Office of the Press Secretary
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT IN ANNOUNCING AMERICAN HERITAGE RIVERS INITIATIVE Room 450 Old Executive Office Building
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Jose. I think we should send
him around the country to organize other young people, don't you?
(Laughter.) Thank you, Mr. Carleno; to the members of the
administration who are here, and the senators and members of the
House and all the rest of you.
We did not intend to regale you today with the natural
splendor and riverfront aura of Room 450 -- (laughter) -- of the Old
Executive Office Building. I can't really take responsibility for
the weather. I wanted to welcome you to Mount Vernon. The Vice
President suggested I blame it on climate change. (Laughter.) But
we haven't had time to have the requisite number of studies done.
(Laughter.) So we're here to make the best of it.
Before I start and make remarks about this subject, I do
want to say that something has occurred in the United States Senate
this morning about which I am personally very pleased and for which I
am grateful. I have been working, as everyone knows, since the day I
became President to allow all our people to participate in the
opportunities that this country offers and will offer in the new
century. I think clearly the most important way to do that is to
guarantee a world-class education to every young person. Just this
morning, an overwhelming bipartisan majority in the Senate, 88
senators, voted to move forward with the plan that I have advocated
to establish national standards of learning in reading and
mathematics, and to test our children in the 4th and 8th grades by
They have voted to make sure that these examinations
would be written by truly independent, nonpartisan board, and the
measure that they have embraced will help parents to ensure that
their children will master the basics of reading and math and to help
measure the performance of the schools and teachers involved. This
is another example of what can happen when people of goodwill of both
parties get together and look to the future and not the past. And
thank you, Senators, and I think this is very, very good news.
(Applause.)
And what we're here today to talk about is also very
good news and profoundly important. If you think about the stories
of Pittsburgh and Chicago -- I don't know how many of you have been
to Pittsburgh to see the rivers there and see the changes in the
community that are truly astonishing, and all the other little
communities outlying Pittsburgh and Southwest Pennsylvania. As you
know -- I think all of you know, Hillary is from Chicago, so I spent
a lot of time in Chicago and I've spent a lot of nights and days
looking at the Chicago River.
And I think it's very important to remember that many of
our greatest cities became what they are because they were built on
rivers. And now if we want them to be even greater as we move into a
totally new era and where their economies are changing, we have to
make sure that the rivers that run through them are good, clean
rivers that offer the potential for young people like Jose to do
something they can be proud of, to have a place that they can be
proud to be a part of, and to preserve a heritage for their own
children and grandchildren.
Rivers have always been the lifeblood of our nations.
They nourish our cities, they feed our soils, they allow us to expand
our territory in commerce, they permit us -- millions upon millions
of us -- to fish. You heard the Vice President putting in his little
gig about the Tennessee rivers -- (laughter) -- you know, those of us
who come from the states with a lot of rural land -- all of us grew
up living with the rivers and all of us have these vivid memories of
the rivers. When I graduated from law school, I went home to the
hills in north Arkansas to live before Hillary and married, and I
bought a home -- I rented two different places out in the country on
two different rivers. I spent a lot of the happiest days of my life
along the Buffalo River in the Ozark Mountains in north Arkansas,
which was the very first river set aside by Congress in the National
Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. You can't get there from here.
(Laughter.) But if you do, it's worth the effort. (Laughter.)
Nineteen years ago, when I first ran for governor of my
home state, I called my great uncle at -- who just passed away at the
age of 91 -- and who had only an elementary school education, but a
very high IQ and a great wit. And we were having a heated election
of the United States Senate that year, and I asked my uncle, I said,
who do you want to win this Senate race? He said, I don't care, and
I wouldn't care who was going to be governor if you weren't my
kinfolks. (Laughter.) And I said, well, if I get elected, what do
you want me to do? Then he got dead serious. He said, I want you to
make sure that the rivers are clean and pure so the fish will be in
them and I can run my feet in them in the springtime. (Laughter.)
That was his platform for my campaign. (Laughter.)
