President Obama Visits the Everglades

April 22, 2015 | 14:44 | Public Domain

The President travels to the Florida Everglades for Earth Day and speaks about the impacts of climate change, April 22, 2015.

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The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice’s Meeting with Greek Foreign Minister Nikolaos Kotzias

National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice met today with Foreign Minister Nikolaos Kotzias of Greece.  Ambassador Rice and the Foreign Minister discussed a range of security issues in Europe and the Middle East, including Russia’s actions in Ukraine.  They agreed that full implementation of the three Minsk agreements is essential to resolving the crisis in eastern Ukraine.  On the economy, Ambassador Rice encouraged the Minister to work closely with European and IMF partners to agree on a concrete set of reforms that will set Greece on a sustainable path to growth within the Eurozone.

You’re Invited: A White House Social for the Japan Arrival Ceremony

White House Social Japan Arrival

Next week, President Obama and Vice President Biden will welcome Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to the United States -- and we want you to join.

The Prime Minister will begin his U.S. visit with an arrival ceremony on the White House South Lawn the morning of April 28. Arrival ceremonies began during the Kennedy Administration and have evolved into the traditional way to welcome visiting world leaders. 

We want our followers on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Vine to help us welcome Prime Minister Abe. While you're here at the White House, you will get to attend the arrival ceremony on the South Lawn and then head inside for meetings with Administration officials with an interest in diplomacy.

Sound fun? The deadline to apply is Thursday, April 23, 2015 at 8:00 p.m. ET, so don’t wait! Apply now

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on the Impacts of Climate Change

The Everglades, Florida

3:16 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody!  Please have a seat.  It’s good to be back in Florida.  So I can’t think of a better way to spend Earth Day than in one of our nation’s greatest natural treasures, the Everglades.  (Applause.)  And anybody who comes here to visit -- and I advise everybody who’s watching who hasn’t been down here to come on down.  You can see what makes this unique landscape so magical -- what the poet Emma Lazarus called “the savage splendor of the swamp.”  Although I was informed it’s not technically a swamp.  (Laughter.) 

I want to thank our outstanding Secretary of the Interior, Sally Jewell, who’s here.  (Applause.)  Her team at the Interior Department and the National Park Service Director Jonathan Jarvis for helping to protect places like this.  (Applause.)  The Everglades National Park Superintendent Pedro Ramos is doing outstanding work.  (Applause.)  I want to thank Miami-Dade Congressmen Murphy and Carvalho who are here doing outstanding work, as well as Debbie Wasserman Schultz.  (Applause.)  You’ll be pleased to know that they are all in when it comes to protecting the Everglades, and we’re very proud of the good work that they’re going.  We even have the Science Guy, Bill Nye, here.  (Applause.)  There’s Bill. 

Now, they’re all here and we’re all here because this 1.5 million acres is unlike any place on Earth.  It’s no wonder that over a million people visited last year alone.  The sawgrass prairies and mangrove forests are home to an incredible diversity of wildlife -- bald eagles, herons, hundreds of plant species, from pine trees to wild orchids.  Believe it or not, south Florida is the only place in the world where you can find both alligators and crocodiles in the same habitat.  I’m told this is a good thing.  (Laughter.)

In the words of Marjory Stoneman Douglas, who helped preserve this land: “There are no other Everglades in the world.”  But part of the reason we’re here is because climate change is threatening this treasure and the communities that depend on it, which includes almost all of south Florida.  And if we don’t act, there may not be an Everglades as we know it. 

2014 was the planet’s warmest year on record.  Fourteen of the 15 hottest years on record have all fallen in the first 15 years of this century.  Yes, this winter was cold in parts of our country, including Washington.  Some people in Washington helpfully used a snowball to illustrate that fact.  But around the world, in the aggregate, it was the warmest winter ever recorded.

This is not a problem for another generation.  Not anymore.  This is a problem now.  It has serious implications for the way we live right now.  Stronger storms.  Deeper droughts.  Longer wildfire seasons.  The world’s top climate scientists are warning that a changing climate already affects the air that our children are breathing.  The Surgeon General and I recently met with doctors and nurses and parents who see patients and kids grappling with the health impacts.  The Pentagon says that climate change poses an increasing set of risks to our national security.

And here in the Everglades, you can see the effect of a changing climate.  As sea levels rise, salty water from the ocean flows inward.  And this harms freshwater wildlife, which endangers a fragile ecosystem.  The saltwater flows into aquifers, which threatens the drinking water of more than 7 million Floridians.  South Florida, you’re getting your drinking water from this area, and it depends on this.  And in terms of economic impact, all of this poses risks to Florida’s $82 billion tourism industry on which so many good jobs and livelihoods depend.

So climate change can no longer be denied.  It can’t be edited out.  It can’t be omitted from the conversation.  And action can no longer be delayed.  And that’s why I’ve committed the United States to lead the world in combatting this threat.  (Applause.)  

The steps we’ve taken over the last several years are already making a difference.  We’re using more clean energy than ever before.  America is number one in wind power, and last year we generated 20 times more electricity from sunlight than we did in all of 2008 -- 20 times. 

