To the Congress of the United States:
From the beginning of civilization,
every nation's basic wealth and progress has stemmed in large measure from
its natural resources. This nation has been, and is now, especially fortunate
in the blessings we have inherited. Our entire society rests upon - and
is dependent upon - our water, our land, our forests, and our minerals.
How we use these resources influences our health, security, economy, and
well-being.
But if we fail to chart a proper
course of conservation and development - if we fail to use these blessings
prudently - we will be in trouble within a short time. In the resource
field, predictions of future use have been consistently understated. But
even under conservative projections, we face a future of critical shortages
and handicaps. By the year 2000, a United States population of 300 million
- nearly doubled in 40 years - will need far greater supplies of farm products,
timber, water, minerals, fuels, energy, and opportunities for outdoor recreation.
Present projections tell us that our water use will double in the next
20 years; that we are harvesting our supply of high-grade timber more rapidly
than the development of new growth; that too much of our fertile topsoil
is being washed away; that our minerals are being exhausted at increasing
rates; and that the Nation's remaining undeveloped areas of great natural
beauty are being rapidly pre-empted for other uses.
Wise investment in a resource
program today will return vast dividends tomorrow, and failures to act
now may be opportunities lost forever. Our country has been generous with
us in this regard - and we cannot now ignore her needs for future development.
This is not a matter of concern
for only one section of the country. All those who fish and hunt, who build
industrial centers, who need electricity to light their homes and lighten
their burdens, who require water for home, industrial, and recreational
purposes - in short, every citizen in every State of the Union - all have
a stake in a sound resources program under the progressive principles of
national leadership first forged by Pinchot and Theodore Roosevelt, and
backed by the essential cooperation of State and local governments.
This statement is designed to
bring together in one message the widely scattered resource policies of
the Federal Government. In the past, these policies have overlapped and
often conflicted. Funds were wasted on competing efforts. Widely differing
standards were applied to measure the Federal contribution to similar projects.
Funds and attention devoted to annual appropriations or immediate pressures
diverted energies away from long-range planning for national economic growth.
Fees and user charges wholly inconsistent with each other, with value received,
and with public policy have been imposed at some Federal developments.
To coordinate all of these matters
among the various agencies, I will shortly issue one or more Executive
Orders or directives:
(1) Redefining these responsibilities
within the Executive Office and authorizing a strengthened Council of Economic
Advisers to report to the President, the Congress and the public on the
status of resource programs in relation to national needs;
(2) Establishing, under the
Council of Economic Advisers, a Presidential Advisory Committee on Natural
Resources, representing the Federal agencies concerned in this area and
seeking the advice of experts outside of government; and
(3) Instructing the Budget Director,
in consultation with the Departments and agencies concerned, to formulate
within the next 90 days general principles for the application of fees,
permits and other user charges at all types of Federal natural resource
projects or areas; and to reevaluate current standards for appraising the
feasibility of water resource projects.
In addition, to provide a coordinated
framework for our research programs in this area, and to chart the course
for the wisest and most efficient use of the research talent and facilities
we possess, I shall ask the National Academy of Sciences to undertake a
thorough and broadly based study and evaluation of the present state of
research underlying the conservation, development, and use of natural resources,
how they are formed, replenished and may be substituted for, and giving
particular attention to needs for basic research and to projects that will
provide a better basis for natural resources planning and policy formulation.
Pending the recommendations of the Academy, I have directed my Science
Advisor and the Federal Council for Science and Technology to review ongoing
Federal research activities in the field of natural resources and to determine
ways to strengthen the total government research effort relating to natural
resources.
I. WATER RESOURCES
Our Nation has been blessed with
a bountiful supply of water; but it is not a blessing we can regard with
complacency. We now use over 300 billion gallons of water a day, much of
it wastefully. By 1980 we will need 600 billion gallons a day.
Our supply of water is not always
consistent with our needs of time and place. Floods one day in one section
may be countered in other days or in other sections by the severe water
shortages which are now afflicting many Eastern urban areas and particularly
critical in the West. Our available water supply must be used to give maximum
benefits for all purposes - hydroelectric power, irrigation and reclamation,
navigation, recreation, health, home and industry. If all areas of the
country are to enjoy a balanced growth, our Federal Reclamation and other
water resource programs will have to give increased attention to municipal
and industrial water and power supplies as well as irrigation and land
redemption; and I am so instructing the Secretary of the Interior, in cooperation
with the Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary of the Army.
1. Planning and Development.
A. We reject a "no new starts"
policy. Such a policy denied the resource requirements and potential on
which our economic growth hinges and took a heavy toll in added costs and
even human life and homes by postponing essential flood control projects.
