WRITTEN TESTIMONY OF
MARY GLACKIN
ASSISTANT ADMINISTRATOR FOR
PROGRAM PLANNING AND INTEGRATION
NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION
HEARING ON
“STATUS OF THE OCEANS – 2006”
BEFORE THE
COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE, SCIENCE, AND TRANSPORTATION
SUBCOMMITTEE ON
UNITED STATES SENATE
Good afternoon Chairman Sununu, Senator Boxer and members of the Committee. I am Mary Glackin, Assistant Administrator for the Office of Program Planning and Integration at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), in the Department of Commerce. Thank you for the opportunity to testify before you today on NOAA’s response to the final report of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy and our role in implementing components of the Administration’s response to that report - the U.S. Ocean Action Plan.
On
In response to the Commission's findings and recommendations, the President issued Executive Order no. 13366, on December 17, 2004, establishing a Cabinet-level Committee on Ocean Policy, whose membership includes the Secretaries of Commerce, State, Defense, the Interior, Agriculture, Health and Human Services, Transportation, Energy, and Homeland Security, and the Attorney General. Other members of the Committee on Ocean Policy include the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Director of National Intelligence, the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, the Director of the National Science Foundation, and the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff; and the Assistants to the President for National Security Affairs, Homeland Security Domestic Policy, Economic Policy, and an employees of the Office of the Vice President. The Committee on Ocean Policy created a framework to coordinate the ocean- and coastal-related activities of over 20 federal agencies, administering over 140 laws, and facilitates coordination and support to the numerous state, tribal, and local programs with the overall goal of improved ocean governance. At the same time, the President released the U.S. Ocean Action Plan, which identifies immediate short-term and long-term actions necessary to more effectively manage coastal and ocean resources.
Both the final report of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy, and the U.S. Ocean Action Plan, recognize that partnerships are vital to halting the degradation of our oceans, and to our realizing their full potential. Thus, an underlying theme of my testimony today is “partnerships are essential for success.” There are many agencies with important ocean and coastal responsibilities with which NOAA partners, and we take great pride and place great importance in continuing to strengthen our role as the lead civilian ocean agency.
NOAA is at the center of the federal government’s understanding, awareness, and stewardship of our ocean resources and has been given a lead role in carrying through on the U.S. Ocean Action Plan. Because of the size and breadth of NOAA’s involvement in the implementing activities, today I will highlight just a few results from the six sections of the plan. These will demonstrate how NOAA is actively working with federal, state, tribal, and international partners, congress, and other stakeholders to meet our nation’s challenges with respect to the oceans. In addition, I will highlight a few of the legislative priorities that would allow NOAA to improve its effectiveness at addressing issues raised by the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy.
Coordinated Ocean Governance Structure
The Committee on Ocean Policy conducts its operational work through the Interagency Committee on Ocean Science and Resource Management Integration (ICOSRMI) and its subordinate bodies, Subcommittee on Integrated Management of Ocean Resources (SIMOR) and the National Science and Technology Council’s (NSTC) Joint Subcommittee on Ocean Science and Technology (JSOST). Within this new coordinated ocean governance structure (figure 1), ICOSRMI is incorporating the mandate and functions of the National Oceanographic Partnership Program’s (NOPP) National Ocean Research Leadership Council (NORLC) into its broader ocean and coastal policy mandate, which now includes ocean resource management. The purpose of a high-level group like the ICOSRMI is to provide oversight to the implementation of the U.S. Ocean Action Plan and direct further actions to advance ocean science and resource management activities. The ICOSRMI is comprised of Under/Assistant Secretaries or their equivalents from the Executive branch agencies and departments of the Committee on Ocean Policy, and is co-chaired by the White House’s Council on Environmental Quality and Office of Science and Technology Policy. The White House involvement in this effort has been critical to providing the high-level guidance and support necessary to focus the group on achievable goals, and to maintain its momentum. NOAA Administrator Conrad C. Lautenbacher plays an active role in ICOSRMI and its bimonthly meetings.
