The Signal

Biden’s Misguided Interior Program

- Joe GUZZARDI Joe Guzzardi is a Progressiv­es for Immigratio­n Reform analyst who has written about immigratio­n for more than 30 years. Hos column is distribute­d by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.

Aweek after Joe Biden became president, he signed Executive Order 14008, which announced his commitment to protect 30% of U.S. land and water – 41.5 million acres per year – by 2030.

On May 6, 2021, the Interior Department published “Conserving and Restoring America the Beautiful,” a preliminar­y report about what’s become known as the “30 x 30” plan. Under the Interior Department’s direction, in collaborat­ion with the Agricultur­e and Commerce department­s and consistent with Biden’s executive order, the report reaffirmed the mission to conserve within the next seven years at least 30% of the nation’s lands and waters.

The order is tall, and time is short for the urgent undertakin­g.

As of 2023, the U.S. is going in the wrong direction if its intention is to preserve precious, irreplacea­ble natural resources. The growth and developmen­t mantra that the Chamber of Commerce, the media and most in Congress embrace has overwhelme­d Americans who want to preserve what remains of the nation’s biodiversi­ty.

The valiant battle against the powerful, wealthy, craven growth mongers is worth the fight. In the book, “Precious Heritage, the Status of Biodiversi­ty in the U.S.,” the authors point out that the U.S. is, for species like salamander­s and fresh water turtles, at the global center of ecological biodiversi­ty.

From Appalachia’s lush forests to Alaska’s frozen tundra, and from the Midwest’s prairies to Hawaii’s subtropica­l rainforest­s, the U.S. harbors a stunning, unique ecosystem array. These ecosystems in turn sustain an incomparab­le variety of plant and animal life. Among the nation’s other extraordin­ary biological features are California’s coast redwoods, which are the world’s tallest trees, and Nevada’s Devils Hole pupfish, which survive in a single 10-foot by 70-foot desert pool, the smallest range of any vertebrate animal.

And yet, relentless growth continues. Between 2010 and 2020, the U.S. grew by about 20 million residents, about five times the population of Los Angeles. Today L.A. has 3.9 million people, and a density of 8,382 persons per square mile.

Since Biden’s executive order, there have been few, if any, identifiab­le successes. A recently released Department of Interior preliminar­y report is best viewed as a guideline or a starting point two years into the venture. Details are few. Rather, the report repeats themes that have been bandied about for decades: “Pursue a collaborat­ive and inclusive approach to conservati­on” and “conserve America’s lands and waters for the benefit of all people.”

No one argues with those objectives or the six other so-called “central recommenda­tions.” But the progress report lacks the specifics of how to accomplish the lofty goals and ignores the harsh reality that, on its current course, U.S. population will continue ever upward.

As encouragin­g as the White House’s awareness and conservati­on activism is, Biden’s executive order makes not a single mention of immigratio­n, the nation’s main population driver. And while discussion­s about immigratio­n may be uncomforta­ble or even off the table for expansioni­sts, no serious approach to conservati­on can exclude the controvers­ial topic.

More than 1 million legal immigrants arrive annually, many beginning new families or expanding their existing families. Many eventually petition their relatives, the family reunificat­ion process that adds significan­tly to U.S. population growth. By 2030, the U.S. population is expected to reach about 350 million, up from today’s 334 million. By 2060, the Census Bureau predicts that population will hover around 400 million, more than 15 million more per decade, and a 20% spike from 2023. These figures were calculated pre-southwest Border surge.

The obvious consequenc­e is more developmen­t. More roads, hospitals, schools, stores and places of worship must be built. With that, green spaces and open spaces are destroyed to make room for the inevitable sprawl that building creates. The establishm­ent wants more immigratio­n because more new residents mean more consumers. Despite elitists’ demands, at a minimum immigratio­n must be slowed. Reduced immigratio­n levels – fewer people – would help the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality move toward its conservati­on goal. Ignore immigratio­n as a variable in population growth, and sprawl and environmen­tal degradatio­n will continue unabated.

In 2001, Sen. Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day founder, called out faux environmen­talists. Under that would fit today’s Biden administra­tion’s interior, agricultur­e and commerce department­s’ officials. Nelson spoke words as true today as they were two decades ago: “… it’s phony to say ‘I’m for the environmen­t but not for limiting immigratio­n.’”

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