I have requested the Director of the Bureau of the Budget, working with
appropriate department and agency heads, to schedule a progressive, orderly
program of starting new projects to meet accumulated demands, taking into
account the availability of funds, and implementing with the agencies concerned,
wherever possible, the very excellent and timely report of the bi-partisan
Senate Select Committee on National Water Resources issued three weeks
ago.
B. This Administration accepts
the goal urged by the Senate Select Committee to develop comprehensive
river basin plans by 1970, in cooperation with the individual States. I
urge the Congress to authorize the establishment of planning commissions
for all major river basins where adequate coordinated plans are not already
in existence. These commissions, on which will be represented the interested
agencies at all levels of government, will be charged with the responsibility
of preparing comprehensive basic development plans over the next several
years.
C. A major reason for such planning
is the ability to identify both the need and the location of future reservoir
sites far in advance of construction. This advantage will be dissipated
in great measure if the selected sites are not preserved - for uninhibited
commercial and residential development in such areas increase ultimate
acquisition costs and may result in pressures against the project required.
I urge the Congress to enact legislation permitting the reservation of
known future reservoir sites by the operating agency whenever such protection
is necessary.
D. The full development of the
power and other water resource potentials of the Columbia Basin is a vision
that must be fulfilled. The Columbia River Joint Development Treaty with
Canada is before the Senate for approval. I urge the Senate to approve
this Treaty at the earliest possible time, to permit an immediate start
on the immense efforts that can be jointly undertaken in power production
and river control in that Basin.
E. This Administration is committed
to strengthening and speeding up our flood control program as rapidly as
our fiscal and technical capabilities permit. Unfortunately, efforts to
reduce flood losses by constructing remedial works are being partially
offset by rapid industrial and residential development of flood plain lands.
I am asking all Federal agencies
concerned to provide data on flood hazards in specified areas to all 50
States, and to assist in their efforts for effective regulation or zoning
of the flood plains. In addition, I have instructed the Federal agencies
concerned with urban development - including the Housing and Home Finance
Agency and the Bureau of Public Roads - to coordinate their activities
with the flood control agencies to insure that their programs utilize flood
information to advantage.
F. Complementing larger downstream
reservoirs in the control of flood waters are the small watershed projects
which are an integral part of our soil and water conservation program,
along with terracing, strip cropping, grass waterways and other erosion
prevention measures. Nearly 300 million of our nation's 460 million acres
of farm crop lands still need these basic practices for preserving our
water and soil resources. I have asked the Secretary of Agriculture, in
cooperation with other interested Federal agencies, to review the basic
objectives of our soil conservation and watershed management programs,
and to make certain that any Federal assistance is directed toward realizing
maximum benefits for the Nation as a whole. In addition, there should be
improved coordination of the various Federal and local activities in this
field.
2. Water and Air Pollution Control.
Pollution of our country's rivers
and streams has - as a result of our rapid population and industrial growth
and change - reached alarming proportions. To meet all needs - domestic,
agricultural, industrial, recreational - we shall have to use and reuse
the same water, maintaining quality as well as quantity. In many areas
of the country we need new sources of supply - but in all areas we must
protect the supplies we have.
Current corrective efforts are
not adequate.
This year a national total of
$350 million will be spent from all sources on municipal waste treatment
works. But $600 million of construction is required annually to keep pace
with the growing rate of pollution. Industry is lagging far behind in its
treatment of wastes.
For a more effective water pollution
control program, I propose the following-
First, I urge enactment
of legislation along the general lines of H.R. 4036 and S. 120 extending
and increasing Federal financial assistance for the operation of State
and interstate water pollution control agencies.
Secondly, I urge that
this legislation increase the amount of Federal assistance to municipalities
for construction of waste treatment facilities in order to stimulate water
pollution construction in those cities with inadequate facilities.
Third, I urge that this
legislation strengthen enforcement procedures to abate serious pollution
situations of national significance.
Fourth, I propose an
intensive and broadened research effort to determine the specific sources
of water pollution and their adverse effects upon all water uses; the effects
upon the health of people exposed to water pollution; and more effective
means of preventing, controlling, or removing the contaminants - including
radioactive matter - that now pollute our rivers and streams so that the
water may be safely used.
Fifth, I propose the
establishment of a special unit within the Public Health Service under
the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, where control measures
to prevent and limit pollution of our water will be developed.
Sixth, this same unit
should provide new leadership, research and financial and technical assistance
for the control of air pollution, a serious hazard to the health of our
people that causes an estimated $7.5 billion annually in damage to vegetation,
livestock, metals and other materials. We need an effective Federal air
pollution control program now. For although the total supply of air is
vast, the atmosphere over our growing metropolitan areas - where more than
half the people live - has only limited capacity to dilute and disperse
the contaminants now being increasingly discharged from homes, factories,
vehicles, and many other sources.
