
Several issues still must be resolved.
1. What to Call the Meetings. They are currently being called
the Technology Reinvestment Project Regional Meetings. We need
something more evocative of jobs and swords-to-plowshares. Our
drop-dead date for a new name is c.o.b. Tuesday, March 30.
2. Key Administration Officials. Ideally, we would like the
following lineup:
April 12
New York
Gore, O'Leary, Gibbons
April 13
Detroit
Reich
April 14
Orlando
Aspin
April 15
Dallas/Ft.W
Pena
April 16
Los Angeles
Ron Brown
I will talk to Greg Simon about getting the Vice President; Jack
Gibbons has tentatively accepted. Steve will contact O'Leary,
Reich, Aspin, Pena and Ron Brown.
3. Site Visits for Administration officials. Coburn will ask
governors and local officials for suggestions on site visits. I
will ask DoD for suggestions. (Westinghouse worked well for the
President's visit, but smaller firms might work better for the
regional site visits: The potential for conversion is much
greater among the "subs" than the large "primes." And for that
reason, that's where the TRP programs are targeted.)
4. Media. The site visits are designed to generate press
interest. In addition, we want to arrange press availability
and/or an editorial board featuring the traveling team from ARPA
and the other federal agencies. (ARPA's Lee Buchanan, who put
the TRP together, will be outstanding with the press. He's a
witty physicist with a gift for explaining technology -- and
DoD's new dual-use direction -- in lay terms.)
We would like C-SPAN to broadcast one of the meetings.
Coburn has mentioned it to Lou Ketchum, but the White House needs
to follow up.
The Pentagon press officer for these meetings is Jan Walker:
(703) 695-0192.
4. Invitations to Members of Congress. I will draft a letter
from the President inviting Members to the meeting in their
region. We will enclose a packet containing information about
logistics, agenda, audience, likely press coverage, and an
explanation of the choice of cities.
-3-
5. Choice of "B" Cities. ARPA can do somewhat smaller outreach
meetings in another five cities. Boston is a given, because it
came so close in the "A" competition. Other candidates are:
Groton (CN), Philadelphia, Atlanta, St. Louis, Chicago, Denver,
Albuquerque, San Francisco, and Seattle.
Rahm needs to give me guidance on this as soon as possible.
6. Letter to Governors. Coburn suggests that the President use
this as an occasion for a letter to every governor. Several of
the TRP programs are designed to support and build on good state
activities (manufacturing extension, regional technology
alliances). More generally, the TRP represents a major step
toward forming a federal-state partnership in technology.
I will draft such a letter if you think it makes sense.
CC: David Lane
Bo Cutter
Steve Jones
Chris Coburn
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