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Annie Notthoff’s Blog

John Laird named to key environmental post in Brown administration

Annie Notthoff

Posted January 6, 2011 in Living Sustainably, Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

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I’ve been lucky enough to know and work with John Laird ever since he was a Santa Cruz city councilman and we first joined forces with then Congressman Leon Panetta and US Senator Pete Wilson to protect California’s coastal environment and economy from offshore oil drilling proposals. Today we all have very good reasons to applaud our new Governor Jerry Brown’s appointment of former Assemblyman Laird as Secretary of Natural Resources. Simply put, John Laird bring unparalleled expertise and experience to the job of protecting the public trust of the state’s waters, public lands, and wildlife and helping chart a course to a clean energy economy here in California.

Times are tough for the Natural Resources Agency. Past staff and budget cuts have jeopardized the Agency’s ability to confront growing pressures on water, land, and wildlife from a growing population and economy. As one example, revenues from the state’s commercial fisheries have declined by more than half since 1990, the number of fishing vessels by more than 70%, and the number of fish processors by a third, costing thousands of jobs and millions of dollars to local economies.

It’s hard not to look at the state of the budget and these challenges and not conclude that California needs to find a new way forward. Laird is unusually well prepared for this challenge because he combines a deep knowledge of the issues with an expert understanding of how state budgets work (or not).  In the Assembly, and as a City Councilman in Santa Cruz, Laird regularly showed his knowledge and concern for ocean and coastal protection and the environment, battling against offshore oil drilling, co-authoring AB 32—the state’s landmark clean energy law—and advancing implementation of the Marine Life Protection Act and the statewide network of marine protected areas that can help rebuild California’s fisheries. Laird also authored legislation calling upon the Ocean Protection Council to support better fisheries management through strategic grants.

Better than most anyone with his kind of environmental credentials, Laird knows the nuts and bolts of the state budget. While in the State Assembly in 2002-2008, Laird served as Chair of the Budget Committee and Special Session Committee on Budget Process. Governor Brown and Californians will benefit greatly from have Laird’s experience and expertise to call upon. And in tough budget times, the state’s natural resources will benefit from having someone representing them who knows the budget as deeply as Laird does.

Finally, John Laird is a pragmatist and problem-solver who has committed his life to public service, whether serving as a Board Member of the Santa Cruz Area Chamber of Commerce or as a member of the Cabrillo College Board of Trustees.  And he knows how to laugh – a quality that is especially important in tough times.

Congratulations to John Laird for his selection, and to Governor Brown for his adding John Laird to his team. 

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Comments

SteveJan 7 2011 03:57 PM

I'm loving what CA is doing...Can someone write an article how future Gov. Newsom will change the world, starting in CA of course.

JohnJan 7 2011 05:00 PM

Steve- Gov. Newsom will become Governor (Next Round) and continue his legacy of removing peoples rights to bare arms, fish and hunt. Hopefully the trend will continue across the nation.

Larry LaddJan 14 2011 01:48 AM

I'm eternally grateful to John Laird for his role in in the legislature securing regulation of perchlorate in drinking water. I hope he will play a similar role in the application of a total nitrosamine assay to the sewage discharges entering the Delta from Sacramento, Stockton, and other cities that will help identify some of the chemicals causing problems for wildlife in the Delta, and quite possibly also curb contamination in some of the municipal water supplies across the state. Sewage discharges via the Delta and the Contra Costa Canal seem to be the most likely source of the nitrosamines in the drinking water of Antioch discovered by the US EPA's Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule 2 drinking water survey.

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