ORLANDO, Fla. -- Microphone in hand, President Bush took the stage of a town hall meeting Tuesday and expressed sympathy with workers and business owners struggling in a sagging economy.
"There's nothing that hurts me more than to know, as we head for the holiday season, that some of our citizens and some of their families hurt because they've been laid off as a result of" the Sept. 11 suicide hijackings over Washington, New York and Pennsylvania.
Tourism, a key industry in this area, has been hard hit by the attacks.
In the first town hall meeting of his presidency, Bush strolled the stage and called for questions from a crowd of several hundred displaced workers and business owners.
One of them complained that his company's request for a Small Business Administration loan had gotten lost in red tape. Bush's response was blunt.
"First, get in your car and find out why your case is bogged down in bureaucracy," Bush said. He got serious later, sending an aide to the man's side to find out more information about the case.
He joked about his mother's cooking, saying she was the best "fast food cook of all time." His brother, Jeb, the governor of Florida, recoiled at the remark and shook his head from side to side.
Bush pledged to make planes safer, which would help the tourism industry, and demanded action from Congress on an economic stimulus package.
'I urge the United States Congress to stop talking and to get an economic stimulus bill to my desk," he said.
He brushed aside a question about giving tax incentives to people who travel. "That hasn't made it to my radar screen yet," Bush said.
Bush was looking to coax Americans back onto planes and trains during his fifth visit as president to Florida, which decided the presidency a year ago.
The last time Bush visited the state, he was addressing a classroom full of students when he learned that jetliners had struck the World Trade Center.
$3 billion proposal
The president met with laid-off workers in Orlando, home of Walt Disney World, and pushed his proposal to spend $3 billion to help them get by financially, maintain their health insurance and train for new work.
Among those at the job center was William Richards of Sanford, Fla., a graphic artist who has seen his work dry up at the Disney and Universal Studios theme parks.
Richards said he would prefer the kind of subsidies for enhanced health insurance that Democrats envision over more grants for job centers like the one he was sitting in.
Labor Secretary Elaine Chao told reporters aboard Air Force One that Bush's $3 billion expansion includes $3.4 million to help some 2,000 unemployed workers in the Orlando area, partly through centers like the one Bush visited. Jeb Bush said he had asked his brother's administration for $35 million.
Orlando has been hit harder than most communities because of the slowdown in travel. Orange County's collections from the resort tax on hotel and motel rooms declined by nearly a third for September.
An estimated 60,000 to 80,000 workers have had their work schedules reduced, been laid off or faced pay cuts since Sept. 11.
To revive the economy, Bush has called for a blend of corporate tax cuts, accelerated personal income tax reductions and aid to hurting workers, but on Tuesday the emphasis was on government aid.
Tourism is Florida's largest industry at $50 billion annually in gross sales. But the number of visitors has declined by 6 percent compared with last year, with a drop apparent since Sept. 11, said Tom Flanigan, a spokesman for Visit Florida, the state's public-private tourism marketing corporation.
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