[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[January 12, 1999]
[Pages 32-35]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks Announcing the Lands Legacy Initiative
January 12, 1999

    Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for 
that welcome. Thank you, Jean Mason, for taking 
the tour with us and for the work you do with the neighborhood 
association. Thank you, Mr. Mayor, for 
showing up here today and being with us. Jean was telling us that a lot 
of the schoolchildren in Washington, DC, come to the Arboretum every 
year on tours. I hope your presence here and her remarks here will lead 
even more of the city's children to find their way to this remarkable 
place.
    I'd like to thank Thomas Elias for the 
tour that he gave the Vice President and me 
and Jean today. And I thank Secretary 
Babbitt for his strong leadership for the 
environment, especially in the area that we're discussing today, and 
Deputy Agriculture Secretary Rich Rominger 
and the other representatives here from the Agriculture Department, the 
Commerce Department, the EPA.
    And I want to thank Theodore Roosevelt IV for being faithful to his family and his national heritage 
in all the wonderful work he's done. And I'd like to say just a special 
word--I see my good friend Senator Gaylord Nelson out there--people in public life have periodic 
chances to make an impact that will last far beyond their own lives. I 
think Senator Nelson certainly has.
    Six and a half years ago, in the summer of 1992, in the late spring, 
when I first talked to Al Gore about 
joining the ticket in the '92 election, this--what we're here to do 
today--this is one of the things that I talked to him about. And I said, 
``I want you to come help me. There are things you know more about than 
I do.'' We differ on how many and what they are. [Laughter] But anyway, 
I said, ``You know, there are things you know more about than I do.'' 
And I said, ``We can make a difference that will last forever, for as 
long as the United States lasts.'' And he has been faithful to that in 
this administration, and I'm very grateful to him.
    I also want to thank George Frampton 
for the work that he has done to put this proposal together.
    We just took this tour to learn about the vital research the 
Agriculture Department does here, to also hear about the young children, 
the families that use this facility. I also heard

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about the elementary schoolers who grow vegetables and donate much of 
their harvest to the D.C. Central Kitchen. I heard about the AmeriCorps 
members and hundreds of other dedicated volunteers who work here to make 
sure that we'll always have this beautiful sanctuary in the middle of 
our Capital City.
    I'd like to mention one of them who is here, Mary Morose, over here. Thank you for being here. She is a retired 
Government geologist who recently donated more than $1 million of her 
life's savings to help ensure that the Arboretum will always be here, 
for the children to see. Thank you, and God bless you.
    We're just here trying to follow Mary's lead. We think every child 
in every community ought to have a chance to grow up around tall trees 
as well as tall buildings, to know what vegetables look like when 
they're growing in the ground, not just when they're in the grocery 
store, to know what it feels like to walk on a carpet of pine needles as 
well as one of asphalt.
    At the dawn of the century, many Americans saw nature only as a 
resource to be exploited or an obstacle to be overcome. We can all take 
pride, each of us, in the work that we have done and will do. But it 
really is truly astonishing that at the dawning of the industrial age in 
America, Theodore Roosevelt even then knew nature was a divine gift, 
that old-growth forests were more than trees to be cut down, that a 
pristine peak was more than a repository of ore. He set aside millions 
of acres of forests and mountains and valleys and canyons, land shaped 
by the hand of God over hundreds of millions of years. He defined his 
great central task as leaving this land even a better land for our 
descendants than it is for us. In the last 100 years, I think only his 
kinsman, Franklin Roosevelt, approached his devotion to setting aside 
land and preserving resources.
    We have tried over these last 6 years to fulfill that vision. We 
have set aside more than 1\1/2\ million acres in the spectacular red 
rock canyons in Utah. And I might say, I think more and more folks out 
there have decided it's not such a bad idea. [Laughter] We have 
protected vast acres of the Mojave Desert of California, designating 
three new national parks; saved more than 400,000 pristine acres of land 
in Alaska. We're about to complete an historic agreement to save vast 
tracts of ancient redwoods in California. We have worked hard to 
preserve the Florida Everglades and to restore much of them; and put a 
stop to a massive mining operation planned for right next to 
Yellowstone, America's very first national park.
    But we have a lot to do. All of you know that. Our population is 
growing; our cities are growing; our commitment to conservation must 
grow as well. We'll never have a better time to act because of the 
unprecedented prosperity, because we had our first surplus this year--or 
last year--in nearly 30 years. And we ought to remember what Theodore 
Roosevelt said, ``We are not building this country of ours for a day. We 
have to make sure it lasts through the ages.''
    So today I am proud to announce a lands legacy initiative: $1 
billion to meet the conservation challenges of a new century, fully paid 
for in my new balanced budget, more than doubling our already 
considerable commitment to protect America's land. It represents the 
single largest annual investment in protecting our green and open spaces 
since Theodore Roosevelt set our Nation on the path of conservation 
nearly a century ago. And to keep on that path, we will be working with 
Congress to create a permanent funding stream for this purpose, 
beginning in 2001.
    The first part of the plan builds directly on Theodore Roosevelt's 
conservation legacy by adding new crown jewels to our endowment of 
natural resources. Next year alone, we will dedicate $440 million, 
largely from the sale of oil from existing offshore oil leases, to 
acquiring and protecting precious lands and coastal waters. Secretary 
Babbitt and I were talking about it on the way 
in.
    Among our many priorities, we intend to secure an additional 450,000 
acres of private land in and around the new Mojave and Joshua Tree 
National Parks, to expand beautiful forest refuges in Maine, Vermont, 
New Hampshire, and New York, to continue our massive restoration of 
Florida's Everglades, to extend America's marine sanctuaries and restore 
coastal reefs.
    In addition, I will propose to add the highest level of wilderness 
protection to more than 5 million acres of back-country lands within 
Yellowstone, Glacier, Great Smoky Mountain, and other national parks. If 
Congress approves this request, then these places will never know the 
roar of bulldozers and chainsaws. They will never drown out the call of 
the wild. Families will still be free to enjoy the lands, but they