We’ve committed to doubling the pace at which we cut carbon pollution.  China, in part because of our actions, has now committed for the first time to limit their emissions.  And this means that there’s new hope that this year the world will finally reach an agreement to prevent the worst impacts of climate change before it’s too late.

We’re wasting less energy, with more fuel-efficient cars that save people money at the pump, and more energy-efficient buildings that save us money on our electricity bills. 

So more clean energy, improved energy efficiency -- these steps can help us avoid some of the worst effects of climate change down the road.  But we also have to prepare for the effects of climate change that we’re already too late to avoid.  If you think about it, this is like we’re hitting the brakes on a car, but the car is not going to come to a complete halt right away.  So some of these changes are already happening, and even if we take the right steps, we’re going to have to make some adaptations.

And that’s why we’ve been working with cities and states to build more resilient infrastructure and restore natural defenses like wetlands.  And today, I want to announce new actions to protect our national parks and our public lands, and the communities that rely on them.

First, we’re releasing a report showing that every dollar invested in the National Park Service generates $10 for the economy.  That’s a good investment.  (Applause.)  I don’t run a private equity fund, but I know that if you invest a dollar and you get $10 back, that’s a good investment.  (Laughter.) 

In 2014, almost 300 million visitors to our national parks spent almost $16 billion and supported 277,000 jobs.  So protecting our parks is a smart thing to do for our economy.  That’s why I’ve set aside more public lands and waters than any administration in history.  (Applause.)

Here in the Everglades, we’ve already invested $2.2 billion in restoration efforts.  With the support of some outstanding members of Congress, I’ve proposed another $240 million this year.  We want to restore the natural water flow of the Everglades, which we know is one of the best defenses against climate change and rising sea levels.  (Applause.)  And I’m calling on Congress to fully fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund, which supports this work across the country.  (Applause.) 

I’m also announcing $25 million in public and private money for restoration projects at our national parks.  And this is part of our broader effort that we’ve launched to encourage every American to “Find Your Park.”  Chances are, there’s one closer than you think. 

Just last weekend, Michelle and I took the girls for a hike in a national park just 20 minutes outside of Washington, D.C.  As we were walking a trail along the Everglades, we saw a group of school kids -- couldn’t have been more excited about mostly seeing the gators, not seeing me -- (laughter) -- but also learning about the science of the planet that they live on.  And I want every child to have that opportunity.

So starting this fall, we’re going to give every fourth grader in America an “Every Kid In A Park” pass, and that’s a pass good for free admission to all our public lands for you, your families for an entire year.  (Applause.)  Because no matter who you are, no matter where you live, our parks, our monuments, our lands, our waters -- these places are your birthright as Americans. 

And today, I’m designating America’s newest national historic landmark, the Marjory Stoneham Douglas House in Miami, so that future generations will know how this amazing woman helped conserve the Everglades for all of us.  (Applause.) 

We’re also working with farmers and ranchers and forest land owners to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions.  I’m going to keep doing everything I can to prepare and protect America from the worst effects of climate change, including fighting for clean air, clean water.  Because in places like this, folks don’t have time, we don’t have time -- you do not have time to deny the effects of climate change.  Folks are already busy dealing with it.  And nowhere is it going to have a bigger impact than here in south Florida.  No place else.  It has to be paying closer attention to this and acknowledging it, and understanding that if we take action now we can do something about it.  (Applause.)   

This is not some impossible problem that we cannot solve.  We can solve it if we’ve got some political will.  And we can solve it in a way that creates jobs.  We can solve it in a way that doesn’t disrupt our economy but enhances our economy.  And it’s a bipartisan issue. 

On the way in, I was talking to some folks about the fact that Teddy Roosevelt, he’s a Republican -- started our National Park System.  Richard Nixon started the EPA.  George H.W. Bush was the first President, globally, to acknowledge the impacts of climate change and that we needed to do something about it.  This is not something that historically should be a partisan issue.

Five years ago, local leaders down here, Republicans and Democrats, formed the bipartisan Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact -- an agreement to work together to fight climate change.  (Applause.)  And it’s become a model not just for the country, but for the world. 

It’s the type of mission that Americans from all walks of life are taking on -- from the CEOs of some of our biggest corporations and utilities, to student organizations across the country.  Because they know that simply refusing to say the words “climate change” doesn’t mean that climate change isn’t happening.  (Applause.) 

And we know that in our own lives.  If you’ve got a coming storm, you don’t stick your head in the sand; you prepare for the storm.  You make sure our communities are prepared for climate change.  And that’s an economic imperative.  Protecting the one planet we’ve got is what we have to do for the next generation.  I want Malia and Sasha not only to be able to enjoy this amazing view; I want my grandchildren -- a way, way long time from now -- (laughter) -- to enjoy this amazing view.  And their children, and their children after that.  That’s what we do as Americans, take responsibility and leave behind for our children something special.