In
addition to the Administrator’s role in ICOSRMI, NOAA has taken a leadership
role in both SIMOR and the JSOST, serving as co-chair on each respective group
and further supporting their activities.
SIMOR seeks to identify and promote
opportunities for collaboration and cooperation among agencies on resource
management issues, and to build partnerships among federal, state, tribal and
local authorities, the private sector, international partners, and other
interested parties.
SIMOR’s counterpart in the new coordinated ocean governance structure is the JSOST. The principal roles of JSOST are to identify national ocean science and technology priorities and to facilitate coordination of disciplinary and interdisciplinary ocean research, ocean technology and infrastructure development, and the development and implementation of the U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS). The JSOST was created through expansion of the former NSTC’s Joint Subcommittee on Oceans in 2005 to include the issues of Science and Technology. Because of this evolution, the JSOST continues to report to the NSTC Committee on Science and the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, in addition to the ICOSRMI.
ICOSRMI
seeks advice from the its federal advisory committee, the Ocean Research and
Resource Advisory Panel, comprised of 18 members from academia, public and
private sectors with interest and expertise in ocean science and resource
management. ICOSRMI also coordinates
with the National Security Council Policy Coordinating Committee – Global
Environment, Subcommittee on Ocean Policy.
NOAA’s Implementation of the U.S. Ocean Action Plan
The tenets of the U.S. Ocean Action Plan include: developing management strategies that ensure continued conservation of our ocean, coastal and Great Lakes resources, while at the same time ensuring that the American public enjoys and benefits from them; employing the best science and data to inform decision-making; working toward an ecosystem-based approach to management; and, where possible, employing economic incentives over mandates.
The Council on Environmental Quality designated NOAA as lead,
or co-lead, on 45 items from the U.S. Ocean
Action Plan. The diverse range of actions
begun by NOAA to date include developing a status report on deep-sea corals in
the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), working jointly with the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to conduct community workshops to improve
watershed protection, and improving navigation by updating the National Water
Level Observation Network. NOAA also
continues to emphasize the importance of local and regional leadership in ocean
management, co-leading with EPA the federal working group supporting the
Legislative
Priority - NOAA Organic Act
An ocean leadership priority identified in both the final report of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy and the U.S. Ocean Action Plan is the passage of a NOAA Organic Act. We believe it is necessary to consolidate into one authorization NOAA’s myriad purposes and responsibilities, which now reside in over two hundred separate statues. It should encompass the full spectrum of NOAA’s responsibilities, including programs to protect and restore the nation’s fisheries, and its responsibilities to provide products that foster safe transportation on marine highways. The Administration transmitted a proposal for such legislation to Congress in April 2005, and we are hopeful that this Committee will play an integral part in its passage. Most importantly, NOAA believes the agency must maintain its current flexibility in determining how best to structure itself to address current and future needs. In responding to the recommendations of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy thus far, flexibility has proved to be a vital tool for NOAA leadership. An organizational structure that serves the nation well today may not be the best structure to serve the nation in the future. We believe that specific programmatic changes should be made through authorization bills that are revisited every few years. We would be happy to work with the Committee on such bills.
Ocean
Research Priorities Plan
As outlined in the U.S.
Ocean Action Plan, an important role of the JSOST within the interagency
process is to improve our understanding of oceans, coasts, and
NOAA
is undertaking several other activities in partnership with external partners
or other agencies, to enhance our scientific knowledge of marine ecosystems. This includes a review of ecosystem science,
integration of
NOAA
External Ecosystem Science Review
NOAA is currently engaged in an effort, through the NOAA Science Advisory Board, to solicit external input to evaluate and strengthen the structure and function of ecosystem research within NOAA. This will allow NOAA to better address changing needs for ecosystem-based management. The NOAA Science Advisory Board formed an external panel, named the External Ecosystem Task Team, to conduct this external ecosystem science review. The External Ecosystem Task Team recently published a preliminary report on its findings for public comment. NOAA anticipates that the team’s final report will assist the agency in identifying the scientific activities conducted, and/or sponsored by NOAA, that meet its ecosystem science needs, including its legislative and regulatory requirements, and will also organize its ecosystem research and science enterprise.
