from the website:
Mark R. Warner
 
 
 
May 17 2013
Sen. Warner Has a 'Virginia  Conversation' on Virginia Public Radio

 
Senator Warner joined _Virginia  Public Radio’s ‘Virginia Conversations’_ 
(http://virginiapublicradio.org/)  for over an hour today, taking  questions 
from host May-Lily Lee as well as listeners from across the  Commonwealth 
in a remarkably open and wide-ranging interview.  He addressed  a broad 
spectrum of issues important to Virginians, including his bipartisan  approach 
in 
Washington, the lingering effects of the financial crisis, and  21st 
century strategies for economic  development. 
Robert from Hampton was one of the first callers.  His frustration was  
evident as he lamented the stubborn refusal of members of Congress to sacrifice 
 some of their personal principles in order to find solutions to the nation’
s  larger problems. 
“Amen,” said Senator Warner. “What I used to say is that if you hired me 
to  the Senate, I’d be a bipartisan, radical centrist.  If you’re on either 
end  of the spectrum, left or right, you don’t need to think that much 
because  there’s an ironclad, ideological position on each side.  If you’re 
trying  to be a centrist, you need to think about each issue and try to take 
some of the  best ideas from both sides of the spectrum.”

 
Tony, a caller from Chesapeake, dialed in to raise an issue of vital  
importance to homeowners and their families across the state. “Why is it that  
mortgage investors are still making billions putting Americans out of their  
homes?” she asked Senator Warner. 
“You’re right,” he told her, in a lengthy answer that lead the host to  
joke about a commercial break.  “If we look back to when the financial  crisis 
took place, we did a whole lot of things to reinforce the banking  system.  
And I think, while it was terribly unpopular, it was the right  thing to do 
because if credit had frozen up we would’ve been in an even worse  place.” 
“Where we didn’t do a very good job,” he continued, “was with homeowner  
relief.  There’s still an awful lot of folks underwater.  What I’ve  been 
willing to support is legislation that would allow principle modification  to 
keep the homeowner in the home.  That’s better than letting the home go  
vacant for months on end, which decreases the value not only of that home, but 
 of the homes in the neighborhood.  We’ve not been able to get that through 
 [Congress].” 
“I am working on a major reform in this area with a Republican colleague,” 
 said Sen. Warner,  “that will revamp Fannie and Freddie and put more  
private capital into some of these organizations so the taxpayer’s not at risk, 
 
because we’re still owed over $100 billion for helping bail them out.  We  
also have to recognize that consumers need to be better educated on loans 
that  are too good to be true, including subprime loans.  I don’t think they  
should come back.”  
A caller from Charlottesville, asked Senator Warner about why America’s  
education system, and Virginia’s in particular, seemed to be less important to 
 many elected officials than economic issues. 
Education and the economy were intimately connected, said Senator Warner. “
I  believe that education is an essential piece of the economy,” he replied. 
 “America’s value add in the world economy is not going to be cheap  
labor.  It’s going to be intellectual capital creation and a well-educated,  
well-trained workforce.” 
“I would respectfully disagree with you that Virginia does not do well in  
education,” he countered.  “When I was Governor ‘Education Week’ said that 
 Virginia, for a lifetime of educational opportunity from preschool through 
 graduate school, offered a child the best opportunities of any state in 
the  nation…I would also argue that while I’d like to see more public support 
for our  colleges and universities, I would take our public higher 
education system and  match it against any other state in the country.” 
“However, it’s true that when you look at the rest of the world, there are 
 things about our education we need to fix,” Senator Warner continued. “We 
need  to break some more glass in education.  I tried a series of things as 
 Governor, for example giving high school seniors the opportunity to earn a 
free  semester of college.  We’ve also got to do a better job of getting 
girls  and children of color to stay interested in math and science past 
middle  school.  When you look at Virginia, we’re 30% people of color and 52%  
women.  So if we don’t get more of those Virginians into math and science,  
that’s a bad economic deal.” 
Finally, Senator Warner addressed a higher education issue that he has been 
 working on throughout his political career.
 
