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And so we go forth from this place today, remembering the lives of
people like Chambers, Rainey, Byrd, and James. From their example, let
us carry forth that passion and let us strengthen our national unity.
God bless you all, and God bless America.
Note: The President spoke at 11:32 a.m. at Arlington National Cemetery.
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[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 921-923]
Monday, June 5, 1995
Volume 31--Number 22
Pages 915-966
Week Ending Friday, June 2, 1995
Remarks on Clean Water Legislation
May 30, 1995
Thank you very much. This country would be better off if we had a
few more little old ladies in tennis shoes, don't you think, like Minny
Pohlmann? [Applause] Thank you, Minny, for your introduction, and more
importantly, thank you for the many years of work you have done to clean
up the Potomac and to set an example about responsible environmentalism.
Secretary Babbitt; Administrator Browner; to the CEQ Chairman, Katie
McGinty; George Frampton; Bob Stanton; Mike Brown; to Neal Fitzpatrick,
the conservation director of the Audubon Naturalist Society; and the two
young people who came up with me, Hannah and Michael--where are they,
where are the young people who were with me? Thank you very much. And to
all the schoolchildren who are here--I wish you could have heard what
they were saying over there as I was looking at some of the species that
live in this water, because it is still not as pure as it ought to be,
and reading the sign over there. Have you all read the sign on the
creek? ``Fish from these waters contain PCB's. Do not eat catfish, carp,
or eel from these waters. You may eat a half a pound per month of
largemouth bass or a half a pound per week of sunfish or other fish.
Choose to eat younger and smaller fish of legal size. Always skin the
fish, trim away the fat, and cook so that it drains away. The practice
of catch and release is encouraged. Swimming is prohibited still due to
high levels of bacteria.''
To those who say we have nothing more to do to clean up America's
waterways, I urge them to come here to Pierce Mill and read the sign.
We still have a lot of work to do on this, the most simple necessity
of our lives, water. Pierce Mill and this part of Rock Creek Park are
very important in the history of our country. Teddy Roosevelt used to
come here to walk and to look at the creek, to get a little exercise.
I admire Teddy Roosevelt for many reasons, but one of the most
important is that he taught us the necessity of preserving our natural
resources and protecting our natural world. He established the National
Wildlife Refuges. The Forest Service grew in size and vision under his
leadership. His actions led to the creation of the National Park
Service, which takes care of this very park. This great Republican
President taught us that it would be foolhardy and spendthrift to try to
play politics with our environmental treasures. Caring for our land
wasn't just for Democrats or just for Republicans, it was an American
cause and just plain common sense. That was true at the beginning of
this century when Teddy Roosevelt was President; it's even more true at
the end of this century as we look toward a new millennium.
Roosevelt's legacy of nonpartisanship on the environment extended
throughout most of this century. It was under another Republican
President, Richard Nixon, that we created the Environmental Protection
Agency, passed the Clean Water Act, and created the White House Council
on Environmental Quality.
For a long time, therefore, Americans have stood as one in saying no
to things like dirty water and yes to giving our children an environment
as unspoiled as their hopes and dreams. It is because of this commitment
on the part of millions of Americans of both parties and all races and
ethnic backgrounds, people from every region of our country and all
walks of economic life, that last week you were able to take your
children--last weekend--to a beach that was clean or a lake that was
full of fish or a river that was safe to swim in. And that's why I want
to talk to you about some of the things that are going on now that
present a threat to that way of life.
Some Members of the new Congress, operating with major industry
lobbyists, have come up with a bill that would roll back a quarter-
century of bipartisan progress in public health and environmental
protection. The bill would let polluted water back into our lives. It
would increase the threat of improperly treated sewage being released
into our waters. The sewage could then wash up on our beaches, maybe on
the very beach where you taught your children to swim.
Members of Congress who support this legislation actually have the
nerve to call their bill the ``Clean Water Act.'' And the House
[[Page 922]]
of Representatives actually passed it just before the Memorial Day
weekend. But newspapers all over America are calling it the dirty water
act. And it won't get past my desk.
We have worked as one people for 25 years--as one people for 25
years--across party lines to make our environment safer and cleaner. We
cannot turn away from it now. There is still more to be done, not less.
