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from: Whitehouse Press
date: 2008-06-23 23:31:22
subject: Press Release (0806231) for Mon, 2008 Jun 23

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Mrs. Bush's Remarks at an Active Trails! Event
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For Immediate Release Office of the First Lady June 23, 2008

Mrs. Bush's Remarks at an Active Trails! Event Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller
National Historical Park Woodstock, Vermont

˙˙Photos


11:29 A.M. EDT

MRS. BUSH: Thank you very much, Rachel. I'm so excited to be here today.
June is Great Outdoors Month in the United States, and I think it's a great
way to celebrate Great Outdoors Month by exploring
Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park.

I want to acknowledge Representative Steve Adams, the Minority Leader of
the Vermont House of Representatives. Thank you very much, Steve, and Jean,
for joining us today. Representative Alison Clarkson from the Vermont House
of Representatives -- thank you, Alison, for all your good work for parks
here. The Superintendent here of Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National
Historical Park, Rolf Diamant, thank you very much. Rolf has been the
Superintendent of this park since it opened for 10 years. And imagine how
terrific that would be to be able to build a park like he has. And that's
what's so terrific about our National Park System, is we have our old
fabulous parks that were founded over 100 years ago, or protected areas
over 100 years ago, and we have our new parks as well.

David Donath, thank you very much, from the Woodstock Foundation. Thank you
for your partnership with this park. And Vin Cipolla, who's been terrific
as the National Park Foundation Board President. And he's just been so
great and really doing a lot of great things like being able to give these
sort of $50,000 grants to parks around the country.

Regan Gammon, who is the Citizen Chair -- Vice Chair of the National Park
Foundation is here with me. And Regan and my other friends that are here
with me -- Jane Ann, Marge and Peggy -- and I all grew up together in
Midland, Texas, and we hike together every summer. And Rachel, we like to
do just what you like to do. We like to splash through streams and we like
to get up in the middle of the night and look at stars when we're on the --
in great big national parks where it's very dark and you can see really
great stars at night.

We started hiking together for our 40th birthday by going down the Colorado
River in the Grand Canyon and then hiking the 10 miles out. And in the
years since -- and I won't tell you how many years since -- (laughter) --
we've visited all of -- or many of our great Western national parks:
Yosemite, Glacier, Yellowstone, Denali -- is there someone named Denali
over there? (Laughter.) Are you named for the national park? You are? I
thought -- I wondered if you were. Olympic National Park -- many, many
others. But this is our first year to choose to hike on an Eastern -- one
of our Eastern parks, and we're starting here at Marsh-Billings and then
we're going on to Acadia National Park to hike there.

The mountains on this side of the country may not be as tall as those on
the other side, but it's easy for us to see from our surroundings that this
scenery is every bit as grand as those Western parks. And actually, as
we've gotten older, these smaller mountains are more -- (laughter) -- more
appropriate for our hiking.

Long before conservation or sustainability became popular terms, Frederick
Billings and his family were putting it into practice on this land. Today,
Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park is the oldest
sustainably managed forest in the United States. And the new Forest Center,
which we're in at this very moment, that will officially open in August, is
the first National Park Service structure to be built entirely from lumber
from a certified sustainable forest. Everything in here -- the only thing
that is not local are the cedar shingles on the outside, and that's because
there is not cedar in this forest.

The park's new permanent exhibit -- The Mount Tom Forest: A Legacy of
Stewardship -- will tell the story of sustainable forestry as it's uniquely
written here across these lands.

As Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller prepares for its 10th anniversary later in
August this summer, national parks around the country are getting ready for
another important milestone: 2016 marks the 100th anniversary of the
National Park System. Some of our national parks have been protected for
longer than that; they're older than 100 years. In fact, we went to Mesa
Verde for its 100th anniversary last year, I guess, or maybe the year
before, its 100th anniversary as a protected site. But this anniversary,
100th anniversary of the National Park System is an opportunity for the
National Park Foundation and other friends of the parks to identify new
goals for a new century of stewardship.

President Bush has the President's National Park Centennial Initiative,
which is challenging individuals and corporations and foundations and the
private sector to make a personal investment in park improvements. And
today's event, which is held on this donated land, exemplifies how public
-- private philanthropy has always been a mainstay of our public lands, and
especially in the park system.

As the federal government increases its support of the parks, the
Centennial Initiative will also inspire anew a sense of private
responsibility for our public lands. This morning I got to see these young
people who are committed to the parks by working to improve the network of
pathways and trails and carriage roads here at Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller.
Students who are engaged in service-learning activities like these -- like
the camp provides for them and from SCA and the Vermont Service
Organization -- are more likely to do well in school and to have strong
social skills. These students are also more likely to continue service and
civic involvement as adults. And they're more likely to grow up with a love
of time spent outdoors in America's national parks.

The National Park Foundation's new Active Trails! program will help expand
community involvement in the trails initiative through the grant that Vin
just announced to the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park.
This funding will support the park and the Woodstock Foundation as they
work to connect the park's trails with the town of Woodstock and with the
Appalachian Trail. And it will help revitalize the aptly named "Stewardship
Trail" this summer, because a lot of volunteers, like these young people,
will be working on that trail.

Our national parks give Americans the chance to hike, swim, camp, explore,
and, most important, create lasting memories with families and friends, and
that's certainly what we've done with each other in our many years of
hiking together. And finally, one year we did break down and invite our
girls -- (laughter) -- along with us. We did that Grand Canyon trip again a
few years ago with -- all of us have girls, some of us have boys, too; some
of them have boys -- but it was a mother and daughter trip, and it was
really fun -- really fun to get to be with them and show them what it was
like. And then they said, "Now, are we going to get to go next year?" And
we said, "No." (Laughter.) But they all hike and camp themselves, and
really not because we took them hiking and camping so much but because they
saw us do it and knew how much it meant to us. And so that's what they're
doing with their friends.

In fact, Acadia National Park, where we're going to go tomorrow, has a very
special and romantic spot in our hearts because that's where our
son-in-law, Henry, asked Jenna to marry him, on the top of Cadillac
Mountain, at sunrise, in the very first spot that the sun shines on the
United States. So, isn't that so sweet and romantic? (Laughter.) What a
great son-in-law we've got. (Laughter.)

So here today, as we celebrate the very start of the summer season, it's a
perfect time for us to recommit ourselves to preserving and protecting our
fabulous national parks.

So thank you all very much. It's great to get to be with you here today.
We're going to walk on these carriage trails this afternoon and tomorrow,
and we're really looking forward to seeing the farm and some other things
here. We already toured the Rockefeller house, so that's been very fun. And
then we'll go on to Acadia and do the same thing for the rest of the week.

So thank you all very much. Thank you for your support of this fabulous
national park. (Applause.)

END 11:39 A.M. EDT

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