A Historic Summit Amid Historic Cuts

Earlier today, the White House hosted the first ever summit on environmental education. This historic event was literally decades in the making and signified the level to which the issues of environmental education and green schools have become the topic du jour in communities nationwide. The EPA deserves credit for making the event happen, as does the Department of Education and the White House Council on Environment Quality. And there’s good reason why: these 3 agencies also announced the joint creation of a (resurrected) new federal task force on environmental education. Though details are scare at this early stage, Earth Day Network lauds the continual efforts of this Administration to raise environmental education and green schools to new heights.

Yet for all the fanfare and historic gestures, the summit’s timing was more than ironic; it was unfortunate. To be exact, the Obama Administration recently proposed eliminating funding for environmental education at the EPA, NOAA and NSF – a total amount hovering around the $40 million range. This regrettable action did more than hang over the summit attendees (who included our Education Director, Sean S. Miller). It cast a shadow of doubt on the Administration’s priorities with respect to environmental education. In short, these proposed cuts are worse than the funding levels during the Bush Administration.

If we are truly going to “out-educate and out-innovate” our global competitors, as the President so eloquently states, then cutting environmental education is certainly not the preferred pathway to success. In fact, the elimination of such funding puts several critical programs – like the National Environmental Education Foundation – in serious jeopardy. Earth Day Network hopes that Congress, along with any future budget proposal from the current Administration, will show a little bit more foresight with respect to environmental education. To paraphrase Education Secretary Duncan, the most dynamic speaker today: we cannot continue to educate our nation’s youth for an economy and workforce that is increasingly a figment of the past. Instead, we need to better prepare today’s students with the knowledge and skills necessary to thrive in a rapidly changing and complex world. Environmental education is critical for doing just that, and we encourage you to contact Congress now so that these proposed cuts do not set precedent and become law.  

Comments

updater

They should keep focussing on

They should keep focussing on the topic. And they must give a complete explanation about all of it.
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MeganDois

White House is quite famous

White House is quite famous in this world, but few people know about the history of this building. I personally do not know much about the history of this building is just a new general history course I know.
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henrypension

This is sad to hear that the

This is sad to hear that the white house took away the funding for the environment, when will they learn? http://www.pensionreleases.co.uk

EdoLaw

Historic meeting at the White

Historic meeting at the White House as the summit would be nice if we know and what is a decision at the meeting. Discussion and decisions on environmental protection was supposed to have realized this now. http://www.grekadrilling.com/

ashketchum

The team at EPA really did

The team at EPA really did put on an amazing, first-ever summit, but I agree that the timing was unfortunate.
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Jason Gooljar

  I really enjoyed this post

 

I really enjoyed this post Sean, thank you!  The team at EPA really did put on an amazing, first-ever summit, but I agree that the timing was unfortunate.  It was great that EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson committeed $5 million to environmental education efforts at EPA and I hope we'll see more details on how that might work, but this is still half of what Congress provided last year.  And I didn't hear a word about the program eliminations at NSF and NOAA.  There's a lot of work to be done here, with the Administration and Congress.  I hope those reading this will follow Sean's advice and follow the link above to contact Congress.

 

Patrick Fitzgerald

Director of Education Advocacy

National Wildlife Federation

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