Gale Norton is an American public servant who served as the Secretary of the Interior from 2001 to 2006. During her tenure, she was involved in overseeing national parks, wildlife, and natural resources. Norton's work in public service focused on issues related to environmental policy and land management. Her contributions to the field have had a significant impact on American conservation efforts.
"Our responsibility for BLM lands is multiple-use, meaning a variety of needs and uses."
"I think that our cooperative conservation approaches get people to sit down and grapple with problem solving."
"I think the greatest challenge in environmentalism and the most rewarding challenge is trying to figure out how humans can meet their needs while protecting the environment."
"We have vastly increased the amount of funding that is available for conservation partnerships."
"We also know that China and India, as their economies ramp up, are using more and more energy."
"Why has it seemed that the only way to protect the environment is with heavy-handed government regulation?"
"Local innovation and initiative can help us better understand how to protect our environment."
"My schedulers keep getting driven crazy by the fact that they can't fit hikes in my schedule."
"Growing up in Denver, I'm sure it started with loving the Colorado mountains."
"I think today we recognize that economic activity needs to search for ways to protect the environment."
"Especially with the predators, one of the things that gets these programs going on a local level is for our land management agencies to build partnerships with surrounding communities and landowners."
"The developers, if they decide to move a tortoise, have to pay the long-term costs for enhancing the areas that take care of the tortoise, and it gives us the opportunity to manage an area that is going to be protected."