Let me tell you about the true Clean Water Act, the one we have in
place now, the one I'm going to use the power of the Presidency to
protect. Every year the real Clean Water Act cleans more than a billion
pounds of toxic pollutants from our water. Every year it keeps 900
million tons of sewage out of our rivers, lakes, and streams. In human
terms, it keeps poisons out of your child's evening bath and bedtime
glass of water.
Once a river of ours was so polluted that it actually caught fire.
Thanks to that act, that doesn't happen anymore. The story used to be
that if you fell into the Potomac, which this stream runs into, you had
to go to a doctor and get shots to protect yourself from disease.
Because of the genuine Clean Water Act, that's on its way to being a
dark and distant memory. Today the Potomac has rebounded. And many parts
of it are safe for fishing and swimming.
Under the new bill in Congress all this could change. Instead of
getting progressively cleaner, our water quality would go straight down
the drain. We've heard all about beaches that have had to be shut down
because of water waste and syringes on the sand. Some of us have been
unlucky enough to have that experience firsthand.
The House bill would only increase this risk. Under its provisions,
many coastal cities would be able to dump inadequately treated sewage
and industrial waste into the ocean, increasing your family's chances of
finding waste in the water when you're swimming or boating.
But this fight isn't just about how clean the water is when you're
on vacation. It's also about the water that you drink every day, the
water that you bathe in, the water that you use at home, the water that
keeps you and your children and all of us alive.
Americans have a right to expect that our water will be the cleanest
in the world. Clean water is essential to the security our people
deserve, the safety that comes from knowing that the environment we live
in won't make us sick. With all the other changes and challenges that
the American people have to confront in the world today, they sure
should not have to worry about the quality of their water. That is one
uncertainty that even in this rapidly changing world we ought to be able
to remove from every family in the United States of America.
This House bill would put the cleanliness and safety of our water at
risk. Industries in our country use roughly 70,000 pollutants,
chemicals, and other material that can poison water if they're not
controlled properly. This bill would make it easier for those poisons to
find their way into our water.
Current law requires that we use the best achievable technology to
keep our water clean and safe. Amazingly, the House bill actually says
we don't need to bother with the best technology; it says that second or
even third best is good enough. That's crazy. There's no reason on Earth
why Americans should have to settle for anything less than the best when
it comes to keeping our water safe and pure.
Now, here's the part that really gets to me. This bill would also
postpone, perhaps indefinitely, action against some of the suspected
sources of cryptosporidium in drinking water. Now, we all remember what
that is. That's the deadly bacteria that contaminated Milwaukee's water
supply just 2 years ago. One hundred people died from drinking it;
thousands more fell ill. For more than a week, the people of Milwaukee
were terrified to brush their teeth, make coffee, use ice cubes, even
wash their clothes in their own city's water supply. If you can believe
it, this bill that passed the House would prevent us from doing
everything in our power to make sure that this never happens again.
Who could possibly think up such a bill? Well, the lawyers and the
lobbyists who represent the polluters who wrote the bill. They were
invited into the back rooms of what once was your Congress to write a
bill that provides loopholes for their industries. They want to make it
possible for their companies
[[Page 923]]
to get around the standards that are designed to protect us all. If the
bill becomes law, that's exactly what will happen.
But it won't. It won't. I am encouraged that some people in the
Senate on both sides of the political aisle have expressed the gravest
of reservations about this House bill. But if the special interests
should get it through the Senate as well in the way that the House
passed it, I will certainly have no choice but to veto it. And I will do
it happily and gladly for the quality of water in this country.
A big part of the American dream goes way beyond economics and has
to do with the preservation of our liberties and the stewardship of our
land. This is a part of the American dream. The stories these children
told me this morning about the dreams they have for clean water and a
clean environment and growing up in an America where they'll be able to
take their children to places like Pierce Mill, that's a big part of the
American dream. A lot of people sacrificed to give us this dream. And we
shouldn't squander it in a momentary lunge away from common sense and
the common direction the American people have been taking for a
generation now.
Teddy Roosevelt said the Nation behaves well if it treats the
natural resources as assets which it must turn over to the next
generation, increased and not impaired in value.
Now, let's get away even from the beauties of the stream. Look at
this--every time I give a talk they give me one of these--[laughter]--
because they're afraid I'll get hoarse or need it otherwise. We take
this for granted. It's clean. It's safe. It's available to everyone. It
won't make us sick. We have to have it to survive. Our lives depend on
it. Why in the world would we do anything, anything at all, which would
take away the simple security of the safety of this water from our
children, ourselves, and our future.