And we are blessed with the most beautiful God-given landscape in the world.  (Applause.)  It’s an incredible bounty that’s been given to us.  But we’ve got to be good stewards for it.  We have to take care of it.  We only get to enjoy things like our amazing national parks because great Americans like Teddy Roosevelt and Marjory Stoneman Douglas and a whole bunch of ordinary folks whose name aren’t in the history books, they fought to protect our national inheritance.  And now it’s our turn to ensure that this remains the birthright of all Americans for generations to come.  So many people here are active in your communities, doing what’s needed.  The young people who are here, the next generation, they’re way ahead of us in understanding how important this is.  Let’s make sure we don’t disappoint them.  Let’s stand up and do what’s right before it’s too late.

Thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.)  Thank you.

END
3:32 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Gaggle by Principal Deputy Press Secretary Eric Schultz en route Miami, FL | 4/22/2015

Aboard Air Force One
En Route Miami, Florida

11:48 A.M. EDT

MR. SCHULTZ:  Welcome aboard Air Force One, everyone.  And Happy Earth Day.  We are en route to the Florida Everglades, where rising seas and other climate change impacts are endangering one of the nation’s most iconic landscapes, and increasing risk to the state’s $82 billion tourism industry. 

Following the President’s tour this afternoon, and during his remarks, the President will highlight the value of vulnerable iconic places like the Everglades, and announce new steps to protect people, places and local economies from climate change.

A few specifics that I would draw your attention to are the National Park Service released a new report today that shows that for every one dollar invested by American taxpayers in the National Park Service, it returns ten to the U.S. economy.  The National Park Service and the U.S. Geological Survey released a new report showing that for the first time the value of national parks restoring carbon and mitigation climate change, the Service valued it at more than $580 million each year.  And the National Park Service announced $26 million for restoration projects at national parks around the country.  That actually includes $16 million from non-governmental partners.

I’d also tell you that it’s unfortunate that House Republicans today are observing Earth Day a little bit differently.  They have a bill that slashes $1 billion for wind power, solar power and electric vehicles.  Yesterday, our Budget Director, Shaun Donovan, sent a letter to the House Appropriations chair on this bill detailing our concerns.

With that, I’m happy to take your questions.

Q    Do you have any update on whether Governor Scott plans to greet the President on the tarmac, or see him during the trip?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Josh, I don’t have any scheduling updates for the Governor of Florida, but I can confirm for you that he was invited to meet us upon arrival in Miami.

Q    Can I ask you about Saudi Arabia?  You guys congratulated the Saudis this morning for completing their mission -- their military mission over Yemen, but it seems like airstrikes are continuing.  So what is the White House’s understanding of where that mission stands?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Kevin, we believe and we noted that Saudi Arabia and its coalition partners made clear in their announcement yesterday that as part of Operation Renewed Hope they might continue limited operations to counter certain ongoing Houthi military actions in Yemen.

But in terms of our view is -- our view is we must look forward now to a shift from military operations to the rapid, unconditional resumption of all-party negotiations that allow Yemen to resume an inclusive, political transition process.  There’s going to be no military solution to this problem; only one that’s solved at the diplomatic table.

Q    Great.  But does the fact that these airstrikes are continuing hamper the work toward a negotiated settlement that you guys are looking for?  I mean, you said that there’s no military solution, so does the fact they’re continuing to bomb sites in Yemen sort of forestall any work towards that settlement that you want to see?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Kevin, our view on that Saudi-led military campaign hasn’t changed.  We support their capabilities in defending Saudi Arabia’s southern border and destroying heavy weaponry and missiles, which pose a threat to Saudi Arabia.  And also, quite frankly, giving notice to the Houthis and their allies that their destabilizing military actions pose an unacceptable threat not only to Yemen but to the region, and should cease. 

So given yesterday’s announcement, we do look forward to a shift from military operations to this resumption of all-party negotiations that allow Yemen to resume an inclusive political transition. 

Q    What role did the U.S. play specifically in bringing about an end to this military phase of the Saudi operations?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Roberta, I don’t have any specific conversations to read out to you.  As you know, this was a military operation led by the Saudis.  But with our support, we had set up a Joint Planning Cell to help with communications and intelligence and logistical support.  And now that the Saudis have signaled that they will be transitioning their operation, we do believe that this is an opportunity for all parties to come together and resolve this at the negotiating table.

Q    How did the U.S. government find out that the shift was taking place?  What kind of notification were you given, and what kind of discussions has the President had with some of his counterparts?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Roberta, I don’t have specific conversations to read out to you, but I can say to you that the President and his team, both senior members of the White House and the relevant agencies at the Cabinet level have been in touch with their counterparts in the region.

Q    Going back to Rick Scott for a moment -- Josh took a couple of shots at him yesterday, saying that climate change was banned in the Scott administration as a term.  Scott’s administration says that’s not true and that you guys are politicizing things with them.  What do you guys say to that? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Well, if it’s not true, we look forward to them contributing to the discussion on one of the greatest threats that we face.  If the Scott administration is now joining the rest of us in confirming the impacts of climate change on both the environment, on the energy sectors and also, as I pointed out, in terms of the economy, we welcome that change of position on the governor’s part.

