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President
Bush Names Gov. Leavitt to Head EPA
Remarks by the President in Announcing Nomination of Mike Leavitt
as EPA Administrator
The Marriott
Hotel
Aurora, Colorado
3:34 P.M. CDT
THE PRESIDENT:
Good afternoon. First I want to make a comment about some foreign
policy. Today's departure of Charles Taylor from Liberia is an important
step toward a better future for the Liberian people. The United
States will work with the Liberian people and with the international
community to achieve a lasting peace after more than a decade of
turmoil and suffering.
The United States
will help ECOWAS and the humanitarian relief organizations to get
aid to those who need it. I appreciate the efforts of many African
leaders, most especially Nigerian President Obasanjo, Ghanaian President
Kufour, South African President Mbeki, Mozambique President Chissano.
Their continued leadership will be needed in the weeks and months
ahead as a new government is formed and the Liberian people seek
to chart a future of peace and stability.
Earlier today,
I spoke in Arizona about the urgent need to safeguard America's
forests from wildfire. It's one of the many environmental challenges
that face our nation. Those challenges go beyond our forests. We
must also be vigilant in protecting the air and soil and waters
around us.
This is the
primary responsibility of our Environmental Protection Agency, and
today I am pleased to introduce my nominee to lead that Agency,
Governor Mike Leavitt, of Utah. I appreciate so very much Jackie
being here, as well as Michael, Taylor, Anne Marie, Westin and Chase,
who's not with us. The Leavitt family is a great American family,
primarily because Dixie and Anne, the mom and dad of the Governor,
worked hard to make it such, and I'm honored they are here, as well.
Thank you all for coming.
I also appreciate
the fact that the leader of the House and the Senate from Utah have
joined us today.
I selected Mike
Leavitt because he is a trusted friend, a capable executive and
a man who understands the obligations of environmental stewardship.
With the Senate's approval, Mike Leavitt will lead an Agency with
18,000 dedicated employees in offices all across our country. The
work of the EPA is vital and reflects a national consensus on the
importance of good stewardship.
During the last
three decades, we've seen extraordinary progress in cleaning our
air and protecting our land and making our water more pure. The
quality of our air is far better than it was in the 1970s. Many
more of our lakes and rivers are safe for fishing and swimming.
Toxic emissions have declined, and we're bringing new resources
and programs to reduce run-off and erosion.
We're making
real progress protecting endangered species and helping them recover.
Mike Leavitt
will come to the EPA with a strong environmental record and a strong
desire to improve on what has taken place during the last three
decades. He served for over a decade as governor of an important
state. As co-chair of the Western Regional Air Partnership, Governor
Leavitt has been a leader in applying high standards in air quality,
and he understand the importance of clear standards in every environmental
policy. He respects the ability of state and local governments to
meet those standards, rejects the old ways of command and control
from above. He was twice re-elected by the people of Utah in part
because he leads by consensus and focuses on results, instead of
process.
In Utah and
beyond, he has gained wide respect for handling environmental issues
in a spirit of openness and bipartisanship. These qualities and
his experience will make Mike Leavitt a fine addition to my administration.
I will count on him to continue the good work begun by former Administrator
Whitman and Acting Administrator Horinko.
He will join
my Cabinet with a full agenda and with my full confidence. Mike,
I appreciate your willingness to serve. I thank the people of Utah
as you leave office to take on this incredibly important assignment
in our nation's capital.
GOVERNOR LEAVITT:
Thank you, Mr. President. First of all, Mr. President, may I express
my appreciation to you for your confidence, most of all for your
friendship. I'd like also to acknowledge Governor Whitman and the
service that she rendered, first to her state and then to the United
States Environmental Protection Agency.
Two brief stories
communicate what I'm feeling. I was eight years old, Mr. President,
when I first laid eyes on the Grand Canyon. My mother, who's here
today, had entered an essay contest with a local radio station,
and she won. And on a hot summer day we got on a big yellow Utah
Parks bus, and we went to the rim of the Grand Canyon. We got there
about twilight, and it's a view I won't ever forget. There's 200
miles that drops in front of you, and there are these cliffs that
are gold and crimson, and it's this large shadow that begins to
cross that canyon as the sun goes down.
I went back
to that spot. I went back 36-years later. This time I was governor.
This time there was a brown haze across the same place where that
beautiful clear vista had been before. This time, I was there to
co-chair a commission that had been charged under the Clean Air
Act to rescue that view.
Now, any environmental
problem that involves 13 states, and 13 tribal nations, and three
federal agencies, and the private sector, and a long list of environmental
groups had complexities and had disagreements, and this was absolutely
no exception to that. But in the end, we worked together to develop
a plan that will clean up the air over the Grand Canyon. It's left
a lasting impact, not just on the Grand Canyon, but on me. It has
changed the way we resolve environmental problems and disputes in
the west, and I think it's safe to say, in the entire country.
There is no
progress polarizing at the extremes, but there is great progress,
there's great environmental progress when we collaborate in the
productive middle. And if you add to that, technology -- the new
technologies of the 21st century, and an unwavering commitment to
progress, it's a recipe for success, a recipe for real progress.
That experience
at the Grand Canyon and a hundred others that I've had since that
time have crystallized in me a very clear environmental philosophy.
It's called, in libra. It's a latin word. It means to move toward
balance. To me, there is an inherent human responsibility to care
for the earth.
But there's
also an economic imperative that we're dealing with in a global
economy to do it less expensively. And Mr. President, it's your
commitment to both that has enlisted me to this cause.
Now, the setting
of the second story is the Parker Mountain, and it's where my grandfather
keeps his -- kept his cattle. We had just finished lunch. He had
a one ton flatbed truck, and we were sitting in the shade. There
was a wooden box he kept on the back of the truck, and it had grass
seed in it.
And it was my
job, no matter where we were after lunch, to spread some grass seed
among the sagebrush to improve the range. It was very hot. I don't
think it's as hot as it was -- as in Crawford, Texas, but it was
hot. And I say, it's too hot. And my grandpa said to me, we've been
on this mountain for four generations, and there's an obligation
to take care of this place, and to leave it better than we found
it.
If the Senate
confirms my nomination, it will require that I conclude the service
of a decade to a state I love and to people I love. But I may do
so knowing that the air is cleaner than when I arrived, that the
water is more pure, that the land is better cared for, and that
the people are more safe. I'm leaving it a better place than I found
it.
And Mr. President,
to you and to the American people, I leave that precise commitment.
If I'm confirmed of this service, I will give you the same pledge:
I'll leave it a better place than I find it, I'll plant seeds for
a future generation, and I'll give it all I have.
Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT:
Thank you all. Good job.
END 3:44 P.M.
MDT
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