Natural Resources Task Force
Purpose
The United States enjoys a bountiful diversity of natural resources. Our
nation's natural resources are the well-spring from which our economic and
social vitality flows. Expanding human demands and national and
international economic activities place ever-increasing pressures on our
nation's natural resources.
The Natural Resources Task Force is developing an integrated vision of
what constitutes sustainability for domestic natural resources,
considering biodiversity, ecosystems, and watersheds with a focus on
issues in the areas of wetlands, fisheries, agriculture, coastal
resources, and forestry. The Task Force will recommend goals and actions
that corporations, communities, individuals, and government at federal,
state, and local, and tribal levels can take to move our nation toward
protection, conservation, and sustainable management of our natural
resources.
Method and Organization
Watersheds are the primary organizing principle in the Task Force's
investigations. They provide a natural integration in assessing and
analyzing the social, environmental, and economic sustainability of
people's activities. The Natural Resources Task Force findings and vision
will be based on a process of discovery using regional teams (Western,
Midwestern, and Eastern) as vehicles for collecting information to find
out what works and what does not through a series of watershed workshops
held across the country. A federal team was created to assist in analysis
and synthesis of the watershed workshops and current federal initiatives.
The regional teams invited 27 additional members to participate in the
planning, synthesis, and formulation of recommendations from the
workshops. These additional members were selected based on their
diversity of regional experience and expertise in sustainable development
from industry, conservation, government, and elected officials, which
mirrors the diversity and balance of the Council.
Update
The Western Team has conducted a series of workshops throughout the region
including Seattle, Tahoe, Santa Fe, Las Vegas, Yakima and Bellevue. The
Midwestern Team focused its attention on the Mississippi River watershed,
conducting workshops in La Crosse, Des Moines, Chicago, and Baton Rouge.
The Eastern Team selected three watersheds to use as case studies: the
Chesapeake Bay, Hudson River in New York, and St. John's River in
Florida.
In addition to the watershed workshops, the Water Science and Technology
Board of the National Academy of Sciences held a workshop in Washington,
DC on Criteria for Evaluating Watershed Sustainability. The workshop
participants included 14 scientists from all over the country with a
diversity of expertise. The final product of this workshop includes a set
of scientifically defensible questions and a framework for assessing and
achieving sustainable human activities in watersheds.
Task Force Council Membership
Co-Chairs
- Richard Barth, Chairman, President & CEO, Ciba-Geigy
Corporation
- Theodore Strong, Executive Director, Columbia River
Inter-Tribal Fish Commission
Members
- Bruce Babbitt, Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior
- Dr. D. James Baker, Under Secretary for Oceans and Atmosphere,
U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
- Carol M. Browner, Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency
- A.D. Correll, Chairman & CEO, Georgia-Pacific Corporation
- Fred D. Krupp, Executive Director, Environmental Defense Fund
- Michele Perrault, International Vice President, Sierra Club
- John C. Sawhill, President & CEO, The Nature Conservancy
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