And there were many people of his generation of modest
means who knew that if all else fails they could still go to the
river in the springtime. And so this is a big part of what we are.
When I leave this office and I go home, I hope to
continue a project I've been working on for many years -- I worked on
as governor -- to help both restore and enhance the development of
our capital city at home along the Arkansas River. And the river has
to be clean and pure and fully developed in its natural potential in
order for us ever to make the most of that.
So this is a big deal to millions of people. And I
suppose that it may be to free of controversy to arouse great
interest today here, but we're all trying to change that, just like
the Senate did this morning on the education issue. When I saw the
two gentleman before me speaking and then I was looking out here at
all the mayors and all the representatives of the local community,
about every third sentence they'd be nodding their heads, yes, what
they're saying is absolutely right. And that's a very, very good
thing.
Today we are going to rededicate our country to
restoring our river heritage and to reaffirm one of our oldest
values, the importance of safeguarding our national treasures for all
generations to come.
You know, we didn't get to go to Mt. Vernon, but I think
it's important to say a few words about the Potomac, since that is
our river here. George Washington considered it one of the finest
rivers in the world. But, regrettably, for most of this century the
Potomac suffered in ways that President Washington would have been
perfectly appalled by.
By the 1960s, when I came to school here, the river was
so polluted that students on the boating teams at Georgetown actually
had to get typhoid shots to go out on the water. But today, thanks
to the ongoing -- I was not on crew team, that was my excuse.
(Laughter.) That's a true story. But today, thanks to the ongoing
clean-up efforts in communities all up and down this river, the
Potomac once again is a genuine, legitimate source of national pride.
All across the country we're seeing this kind of river
renaissance. You heard about Chicago and Pittsburgh. We could have
talked about Evanston, Wyoming; Cherokee, Iowa; Chattanooga,
Tennessee -- communities coming together to restore their rivers, to
make them both attractive and natural and pure and commercially
viable.
Today we take an important step to support and celebrate
these efforts when, in a few moments, I will sign an executive order
to launch the new American Heritage Rivers Initiative. Through this
voluntary program which I first proposed in the State of the Union
address, we will lend our hand of assistance to community-led
waterfront projects that protect natural resources, promote economic
revitalization, and preserve our cultural heritage.
For 90 days, starting today, communities that have
developed plans to restore and reconnect with their rivers may submit
nominations to participate in this innovative initiative. Shortly
thereafter, a panel of experts will help me select 10 finalist rivers
from among the nominations, each of which will earn a designation as
an American Heritage River. These rivers, most likely a mix of
rural, suburban, and urban rivers, will receive targeted and
coordinated assistance to help bring the community plans to life.
Here is how the initiative might work for an urban river
linked by junkyards and abandoned buildings. If the riverfront
community comes forward with a good revitalization plan and wins
American Heritage River designation, we'll first work with the
community to select a skilled, full-time liaison, which we call a
river navigator -- maybe we should have called it a river rat.
(Laughter.) The river navigator will then help the community line up
federal and private resources for everything from improving water
quality to cleaning up brownfields to designating a riverfront plaza
and finding loans for local entrepreneurs.
Every step of the way, the initiative will be driven by
the needs and desires of the communities that choose to participate.
There will be no federal mandates, no regulations, no restrictions on
property holders' rights. All communities interested in this
collaborative concept will be able to learn from the success of the
program participants by tapping in to a very impressive American
Heritage Rivers website.
The reason I'm so pleased by the American Heritage
Rivers Initiative is that it neatly combines there of the concepts
that are closest to my heart, as the Vice President said: First, the
notion of environmental stewardship. Second, the idea of offering
citizen support for a reinvented government the actually works better
and costs less. And, finally, once again, that economic prosperity
and environmental protection go hand in hand.
We must continue to embrace these three ideas. We must
believe in them, we must live by them. The American Heritage Rivers
Initiative is a great first step. Let the nominations begin.
(Laughter.)
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
American Heritage Rivers Paper
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