Jimmy Carter speaks about Arctic National Wildlife Refuge on its 50th anniversary
[2023-07-25 14:42:44]
SHEPHERDSTOWN, W. Va. - Over the past two decades, Alaska's land has been abandoned whenever it promotes the protection of large Arctic wildlife sanctuaries.
"I do not know who can do what," former Jimmy Carter said at a symposium at the National Conservation Training Center to celebrate the 50th anniversary of evacuation centers.
In the last few months of President Dwight Eisenhower's regime, evacuation centers were built above 9 million acres. Twenty years later, in 1980, Carter signed the Alaska National Profit Land Protection Act at the end of the White House. And it allowed the shelter to expand to 18 million acres. Today it covers an area of 19.6 million acres
Republican Ted Stevens and Democratic Mike Gravel in 1980 represented the Alaska in the American Senate. Stevens was the longest Republican senator ever in history and died in an airplane accident in August.
Carter said the bill to protect evacuation from exploitation often goes through the House of Representatives, but they are always arrested by the Senate.
86-year-old Carter and interior secretary Cecil D. Andrews found a solution in the 1906 Antiquities Artifact Act.
As Alaska 's public opinion is very strong to Carter, Secret Service recommended not to let him into the state.
In public activities, two dunk tanks were installed in the past. "One is my face and the other is Ayatollah Khomeini," he said.
Mr. Carter said that later in the government and the Capitol, the shelter was later considered to be safe forever.
"A few weeks after I resigned, President Ronald Reagan appointed James Watt as an interior minister, ANWR began training," Carter said. He said that Watt is "mean mean".
He said that whenever a Republican took over the White House, there would be new measures to open up evacuation centers for this development.
Immediately after President Reagan took office, Carter said that he changed the limit per gallon Carter did, he said. He said that this caused the country to waste more oil than any possible drilling at the shelter.
Carter said he and the wife Rosalin eventually went to evacuation centers. They met locals, saw the Porcupine Caribou group and saw that Yak was making a protective ring to protect women and young people. When the Carters are too close, look at the Dall sheep, look at the wolves, and a polar bear, he said
Since 1996, the population of Alaska has increased by 15%, tourists tripled, the state has the lowest mortality rate, ranked first among high school graduates. And Chamber of Commerce who condemns him
Everyone can enter a shelter to enjoy fishing, fishing, hiking, camping, research, or its beauty, but you need to get inside, canoe and fly.
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, President Jimmy Carter remembered that his work led to the adoption of the Alaska National Land Protection Act (ANILCA) in 1980. ANICLA also created nine new national wildlife sanctuaries and expanded six of the seven existing shelters. Carter signed the bill on December 2, 1980. The former president spoke at the beginning of the three-day historical seminar on Arctic evacuation centers at the Shepherdstown National Conservation and Training Center in West Virginia on January 18. "I spent more time investigating the Alaska map than anywhere else in the world," Carter reminds him of his president. Carter said that AnilCA made him very unpopular in Alaska more than 30 years ago. Carter pointed out that the state tourism industry has tripled since the bill was formed.
Arctic National Wildlife Sanctuary (ANWR or Arctic Cross Protection) is a national wildlife reserve in the northeast of Alaska. It includes 19,286,722 acres (78,050.59 square kilometers) on the north slope of Alaska. It is the nation's largest national wildlife sanctuary, slightly larger than the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Reserve. The evacuation center is managed by the office of Fairbanks. The Arctic National