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will be expected to take only photographs and leave only footprints.
    The second part of our plan, which works in tandem with the livable 
communities initiative the Vice President 
announced yesterday, represents a new vision of environmental 
stewardship for the new century. Today, it's no longer enough to 
preserve our grandest natural wonders. As communities keep growing and 
expanding, it's become every bit as important to preserve the small but 
sacred green and open spaces closer to home: woods and meadows and 
seashores where children can still play; streams where sports men and 
women can fish; agricultural lands where family farmers can produce the 
fresh harvest we often take for granted.
    In too many communities, farmland and open spaces are disappearing 
at a truly alarming rate. In fact, across this country, we lose about 
7,000 acres every single day. And as the lands become more scarce, it 
becomes harder and harder for communities to then afford the price of 
protecting the ones that are left. That's why we have to act now.
    So we will also dedicate nearly $600 million to helping communities 
across our country save the open spaces that greatly enhance our 
families' quality of life. With flexible grants, loans, and easements, 
we will help communities to save parks from being paved over. We'll help 
to save farms from being turned into strip malls. We'll help them to 
acquire new lands for urban and suburban forests and recreation sites. 
We'll help them set aside new wetlands, coastal, and wildlife preserves. 
There will be no green mandates and no redtape. Instead, the idea is to 
give communities all over our country the tools they need to make the 
most of their own possibilities.
    Let me just give you an example of what I mean. South Kingstown, 
Rhode Island, was a quiet farming town for more than two centuries. 
Today, it's the fastest growing community in the State. Its citizens 
welcome growth, but they want to maintain their parks and their open 
spaces. They want to make sure parents won't have to sit in traffic jams 
when they could be home reading to their children. They want to remain 
the kind of livable town where employers have no trouble recruiting 
educated workers interested in a high quality of life. So South 
Kingstown is setting aside one of every 5 acres as green space. They're 
revitalizing the historic downtown by creating a greenway along the 
Saugatucket River so people can stroll and bike right through the heart 
of town. And in November voters overwhelmingly approved a million-dollar 
bond measure to protect more farms and more open spaces.
    This is the work we will help them to complete and the kind of work 
we will help people all over America to do. This is the kind of future-
oriented community action all Americans, without regard to party or 
region, should be supporting, action that combines a vigorous commitment 
to economic prosperity with an equally vigorous commitment to 
conservation.
    Ever since Theodore Roosevelt launched our Nation on the course of 
conservation, pessimists have claimed that this would hurt the economy. 
They've been wrong for 100 years now, but they haven't given up. Time 
and again they have been wrong. Whether the issue was park land 
preservation, acid rain, deadly pesticides, polluted rivers, the ozone 
hole, or any number of other environmental issues all of you know very 
well, we have always found ways to improve our environment, protect the 
public health, and enshrine our public heritage and still continue to 
grow our economy.
    In fact, with the recent developments in technology and the looming 
problems of climate change, we now know that we will have a far more 
prosperous economy if we do the right things by the environment. And I 
hope that in the 21st century we will not have to fight that battle for 
another 100 years.
    With this historic lands legacy initiative and the farsighted 
livable communities plan the Vice President 
announced yesterday, we will use flexible, innovative means to protect 
our Nation's and our communities' natural heritage. We will help to 
create livable cities where both citizens and businesses want to put 
down roots. We will honor the core principle Theodore Roosevelt set out 
for us 100 years ago: to leave this magnificent country even a better 
land for our descendants than it is for us.
    Thank you very much.

Note: The President spoke at 12:15 p.m. at the National Arboretum. In 
his remarks, he referred to Jean Mason, president, Arboretum Civic 
Association, who introduced the President; Mayor Anthony A. Williams of 
Washington, DC; Thomas S. Elias, Director, National Arboretum; Theodore 
Roosevelt IV, member, board of directors, League of Conservation Voters, 
and great-grandson of

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President Theodore Roosevelt; former Senator Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day 
founder; and George T. Frampton, Jr., Acting Chair, Council on 
Environmental Quality. The transcript released by the Office of the 
Press Secretary also included the remarks of Vice President Al Gore.