“This may sound like a little bit of heresy,” he said, “and I think 
college  is great, but a 4-year liberal arts college may not be the right 
choice 
for  every student.  One of the things I’ve been passionate about is that  
technical education is a valuable path for a lot of folks.” 
Senator Warner related how he is actively working in Congress to help  
students navigate these higher education decisions. “A new piece of legislation 
 
I put in just this past week called ‘Know Before You Go’ basically says, 
for  each degree or industry certification, one, how long it’s going to take 
you to  finish? Two, what is the percentage of students who graduate?  And 
three,  what are your chances of getting a job and what’s that job going to 
pay?  Particularly with the cost of higher education skyrocketing, you ought 
to have  that information.” 
“This’ll be valuable not just for that high school student picking their  
college and their major,” he explained, “but particularly important for 
that  increasing number of people in higher education who are people after high 
school  coming back to a community college.” 
One of his final questions came from Robert of Halifax, who was concerned  
about the lack of jobs in Southside Virginia.  Senator Warner spoke about  
the numerous areas he’s looking at to try and get new jobs to regions like  
Southside and Southwest Virginia. 
Senator Warner, as new chair of a Senate subcommittee focused on tourism,  
emphasized that as one area that would be important moving forward. “For 
every  extra 1% of foreign tourism we get coming to the United States,” he said 
in  reply to Robert’s concerns, “that adds 128,000 jobs.  We have an  
international gateway airport at Dulles, and I’m thinking about how we can try  
to draw those tourists down to Southside and Southwest Virginia.  I think  
about things we did like the Crooked Road Music Heritage Trail.  To try and  
get people off the 64-95 corridor is important.”  
“There are also a lot of challenges around the issue of trade,” he said,  
moving on to another area of the economy that has an outsize impact on the  
region. “The fact is, 95% of all the new customers for American stuff are 
going  to be foreign, and we do a really crummy job in the U.S. of helping 
small and  midsize businesses figure out how to sell their goods and products 
abroad.   So one of the things I’m looking at is how we can rationalize those 
various  trade support services that are spread out through about eight 
different  agencies in the federal government.” 
“Clearly, we’ve seen job losses, as textiles and furniture jobs in 
particular  left the region.  In trade we’ve got to have a level playing field, 
and 
it  doesn’t help that these other countries ignore environmental and labor 
laws,” he  said.  “But I remember when I was Governor trying to bring to 
Southside an  Indian company called Essel Propack that has now expanded four 
times in  Danville, and has got hundreds of people working on polymers.  That 
didn’t  change everybody’s mind about trade down in Danville, but it 
showed that there’s  a reverse benefit as we try to attract foreign-based 
businesses into  America.”  
“America is becoming more competitive for the insourcing of jobs, including 
 in manufacturing.  We need to do more to push that manufacturing back  
here,” he told Robert as he explained his larger trade-oriented goals.  “So  
there are things we can do to change parts of the tax code that promote  
companies moving offshore so that there are instead tax benefits for companies  
that move back onshore.”  
“My proudest day as Governor,” Senator Warner reminisced, “was when we 
were  able to bring about 700 high quality information technology jobs from CGI 
and  Northrop Grumman down to Lebanon, in Russell County.  That to my mind 
was  the best example of how in the internet-driven world you can build a 
company or  place a company anywhere.”  
“Those jobs have helped revitalize that community,” he concluded.  “But  
to get those jobs there, you’ve got to have a well-educated workforce, and  
you’ve got to have a 21st century infrastructure,  including broadband.  I 
made major investments when I was governor in  broadband technology and one of 
the reasons I talk so much about the debt and  deficit is that if we 
continue on this stupid sequestration path, it’s going to  cut domestic 
investment 
to a point where you’re not going to see any further  public sector 
investment in research and development or infrastructure from  roads and 
bridges to 
broadband.  And that’s going to put the Southsides and  Southwest Virginias 
of this country further  behind.”

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