3. Saline and Brackish Water Conversion.
No water resources program is
of greater long-range importance - for relief not only of our shortages,
but for arid nations the world over - than our efforts to find an effective
and economical way to convert water from the world's greatest, cheapest
natural resources - our oceans - into water fit for consumption in the
home and by industry. Such a break-through would end bitter struggles between
neighbors, states, and nations - and bring new hope for millions who live
out their lives in dire shortage of usable water and all its physical and
economical blessings, though living on the edge of a great body of water
throughout that parched life-time.
This Administration is currently
engaged in redoubled efforts to select the most promising approaches to
economic desalinization of ocean and brackish waters, and then focus our
energies more intensively on those approaches. At my request, a panel of
the President's Science Advisory Committee has been working with the Secretary
of the Interior to assure the most vigorous and effective research and
development program possible in this field.
I now pledge that, when this
know-how is achieved, it will immediately be made available to every nation
in the world who wishes it, along with appropriate technical and other
assistance for its use. Indeed the United States welcomes now the cooperation
of all other nations who wish to join in this effort at present.
I urge the Congress to extend
the current saline water conversion research program, and to increase the
funds for its continuation to a level commensurate with the effort our
current studies will show to be needed - now estimated to be at least twice
the level previously requested.
II. ELECTRIC POWER
To keep pace with the growth
of our economy and national defense requirements, expansion of this Nation's
power facilities will require intensive effort by all segments of our power
industry. Through 1980, according to present estimates of the Federal Power
Commission, total installed capacity should triple if we are to meet our
nation's need for essential economic growth. Sustained heavy expansion
by all power suppliers - public, cooperative and private - is clearly needed.
The role of the Federal Government
in supplying an important segment of this power is now long established
and must continue. We will meet our responsibilities in this field.
- Hydroelectric sites remaining
in this country will be utilized and hydroelectric power will be incorporated
in all multiple-purpose river projects where optimum economic use of the
water justifies such action.
- The Tennessee Valley Authority
will continue to use the financing authority granted it by the last Congress
to meet the power needs of the area it serves.
- Our efforts to achieve economically
competitive nuclear power before the end of this decade in areas where
fossil fuel costs are high will be encouraged through basic research, engineering
developments, and construction of various prototype and full scale reactors
by the Atomic Energy Commission in cooperation with industry.
- In marketing Federal power,
this Administration will be guided by the following basic principles which
recognize the prior rights of the general public, consumer and taxpayer
who have financed the development of these great national assets originally
vested in them:
(1) Preference in power sales
shall be given public agencies and cooperatives.
(2) Domestic and rural consumers
shall have priority over other consumers in the disposal of power.
(3) Power shall be sold at the
lowest possible rates consistent with sound business principles.
(4) Power disposal shall be
such as to encourage widespread use and to prevent monopolization.
Finally, I have directed the
Secretary of the Interior to develop plans for the early interconnection
of areas served by that Department's marketing agencies with adequate common
carrier transmission lines; to plan for further national cooperative pooling
of electric power, both public and private; and to enlarge such pooling
as now exists.
III. FORESTS
Our forest lands present the
sharpest challenge to our foresight. Trees planted today will not reach
the minimum sizes needed for lumber until the year 2000. Most projections
of future timber requirements predict a doubling of current consumption
within forty years. At present cutting rates, we are using up our old growth
timber in Western stands. Because of the time requirements involved, we
must move now to meet anticipated future needs, and improve the productivity
of our nearly 500 million acres of commercial forest land.
Unfortunately, the condition
of our forest land area is substantially below par: 45 million acres are
in need of reforestation; more than 150 million acres require thinnings,
release cuttings and other timber stand improvement measures if growth
rates are to be increased and quality timber produced; forest protection
must be extended to areas now poorly protected. Losses in growth from insects
and disease need to be reduced substantially by wider application of known
detection and control measures.
(A) I urge the Congress to accelerate
forest development on Federal public lands both as a long-term investment
measure and as an immediate method of relieving unemployment in distressed
areas.
(B) To make additional supplies
of merchantable timber available to small businesses, I have directed the
Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior to accelerate the program of
building approved access roads to public forests.
(C) A more difficult and unresolved
forest situation lies in that half of our forest land held in small private
ownerships. These lands, currently far below their productive potential,
must be managed to produce a larger share of our future timber needs. Current
forest owner assistance programs have proven inadequate. I am therefore
directing the Secretary of Agriculture, in cooperation with appropriate
Federal and state agencies, to develop a program to help small independent
timber owners and processors attain better forest management standards
and more efficient production and utilization of forest crops.
IV. PUBLIC LANDS
The Federal Government owns nearly
770 million acres of public land, much of it devoted to a variety of essential
uses. But equally important are the vacant, unappropriated and unreserved
public domain lands, amounting to some 477 million acres - a vital national
reserve that should be devoted to productive use now and maintained for
future generations.
