If you would like to see the text of President Clinton's Executive order, please let me know. Jane Clark =============================================== From: [log in to unmask] Date: Thu, 04 Feb 99 14:49:47 -0500 To: <[log in to unmask]> Subject: SSI Alert: Invasive Species Exec. Order pt.I Content-Description: "cc:Mail Note Part" This is Part 1 of a 2 Part Alert. ******************** EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ******************** ISSUE: President Clinton yesterday (2/3) signed an executive order to coordinate federal efforts to address the growing environmental and economic threat of invasive species. The order instructs federal agencies to avoid authorizing or funding activities that are likely to cause or promote the spread of invasive species. It also creates an Invasive Species Council that is charged to develop a comprehensive plan to minimize the economic, ecological, and human health impacts of invasive species and to determine further steps to prevent the introduction and spread of additional invasive species. ACTION: Monitor your local paper and write a letter-to-the editor. MAIN MESSAGE: The President's Executive Order is an important step to combat one of the country's most serious, yet least recognized, environmental threats -- invasive species. [Add a second line in your message about a state or regional invasives problem, if possible.] DEADLINE: Send your letter by Friday, February 5. ****************************************** *** THE ISSUE *** President Clinton yesterday (2/3) signed an executive order to coordinate a federal strategy to address the growing environmental and economic threat of invasive species. At a press conference held at the National Geographic Society, Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman, Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt, and National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Administrator James Baker announced the Executive Order -- suggesting an expanded nation-wide effort to combat invasive species. The Executive Order (appended below): ** directs federal agencies to use their authorities to prevent the introduction of invasive species and to restore native species. ** creates an Invasive Species Council that is charged to develop a comprehensive plan within 18 months to minimize the economic, ecological, and human health impacts of invasive species and to determine further steps to prevent the introduction and spread of additional invasive species. While much remains to be done to effectively combat invasives, the Executive Order is, nonetheless, an important step. First, the Order, President Clinton's statement, and the press conference have focused much-needed public attention on the issue. The Order also outlines some useful steps to address the problem -- that is, requiring the various federal agencies to take a closer look at their activities relative to invasives, creating a dialog between the agencies, providing greater impetus for the agencies to coordinate their work on the problem, and strengthening the ability of federal agencies to work cooperatively with the states and other stakeholders. President Clinton is also trying to put some financial clout behind his Order. In the fiscal year 2000 budget, released Monday (2/1), he proposed an increase of more than $28.8 million in funding to combat invasive species. This includes new funding for combating exotic pests and diseases as well as accelerating research on habitat restoration and biologically based integrated pest management tactics. Recall that SSI helped circulate a sign-on letter from the scientific and resource management community to Vice President Al Gore in March 1997. That effort was led by, among others, Jim Carlton, Don Schmitz, Dan Simberloff, E.O. Wilson, and Phyllis Windle. Administration sources have now confirmed that the scientists' letter -- which at least than 10 SSI members signed and many more circulated --played a significant role in bringing the Executive Order to fruition, helping convince senior Administration officials that invasive species are a potent threat to the US environment and economy. (For some basic information on the seriousness of this issue, see Supplemental Information, below.) SSI will be focusing greater attention on the invasives issue over the coming months -- identifying those places where scientists input can be most helpful. *** THE ACTION *** -- Monitor your local paper and write a letter-to-the editor (LTE). The invasive species issue has been receiving increasing press attention in the last several months, including coverage of the recent MIT conference on marine invasives, several stories on the regulatory effort to control import of the Asian long-horned beetle, and comprehensive stories in news magazines like US News & World Report and Newsweek. We know the Executive Order story was already being carried by some wire services on Wednesday afternoon, suggesting the potential for widespread coverage in Thursday's papers. So, monitor your local paper for the story and respond accordingly. If your paper carries the story, reinforce the coverage with a LTE. You should first emphasize the seriousness and scope of the problem. Then, one sure way to give the main message "legs" is to include a state or regional angle in your letter. So, if at all possible, use your LTE to focus attention on an