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My friends, I have been
on a journey of husbandry. I went primarily to see
at first hand conditions in the drought states; to
see how effectively Federal and local authorities
are taking care of pressing problems of relief and
also how they are to work together to defend the people
of this country against the effects of future droughts.
I saw drought devastation
in nine states.
I talked with families who
had lost their wheat crop, lost their corn crop, lost
their livestock, lost the water in their well, lost
their garden and come through to the end of the summer
without one dollar of cash resources, facing a winter
without feed or food -- facing a planting season without
seed to put in the ground.
That was the extreme case,
but there are thousands and thousands of families
on western farms who share the same difficulties.
I saw cattlemen who because
of lack of grass or lack of winter feed have been
compelled to sell all but their breeding stock and
will need help to carry even these through the coming
winter. I saw livestock kept alive only because water
had been brought to them long distances in tank cars.
I saw other farm families who have not lost everything
but who, because they have made only partial crops,
must have some form of help if they are to continue
farming next spring.
I shall never forget the
fields of wheat so blasted by heat that they cannot
be harvested. I shall never forget field after field
of corn stunted, earless and stripped of leaves, for
what the sun left the grasshoppers took. I saw brown
pastures that would not keep a cow on fifty acres.
Yet I would not have you
think for a single minute that there is permanent
disaster in these drought regions, or that the picture
I saw meant depopulating these areas. No cracked earth,
no blistering sun, no burning wind, no grasshoppers,
are a permanent match for the indomitable American
farmers and stockmen and their wives and children
who have carried on through desperate days, and inspire
us with their self-reliance, their tenacity and their
courage. It was their
fathers' task to make homes; it is their task to keep
those homes; it is our task to help them with their
fight.
First let me talk for a minute
about this autumn and the coming winter. We have the
option, in the case of families who need actual subsistence,
of putting them on the dole or putting them to work.
They do not want to go on the dole and they are one
thousand percent right. We agree, therefore, that
we must put them to work for a decent wage, and when
we reach that decision we kill two birds with one
stone, because these families will earn enough by
working, not only to subsist themselves, but to buy
food for their stock, and seed for next year's planting.
Into this scheme of things there fit of course the
government lending agencies which next year, as in
the past, will help with production loans.
Every Governor with whom I
have talked is in full accord with this program of
doing work for these farm families, just as every
Governor agrees that the individual states will take
care of their unemployables but that the cost of employing
those who are entirely able and willing to work must
be borne by the Federal Government.
If then we know, as we do today,
the approximate number of farm families who will require
some form of work relief from now on through the winter,
we face the question of what kind of work they should
do. Let me make it clear that this is not a new question
because it has already been answered to a greater
or less extent in every one of the drought communities.
Beginning in 1934, when we also had serious drought
conditions, the state and Federal governments cooperated
in planning a large number of projects -- many of
them directly aimed at the alleviation of future drought
conditions. In accordance with that program literally
thousands of ponds or small reservoirs have been built
in order to supply water for stock and to lift the
level of the underground water to protect wells from
going dry. Thousands of wells have been drilled or
deepened; community lakes have been created and irrigation
projects are being pushed.
Water conservation by means
such as these is being expanded as a result of this
new drought all through the Great Plains area, the
western corn belt and in the states that lie further
south. In the Middle West water conservation is not
so pressing a problem. Here the work projects run
more to soil erosion control and the building of farm-to-market
roads.
Spending like this is not waste.
It would spell future waste if we did not spend for
such things now. These emergency work projects provide
money to buy food and clothing for the winter; they
keep the livestock on the farm; they provide seed
for a new crop, and, best of all, they will conserve
soil and water in the future in those areas most frequently
hit by drought.
If, for example, in some local
area the water table continues to drop and the topsoil
to blow away, the land values will disappear with
the water and the soil. People on the farms will drift
into the nearby cities; the cities will have no farm
trade and the workers in the city factories and stores
will have no jobs. Property values in the cities will
decline. If, on the other hand, the farms within that
area remain as farms with better water supply and
no erosion, the farm population will stay on the land
and prosper and the nearby cities will prosper too.
Property values will increase instead of disappearing.
That is why it is worth our while as a nation to spend
money in order to save money.
I have, however, used the argument
in relation only to a small area -- it holds good
in its effect on the nation as a whole. Every state
in the drought area is now doing and always will do
business with every state outside it. The very existence
of the men and women working in the clothing factories
of New York, making clothes worn by farmers and their
families; of the workers in the steel mills in Pittsburgh,
in the automobile factories of Detroit, and in the
harvester factories of Illinois, depend upon the farmers'
ability to purchase the commodities they produce.
