Remarks by President Obama at Latino Town Hall on H1N1 Virus
Obama administration and Univision host Spanish-language town hall meeting
Posted: May 8, 2009
Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis joins other Administration officials for a Latino town hall meeting to listen to the community’s concerns and inform the public about the government’s efforts to control the impact of the H1N1 virus.
(begin transcript)
THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary May 8, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AT LATINO TOWN HALL
Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building 12:24 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody. Hola. (Applause.) Thank
you. Please, everybody have a seat. (Applause.) Muchas gracias.
Thank you very much. Please, everybody have a seat.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Viva Obama! (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT: Now, I don't want to take up too much time.
I just wanted to stop by and let you know how important
I think this is.
Obviously, all of us are concerned about the health of
our families and our children. And our experience with the
H1N1 virus over the last couple of weeks is a sobering reminder
of how vital it is that we all recognize we're all in this
together. We're one country, we're one community. When one
person gets sick, that has the potential of making us all
sick. And when we help to make everybody well, one person
well, then everybody has the potential to get well. We can’t
be divided by communities.
And that means that government at every level has to make
sure that good information is getting out to every part
of the broader American community. And that's part of the
reason why we wanted to do this today. It's our first step
in making sure that whenever we have a public health issue
that has to be addressed, that everybody is on the same
page.
So I want to ensure everybody that we're seeing that the
virus may not have been as virulent as we at first feared,
but we're not out of the woods yet and we still have to
take precautions. Many of you are community leaders; obviously
those who are viewing this on television are going to be
able to give information to your friends and family about
washing your hands, about covering your mouths, staying
home if you're sick, keeping children home from school if
they're sick. That kind of common-sense approach can make
all the difference in the world.
And so I just want to thank the Center for Disease Control.
They've been vigilant on this issue. They believe that we're
going to have to keep on taking some precautions, and we
may have to prepare for an even worse flu season sometime
in the fall. This H1N1 flu obviously has hit Mexico much
more badly than it's hit us so far, and I've been working
very closely -- I spoke to President Calderón last
weekend to ensure that we were providing Mexico with the
assistance that it needed, because one of the things that
we have to understand is public health issues like this
-- not only is it important for all communities within the
United States to be working together, it's also important
to be working internationally together.
So I'm very proud of this first White House town hall meeting
conducted entirely in Spanish. I am grateful -- except for
my part. (Laughter.) You know, I'm kind of messing up the
whole thing. (Laughter.) I'm grateful for Univision for
hosting us, and I'm happy to see that we've got officials
from many different departments, including my Secretary
of Labor, Hilda Solis.
So I want to let you continue with your conversation. I
hope you learn something. Please ask questions -- these
folks are extraordinarily well informed -- and then distribute
the information that you learn from this town hall throughout
your communities. And this is just the first of many, I
hope, mechanisms for outreach that will improve the quality
of service that the White House provides to the American
people.