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CNN Live Event/Special

President Bush Speaks About Environment in Everglades

Aired June 04, 2001 - 11:15   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
DARYN KAGAN, CNN ANCHOR: All right, we want to take you now live to Florida. President Bush in Florida today at the Everglades, talking about the environment and saving this national resource. Let's listen in.

(JOINED IN PROGRESS)

GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I'm honored to be here with two fine United States senators.

Thank you both for being here.

Senator Graham, thanks for flying down with us.

And Senator Nelson, it was good to see you at the airport today.

Peter Deutsch -- this is his district -- Congressman, thanks so much for coming. We're honored to have you here.

Congressman -- I just call her Ileana.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: Thanks so very much for being here, Ileana.

And same to you Lincoln. I'm honored that you're here.

The two chairman, Chairman Shaw and Chairman Young, I'm honored you all are here as well.

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: I don't see Congressperson Meek. I think she was going to be here. She's not, but Jerry, I appreciate you. I appreciate your staff.

I appreciate so much Maureen Finnery (ph) for giving us the briefing, and I appreciate Larry Bely (ph) as well for taking time to chopper over this beautiful slice of heaven. Thank you both, and thank all your staff for making this experience such a meaningful experience for all of us.

It's an honor to be here, especially in these surroundings. Visitors from around the world come to this beautiful state to see the coasts and the Keys and the sandy beaches.

Today, we're standing in just as wondrous a scene in Florida and just as an important part of this state. It commands our care and attention. This area needs our protection, and I'm here to join with your governor in the cause of preserving and protecting the Florida Everglades.

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: Last week, I visited the great Sequoia National Park in California. Just to get there, we covered many miles of land that appeared exactly as it did to the first people who saw it. The same can be said of these surroundings and of this park. They're here to be appreciated, not changed. Their beauty is beyond our power to improve.

Our job here is to be good stewards of the Everglades, to restore what has been damaged and to reduce the risk of harm.

The Everglades National Park was established more than 50 years ago. It is not just a beautiful place to visit, but as everybody down here knows, is a vital part of south Florida's ecosystem.

The park extends nearly 1.4 million acres and is our country's largest remaining subtropical wilderness. It includes most of Florida Bay, mangrove forests, coastal prairie, cypress forests, pine lands, and fresh water streams that form, as they are now called, the River of Grass.

We're also visitors today in the home of 68 endangered species and the only place on earth where crocodiles and alligators live side by side. We're kind of hoping that's the way it gets to be in the United States Congress one of these days.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: Over the same half-century since the park was created, south Florida's population has doubled many times over, and it will continue to grow. For ages, the waters of the Everglades have sustained animal life. Today, south Florida's human population relies upon them as well.

Growth and progress are desirable, and environmental destruction is not inevitable. We must build and plan with respect for nature's prior claims.

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: Lost, if we are careless, are the sparrows and wading birds, panthers and bears who live here and the chance for future generations to see these creatures in the place that nature gave them. We must meet the demands of growth, but without harming the very things that give Florida and the Everglades their beauty.

For its part, the federal government carries important responsibilities in stewardship. It is not enough to regulate and dictate from afar. To preserve places like this we must bring to our work a new spirit of respect and cooperation. What I call a new environmentalism for the 21st century. This was the spirit behind the comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan, which passed Congress last year with strong bipartisan majorities in both Houses.

The late Senator John Chafee of Rhode Island set the law in motion. It was advanced by the good work of a New Hampshire senator, Bob Smith, and received crucial support from the Florida delegation, especially from former governor and current United States Senator Bob Graham.

Protecting the Everglades shows that bipartisanship is possible, but more importantly, crucial to doing the will of the American people. When we talk about empowering state and local governments to do more to protect the environment, we do not mean Washington will do less.

We mean that the federal government will work more closely and effectively with the people closest to the problem and, therefore, best equipped to solve it. Everglades restoration is a good example. It is a long-term commitment shared by the federal government and by the state of Florida.

Restoration will not take years, but it'll take decades. It'll require the best efforts of all involved for a long period of time, from government officials to tribal leaders to landowners and environmentalists. The hard work, patience and goodwill of these groups have brought us thus far in restoring the Everglades. We will need the same qualities to finish the job in years ahead.

BUSH: From my administration, the people of Florida can count on the commitment to carrying out this important project.

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: My budget for next year proposes an investment of $219 million, a 36 percent increase from last year. Working together, the state of Florida and the federal government will provide nearly $8 billion in the coming decades for Everglades restoration.

The federal government has clear responsibility for the Everglades, as in each of the nearly 400 national parks. In recent years, that obligation has sometimes been neglected. Many parks have lacked the resources they need for their basic care and maintenance. My administration will restore and renew America's national parks.

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: Last week, I announced our National Parks Legacy project, a major investment in preserving places such as this. We will clear up nearly $5 billion in maintenance to make our parks more inviting and accessible to all Americans.

We're also the first administration to request full funding of the Land and Water Conservation Fund. This fund provides Florida and other states with the means to set aside new parks, vital habitats and restore threatened ecosystems.

To protect our parks and their inhabitants, we must have the best available information. So I've directed Secretary Norton to prepare an annual report that describes the condition of our parks and offers specific recommendations to improve them. I've also asked the people who know our parks best, our rangers, to prepare stewardship plans.

As many of you know, Florida was recently voted as America's best state park system.

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: To be the best, you have to assemble the best team for the job.

And joining Secretary Norton in that effort will be a new director of the National Park Service. You know her well. I'm pleased to announce that Fran Mainella, Florida's director of state parks...

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: ... is my choice to lead the National Park Service. She's been a steady and conscientious steward of Florida's 500,000 acres of park lands. With the support of Senators Graham and Nelson and their colleagues, I'm hopeful she will soon assume responsibility for America's more than 80 million acres of parkland.

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: Under her leadership, the National Park Service will continue to do its very important work.

I respect our park rangers and the folks who work in our national parks a lot. Their's is an incredibly tough job. Many times, it's a thankless job. And so on behalf of your government and the people of the United States, thank you for your dedication to America.

(APPLAUSE)

BUSH: And thank you so very much for welcoming us to America's River of Grass.

Thank you all for coming, and God bless.

KAGAN: We have been listening to President Bush as he speaks from the Everglades National Park, his second environment-related event in the last week. Last week, he was at Sequoia National Park in California. This is his third trip to Florida since becoming president, and on the topic of the Everglades, which are currently undergoing a restoration, the president's proposed budget for 2002 does include $219 million for that restoration project.

The president staying in Florida for the day. Tomorrow, he is scheduled to help build houses for Habitat for Humanity in the Tampa area. TO ORDER A VIDEO OF THIS TRANSCRIPT, PLEASE CALL 800-CNN-NEWS OR USE OUR SECURE ONLINE ORDER FORM LOCATED AT www.fdch.com