[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 57 (Wednesday, April 21, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2513-S2514]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
40TH ANNIVERSARY OF EARTH DAY
Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, I come to the floor to recognize the
40th anniversary of Earth Day and to remember the man who founded Earth
Day, the late Wisconsin Governor and Senator Gaylord Nelson.
Before he was the founder of Earth Day, and one of the Nation's
greatest conservationists, he was a son of Wisconsin. He was a young
boy growing up in the town of Clear Lake, WI, amid the great natural
beauty of our State. When asked how he developed his lifelong interest
and dedication to the environment, Nelson would say ``by osmosis''
while growing up in Clear Lake, WI.
He reflected the very best of our State from the beginning, building
on Wisconsin's long tradition of environmental conservation. Our State
passed landmark forest and waterpower conservation acts during the
progressive era and lays claim not only to Gaylord Nelson but to other
giants of the conservation movement such as Aldo Leopold, John Muir,
and Sigurd Olson.
All of them were inspired, as Nelson was, by the beautiful Wisconsin
wilderness. The natural beauty of our State charted the course of
Nelson's life, from the shores of Clear Lake to the banks of the
Potomac, where he changed the way we think about our planet and changed
the law to protect the water we drink and the air we breathe.
There are few Members of this body, past or present, who have left
such a valuable legacy. So I am proud to help celebrate that legacy
with a resolution in the House and Senate celebrating the 40th
anniversary of Earth Day and its founder. As we look ahead to the many
challenges we face, we can draw strength from the example Gaylord set
for us all. He drove tremendous change and, with Earth Day, created a
new momentum that has been critical to so many efforts to protect the
health of our environment.
Gaylord also understood the connection between the two great
Wisconsin traditions of fiscal responsibility and conservation. Too
often, a Federal program that is wasting taxpayer dollars is also
laying waste to our air, our water or our public lands. The Nation's
outdated mining laws are a perfect example. These laws allow the mining
companies to mine on our public lands for next to nothing and leave
behind an environmental mess for taxpayers to clean up.
Gaylord fought to change those laws, and when I was elected to the
Senate, he asked me to take up this fight and I have. I have made it
part of my Control Spending Now Act, legislation to cut the deficit by
about $\1/2\ trillion over the next 10 years. If we scrap these
outdated mining laws, we can save taxpayers hundreds of millions of
dollars and protect the public lands that belong to the American
people. They do not belong to the mining companies.
I am also working on another environmental issue that has a special
connection to Gaylord Nelson; that is, clean water. The man from Clear
Lake did so much for clear, clean water everywhere, including being a
champion of the Clean Water Act.
Today, the Clean Water Act is under threat because two recent Supreme
Court decisions have jeopardized its protections. Those decisions put
nearly 20 million acres of wetlands habitat and more than 50 percent of
our stream miles in the lower 48 States at risk. These waters could now
become polluted or wiped out altogether unless Congress takes action.
I am working to see that Congress stands up to the special interests
that want to roll back the Clean Water Act's protections and ensure
that these bodies of water can continue to provide drinking water,
wildlife habitat, recreation, and support for industry and agriculture
for generations of Wisconsinites to come.
So I have joined with Minnesota Representative Jim Oberstar to
introduce the Clean Water Restoration Act. This bill is designed to
accomplish one basic and important goal: ensure that the Clean Water
Act of 1972 stays in place. There are no new regulations in our
legislation, only a return to the original intent of the Clean Water
Act, which has protected our waters for more than 35 years.
Gaylord Nelson and others have done so much to protect the health of
our waters, and we owe it to them and to ourselves to carry that legacy
forward. That is what I seek to do in the Senate with the Clean Water
Restoration Act.
We face many other challenges as well. Of course, climate change
looms largest of all. We need to address the serious problem of climate
change and do so without unfairly hurting Wisconsin, which relies on
coal for much of its energy needs. If we do this right, we have an
opportunity to pass legislation that will reduce greenhouse gas
emissions and create energy jobs here in America. We can help American
businesses gain a competitive advantage developing new renewable energy
and energy efficient technologies.
The desire to protect our air, our water, and our planet will bring
people together tomorrow, all around the world. They will talk about
global issues we face and the local environmental issues in their
communities that they want to address. They will organize, mobilize,
and galvanize new momentum for change.
That is exactly what Gaylord Nelson intended. He knew the power of
people coming together and what that could mean for the air we breathe,
the water we drink, and the national parks and public lands we all
cherish. He knew that these natural resources connect us all and that
Earth Day would bring us together to protect them.
I am so grateful to have known Gaylord Nelson, and I am proud of the
legacy he left behind. As we celebrate the 40th anniversary of Earth
Day, we remember the man from Clear Lake who came to this body inspired
by the beautiful Wisconsin landscape of his childhood and in the end
made a better world for us all.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
[[Page S2514]]
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I would say to my distinguished friend from
Wisconsin, I was delighted to hear those words about Gaylord Nelson. I
had the privilege of serving for a term with Senator Nelson. He was
down-to-earth, respected by all in this body, and he had a commitment
to the environment rarely ever matched. The Senator from Wisconsin has
said it far more eloquently than I could. But I think how fortunate we
are that we have this Senator from Wisconsin who has carried out that
commitment to the environment, that commitment to the best ideals of
our government. I know our dear, departed friend Gaylord Nelson would
be so proud to have the Senator here representing Wisconsin.
Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, let me thank the Senator from Vermont
for his kind words, for his remembering Gaylord Nelson, and, of course,
for the incredible legacy of his own for the environment, coming from
one of the most beautiful States in this country, Vermont. I thank him.
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