[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1999, Book I)]
[March 4, 1999]
[Pages 308-311]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



[[Page 308]]


Remarks on the 150th Anniversary of the Department of the Interior
March 4, 1999

    Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, it's wonderful to be here 
today. I want to thank the great American Indian dancers. I got to watch 
on the screen, off the stage, and I thought they were wonderful. And I 
want to thank Dagmar and Mark for their presentations and for the employees they 
represent.
    Mark, that was a pretty shameless pander to Bruce Babbitt, though. 
[Laughter] If that doesn't get you a raise, nothing will. [Laughter]
    And I would like to say Secretary Babbitt 
has spent a lot of his time putting out fires, both figuratively and 
literally, some of which I lit. [Laughter] And I thank him for that and 
for his remarkable loyalty to this Department. I got kind of tickled 
when he said that talking to one of you reminded him of drinking water 
from a fire hydrant. Sometimes I feel like the fire hydrant looking at a 
pack of dogs. [Laughter]
    For 6 years I have declined to tell these kinds of jokes because I 
have been told repeatedly it is not Presidential. [Laughter] But I feel 
kind of outdoorsy today, you know. [Laughter]
    I would like to also say to all of you, I really appreciated the 
Secretary both featuring these two fine 
employees and talking 
about the other appointees. I know we have some previous administration 
appointees who have left to go on to other things here in the audience. 
I thank all of you who have served by my appointment and all of you who 
serve by choice in this Department.
    I have some remarks to make, but I hope that you will forgive me if 
I mention a few words about a great American citizen who deeply loved 
the natural beauty of his native Minnesota. Justice Harry 
Blackmun died this morning, at the age of 
90. In 24 years on the Supreme Court, he served with compassion, 
distinction, and honor. Every decision and every dissent was firmly 
grounded in the Constitution he revered, and his uncanny feel for the 
human element that lies just beneath the surface of all serious legal 
argument.
    You can see his mind and heart at work in the landmark decision he 
wrote protecting women's rights to reproductive freedom, and in his 
decisions to make the promise of civil rights actually come alive in the 
daily existence of the American people.
    Hillary and I were deeply privileged to know Justice Blackmun and 
his wonderful wife of 58 years, Dottie, for 
quite a long while. I saw up close Harry Blackmun's intense passion--his 
passion for the welfare of the American people, for defending our 
liberties and our institutions, for moving us forward together. We send 
our respect and our prayers to Dottie and to his three daughters.
    To the millions of Americans whose voices he heard and whose rights 
he defended, to the countless numbers of us who knew and loved him, 
Harry Blackmun's life embodied the admonition of the prophet Micah: He 
did justice, and he loved mercy. And now, he walks humbly with his God. 
Thank you very much.
    Now, let me say that I've been wanting to come over here to thank 
you for a long time. I don't know that there has ever been a President 
who has benefited more, in personal ways at important times of his life, 
from the Department of the Interior. I was raised in Hot Springs 
National Park, Arkansas, the first city in America to contain a national 
park. I spent my first 18 years in a State that is more than half-
covered with pine and hardwood forests, which is why Mike 
Gauldin had a little trouble appreciating 
Arizona. [Laughter]
    When I finished law school, I went home to the hills of northwest 
Arkansas and spent some of the happiest days of my life on the Buffalo 
River, the very first river set aside under the National Wild and Scenic 
Rivers Act.
    Today, my family and I have the great honor of living in the most 
beautiful home under the care of the National Park System. Sometimes it 
feels more like a zoo than a park, but I love it. Now, my lease is up in 
one year, 10 months, and 16 days--[laughter]--but who's counting? 
[Laughter]
    Perhaps more than any other department of the Federal Government, 
the Interior Department really does embody the history of our country: 
the story of manifest destiny and the great western expansion; the story 
of fertile fields rising from arid desert, of people rising from the 
depths of the Great Depression, of