In the same way it is the purchasing power of the
workers in these factories in the cities that enables
them and their wives and children to eat more beef,
more pork, more wheat, more corn, more fruit and more
dairy products, and to buy more clothing made from
cotton, wool and leather. In a physical and a property
sense, as well as in a spiritual sense, we are members
one of another.
I want to make it clear that
no simple panacea can be applied to the drought problem
in the whole of the drought area. Plans must depend
on local conditions, for these vary with annual rainfall,
soil characteristics, altitude and topography. Water
and soil conservation methods may differ in one county
from those in an adjoining county. Work to be done
in the cattle and sheep country differs in type from
work in the wheat country or work in the corn belt.
The Great Plains Drought Area
Committee has given me its preliminary recommendations
for a long-time program for that region. Using that
report as a basis we are cooperating successfully
and in entire accord with the Governors and state
planning boards. As we get this program into operation
the people more and more will be able to maintain
themselves securely on the land. That will mean a
steady decline in the relief burdens which the Federal
Government and states have had to assume in time of
drought; but, more important, it will mean a greater
contribution to general national prosperity by these
regions which have been hit by drought. It will conserve
and improve not only property values, but human values.
The people in the drought area do not want to be dependent
on Federal, state or any other kind of charity. They
want for themselves and their families an opportunity
to share fairly by their own efforts in the progress
of America.
The farmers of America want
a sound national agricultural policy in which a permanent
land use program will have an important place. They
want assurance against another year like 1932 when
they made good crops but had to sell them for prices
that meant ruin just as surely as did the drought.
Sound policy must maintain farm prices in good crop
years as well as in bad crop years. It must function
when we have drought; it must also function when we
have bumper crops.
The maintenance of a fair equilibrium
between farm prices and the prices of industrial products
is an aim which we must keep ever before us, just
as we must give constant thought to the sufficiency
of the food supply of the nation even in bad years.
Our modern civilization can and should devise a more
successful means by which the excess supplies of bumper
years can be conserved for use in lean years.
On my trip I have been deeply
impressed with the general efficiency of those agencies
of the Federal, state and local governments which
have moved in on the immediate task created by the
drought. In 1934 none of us had preparation; we worked
without blueprints and made the mistakes of inexperience.
Hindsight shows us this. But as time has gone on we
have been making fewer and fewer mistakes. Remember
that the Federal and state governments have done only
broad planning. Actual work on a given project originates
in the local community. Local needs are listed from
local information. Local projects are decided on only
after obtaining the recommendations and help of those
in the local community who are best able to give it.
And it is worthy of note that on my entire trip, though
I asked the question dozens of times, I heard no complaint
against the character of a single works relief project.
The elected heads of the states
concerned, together with their state officials and
their experts from agricultural colleges and state
planning boards, have shown cooperation with and approval
of the work which the Federal Government has headed
up. I am grateful also to the men and women in all
these states who have accepted leadership in the work
in their locality.
In the drought area people
are not afraid to use new methods to meet changes
in Nature, and to correct mistakes of the past. If
overgrazing has injured range lands, they are willing
to reduce the grazing. If certain wheat lands should
be returned to pasture they are willing to cooperate.
If trees should be planted as windbreaks or to stop
erosion they will work with us. If terracing or summer
fallowing or crop rotation is called for, they will
carry them out. They stand ready to fit, and not to
fight, the ways of Nature.
We are helping, and shall continue
to help the farmer to do those things, through local
soil conservation committees and other cooperative
local, state and federal agencies of government.
I have not the time tonight
to deal with other and more comprehensive agricultural
policies.
With this fine help we are
tiding over the present emergency. We are going to
conserve soil, conserve water and conserve life. We
are going to have long-time defenses against both
low prices and drought. We are going to have a farm
policy that will serve the national welfare. That
is our hope for the future.
There are two reasons why I
want to end by talking about reemployment. Tomorrow
is Labor Day. The brave spirit with which so many
millions of working people are winning their way out
of depression deserves respect and admiration. It
is like the courage of the farmers in the drought
areas.
That is my first reason. The
second is that healthy employment conditions stand
equally with healthy agricultural conditions as a
buttress of national prosperity. Dependable employment
at fair wages is just as important to the people in
the towns and cities as good farm income is to agriculture.
Our people must have the ability to buy the goods
they manufacture and the crops they produce. Thus
city wages and farm buying power are the two strong
legs that carry the nation forward.
Re-employment in industry is
proceeding rapidly. Government spending was in large
part responsible for keeping industry going and putting
it in a position to make this reemployment possible.
