For Immediate Release
Office of the
Press Secretary
August 26, 2004
Executive Order Facilitation of Cooperative Conservation
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the
laws of the United States of America, it is hereby ordered as follows:
Section 1. Purpose. The purpose of this order is to ensure that the
Departments of the Interior, Agriculture, Commerce, and Defense and the
Environmental Protection Agency implement laws relating to the environment and
natural resources in a manner that promotes cooperative conservation, with an
emphasis on appropriate inclusion of local participation in Federal
decisionmaking, in accordance with their respective agency missions, policies,
and regulations.
Sec. 2. Definition. As used in this order, the term "cooperative
conservation" means actions that relate to use, enhancement, and enjoyment of
natural resources, protection of the environment, or both, and that involve
collaborative activity among Federal, State, local, and tribal governments,
private for-profit and nonprofit institutions, other nongovernmental entities
and individuals.
Sec. 3. Federal Activities. To carry out the purpose of this order,
the Secretaries of the Interior, Agriculture, Commerce, and Defense and the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency shall, to the extent
permitted by law and subject to the availability of appropriations and in
coordination with each other as appropriate:
(a) carry out the programs, projects, and activities of the agency
that they respectively head that implement laws relating to the environment and
natural resources in a manner that:
(i) facilitates cooperative conservation;
(ii) takes appropriate account of and respects the interests of
persons with ownership or other legally recognized interests in land and other
natural resources;
(iii) properly accommodates local participation in Federal
decisionmaking; and
(iv) provides that the programs, projects, and activities are
consistent with protecting public health and safety;
(b) report annually to the Chairman of the Council on Environmental
Quality on actions taken to implement this order; and
(c) provide funding to the Office of Environmental Quality Management
Fund (42 U.S.C. 4375) for the Conference for which section 4 of this order
provides.
Sec. 4. White House Conference on Cooperative Conservation. The
Chairman of the Council on Environmental Quality shall, to the extent permitted
by law and subject to the availability of appropriations:
(a) convene not later than 1 year after the date of this order, and
thereafter at such times as the Chairman deems appropriate, a White House
Conference on Cooperative Conservation (Conference) to facilitate the exchange
of information and advice relating to (i) cooperative conservation and (ii)
means for achievement of the purpose of this order; and
(b) ensure that the Conference obtains information in a manner that
seeks from Conference participants their individual advice and does not involve
collective judgment or consensus advice or deliberation.
Sec. 5. General Provision. This order is not intended to, and does
not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law
or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies,
instrumentalities or entities, its officers, employees or agents, or any other
person.
GEORGE W. BUSH
THE WHITE HOUSE,
August 26, 2004.
Bush environmental order: Heed local
landowners, governments
By JOHN
HEILPRIN
Associated Press writer
WASHINGTON
President Bush on Thursday ordered Cabinet agencies to pay more attention to
private landowners, states and local governments on how to manage the
environment.
That could influence federal decisions about the use of
public lands, the level of protection for waterways and fighting pollution.
The executive order, bypassing
congressional action, was issued by the White House without fanfare while the
president campaigned in New Mexico. It is in keeping with Bush's goal of having
the government defer as much as possible to local interests. One result could
be that national environmental policy is shaped more by economic pressures from
local projects.
Environmentalists said the order would encourage less
protection for natural resources.
The order calls for more "cooperative
conservation'' by the departments of Interior, Agriculture, Commerce and
Defense, and the Environmental Protection Agency.
The term was defined
as any collaboration related "to use, enhancement and enjoyment of natural
resources, protection of the environment, or both.''
The agencies were
told that "to the extent permitted by law'' and by available dollars, they must
collaborate more with states, local and tribal governments, private for-profit
and nonprofit groups, nongovernment associations and individuals.
It
also requires that government "takes appropriate account of and respects the
interests of persons with ownership or other legally recognized interests in
land and other natural resources.''
Carl Pope, executive director of the
Sierra Club, said the order was "part of the
shrink-the-federal-safety-net' efforts by the Bush
administration.
"It's another signal to federal agencies that they're
supposed to ignore enforcing the law and defer to local governments and
landowners,'' Pope said.
Republican Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma,
chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, praised Bush's
order. Inhofe, mayor of Tulsa, Okla., from 1978 to 1984, said he believed
Bush's approach was "something that has been needed for a long
time.''
While in New Mexico on Thursday, Bush did not refer to the
executive order. He did cite a new forestry law intended to reduce the threat
of fires in national forests. Environmentalists say it lessens protections for
old-growth trees and remote, roadless
areas.