President Obama:21st Century living & efforts to conserve outdoor spaces since 2010



  • The White House.gov Blog …
  • Creating a 21st Century Strategy for America’s Outdoors

    Posted by Jesse Lee on April 16, 2010 at 12:50 PM EDT

    President Obama signed a Presidential Memorandum launching the America’s Great Outdoors Initiative today, which focuses on promoting community-level efforts to conserve outdoor spaces. As part of the initiative, members of the administration will host regional sessions with groups and individuals across the country to discuss ideas on how to protect America’s natural landscape and form a 21st century strategy conservation agenda.

    The President said that the initiative is not a “big federal agenda being driven out of Washington,” but an effort to collect the best ideas on conservation that local communities support and reconnect Americans to the outdoors. He explained that the initiative will build on successful conservation efforts being lead by local and state governments, tribes, and private groups, while helping farmers, ranchers, and property owners to protect their lands. The outdoors initiative will also help families spend more time outdoors by building on the First Lady’s Let’s Move initiative.

    America’s Great Outdoors Initiative will be lead by the Secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the Chair of the Council of Environmental Quality. They will work in coordination with the Departments of Defense, Commerce, Housing and Urban Development, Health and Human Services, Labor, Transportation, Education, and the Office of Management and Budget.

    President Obama Signs Memorandum on America's Great Outdoors InitiativePresident Barack Obama signs a presidential memorandum at the America’s Great Outdoors Conference at the Department of the Interior in Washington, D.C. Watching, from left, are Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality Nancy Sutley, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa P. Jackson, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, Assistant Secretary of the Army Jo-Ellen Darcy, Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere Jane Lubchenco, and Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Dr. Dorothy Robyn. April 16, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)

    The initiative follows a public lands bill that the President signed into law last year that designated 2 acres of wilderness, over 1,000 miles of wild and scenic rivers, and three national parks, marking the most significant lands bill in decades.

    The President reflected on Theodore Roosevelt’s commitment to the outdoors and “legacy of conservation that still enhances our lives.”

    [W]e are working faithfully to carry on the legacy of Teddy Roosevelt in the 21st century.  But we also know that we must adapt our strategies to meet the new challenges of our time.  Over the last century, our population grew from about 90 million to 300 million people, and as it did, we lost more and more of our natural landscape to development.  Meanwhile, a host of other factors –- from a changing climate to new sources of pollution -– have put a growing strain on our wildlife and our waters and our lands.

    So rising to meet these challenges is a task and an obligation, but it’s one that government cannot and should not meet alone.  There are roughly 1,600 privately run land trusts in this country that have protected over 10 million acres through voluntary efforts.  And by working with farmers and ranchers and landowners, the Department of Agriculture’s Conservation Reserve Program has protected over 30 million acres, and its Natural Resource Conservation Service -– a service that is 75 years old this year –- has protected almost 3 million more.  So together, we are conserving our working lands in a way that preserves the environment and protects local communities.

    President Obama followed in Roosevelt’s footsteps on a trip to Yellowstone National Park last summer, a longtime tradition of American Presidents. Watch footage of the First Family’s visit to Yellowstone.

    Download Video: mp4 (96MB)

    Learn more about Energy & Environment

  • The President on Voting Rights for DC

    Posted by Jesse Lee on April 16, 2010 at 12:07 PM EDT

    The President gives his support to those rallying to give voting representation to residents of the Nation’s Capital:

    On this occasion, we remember the day in 1862 when President Lincoln freed the enslaved people of Washington, DC – nine months before he issued the Emancipation Proclamation.   I am proud that an original copy of that document now hangs in the Oval Office, and we remain forever grateful as a nation for the struggles and sacrifices of those Americans who made that emancipation possible.

    Americans from all walks of life are gathering in Washington today to remind members of Congress that although DC residents pay federal taxes and serve honorably in our armed services, they do not have a vote in Congress or full autonomy over local issues.  And so I urge Congress to finally pass legislation that provides DC residents with voting representation and to take steps to improve the Home Rule Charter.

    Learn more about Civil Rights

World Refugee Day 2016 … un.org


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In a world where violence forces hundreds of families to flee each day, the UN Refugee Agency believes now is the time to show world leaders that the global public stands with refugees, and it will launch its #WithRefugees petition on June 20th to send a message to governments that they must work together and do their fair share for refugees.