Q    I’ll give you a scheduling update about Governor Scott.  He’s not going to be there to greet the President.  Is that disappointing to you guys that he won’t be there?

MR. SCHULTZ:  No, I don’t think so.  As custom, we invited the governor from the states in which we travel to meet the President.  Sometimes their schedule allows them to do so, and sometimes it doesn’t.

Q    I have two trade questions.  The first one is, last night on TV the President made the case that these trade deals are good for the environment -- environmentally sound and strong.  Yet today, right before we took off, under an Earth Day hashtag basically every environmental group came out opposing fast-track that the White House wants. 

My question is, what are you doing to convince those groups that the President is right about what he says?  And why hasn’t it worked so far? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Evan, it’s a good question.  As the President has made clear, he will be the first one to acknowledge that past trade agreements have not lived up to the hype; that includes agreements like NAFTA.  But that is the reason the President has been dogged in his determination to make sure that any deal that is reached includes the strongest not only environmental protections, but labor protections and human rights protections we’ve ever seen.

So I take your point that this has been a difficult political issue for Democrats and sort of traditional allies in the past, but that doesn’t mean we’re going to shy away from this conversation.  And to answer your question more pointedly, on Thursday the President is going to continue making these points at his appearance in front of Organizing for Action, the grassroots summit in Washington, D.C.  He’s going to speak to this next generation of progressive organizers from across the country and continue to make the case for Trade Promotion Authority that paves the way for new, high-standard trade agreements that put America’s workers first and helps American businesses expand.

Q    Okay.  And my second question is, yesterday -- or I guess over the past couple days, Secretary Clinton has been talking a little about trade.  And she’s had some statements about being worried about how it protects workers and things like that, that have been characterized by some people as saying that they’re distancing themselves from you.  To my read, they sound a lot like what you guys say.  So my question is, do you consider Hillary Clinton an ally on this trade stuff?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Evan, I'm going to side with you on this.  I believe that the labor, environmental and human rights concerns that many Democrats have voiced, the President takes to heart.  And he would not sign a deal unless those protections are in place. 

If you look at the TPA agreement that was introduced in a bipartisan way in the Senate, we believe that’s the most progressive in history and that’s why the President is encouraged by it. 

Q    So Secretary Clinton and President Obama are on the same page with trade? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Well, look, I believe that if you look at the points that are being raised in terms of human rights, environmental protections, labor protections, that those are important priorities of this President.  So I haven’t seen anything to suggest any distance. 

Q    Can I ask about -- real quick -- about funding?  So as you’ve pointed out, Republicans are cutting funding for climate change activities.  How important is it that the administration get the money it needs -- and as proposed -- for climate change activities this year? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  It’s critically important, Cheryl.  As we both have mentioned now, our Budget Director, Shaun Donovan, sent letters to the Hill earlier this week voicing our concerns about slashing the $1 billion that would go for wind power, solar power, and electric vehicles. 

The energy and water development bill also includes a wide range of highly problematic ideological riders, including some that threaten to undermine our ability to protect the clean water relied on by American families and businesses, and essential to our stewardship of the environment. 

Q    Eric, does the President feel that Michele Leonhart’s decision to step aside at the DEA is an appropriate one?  And what is he looking for in a new head of the DEA?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Josh, I haven’t had a direct conversation with the President about this.  I saw that Director Leonhart tendered her resignation yesterday.  She is obviously someone who served in the federal government for many, many years; was first appointed by President Bush, then reappointed by President Obama.  So we absolutely appreciate her service to our country and we wish her the best. 

I will say that as Josh and others have made clear, we voiced our concerns about the content of that pretty detailed inspector general report a few weeks ago.  So the President, as a general matter, expects 100 percent professionalism from the entire federal workforce, and specifically law enforcement.  So we’re troubled by the contents of that report that is both a subject of congressional oversight right now.

Q    And as you’ll recall, the President, in 2008 when he was running, said that he would call what happened in Armenia a genocide.  He said quote, “The Armenian genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion or point of view, but rather a widely documented fact.”  So why has the President backtracked from that commitment to call it a genocide?   

MR. SCHULTZ:  Josh, the President and other senior administration officials have repeatedly acknowledged as a historical fact that 1.5 million Armenians were massacred or marched to their deaths in the final days of the Ottoman Empire.

Q    In a genocide? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  As we have said in previous years, a full, frank and just acknowledgement of the facts is in all of our interests, including Turkey’s, Armenia’s and America’s.  Now we do recognize the importance of historical remembrance, and for that reason we announced yesterday that a presidential delegation led by Treasury Secretary Lew will travel to Armenia to mark the terrible events that began in 1915, and stand in solidarity with the Armenian people.

Q    What kind of role is pressure from Turkey playing in your decision not to use the word “genocide” in this instance?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Well, I do think that Turkey does play an important role in frankly acknowledging the facts of 1915, which we will continue to encourage them to do, and in fostering a constructive relationship with modern day Armenia. 