invasives problem in your own community or state. If your paper does not even cover the story, then reframe your LTE to emphasize how important this issue is to your community and that you expect better coverage in the future. Remember to keep your LTE short (no more than 300 words) and focused on only one or two main points. If you do not know the address or who to contact at your local paper, check on the letters page; the information you need is usually found right there. Otherwise, call the paper and ask for the letters editor, who can give you the information you need. Most papers now accept email letters and/or faxes. Be sure to include your name, address, and telephone number with your letter (even in email); most papers make a confirming phone call before printing a LTE. -- MAIN MESSAGE: THE PRESIDENT'S EXECUTIVE ORDER IS AN IMPORTANT STEP TO COMBAT ONE OF THE COUNTRY'S MOST SERIOUS, YET LEAST RECOGNIZED, ENVIRONMENTAL THREATS -- INVASIVE SPECIES. [Add a second line in your message about a state or regional invasives problem, if possible.] -- TIMING: Send your letter by Friday, February 5. To help increase the chances that your LTE will be published, the paper should receive it either the day of or the day after the story first runs. *** SUPPORTING MESSAGES *** -- Be sure to reference your professional expertise and/or interest in this issue in your letter. As mentioned above, work in a state or regional perspective on the story if at all possible -- an invasives problem facing your community, for example, or perhaps some invasives-related research underway at your university -- Many ecologists believe the spread of invasive (exotic) species is one of the most serious, yet least appreciated, threats to biodiversity. Exotic species are the second most widespread cause of species endangerment; only habitat destruction and degradation pose a more serious threat. -- The total economic impact of invasive plants on the US economy is estimated by some experts to be about $123 billion annually, including damage to crops and rangeland. -- Greater cooperation among the federal agencies and additional financial resources to combat current threats and prevent others are useful steps to begin addressing the invasives problem. -- The invasive species problem is one issue where environmental and economic interests can work together to combat a common enemy. *** SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION *** -- Many ecologists believe the spread of invasive (exotic) species is one of the most serious, yet least appreciated, threats to biodiversity. Invasives are second only to habitat destruction in threatening extinction of native species. Experts estimate that invasive plants already infest over 100 million acres, and they are spreading on federal lands at the rate of 4,600 acres per day. Invasives produce severe, often irreversible impacts on agriculture, recreation, and our natural resources; in some instances, they even have major human health consequences. -- Some examples of economically and environmentally harmful invasive species include: ** The zebra mussel can shut down electrical utilities by clogging water intake pipes and threatens to cause an estimated $5 billion in damages by 2002, if unchecked. ** Leafy spurge causes more than $144 million in livestock forage damage each year in Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. ** Invading sea lampreys caused the collapse of lake trout and other Great Lakes fisheries, costing the US and Canada $13 million annually to control. ** The brown tree snake has led to the extinction of most native forest birds on Guam and has caused 1200 electrical outages ** When the Asian long-horned beetle infested Brooklyn, New York, more than 2000 trees had to be destroyed, costing the federal and state government more than $5 million. A similar infestation now plagues Chicago. -- Clinton Administration officials were joined at the press conference by several prominent scientists who have led calls for stronger federal action to combat invasive species, including Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson; James T. Carlton of Williams College; Don C. Schmitz of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection; Daniel Simberloff, the Nancy Gore Hunger Professor of Excellence in Environmental Studies at the University of Tennessee; and Phyllis N. Windle, author of a Congressional report on invasive species. -- For a quick yet thorough review of the invasives species issue, check out Dr. Daniel Simberloff's 'Impacts of Introduced Species in the United States,' in "Consequences" (vol 2, no 2 1996), at <http://www.gcrio.org/CONSEQUENCES/vol2no2/article2.html>. -- A copy of the President's statement and the Executive Order are appended, in part 2 of this alert. *** NOTE: If you send a letter-to-the-editor, please send us a "blind copy." (A blind copy simply means that you do not indicate anywhere on your letter that you are sending a copy to us.) If your letter is published, please be sure to send us a copy of the letter in the paper. Send to: [log in to unmask] or UCS, 2 Brattle Square, Cambridge, MA 02238-9105 (attn. Katie Mogelgaard). *** ---------------------------------------------------------------------- To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send email to [log in to unmask] Make the message text (not the Subject): SIGNOFF IOWA-TOPICS