The #WithRefugees petition will be delivered to UN headquarters in New York ahead of the UN High Level Meeting on Refugees and Migrants, scheduled for the 19th September. The petition asks governments to:

  • Ensure every refugee child gets an education.
  • Ensure every refugee family has somewhere safe to live.
  • Ensure every refugee can work or learn new skills to make a positive contribution
    to their community.

World Refugee Day has been marked on 20 June, ever since the UN General Assembly, on 4 December 2000, adopted resolution 55/76 where it noted that 2001 marked the 50th anniversary of the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, and that the Organization of African Unity (OAU) had agreed to have International Refugee Day coincide with Africa Refugee Day on 20 June.

We Stand #WithRefugees 2016 – Please Stand With Us

Events

Monday, June 20 at UN Headquarters
1-2 p.m.

Shared_Studios and the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) are hosting the Zaatari Portal dialoguePDF document at the United Nations. Portalsvideo is a network of gold shipping containers equipped with audio-visual technology that connect individuals around the world. When you enter one, you come face-to-face, live, with someone in another Portal abroad and can converse as if in the same room.

6-8 p.m.

Opening reception of the Refugees ExhibitPDF document hosted by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in partnership with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Action Campaign and the United Nations Department of Public Information

State-Sponsored Discrimination


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Pursuing LGBT Equality In The Wake Of Orlando

In the early hours of Sunday morning, a shooter entered Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando and killed 49 people. But in the immediate aftermath of the shooting, as politicians offered thoughts and prayers for the victims, most neglected to mention the fact that vast majority of the victims were LGBT people of color. Since then, some lawmakers have even gone as far as to deny the fact that the LGBT community was targeted at all.

By refusing to acknowledge that Sunday’s shooting was an act of hate meant to terrorize the LGBT community, these lawmakers are refusing to acknowledge that Orlando was far from an isolated act of violence or discrimination against LGBT Americans. LGBT Americans experience violence at a disturbing rate. And the fact that the majority of lives taken in yesterday’s attack were LGBT people of color gives devastating weight to the fact that LGBT people of color are most likely among LGBT people generally to experience violence.

Not only are LGBT Americans more likely to experience violence, a majority of states still lack explicit legal protections against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. That means that an LGBT survivor of Orlando could still be at risk of being fired from her job, refused service from a business, denied housing, or more just because of who she is.

And it’s not just that LGBT Americans don’t have the same basic protections as every other American. Conservative-led states have been able to pass harmful laws, often in the name of religious freedom, that amount to state-sponsored discrimination against the LGBT community. Below are just a few examples of bias against LGBT Americans being reflected in state laws:

  • North Carolina: North Carolina’s HB2, which erased all existing discrimination protections for the LGBT community within the state and prevents transgender people from using public bathrooms that correspond with their gender identity. The law was passed in an emergency session after Charlotte, NC adopted an LGBT-inclusive non-discrimination ordinance. Two other states—Tennessee and Arkansas—have passed similar laws preempting local non-discrimination ordinances.
  • Mississippi: This Spring, Mississippi passed a bill that allows for discrimination against the LGBT community. The bill exclusively protects people with anti-LGBT religious beliefs and it lists in detail the kind of discriminatory situations it would enable. In a piece of good news: earlier this week Jackson, Mississippi unanimously passednondiscrimination protections in opposition to the state law.
  • Indiana: Last year, Indiana Governor Mike Pence, under the guise of protecting religious liberty, passed a so-called “Religious Freedom Restoration Act” (RFRA) far broader than the one currently in federal law. In effect, Indiana’s RFRA gives the government, businesses, and individuals a license to discriminate against LGBT Hoosiers along with other residents.

Those are just three of the most prominent recent instances of state-sponsored discrimination against the LGBT community that highlight the need for both federal and state comprehensive nondiscrimination protections. The Equality Act, which was introduced in Congress last summer would do just that. It’s on Congress to act to prevent discrimination against LGBT people and address the epidemic of gun violence in our country.

BOTTOM LINE: Orlando served as a devastating reminder of the fear and danger that follows far too many LGBT Americans. While it may be impossible to prevent every act of hate, we can strive to eliminate hate and bias from our legal system. No American should have to live in fear of being fired from their jobs, refused service at a restaurant, or kicked out of their homes just because of who they are. It’s time for comprehensive nondiscrimination laws.

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