Turkey also does -- as I think you’re alluding to, Josh -- play a critical role as we confront the horrific atrocities that occur today in both Iraq and Syria.  So we’re going to be having specific conversations about how we can strengthen that partnership.

Q    Do you believe that the relationship with Turkey is so fragile that just to use the word “genocide” would create such problems for all the things you’ve just talked about? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Isaac, I know there are some who are hoping to hear different language this year, and we understand their perspective even as we believe that the approach we’ve taken in previous years remains the right one, both for acknowledging the past and for our ability to work with these regional partners in the present. 

Q    I think people understand that there’s like a diplomatic back-and-forth with Turkey that prevents the U.S. from using the word “genocide.”  But does the President personally believe that what happened was still a genocide, the way he expressed in 2008? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Kevin, I think we can expect the President to issue a statement that marks the historical significance of this centennial, and in past years mourned the senseless loss of 1.5 million Armenian lives in these atrocities.

We will use this occasion to call attention to the horrors of 1955 -- 1915, sorry -- to urge the full, frank and just acknowledgement of the facts that we believe is in the interest of all parties, and generate momentum for efforts to prevent atrocities in the here and now.

Q    Can I go back to the DEA thing really quick?

MR. SCHULTZ:  You can.

Q    Do you see a chance here for any kind of drug policy debate?  I mean, I know that the woman, she had to resign under circumstances that are not ideal, and there’s going to be discussion about how to run the agency itself.  But I know the President has spoken a bit about having a different approach to some drug crime, different approach to some non-violent drug crime.  And I wonder if, when searching for a new person to run the DEA, those kind of views would be important in a new DEA head.  
   
MR. SCHULTZ:  I think those views are important in the head of the Attorney General, who’s been waiting longer than it took to write the Constitution to be confirmed by the United States Senate for her role.  So we’re going to go ahead and wait for her to be confirmed, which hopefully will happen soon.  And then I think the policy conversations you’re talking about would probably be more at that level.

Q    Are you confident at this point that she will be confirmed very shortly?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Isaac, one of the great hazards of this job is forecasting what Congress will do, so I’m not going to take the bait on that today.  But what we are confident is that she deserves a vote very quickly.

Q    And is the President looking forward to signing the human trafficking bill in its current -- what seems to be its current form?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Isaac, I did see that that bill has engendered broad bipartisan support, including by some of the most vocal supporters of women’s reproductive health.  So that seems to be in line with legislation that he’s supported in the past.

Q    So the President will sign it?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Again, I haven’t had a chance to review the text, but that is something that the President has supported in the past.

Q    I want to ask you about trade.  Yesterday, on the MSNBC interview, the President singled out folks like Elizabeth Warren and said that she was wrong, and said that other Democrats have been -- are not averse to making political arguments that play to the fears of voters.  That’s usually an argument he makes about Republicans.  Is the President saying that Democrats are playing politics with the trade issue?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Toluse, I think there’s no question that this is a difficult issue for Democrats, and the President will be the first one to admit that.  But if you listen to the President, I think it’s pretty clear that, as he says, we have two choices:  We can either deny that globalization is at our door, and we can put our head in the sand; or we can make sure that the global marketplace has a level playing field.  Because the President believes that given a level playing field, our workforce can beat out anyone.

So either we’re going to have the opportunity for the Chinese to set the ground rules, or we can play a leadership role in that.  And that’s what the President hopes to do.

Q    And does he believe that the folks who disagree with him in his own party, does he believe that they’re agreeing -- they’re disagreeing with him based on their policy position, or because they’re trying to get political points out of it?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think we will leave it up to the critics of the plan -- of any potential agreement to speak for themselves.  The President believes that 95 percent of the global marketplace for American goods and services are outside our borders.  So to not take advantage of that and to not capitalize on that would be a mistake.

Q    On this ongoing sort of protest situation in Baltimore, Jen Psaki said this morning on CNN that there was work going on at the White House behind the scenes on that and other incidents of police brutality or prison guard brutality.  Can you describe that work?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I don’t have a detailed readout of our behind-the-scenes work on this, but I can tell you that this is an issue the President has spoken about frequently.  And as you know, his 21st century task force -- well, his Task Force on 21st Century Policing has taken a real active role in diving into a lot of these issues.  Those recommendations have been issued and have been -- they’re something we are working through.  But I don’t have an update on that for you.

Q    Can I ask you one more on Yemen?  As part of the diplomatic process moving forward, does the U.S. want to see Hadi restored to power in Yemen, or is it time for a change?

MR. SCHULTZ:  We believe that all parties need to come together on a diplomatic solution. 

Q    Eric, Europe seems to be really buckling under the pressure of this influx of migrants from Africa.  I know we’ve talked in the past about U.S. counterterrorism and security operations to try and stem the flow, but is the White House doing anything to help Europe deal with this humanitarian situation that’s developed there?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Josh, the images of the stories and the reports that you’re talking about are heartbreaking, and you can’t look at those without evoking a very emotional response.  So we don’t take that lightly.

We are in touch with our European partners on this issue.  I believe Prime Minister Renzi has spoken on this very recently.  And I know that they are working together on this the best they can.

