Click our logo for the Sierra Club homepage.
Taking the Initiative: Who Is Getting It Done?

« Only Four Weeks? But What a Four Weeks! | Main | "The Job of The Rest of Us..." »

The blog of Sierra Club Chairman Carl Pope

February 23, 2009

Who Is Getting It Done?

Nairobi, Kenya -- America is rejoining the world in the 21st century -- and the world is responding. After a global effort to solve the problem of mercury pollution was repeatedly stalemated by the Bush administration and then almost collapsed of its own weight, suddenly this week it sprang back to life. After seven years of resistance, the U.S. has signaled it wants a treaty and, in the words of U.N. Environmental Program Chief Achim Steiner, everything has changed:

"Only a few weeks ago, nations remained divided on how to deal with this major public health threat which touches everyone in every country of the world," Steiner said. "Today, the world's environment ministers, armed with the full facts and full choices, decided the time for talking was over -- the time for action on this pollution is now."

The change in the U.S. position came in a letter from White House Council on Environmental Quality Chair Nancy Sutley. Once the Obama administration said it would reverse Bush's recalcitrance, China, India, and other nations also agreed to endorse the goal of a mandatory treaty.

What is most astonishing about this turn of events is not that the Obama administration favors controls on mercury -- you would have expected that. But how, with virtually no one yet in place or confirmed, did the administration manage to get to this issue so promptly? How, indeed, has President Obama managed to maintain an unprecedented level of momentum with almost no one to do the work? Only Friday I talked with one of the undersecretaries-designate, and he lamented that in his department only the Secretary has been confirmed -- so no one else can do any work yet.

I think there's a hidden, and important, back story here. The current skeleton crew of administration appointees cannot be producing this much change this fast. There simply aren't enough of them, even though they're all working twelve-hour days, seven days a week, and are dog tired. So how is this seeming miracle happening?

The secret ingredient, I believe, is that the career civil service was so abused by Bush for eight years that they've been eagerly waiting for the chance to reverse course. And President Obama has shown, both during his campaign and during the transition, a remarkable capacity to get the best out of people by sending them clear signals -- and getting out of their way. This is where the organizer in him becomes so important -- and we're now seeing that he can enlist as allies not only his own team but also the civil service he has inherited and, perhaps, if the way in which the rest of the world rallied around the idea of mandatory mercury treaty, the civil services of other countries as well. All President Obama needs to do is raise an eyebrow, and things start to happen.

It may be a wild but highly productive ride.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451b96069e2011168921d6c970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Who Is Getting It Done?:

Carl Pope, Sierra Club Chairman

About Carl Pope

Sign up to receive Carl's posts by email

Carl Pope
Carl Pope
Create Your Badge

User comments or postings reflect the opinions of the responsible contributor only, and do not reflect the viewpoint of the Sierra Club. The Sierra Club does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy of any posting. The Sierra Club accepts no obligation to review every posting, but reserves the right (but not the obligation) to delete postings that may be considered offensive, illegal or inappropriate.

Up to Top


Sierra Club® and "Explore, enjoy and protect the planet"® are registered trademarks of the Sierra Club. © 2011 Sierra Club.
The Sierra Club Seal is a registered copyright, service mark, and trademark of the Sierra Club.