Integrate
The U.S. Ocean Action Plan and the final
report of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy endorse implementation of a
sustained Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS). NOAA is pleased that the goals of S. 361, The Ocean and Coastal Observation System Act
of 2005, passed by the Senate in July 2005, are similar to the
Administration’s goals outlined in the its report to Congress on, An Integrated and Sustained Ocean Observing
System for the United States: Design and Implementation. These goals are also similar to the ICOSRMI
approved planning document, The First
NOAA, NASA, NSF and other federal agencies working through the JSOST, in partnership with private sector entities, are actively working on design concepts for IOOS to ensure it meets the varied needs of local, regional, and national users. NOAA recently awarded two, six-month industry contracts to Lockheed Martin Corporation and Raytheon Corporation. These companies will develop a comprehensive, "end-to-end," conceptual design and cost estimate, along with a narrative explanation, that could help structure NOAA’s efforts for implementing IOOS and shape how IOOS fits into GEOSS. To ensure consistency with the broader observing system community, resulting conceptual designs will be structured according to the three IOOS subsystems: data management and communications, national backbone, and regional ocean observing system components coordinated with the IWGOO agencies and other IOOS partners, such as the U.S. IOOS Regional Associations. The two conceptual designs with viability narratives and cost estimates are expected in early September 2006. Additionally, NOAA has continued to work with regional entities to establish organizational structures that capture local and regional needs. To date, 11 IOOS Regional Associations are working on plans for regional implementation of the IOOS, including the development of Regional Coastal Observing Systems (RCOOSs).
Ocean and Coastal Mapping Activities
Improved information on our ocean and coastal areas is essential to improved
management and advances in ocean and coastal management and science. NOAA is working with its interagency partners
to advance our nation’s capabilities in this area, taking advantage of new
technologies such as LIDAR and autonomous underwater vehicles. Among its efforts, NOAA is working to ensure
the most effective use of our fleet of research vessels and aircraft by
integrating our multiple program mapping requirements, developing new
techniques for data acquisition, working with other agencies, and making
seamless the use of our mapping missions.
We are building a Geographic Information System support tool to be able
to better plan and integrate mapping efforts in order to narrow the gaps
between current program mapping capability, and a modern fully integrated ocean
mapping system. The goal is to meet the broadest range of program needs
and eliminate duplicative efforts in NOAA’s ocean and coastal mapping
activities. In addition, NOAA is working with other agencies to develop
an inventory of coastal and ocean mapping programs, their existing data, and
planned acquisitions, along with a Web-based system to search and display
records from the inventory.
Together, SIMOR and the JSOST have formed the joint Interagency Working Group on Ocean Education, to identify opportunities and articulate priorities for enhancing ocean education, outreach, and capacity building. Improved ocean management requires an ocean literate public and to this end, NOAA is committed to advancing lifelong ocean education. Our formal and informal activities include scholarship and fellowship programs, education and research grants, and strategic partnerships with education institutions and industry. In 2005, NOAA provided scholarship and internship opportunities to over 150 undergraduate students and 57 graduate scholarship opportunities. In 2005, 28 teachers participated in NOAA's Teacher at Sea Program. NOAA's education investment is also geared towards hiring students trained through these scholarship and internship opportunities. To date, NOAA has hired 31 students trained through its Graduate Sciences Program.