Q    The President also said yesterday in the interview on MSNBC that weaknesses in Europe are to blame for slower growth in the second quarter, and he’s referred to Europe a number of times in recent stump speeches about the economy and the challenges that we face.  Does he believe that that’s one of the main problems facing the U.S. economy?  And is he doing anything specifically about that?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think that, Toluse, under this President we’ve seen unprecedented job growth.  We’ve seen an economy recovery that has been strong and vibrant.  We’ve seen the longest stretch of private sector job creation in our nation’s history. 

But the President absolutely believes there’s more work to be done and that there are certain economic headwinds that we have to work through.  So that’s not small in the President’s mind, and that’s why he believe there’s more things we ought to be doing for the next couple years.  That includes making sure that we walk away from the sequester that has put real tightening, real unnecessary stranglehold on how we budget in this country.  That includes more investments for infrastructure.  And what it does not include is the Republican path here, which they want to cut taxes for the wealthy of the wealthy.

Q    On the Patriot Act, Senator McConnell introduced a measure last night that would renew parts of the Patriot Act that are expiring in June, including the section 215 that deals with surveillance.  Do you have an update on the White House’s thinking on that?  Do you support a wholescale renewal of that particular portion, or are you more inclined to support something with reforms included in it?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I’ll admit I did not see that report, and we’re happy to take a look at that legislation.  So I don’t really have an update for you on our position.  I do think it’s important to note that this is going to be something that requires bipartisan support.  Democrats and Republicans are going to have to work together on this.  I believe there’s a deadline in May, so we look forward to some earnest legislating.

Q    It’s Earth Day, so I would be remiss if I didn’t ask you about the Keystone pipeline.  Do you have any updates for us on that process?  Is the President going to speak about it today in his speech?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I have no update for you on that.  As you know, this a process that’s housed at the State Department.  I would not expect any significant news on that today in the President’s remarks.

Q    Would you expect news on that before -- sort of as we’re gearing up for the 2016 campaign?  I think Secretary Clinton was asked in a questionnaire about the Keystone pipeline, and she refused to answer that question and answered other Earth Day questions.  Is this something that you hope will be solved before the 2016 campaign gears up?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Toluse, I have no update on this process.  As you know, it’s a process that far predates this administration that is housed at the State Department.  And when that is terminated, it will come to the White House for a final determination.

Q    But before the sun explodes probably.  (Laughter.) 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Anything else?

Q    I got one more question.  Yesterday, Josh was asked a couple of times about discrepancies over Iran’s breakout timeline.  Do you have an update on that?  He said he’d look into it. 

MR. SCHULTZ:  I do.  I think that report confused two different timelines, which I want to distill for you right now.  There are separate assessments for the amount of time it would take for Iran to acquire enough fissile material for one weapon versus how long it would take Iran to weaponize that material -- that is, to make one nuclear weapon.  So just because you have enough fissile material for one weapon does not mean you have an actual weapon.

So I believe the remarks in question from a 2013 interview with the Israeli television channel, Channel Two, the President spoke about the timeline for Iran to develop a nuclear weapon and he made clear that that assessment is -- that it would take Iran more than a year.  The assessment for how long it would take Iran to acquire enough fissile material is approximately two to three months. 

Q    Thanks, Eric.

MR. SCHULTZ:  Thank you.

END 
12:12 P.M. EDT

Historic Photos: A Look Back at Presidential and Cabinet Trips to the Everglades

Today, in honor of Earth Day, President Obama is traveling to the Everglades – the tropical wetlands in the southern part of Florida.

Since 1970, we've commemorated Earth Day on April 22 each year, with worldwide celebrations in support of environmental protection. President Obama is visiting the Everglades this year to highlight how climate change is already damaging American treasures like our National Parks, as well as how climate change will affect our economy, our personal health, and our national security. The Everglades, one of the most beautiful and environmentally sensitive regions in the country, is a key source of drinking water for a third of Florida’s residents, and significantly boosts Florida’s revenue and economy through tourism at the park.

Read more here about the steps President Obama and his Administration are taking to fight climate change, and protect our national treasures like the Everglades.

President Obama isn't the first President or Cabinet member to visit the Everglades, though. Check out a few photos of other Presidential and Cabinet trips to the Everglades over the years:

President Truman in the Everglades

Harry S. Truman speaking at the dedication of Everglades National Park in Florida. Also present and visible behind the President are (from left to right): John Steelman, Clark Clifford, Admiral William D. Leahy, Stanley Woodward, and Major General Harry Vaughan. December 6, 1947. (by the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum)

Follow Along: Earth Day 2015

President Obama celebrated Earth Day this week by visiting the Florida Everglades where he spoke about the threat that climate change poses to our economy and to the world. While there, he sat down with Bill Nye the Science Guy to discuss that threat, conservation, and science education in America. Watch that conversation below:

It's Earth Day -- and all day long, we'll be keeping you updated right here with videos, photos, and opportunities to add your voice to the #ActOnClimate conversation. Follow along here for highlights from the President's trip to the Everglades -- and speak up on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram using the hashtag #ActOnClimate. We'll be reading and sharing what we hear from you.

