IFAW recognizes marine conservation leaders

Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA)
Congressmen Sam Farr (D-CA) and Curt Weldon
(R-PA), Co- chairs, Congressional Oceans Caucus
Hon. Robert B. Zoellick,
Deputy Secretary of State
Mr. Gary Ostrom, Vice President, Massachusetts
Lobsterman’s Association
These outstanding men will be recognized at a
bipartisan event tonight in Washington D.C., hosted by Chris and Kathleen
Matthews. Each of the individuals will be presented with an IFAW “Song of the
Whale” award – named after IFAW’s marine research vessel.
About the awardees
Senator Edward Kennedy
was elected to the Senate in 1962 and has fought for clean seas ever since.
Kennedy has been particularly active in efforts to protect right whales. In
1999, Senator Kennedy, along with Congressman Bill Delahunt, launched the Coast
Guard’s Mandatory Ship Reporting System, a unique program developed to protect
endangered whales from ship strikes. Most recently Senator Kennedy led the
effort to secure federal funds to support the first-of-its-kind Whale Friendly
Fishing Gear Exchange Program pioneered by IFAW and the Massachusetts
Lobstermen’s Association.
As co-chair of the House Ocean’s Caucus
and the original author of the legislation that created the U.S. Commission on
Ocean Policy, Congressman Farr is a leading advocate for protecting the marine
environment and establishing a balanced national oceans policy. During his 12
year tenure Farr has championed significant marine conservation legislation
including the Southern Sea Otter Recovery and Research Act and the Captive
Mammal Protection Act.
As co-chair of the House Ocean’s Caucus
Congressman Curt Weldon has consistently ensured that oceans issues are a
priority for Congress and the Administration. He has sponsored and co-sponsored
legislation to protect and restore the health of marine ecosystems, including
the “Oceans, Conservation, Education, and National Strategy for the 21st Century
Act (Oceans 21)” and the Ocean and Coastal Observation Act of 2004. Weldon
also demonstrated his commitment to the oceans around the world by being the
first call attention to the threats to the marine environment posed by
radioactive waste pollution in the waters surrounding the former Soviet Union.
Both Congressmen Weldon and Farr have worked closely to
incorporate recommendations from the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy and the Pew
Ocean Commission reports to craft sound, science-based ocean policy that will
safeguard our oceans and marine life for future generations.
Deputy Secretary of State Robert B. Zoellick's record of service
at the Treasury and State Departments and as Deputy White House Chief of Staff
during the early 1990s is well known. He helped address many high-profile
challenges during this period: German re-unification, the end of the Cold War,
the Central American peace process and the launch of the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation group (APEC). Less known, and largely unheralded, is the tireless
personal leadership he provided on marine conservation issues, including
international efforts to eliminate the indiscriminate use of driftnets on the
high seas. These efforts culminated in the High Seas Fisheries Enforcement Act
which then-President Bush signed into law in 1992. As US Trade Representative
under the current President Bush, Mr. Zoellick consistently strengthened
environmental provisions in a host of multilateral and bilateral trade
agreements. Since becoming Deputy Secretary of State, Zoellick has worked to
preserve and expand international protections for whales and other endangered
species.
As a fisherman, Mr. Gary Ostrom has spent his life on the
water. He presently serves as Vice President of the Massachusetts Lobsterman’s
Association. The critically endangered right whales and those of us working to
protect them, owe a lot to this fisherman. A decade ago, in 1996, Gary and his
brother-in-law Dan Paul, a plastics engineer from New Hampshire, designed a
simple device that causes lobster lines to break away if they become entangled
with whales. Gary was also instrumental in IFAW’s unique gear replacement
project which pioneered the use of whale-friendly lobster gear in critical right
whale habitat off the coast of Cape Cod.
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