To raise national attention to the need for
ocean literacy, NOAA, with EPA, the Department of Interior (DOI), National
Science Foundation, and National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and the
National Marine Sanctuary Foundation, co-hosted the Conference on Ocean
Literacy (CoOL) on June 7-8, 2006, in
SIMOR
Work Plan
Established as part of the Committee on Ocean Policy, SIMOR
provides a strong mechanism to coordinate federal activities and respond to
regional concerns. SIMOR is jointly
co-chaired by NOAA, EPA, DOI, and CEQ. As
a SIMOR co-chair, I can speak first-hand to the early success of this process. It has fostered mutual interest and proactive
dialog among agencies in addressing difficult resource management issues that
cross jurisdictional boundaries. SIMOR
has developed a work plan with 21 actions that build on the U.S. Ocean Action Plan. NOAA has a leadership role in 12 of these
actions, and participates in nearly all of the others. Examples of the benefits of SIMOR activities
include: improved understanding of an ecosystem approach to management through
regional workshops, and the development of educational standards for resource
managers; coordinated federal support to new and ongoing regional partnerships,
and formation of a federal/state team of resource managers to provide timely
input into the JSOST’s and development of the Ocean Research Priorities Plan..
Implement
Coral Reef Local Action Strategies
The federal agencies and seven jurisdictions (Florida,
Hawaii, Guam, American Samoa, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the
Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands) that comprise the U.S. Coral
Reef Task Force, as well as the freely associated states, have developed and
begun implementing Coral Reef Local Action Strategies to address key threats to
coral reefs in their respective jurisdictions. The action strategies provide a
framework for Task Force member agencies to identify, and collaboratively
address, these threats and additional local needs, connect local priorities to
national goals, and coordinate federal agency actions with local management of
reef resources. This
effort is a significant step forward in advancing the goal of cooperative
conservation between the federal, state, territorial, and commonwealth
governments. NOAA, DOI, EPA, and the
Department of Agriculture, have been key partners in implementing the action
strategy effort and building local capacity for coral reef conservation and
management. For example, agencies
organized a successful Caribbean Coral Reef Grants and Funding Opportunities
Workshop in August 2005 to help state and local partners identify and pursue
funding opportunities for local action strategy support. A similar set of workshops will be held in
Legislative Priority – Reauthorization of Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act
A number of actions highlighted within the U.S. Ocean Action Plan intend to improve coordination and effectiveness of marine fisheries management activities. Reauthorization of the Magnuson-Stevens Act is a high priority of the Administration and NOAA has worked with its constituencies to develop an effective and responsive proposal to the many challenges that face our federally managed marine fishery resources. In 2005, NOAA sponsored a national conference, Managing Our Nation’s Fisheries – II, specifically addressing reauthorization. From the input of the over 800 attendees, the Administration developed a list of strategic priorities to address in the reauthorization process, which resulted in a legislative proposal that addressed the many principles articulated in the final report of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy. The Administration’s proposal for reauthorization of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act seeks to achieve the following objectives:
1. End overfishing and achieve fishery rebuilding based on the biology of species and needs of communities, rather than arbitrary time schedules;
2. Promote wider use of market-based fishery management tools;
3. Improve the operations of Regional Fishery Management Councils (Councils) as well as broaden and balance the constituent interests represented on the Councils;
4. Incorporate ecosystem-based approaches into our fishery management process;
5. Strengthen the role of science in the decision-making process, and increase our access to social and economic information;
6. Upgrade the collection and use of recreational fisheries data;
7. Conform the Magnuson-Stevens Act regulatory procedures to the objectives of other environmental laws; and
8. Enhance the enforcement tools available to ensure they are true deterrents, and increased penalties represent meaningful punishment rather than simply a cost of doing business.