Here's what we've got on tap for the day:

This morning, the President is heading to the Florida Everglades along with Bill Nye the Science Guy and Interior Secretary Sally Jewell.

At 3 p.m. ET, the President will deliver remarks from the Everglades.

At 3:30 p.m. ET, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy will hold a Twitter Q&A on Latino public health.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on the Conclusion of Operation Decisive Storm

The United States welcomes the decision by the Government of Saudi Arabia and its coalition partners to conclude Operation Decisive Storm in Yemen.  With this announcement, we look forward to a shift from military operations to the rapid, unconditional resumption of all-party negotiations that allow Yemen to resume an inclusive political transition process as envisioned in the GCC Initiative, the National Dialogue outcomes, and relevant UN Security Council resolutions.  We also welcome the United Nations continuing to play a vital role in facilitating the political talks and look forward to the United Nations announcing a location for the talks in the very near future.
 
We strongly urge all Yemeni parties, in particular the Houthis and their supporters, to take this opportunity to return to these negotiations as part of the political dialogue.  Having bravely and resolutely sought a democratic political transition, the Yemeni people deserve the opportunity to hold a peaceful debate about their new constitution, to participate in a credible and safe constitutional referendum, and to vote in free and fair national elections.
 
We commend the commitment of King Salman of Saudi Arabia to provide $274 million in emergency humanitarian relief to Yemen.  We also strongly support the commitment of the Government of Saudi Arabia and its coalition partners to facilitate the provision of humanitarian and medical aid to those displaced and injured by the fighting.  We look forward to this transition from Operation Decisive Storm significantly increasing the opportunities for international and Yemeni humanitarian organizations to access and deliver assistance to the Yemeni people.
 
The United States reiterates the obligation of all nations to abide by the provisions of UN Security Council Resolution 2216 that prohibit the supply of arms or other related materiel to key Houthi leaders, as well as former president Ali Abdallah Saleh, his son, and those acting at their direction.  The United States will continue to support efforts to build international cooperation to seek to prevent violations of this resolution, including through enhanced maritime monitoring and inspection by international partners.
 
At the same time, we will continue to closely monitor terrorist threats posed by al-Qa’ida in the Arabian Peninsula and to take action as necessary to disrupt continuing, imminent threats to the United States and our citizens. AQAP and other terrorists have sought to benefit from the deterioration of the political and security situation in Yemen, and we strongly believe it is in the interests of the Yemeni people to unite to confront the shared terrorist threat to their country.
 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

FACT SHEET: Celebrating Earth Day with New Steps to Protect People, Places and Local Economies from Climate Change

Today, in celebration of Earth Day, President Obama will visit the Florida Everglades, where rising seas and other climate change impacts are endangering one of the nation’s most iconic landscapes – and increasing risks to the State’s $82 billion tourism economy. To coincide with the President’s trip, the Administration is highlighting the value of special and vulnerable places like the Everglades and announcing new steps to protect the people and places climate change puts at risk.

The President has made clear that no challenge poses a greater threat to future generations than climate change. The effects of climate change can no longer be denied or ignored – last year was the planet’s warmest year recorded, and 14 of the 15 hottest years on record have happened this century. All over the country, Americans are already facing devastating impacts – from severe floods to extreme heat to increased risk of asthma attacks. These impacts pose major economic, public health, and national security threats. Climate change is also affecting some of the most iconic places in our country, from disappearing glaciers in Glacier National Park to dying Joshua Trees in Joshua Tree National Park. These kinds of losses affect the tourism economies of towns and cities across the country that depend on sharing America’s natural splendor with the world.

That’s why President Obama has taken historic action to cut the carbon pollution that drives climate change and protect American communities from the impacts, including setting the first-ever national limits on carbon pollution from the power sector, making a landmark joint announcement with China to curb greenhouse gas emissions, and supporting smart investments in resilient infrastructure. Under the President’s leadership, the Federal Government has also made significant investments to protect and restore the special places that Americans depend on but that are threatened by pollution and climate change, including the Great Lakes, the Gulf Coast, the Chesapeake Bay, and the Everglades.

In the Everglades alone, the Administration has invested $2.2 billion in restoration efforts, with the President’s 2016 Budget proposing nearly $240 million more. In addition to protecting the primary source of drinking water for more than a third of Florida’s population, these efforts are helping ensure that the Florida Everglades – a major driver of the local economy – are resilient to effects of climate change like saltwater intrusion and invasive species.

Highlighting special places and protecting communities from climate change

From diminishing snowpacks to more severe wildfires, climate change is impacting natural landscapes across the country and threatening an outdoor recreation economy that each year generates $646 billion in consumer spending and 6.1 million direct jobs.  In Florida, impacts like sea level rise are threatening some of the State’s top tourist attractions, including the Everglades and Florida Keys, with estimated revenue losses of $9 billion by 2025 and $40 billion by the 2050s.