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the nation marshaling the resources to win two World Wars; a story of 
scientific discovery and relentless exploration; a story of our 
country's struggles to recognize the dignity and independence and 
sovereignty and expand the opportunity of our first citizens, our Native 
Americans; a story of the efforts of this country to expand the horizons 
and make real the promise of America for all Americans, as Secretary 
Harold Ickes did when he invited the incomparable Marian Anderson to 
sing from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial 60 years ago, in 1939. Most 
of all, as Secretary Babbitt has proved every 
day, it is the story of our intensifying determination as a people to 
conserve and restore our precious natural resources.
    In 1849 when this Department was launched, with a headquarters staff 
of 10 and a budget of $14,200, it lacked a unifying purpose--hard to 
imagine you could do much more than one thing with that kind of money. 
[Laughter] Today, with a much larger staff and a considerably larger 
budget, the contrast is remarkable.
    Under Bruce Babbitt's leadership, 
everything this Department does is guided by the unifying purpose of 
stewardship. As wise and dedicated stewards, you act in the recognition 
that all of us are but brief visitors on this small planet. You 
understand that everything we want for our children depends on 
protecting the forests, the streams, the deserts that were here so very 
long before we came along. Today, the ``Department of Everything Else,'' 
as it was once called, is and forever will be the ``Department of 
Stewardship.'' And for that, I thank you all.
    Using a skillful touch, but not a heavy hand, you have achieved 
remarkable things. Many have been mentioned today, but because they're 
so important to me, I want to thank you personally for them.
    Three years ago, we set out on a mission to preserve California's 
Headwaters Forest, the world's largest unprotected stand of old-growth 
redwoods. Three days ago, you did it. We did it. And aren't we glad? 
[Applause] Thanks to the tireless efforts of so many people here and at 
your sister agency NOAA, not one of the magnificent trees of Headwaters 
Forest will ever be logged. Anyone who has ever strolled through a grove 
of redwoods--and I have--who have seen the tangle of ferns at your feet 
and the living canopy reaching high overhead, knows that these ancient 
forests are as much a part of our legacy, as I said, as the world's 
great cathedrals. Thank you for making them safe for all time.
    We should also be proud that over the last 6 years we've set aside 
vast unspoiled areas of the Mojave Desert, designating three new 
national parks. We put a stop to a massive mining operation that 
threatened Yellowstone, the world's first national park.
    To protect Utah's stunning red rock canyons, we created the Grand 
Staircase-Escalante National Monument and completed the largest land 
exchange in the continental United States. And I have to tell you, I 
just returned from Utah, where the rest of my family went skiing and I 
thought about it. [Laughter] And I was so pleased that any number of 
people--after all the flak we took--any number of people came up to me, 
just on the street, and said, ``Mr. President, you might have been right 
about that. I think this is going to work out fine, and I'm glad we 
saved that land.'' [Applause]
    And in a project that has been particularly close to my heart 
because I have also been there, we are restoring the Florida Everglades, 
the largest restoration project ever undertaken in our Nation's history.
    That is quite a legacy. But we have much, much more to do. This 
year, the last of this century, we must dedicate ourselves not to 
resting on these accomplishments but to building on them.
    First, we must preserve more precious lands. I will soon send the 
Congress a plan to bestow the highest level of wilderness protection on 
more than 5 million acres of back-country lands within Yellowstone, 
Glacier, and other national parks. In these vast regions, the roar of 
bulldozers and chainsaws never again will drown out the call of the 
wild.
    I'm also proposing an unprecedented $1 billion Lands Legacy 
Initiative, which Secretary Babbitt mentioned, on which many of you 
worked. It will allow us to continue your efforts to protect natural and 
historic lands across our Nation, such as Civil War battlefields, remote 
stretches of the historic Lewis and Clark trail, and an additional 
450,000 acres in and around Mojave and Joshua Tree National Parks.
    It will also allow us to meet the stewardship challenges of a new 
century. It is no longer enough for our Nation to preserve its grandest 
natural wonders. As communities grow and expand, it has become every bit 
as important to preserve the small but sacred green and open