Government orders were the backlog of heavy industry
government wages turned over and over again to make
consumer purchasing power and to sustain every merchant
in the community. Businessmen with their businesses,
small and large, had to be saved. Private enterprise
is necessary to any nation which seeks to maintain
the democratic form of government. In their case,
just as certainly as in the case of drought-stricken
farmers, government spending has saved.
Government having spent wisely
to save it, private industry begins to take workers
off the rolls of the government relief program. Until
this Administration we had no free employment service,
except in a few states and cities. Because there was
no unified employment service, the worker, forced
to move as industry moved, often travelled over the
country, wandering after jobs which seemed always
to travel just a little faster than he did. He was
often victimized by fraudulent practices of employment
clearing houses, and the facts of employment opportunities
were at the disposal neither of himself nor of the
employer.
In 1933 the United States Employment
Service was created -- a cooperative state and Federal
enterprise, through which the Federal Government matches
dollar for dollar the funds provided by the states
for registering the occupations and skills of workers
and for actually finding jobs for these registered
workers in private industry. The Federal-State cooperation
has been splendid. Already employment services are
operating in 32 states, and the areas not covered
by them are served by the Federal Government.
We have developed a nationwide
service with seven hundred District offices, and one
thousand branch offices, thus providing facilities
through which labor can learn of jobs available and
employers can find workers.
Last Spring I expressed the
hope that employers would realize their deep responsibility
to take men off the relief rolls and give them jobs
in private enterprise. Subsequently I was told by
many employers that they were not satisfied with the
information available concerning the skill and experience
of the workers on the relief rolls. On August 25th
I allocated a relatively small sum to the employment
service for the purpose of getting better and more
recent information in regard to those now actively
at work on WPA Projects -- information as to their
skills and previous occupations -- and to keep the
records of such men and women up-to-date for maximum
service in making them available to industry. Tonight
I am announcing the allocation of two and a half million
dollars more to enable the Employment Service to make
an even more intensive search then it has yet been
equipped to make, to find opportunities in private
employment for workers registered with it.
Tonight I urge the workers
to cooperate with and take full advantage of this
intensification of the work of the Employment Service.
This does not mean that there will be any lessening
of our efforts under our WPA and PWA and other work
relief programs until all workers have decent jobs
in private employment at decent wages. We do not surrender
our responsibility to the unemployed. We have had
ample proof that it is the will of the American people
that those who represent them in national, state and
local government should continue as long as necessary
to discharge that responsibility. But it does mean
that the government wants to use resource to get private
work for those now employed on government work, and
thus to curtail to a minimum the government expenditures
for direct employment.
Tonight I ask employers, large
and small, throughout the nation, to use the help
of the state and Federal Employment Service whenever
in the general pick-up of business they require more
workers.
Tomorrow is Labor Day. Labor
Day in this country has never been a class holiday.
It has always been a national holiday. It has never
had more significance as a national holiday than it
has now. In other countries the relationship of employer
and employee has more or less been accepted as a class
relationship not readily to be broken through. In
this country we insist, as an essential of the American
way of life, that the employer-employee relationship
should be one between free men and equals. We refuse
to regard those who work with hand or brain as different
from or inferior to those who live from their property.
We insist that labor is entitled to as much respect
as property. But our workers with hand and brain deserve
more than respect for their labor. They deserve practical
protection in the opportunity to use their labor at
a return adequate to support them at a decent and
constantly rising standard of living, and to accumulate
a margin of security against the inevitable vicissitudes
of life.
The average man must have that
twofold opportunity if we are to avoid the growth
of a class conscious society in this country.
There are those who fail to
read both the signs of the times and American history.
They would try to refuse the worker any effective
power to bargain collectively, to earn a decent livelihood
and to acquire security. It is those short-sighted
ones, not labor, who threaten this country with that
class dissension which in other countries has led
to dictatorship and the establishment of fear and
hatred as the dominant emotions in human life.
All American workers, brain
workers and manual workers alike, and all the rest
of us whose well-being depends on theirs, know that
our needs are one in building an orderly economic
democracy in which all can profit and in which all
can be secure from the kind of faulty economic direction
which brought us to the brink of common ruin seven
years ago.
There is no cleavage between
white collar workers and manual workers, between artists
and artisans, musicians and mechanics, lawyers and
accountants and architects and miners.
Tomorrow, Labor Day, belongs
to all of us. Tomorrow, Labor Day, symbolizes the
hope of all Americans. Anyone who calls it a class
holiday challenges the whole concept of American democracy.
The Fourth of July commemorates
our political freedom -- a freedom which without economic
freedom is meaningless indeed. Labor Day symbolizes
our determination to achieve an economic freedom for
the average man which will give his political freedom
reality.