Ladies and gentlemen, this does not have to be a political issue.
For 25 years, it has not been a partisan issue. We are seeing in this
area a dramatic, unusual, unwarranted departure from the commonsense
course that has kept America moving toward a cleaner environment and a
better tomorrow. Let's get back on course. That's the real progressive
future.
Thank you, and God bless you all.
Note: The President spoke at 10:37 a.m. at Pierce Mill in Rock Creek
Park. In his remarks, he referred to Robert Stanton, Regional Director,
National Capital Region, National Park Service; and Michael Brown,
Assistant Superintendent, Rock Creek Park.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 923-929]
Monday, June 5, 1995
Volume 31--Number 22
Pages 915-966
Week Ending Friday, June 2, 1995
Remarks at the United States Air Force Academy Commencement Ceremony in
Colorado Springs, Colorado
May 31, 1995
The President. Thank you very much, General Stein.
Audience member. Soo-o-ey! [Laughter]
The President. That's my home State cheer, for those of you unused
to foreign languages being spoken here in Falcon Stadium. [Laughter]
Thank you very much.
General Stein, thank you. Secretary Widnall, General Fogleman,
Governor Romer, Congressman Ramstad; to the distinguished faculty and
staff; to the proud parents, family, and friends; to the members of the
Cadet Wing: We gather here to celebrate this very important moment in
your life and in the life of our Nation. Gentlemen and gentleladies of
this class, the Pride of '95, this is your day. And you are only one
speech--one pretty short speech--[laughter]--away from being second
lieutenants.
I am honored to share this day with some exceptionally accomplished
alumni of the Air Force Academy: General Fogleman, the first of your
graduates to be the Air Force Chief of Staff; General Hopper, the first
African-American graduate of the Academy to serve as the Commandant of
Cadets; and a member of my staff, Robert Bell, who is the first graduate
of the Air Force Academy to be the Senior Director for Defense Policy
and Arms Control at the National Security Council. As I look out at all
of you, I imagine it won't be too long before there's a graduate of the
Air Force Academy in the Oval Office. If it's all the same to you, I'd
like to delay it for just a few years. [Laughter]
[[Page 924]]
I also want to congratulate the Air Force Academy on extending its
lock on the Commander in Chief's trophy here that--I'm in your stadium,
I think I ought to mention that your winning squad came to see me in the
White House not very long ago, and I said that before I became President
I didn't understand that when I heard that the Commander in Chief's
trophy was a traveling trophy that meant it was supposed to go back and
forth between Washington and Colorado Springs every year.
I want to do my part in another longstanding tradition. By the power
vested in me as Commander in Chief, I hereby grant amnesty to cadets who
are marching tours or serving restrictions or confinements for minor
misconduct. Now, General Stein, I have to leave it to you to define
which offenses are minor, but on this day, even in this conservative
age, I trust you will be fairly liberal in your interpretation of the
term. [Laughter]
Members of the Class of 1995, you are about to become officers in
the United States Air Force. You should be very proud of what you have
already accomplished. But you should be sobered by the important
responsibilities you are about to assume. From this day forward, every
day you must defend our Nation, protect the lives of the men and women
under your command, and represent the best of America.
I want to say here as an aside, I have seen something of the debate
in the last few days on the question of whether in this time of
necessity to cut budgets, we ought to close one of the service
academies. And I just want to say I think that's one of the worst ideas
I ever heard of.
It was General Eisenhower who as President, along with the Congress,
so long ago now recognized that national defense required a national
commitment to education. But our commitment through the service
academies to the education and preparation of the finest military
officers in the world must never wane. And I hope your commitment to the
cause of education as an important element in what makes our country
great and strong and safe will never wane.
As President, my first responsibility is to protect and enhance the
safety of the American people and to strengthen our country. It is a
responsibility that you now have chosen to share. So today, I thought
what we ought to do is talk about the steps that we will have to take
together to make the world safer for America in the 21st century.
Our security objectives over the last 50 years have been dictated by
straightforward events often beyond our control. But at least they were
straightforward and clear. In World War II, the objective was simple:
Win the war. In the cold war, the objective was clear: Contain communism
and prevent nuclear war. In the post-cold-war world, the objectives are
often more complex, and it is clear that American security in the 21st
century will be determined by forces that are operating both beyond and
within our own borders.
While the world you will face is far from free of danger, you must
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