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space closer to home. So my Lands Legacy Initiative will also help 
communities protect meadows and seashores, where children play; streams 
where sportsmen and women can fish; farmlands that produce the fresh 
harvest we often take for granted.
    We believe this Lands Legacy Initiative must be a permanent legacy. 
So today I promise to work with Congress to create for the very first 
time a guaranteed fund for protecting and restoring priceless land all 
across America.
    There are many good legislative ideas for achieving this goal. We 
think any solution must provide at least $1 billion annually, with at 
least half dedicated to helping communities protect local green spaces. 
It also must recognize the unique environmental challenges of coastal 
States, without creating any new incentives for offshore oil drilling. 
Working together, we can ensure that not only our generation, but each 
generation to come, will have the resources to leave an even better land 
for those who follow.
    Second, as we help preserve more open spaces, we have a great 
opportunity to help create more livable communities, healthy communities 
where people don't have to waste a gallon of gasoline driving to get a 
gallon of milk, where employers have no trouble recruiting workers 
interested in a high quality of life. The Vice President and I have 
proposed record funding for public transit and Better American bonds to 
help communities grow in ways that ensure a clean environment and 
strong, sustainable economic development.
    Third, we must clean up the 40 percent of our waterways that still 
are too polluted for fishing and swimming. Most Americans don't know 
that, and many are surprised to hear it. I call on Congress to fully 
fund my clean water action plan and to reauthorize and strengthen the 
Clean Water Act.
    Fourth, we must do more to meet our most profound, common global 
environmental challenge, the challenge of global warming. I have 
proposed a clean air partnership fund to help communities reduce both 
greenhouse pollution and smog, as well as tax and research incentives to 
spur clean energy technologies. I want to work with Members of Congress 
in both parties to reward companies that take early, voluntary action to 
reduce greenhouse gases.
    Let me say just one thing here that's not in the script. A lot of 
you clapped and a lot of you were smiling, when I said I'd been to Utah 
and people came up to me and said this Grand Staircase idea wasn't such 
a bad idea after all, and you nodded your head because you knew it all 
along. One of the biggest impediments to human progress in any free 
society is the persistence, buried deep in the brains of the people at 
large or people in decisionmaking positions, of old ideas that aren't 
right any longer. The biggest impediment we have to dealing with the 
challenge of climate change is not cheap oil. It is the old idea that we 
simply cannot have economic growth without industrial age patterns of 
energy use.
    And I see it all over the world. I see it here in the United States. 
I see it in the United States Congress, where one subcommittee forced us 
to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars last year trying to defend our 
climate change plan, which had no new taxes, no big new regulations, was 
solely devoted to tax incentives and new research and development for 
new technologies.
    Now, the fact is that things we do today to reduce greenhouse gas 
pollution--with available technologies, not to mention those that are 
just ahead and almost within our reach--will lower greenhouse gas 
emissions, will reduce the threat of global warming, and will create 
more jobs at higher incomes. The old idea is wrong. I ask the employees 
of the Interior Department to help the American people get rid of an 
old, wrong idea so that we can do this.
    These are the things that we have to do: setting aside more lands; 
making more livable communities; cleaning up our waterways; dealing with 
the challenge of climate change. We can do it. I say to the Members of 
Congress in both parties, please join this crusade. I say to the 
majority party, the preservation of our natural resources, the 
stewardship of this great land, should not be a partisan issue.
    This country never had a better conservation President than Theodore 
Roosevelt. For 12 years, I was a Governor. The first Governors' 
Conference in history was called by Theodore Roosevelt in 1908 to talk 
about conservation of our resources.
    When I was out in Utah, I was looking through Roosevelt's four-
volume history of the American West, and thinking to myself, why don't 
we have two parties equally committed to fulfilling his vision? So I 
implore the Congress: Let us not waste precious time battling over these 
bad antienvironmental riders, which

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I am going to veto anyway; instead, let's go on with the work of 
America.
    Let me say in closing one very personal thing. As I have already 
explained, I am as deeply indebted to the work of the Department of the 
Interior as any President could possibly be--to the visionaries like 
John Wesley Powell and Harold Ickes and Rachel Carson, to the park 
rangers that I've seen in Yellowstone and Grand Teton and other parks, 
to the people that were kind to me as a boy when I roamed the trails and 
the mountains of the national park which was my home.
    In one way or the other, almost all of us have come to see nature as 
a precious but fragile gift and an important part of the fabric of our 
lives. Probably every one of us could cite one particular example where 
that came home to us as never before. I remember once in 1971, when I 
was driving to California to visit Hillary--we had just started seeing 
each other--and I stopped at the Grand Canyon. And I crawled out on a 
ledge about an hour-and-a-half or two before sunset, and I just sat 
there for 2 hours, and I watched the Sun set on Grand Canyon. If you've 
never done it, you ought to do it. And because of the way the rocks are 
layered over millions of years, it's like a kaleidoscope. And the colors 
change over and over and over again, layer by layer by layer as the Sun 
goes down. It is a stunning, stunning thing to see the interplay of 
light and stone and realize how it happened over the ages. I never got 
over it. I think about it all the time, now, nearly 30 years later.
    That kind of moment can't be captured in the words I have shared 
with you, or even photographed, because the important thing is the 
interaction of human nature with nature. But we've all felt it. And we 
all know that part of our essential humanity is paying respect to what 
God gave us and what will be here a long time after we're gone.
    That is what the Interior Department means to me. And after 150 
years, it's what it means to all of America's past and to America's 
great future.
    Thank you, and God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 2:50 p.m. in the Sidney B. Yates Auditorium 
at the Department of Interior. In his remarks, he referred to Interior 
Department employees Dagmar C. Fertl and Mark Oliver, winners of the 
Unsung Hero Award. The related proclamation on the death of Harry A. 
Blackmun is listed in Appendix D at the end of this volume.