[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 32 (Wednesday, February 25, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1087-S1088]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PRINCIPLED STEWARDSHIP OF THE AMERICAN WEST
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, over the past week while I was home in
Wyoming traveling around our State, I had a chance to talk with
students about their hopes for the future, and I talked with many small
business owners about their efforts in trying to create jobs.
The people of Wyoming work hard and take seriously the Western values
of family and community. They are committed--they are committed--to
preserving the West's role in providing natural resources that improve
the lives of millions of people all across America.
This commitment is shared by the Senate Western Caucus--a caucus
which I chair in the Senate--as well as is shared by the Congressional
Western Caucus under the leadership of Wyoming Congressman Cynthia
Lummis.
Recently, we released a joint report titled ``Principled Stewardship
of the American West.'' This new report has details about specific
things we should be doing right here in Congress, specific things
Washington should let the people in the West do for themselves. The
whole report is available on my Web site, Barrasso.senate.gov.
Now I want to talk about four specific principles that guide the work
of the Western Caucus that are contained in this very report. These
principles are based on the idea that the people who live on the land
are the best stewards of the land. Our main goal is to empower the
residents, the workers, and the leaders in the West and local leaders
throughout the country to make the decisions that best serve their
families and their communities. These principles stand in stark
contrast to the failed approach Washington has taken for far too long.
The first principle in our report has to do with energy. The members
of the Western Caucus are united. We will promote access to our
Nation's abundant, affordable, secure, diverse, and reliable energy and
mineral resources. That means increasing energy security for the United
States. We can do that by producing more energy responsibly right here
at home. It also means opening access to international markets so we
can help the energy security of our allies as well.
The second principle we talk about in the report ``Principled
Stewardship of the American West'' focuses on environmental stewardship
in the West. We take very seriously our commitment to ensuring the
health of the land, the wildlife, and the environment. Thousands of
people are working across the West to protect our communities. These
are people who live in the West, not bureaucrats in Washington, DC.
Nobody is better qualified than the people who actually walk the land
and breathe the air they are trying to protect.
Our report encourages locally led conservation partnerships to build
on the work being done by people who rely on the health and the safety
of the land. This means making sure regulators base their decisions on
science, not on personal ideology, and that their work is done out in
the open. On this front I will be introducing legislation to stop the
Environmental Protection Agency's takeover of the waters of the United
States.
The third principle in this report focuses on agriculture and
forestry. As an environmental stewardship, the Western Caucus believes
the States are better equipped than Washington to develop good farm
policies. Crops, breeds of livestock, soil types, and the growing
seasons vary greatly across this country. These factors come together
in the West very differently from what might be seen in the Northeast
or in the South. A bureaucrat in Washington simply cannot write
regulations that cover every part of the country with any hope of
success. Western States must be allowed to make these decisions for
themselves to help the farming and ranching way of life continue to
thrive in America.
One task we can do at the national level is to promote active
management of our forests to ensure that our forests remain healthy. As
many as 82 million acres of our National Forest System need treatment
to deal with the threats of fire, insects, and invasive species. When
forests deteriorate, they are more vulnerable to wildfire. Fires cause
erosion and threaten water quality. When forests get overgrown and
unhealthy, they stifle habitats critical for deer, elk, wild turkeys,
and other animals. The members of the Western Caucus know how important
it is to responsibly manage our national forests, and we will push for
legislation to make sure that continues to happen.
Finally, the report focuses on a Western approach to judicial and
regulatory reform. This includes stopping the lawsuit abuse that
special interest groups have used to set public policy without the
public actually being involved. It includes protecting private property
owners from excessive Washington regulations.
[[Page S1088]]
Agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S.
Forest Service have a history of interfering with the use of private
property. These agencies have fined and bullied landowners throughout
the West. Too often the goal of the bureaucrats is to protect their own
turf, not to protect the land or to serve the people. Honest, hard-
working taxpayers get crushed beneath the resources of a Federal legal
system that operates without oversight. The Western Caucus favors
conservation through local cooperation and partnership, not through
intimidation and an attitude that ``Washington knows best.''
This report's four principles and the ideas it discusses are based on
what members in the Western Caucus hear back home. These are the topics
I hear from people as I travel around Wyoming. These principles promote
responsible energy, food and timber production, while preserving what
makes the West a unique place in America.
Last year more than 10 million people from around the world visited
Wyoming. They are drawn by its beauty and natural splendor. The people
of Wyoming and all Western States know they have a responsibility to
manage and protect the land and waters in a way that allows all of us
to enjoy them. The goal of the Senate and Congressional Western Caucus
is to preserve and protect everything that is special about the West so
that families who have lived there for generations can continue to live
there for generations in the future.
Thank you, Mr. President.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The assistant Democratic leader.
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