Recognized worldwide as a unique and treasured landscape, the Everglades is a perfect example of the threat we face from climate change, including rising sea levels that result in shoreline erosion and increased flooding.  As the seas rise, salty ocean water travels inland, threatening the aquifers that supply fresh drinking water to Floridians, destroying natural habitats, and starving Everglades National Park of freshwater that also serves as the primary source of drinking water for more than a third of Florida’s population. Already, the park’s characteristic mangrove trees – the largest protected mangrove forest in the northern hemisphere – are retreating inland. The changing conditions in the ecosystem are also displacing native animals and plants like tropical orchids, some of which are only found in south Florida. 

In addition to their cultural, recreational and historic value, our national parks play a significant role in our economy.  And even as climate change threatens their landscapes, national parks play an important role in preventing the worst impacts of climate change.  In celebration of Earth Day, this week the Administration is announcing new steps to recognize the value of these special places, as well as actions to protect the people and places climate change puts at risk, including:

Calculating the Value of National Parks Tourism to the U.S. Economy. Today, the National Park Service (NPS) is releasing a new report that shows that every $1 invested by American taxpayers in the National Park Service returns $10 to the U.S. economy.  In 2014, a record 293 million National Park visitors spent $15.7 billion in communities around National Parks, providing a $29.7 billion benefit to the U.S. economy and supporting 277,000 jobs.

Calculating the Value of National Parks for Storing Carbon. Today, the NPS and the U.S. Geological Survey are releasing a new report that for the first time calculates the value of National Parks for storing carbon and mitigating climate change.  The report concludes that national park lands in the lower 48 states store 14.8 million metric tons of carbon dioxide each year, and that providing this service is valued at more than $580 million each year.

Investing in National Parks. Today, NPS is announcing $26 million for restoration projects at national parks around the country, including $16 million from non-governmental partners.  These Centennial Challenge Grants are part of a multi-year effort to prepare for the National Park Service Centennial next year, including a Find Your Park Campaign to connect a broader audience to public lands and President Obama’s Every Kid in a Park initiative that will give every fourth grader and their families free access to national parks and all federal lands and waters for a full year, beginning this Fall.     

Designating a New National Historic Landmark Near the Everglades. Today, the Department of the Interior and NPS are designating the Marjory Stoneman Douglas House in Miami, Florida as the Nation’s newest National Historic Landmark.  Marjory Stoneman Douglas’s seminal book, The Everglades: River of Grass (1947), marked a significant turning point in the environmental movement, and the Friends of the Everglades organization she founded had a central role in the conservation and restoration of the Everglades.  National historic landmarks provide opportunities for Americans to make personal connections with our Nation’s cultural and historical heritage and can help drive tourism and boost local economies.

Designating National Park Week. On Monday, President Obama signed a Proclamation designating this week National Park Week and encouraging all Americans to use and enjoy the unparalleled public lands that belong to all of us.

Providing a Flood Mapping Tool to Help Communities Prepare for Storms. On Tuesday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced that a flood exposure risk mapping tool, originally developed for New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and Pennsylvania, has been expanded to cover coastal areas along the entire U.S. East Coast and Gulf of Mexico.  This Coastal Flood Exposure Mapper allows users to select their location and view how local populations, infrastructure and natural areas would be affected under a variety of flood scenarios, with the goal of helping communities reduce their vulnerability to current flood risks. This expanded tool is included in the U.S. Climate Resilience Toolkit called for in the President’s Climate Action Plan.

Making Key Landscapes Resilient to Climate Change. On Tuesday, the Interior Department, U.S. EPA and NOAA announced four landscapes – in southwest Florida, Hawaii, Puget Sound and the Great Lakes—where agencies will focus their efforts with partners to conserve and restore important lands and waters and make them more resilient to a changing climate. These Resilient Lands and Waters projects will build climate resilience in vulnerable regions and enhance carbon storage capacity, focusing on increasing coastal resilience, developing coastal wetlands and marine conservation areas, protecting drinking water for urban areas, providing wildlife habitats, and preventing threats like flooding and invasive species.

Partnering with farmers, ranchers and forest land owners to reduce GHG emissions. On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture will announce new voluntary actions it will take in partnership with farmers, ranchers and forest land owners to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions and support President Obama’s goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions 26-28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Announces Presidential Delegation to the Republic of Armenia to Attend the Centennial Commemoration of the Events of 1915

President Barack Obama today announced the designation of a Presidential Delegation to the Republic of Armenia to attend the Centennial Commemoration of the Events of 1915 on April 24, 2015.

The Honorable Jacob J. Lew, Secretary of the Department of Treasury, will lead the delegation.

Members of the Presidential Delegation:

The Honorable Richard M. Mills, Jr., United States Ambassador to the Republic of Armenia, Department of State

The Honorable Jackie “Kanchelian” Speier, Member of the United States House of Representatives (CA-14)

The Honorable Frank Pallone, Jr., Member of the United States House of Representatives (NJ-6)

The Honorable Anna G. Eshoo, Member of the United States House of Representatives (CA-18)

The Honorable Dave Trott, Member of the United States House of Representatives (MI-11)