We appreciate the work of this Committee to move forward on reauthorizing the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Legislative Priority - National Offshore Aquaculture Act
In June 2005, the Administration released its National Offshore Aquaculture Act. Subsequently, Senator Stevens introduced S. 1195. Since that time, the Senate Commerce National Ocean Policy Study Subcommittee hosted a hearing on the bill in April 2006, and a second hearing on June 8, 2006. Enactment of S. 1195 will provide the Department of Commerce the authority to regulate aquaculture in federal waters, and to establish a coordinated process among the federal agencies. We envision a one-stop regulatory shop, coordinated by NOAA, and integrated into NOAA’s environmental stewardship responsibilities. NOAA appreciates the work of this Committee to move legislation forward to allow NOAA to begin a public rulemaking process to produce a comprehensive, environmentally sound permitting and regulatory program for aquaculture in federal waters, as we indicated we would do as part of the U.S. Ocean Action Plan.
Gulf
of Mexico
One
example of SIMOR’s role in enhancing coordination on managing coasts and
watersheds is the Gulf of Mexico Alliance.
In response to priorities articulated by the states of
Cooperative Conservation Executive Order
The
Administration remains committed to the tenets of Cooperative Conservation, as
outlined in the Executive Order of two years ago. Last year, at the White
House Conference on Cooperative Conservation, NOAA announced a new grants
program to aid communities in removing small obstructions to their
rivers. The goal of the Open Rivers Initiative (ORI) is to not only
improve habitat for diadramous fish populations, but also foster new economic
development opportunities. In addition to ORI, NOAA will continue to find
new and innovative ways to advance Cooperative Conservation throughout the
agency.
Interagency
Committee on the Marine Transportation System
Consistent with the final report of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy, the U.S. Ocean Action Plan called for the elevation of the previous federal interagency marine transportation effort – the Federal Interagency Committee on the Marine Transportation System – and directed the creation of a cabinet-level interagency committee on marine transportation. As a result, the 14-member federal agency Committee on the Marine Transportation System (CMTS), chaired by the Secretary of Transportation, was established in April 2005. I am proud to say that the Department of Commerce, with strong representation by NOAA, is a charter member of the CMTS, and actively supports its mission. The purpose of the CMTS is to promote a partnership of federal agencies with responsibility for the Marine Transportation System (MTS) – waterways, ports, and their intermodal connections – to ensure the development and implementation of national MTS policies, and to communicate to the President its views and recommendations for improving the MTS.
The CMTS is executing a work plan that will provide a comprehensive assessment of the MTS; development of a MTS national strategy; improved collection and management of MTS data; and development of a decision making matrix for improved coordination and response to natural disasters affecting the nation’s MTS.
Advance the Use of Large Marine Ecosystems
A new partnership has been developed that links the United Nations Environment Programme Regional Seas Programme and the use of the NOAA-originated concept of Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs). This partnership acts as a tool for enabling ecosystem-based management to provide a collaborative approach to management of resources within ecologically bounded transnational areas. This effort has attracted funding from the Global Environmental Facility (GEF) and various donor countries, specifically focusing on capacity building in the developing world. LME sponsored projects are underway in 10 regions involving 70 countries, and seven new projects are planned with an additional 51 countries participating. NOAA has contributed in-kind technical expertise to assist the planning and implementation of these programs.
2007 Budget Priorities
NOAA
continues to streamline activities and shift priorities to support and implement the President’s U.S. Ocean Action Plan. Legislative
action on the priorities identified could greatly enhance NOAA’s ability to
implement the activities outlined within the
Conclusion
In conclusion, I
would like to reiterate the importance of the efforts of the U.S. Commission on
Ocean Policy, and stress that NOAA is strongly committed to continued implementation
of the related recommendations of the U.S.
Ocean Action Plan, as well as through improvements in existing program
management and partnerships. NOAA
will continue to work with its partners in a collaborative and systematic
fashion, as we believe collaboration is critical to the ongoing development of
our national ocean policy. We look forward to continuing to work with the members of this Committee
in raising the bar for the long-term conservation and management of our coastal
and ocean resources.
Thank you again for
your time and I will be happy to take any questions from the members of the Committee.