Obama Told Only
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Contacts: Sean Crowley, 202-572-3331, [email protected]
Dan Cronin, 202-572-3354, [email protected]
(New Orleans - October 14, 2009) – On the eve of President Obama’s visit to New Orleans on Thursday, Louisiana elected officials, local, state and national group leaders today sent the president a letter advising him that “a robust and effective federal effort…is necessary” to ensure “coastal Louisiana’s survival.”
The letter - signed by Governor Bobby Jindal, U.S. Senators Mary Landrieu and David Vitter, and U.S. Reps. Steve Scalise, Joseph Cao, Charlie Melancon, and Charles Boustany, and Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) President Fred Krupp, among others.
The letter will appear in full-page ads purchased by Environmental Defense Fund, National Audubon Society and National Wildlife Federation in the Thursday editions of the New Orleans Times-Picayune, New Orleans Tribune and Politico.
The letter notes that during his campaign and his 2009 Katrina anniversary address, President Obama spoke of “the need to strengthen the wetlands and barrier islands that are the Gulf Coast’s first line of defense,” and that the issue is pressing because Louisiana has lost more than 2,300 square miles of coastal wetlands since the 1930s, an area larger than the state of Delaware.
The letter commends the president’s “recent steps in support of New Orleans and coastal Louisiana,” including visiting the Gulf Coast, extending operation of the Gulf Coast Recovery Coordinator’s office, and establishing the Gulf Coast Interagency Working Group as “concrete steps forward to community, economic, and environmental recovery and resiliency.”
“Restoring the Mississippi River delta wetlands will save the world’s seventh largest river delta, be the largest ecosystem restoration program in history, protect world-renowned cultures and communities, and bolster the American economy,” the letter says. “Coastal restoration is an essential component of short and long term risk reduction in this region, and must complement and be complemented by other lines of defense like existing and future federal investments in levees, evacuation planning, and storm-sensitive community redevelopment.”
The letter cites five principles to “both ensure effectiveness and concrete progress on restoration before the end of your first term in 2012.” They are:
1. Complete the Near-term Restoration Program Authorized by Congress in 2007.
2. Apply Multi-agency Resources and Coordination.
3. Streamline Bureaucracy and Reconcile Inconsistent Policies.
4. Develop multi-year programmatic funding and budgeting, starting with Fiscal Year 2011.
5. Complete the authorized comprehensive planning, design, and management effort.
“These principles provide President Obama with a roadmap from experts on the issue about how to rebuild coastal Louisiana effectively and quickly,” said Paul Harrison, senior director of rivers and deltas for Environmental Defense Fund, which sponsored the ad. “We are confident the president will follow through on his pledge to invest the resources necessary to restore coastal Louisiana and protect if from the next Katrina.”
The other signers of the letter include:
- Steven Peyronnin, Executive Director, Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana
- Ann Rheims, Executive Director, Lake Pontchartain Basin Foundation
- Cynthia Sarthou, Executive Director, Gulf Restoration Network
- Terri King, Manager, Gulf Coast Operations, Conoco-Philips
- Jeff Benoit, President/CEO, Restore America’s Estuaries
- Larry Schweiger, President, National Wildlife Federation
- R. King Milling, President, America’s Wetland Foundation
- Michael Hecht, President/CEO, Greater New Orleans Inc.
- Ted Falgout, Director, Greater Lafourche Port Commission
- Charlotte Randolph, Lafourche Parish President/Parishes Against Coastal Erosion President
- Adam Mcbride, Director, Port of Lake Charles
- John Flicker, President, National Audubon Society
- Ken Babcock, Senior Director of Conservation, Ducks Unlimited
- Gary Lagrange, Director, Port of New Orleans
- Pam Dashiel and Charles Allen, Co-Directors, Lower Ninth Ward Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development
- Scott Burns, Environmental Program Director, Walton Family Foundation
To read the entire letter, please visit http://www.edf.org/documents/10480_11.625%20x%2021%20Obama%20Letter%20(Times-Picayune).pdf.
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One of the world’s leading international nonprofit organizations, Environmental Defense Fund (edf.org) creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships. With more than 3 million members and offices in the United States, China, Mexico, Indonesia and the European Union, EDF’s scientists, economists, attorneys and policy experts are working in 28 countries to turn our solutions into action. Connect with us on Twitter @EnvDefenseFund
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