Press Releases
Washington–Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) joined Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Ben Ray Lujan (D-N.M.) and Representatives Raúl M. Grijalva (D-Ariz.) and Joe Neguse (D-Colo.) to send a bicameral letter, cosigned by 99 House and 17 Senate Democratic colleagues, to President Biden urging him to adopt a transparent, stakeholder-driven process in deciding how best to preserve American lands and waters as part of the administration’s “30 by 30” initiative. The lawmakers express that choosing which areas to preserve should be done in consultation with locally affected communities and should take the economic benefits of conservation into account.
The full letter is available here.
The initiative is spurred by the growing scientific consensus that it will be necessary to preserve 30 percent of America’s lands and 30 percent of its waters within the next decade, both to prepare for the already unavoidable effects of climate change and to prevent further catastrophic loss of habitat for wildlife and endangered species.
“By marshaling the expertise of U.S. agencies and relying on local and indigenous knowledge and wisdom we can meet the scale of the challenges facing our natural systems. Tribal councils, farmers, ranchers, fishermen, conservationists, recreationists, hunters, and local governments will all play critical roles,” the lawmakers wrote. “For many of these stakeholders, conserving our shared environment will have immediate and lasting impacts on their lives and livelihoods, which is why we urge you to pursue this ambitious goal through a transparent, stakeholder driven process.”
The lawmakers point out that the crises we already face demand more than simply scaling up current efforts. Our environmental policies have to take advantage of large-scale spatial planning to identify, conserve and protect climate-resilient habitats and to mitigate deforestation, land use conversion, overfishing and climate change impacts.
The 30 by 30 initiative can be a major economic driver if implemented well, the lawmakers point out. Every $1 million invested in federal conservation programs helps generate more than 30 jobs and generates $4 million in economic value from natural resource goods and services alone. The process of conserving lands and waters will create well-paying jobs that bolster communities across the country, promote a just transition away from fossil fuels and support rural economies for landowners who manage some of the most biodiverse lands and waters in the United States.
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