Much of this public domain suffers
from uncontrolled use and a lack of proper management. More than 100 million
acres of our Federal Grazing Districts are producing livestock forage well
below their potential. We can no longer afford to sit by while our public
domain assets so deteriorate.
I am, therefore, directing the
Secretary of the Interior to-
(1) accelerate an inventory
and evaluation of the nation's public domain holdings to serve as a foundation
for improved resource management;
(2) develop a program of balanced
usage designed to reconcile the conflicting usesgrazing, forestry, recreation,
wildlife, urban development and minerals; and
(3) accelerate the installation
of soil conserving and water saving works and practices to reduce erosion
and improve forage capacity; and to proceed with the revegetation of range
lands on which the forage capacity has been badly depleted or destroyed.
V. OCEAN RESOURCES
The sea around us represents
one of our most important but least understood and almost wholly undeveloped
areas for extending our resource base. Continental shelves bordering the
United States contain roughly 20 percent of our remaining reserves of crude
oil and natural gas. The ocean floor contains large and valuable deposits
of cobalt, copper, nickel, and manganese. Ocean waters themselves contain
a wide variety of dissolved salts and minerals.
Salt (and fresh water) fisheries
are among our most important but far from fully developed reservoirs of
protein foods. At present levels of use, this country alone will need an
additional 3 billion pounds of fish and shellfish annually by 1980, and
many other countries with large-scale protein deficiency can be greatly
helped by more extensive use of marine foodstuffs. But all this will require
increased efforts, under Federal leadership, for rehabilitation of depleted
stocks of salmon and sardines in the Pacific, groundfish and oysters in
the Atlantic, lake trout and other desirable species in the Great Lakes,
and many others through biological research, development of methods for
passing fish over dams, and control of pollution:
This Administration intends
to give concerted attention to our whole national effort in the basic and
applied research of oceanography. Construction of ship and shore facilities
for ocean research and survey, the development of new instruments for charting
the seas and gathering data, and the training of new scientific manpower
will require the coordinated efforts of many Federal agencies. It is my
intention to send to the Congress for its information and use in considering
the 1962 budget, a national program for oceanography, setting forth the
responsibilities and requirements of all participating government agencies.
VI. RECREATION
America's health, morale and
culture have long benefited from our National Parks and Forests, and our
fish and wildlife opportunities. Yet these facilities and resources are
not now adequate to meet the needs of a fast-growing, more mobile population
- and the millions of visitor days which are now spent in Federally-owned
parks, forests, wildlife refuges and water reservoirs will triple well
before the end of this century.
To meet the Federal Government's
appropriate share of the responsibility for fulfilling these needs, the
following steps are essential:
(A) To protect our remaining
wilderness areas, I urge the Congress to enact a wilderness protection
bill along the general lines of S. 174.
(B) To improve both the quality
and quantity of public recreational opportunities, I urge the Congress
to enact legislation leading to the establishment of seashore and shoreline
areas such as Cape Cod, Padre Island and Point Reyes for the use and enjoyment
of the public. Unnecessary delay in acquiring these shores so vital to
an adequate public recreation system results in tremendously increased
costs.
(C) For similar reasons, I am
instructing the Secretary of the Interior, in cooperation with the Secretary
of Agriculture and other appropriate Federal, state and local officials
and private leaders to-
- formulate a comprehensive
Federal recreational lands program;
- conduct a survey to determine
where additional national parks, forests and seashore areas should be proposed;
- take steps to insure that
land acquired for the construcion of Federally-financed reservoirs is sufficient
to permit future development for recreational purposes; and
- establish a long-range program
for planning and providing adequate open spaces for recreational facilities
in urban areas.
I am also hopeful that consistent
and coordinated Federal leadership can expand our fish and wildlife opportunities
without the present conflicts of agencies and interests: One department
paying to have wetlands drained for agricultural purposes while another
is purchasing such lands for wildlife or water fowl refuges - one agency
encouraging chemical pesticides that may harm the song birds and game birds
whose preservation is encouraged by another agency - conflicts between
private land owners and sportsmen - uncertain responsibility for the watershed
and anti-pollution programs that are vital to our fish and wildlife opportunities.
I am directing the Secretary
of the Interior to take the lead, with other Federal and State officials,
to end these conflicts and develop a long-range wildlife conservation program-and
to accelerate the acquisition of upper midwest wetlands through the sale
of Federal duck stamps.
CONCLUSION
Problems of immediacy always have the advantage of attracting notice-those that lie in the future fare poorly in the competition for attention and money. It is not a task which should or can be done by the Federal Government alone. Only through the fullest participation and cooperation of State and local governments and private industry can it be done wisely and effectively. We cannot, however, delude ourselves - we must understand our resources problems, and we must face up to them now. The task is large but it will be done.
JOHN F. KENNEDY