NATIONAL
BIOTECHNOLOGY MONTH,2000 BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITEDSTATES OF
AMERICA A
PROCLAMATION
As we stand at
the dawn of a new century, we recognize the enormous
potential that biotechnology holds for
improving the quality of life here in the United States and around the
world. These technologies, which draw on our understanding of the life sciences to
develop products and solve problems, are progressing at an exponential rate and promise to
make unprecedented
contributions to public health and safety, a cleaner
environment, and economic
prosperity.
Today,a third of all new medicines in
development are based on biotechnology. Designed to attack the underlying cause of
an illness, not just its
symptoms, these medicines have tremendous potential to provide
not only more effective
treatments, but also cures. With improved
under-standing of cellular and genetic
processes, scientists have opened exciting new avenues of research into treatments for
devastating diseases --
like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's, diabetes, heart disease, AIDS,
and cancer -- that
affect millions of Americans. Biotechnology has also given
us several new vaccines,
including one for rotavirus, now being tested clinically, that could eradicate an illness
responsible for the deaths of more than 800,000 infants and children each
year.
The impact of biotechnology is
far-reaching. Bioreme-diation technologies are cleaning our environment by removing toxic
substances from contaminated soils and groundwater. Agricultural
biotechnology reduces our dependence on pesticides. Manufacturing processes
based on biotechnology
make it possible to produce paper and chemicals with less
energy, less pollution, and less
waste. Forensic technologies based on our
growing knowledge of DNA help us
exonerate the innocent and bring criminals to justice.
The biotechnology industry is also
improving lives through its substantial economic impact. Biotechnology has stimulated
the creation and growth
of small businesses, generated new jobs, and encouraged
agricultural and
industrial innovation. The industry currently employs more
than 150,000 people and
invests nearly $10 billion a year on research and
development.
Recognizing the extraordinary promise
and benefits of this enterprise, my Administration has pursued policies to foster biotechnology
innovations as
expeditiously and prudently as possible. We have supported
steady increases in
funding for basic scientific research at the National
Institutes of Health and other science
agencies; accelerated the process for approving new medicines to make them available as quickly
and safely as possible;
encouraged private-sector research investment and small business
development through tax incentives and
the Small Business Innovation Research program; promoted intellectual property protection and
open international
markets for biotechnology inventions and products; and
developed public databases that enable
scientists to coordinate their efforts in an enterprise that has become one of the world's
finest examples of
partnership among university-based researchers, government, and
private industry.
Remarkable as its achievements have
been, the biotechnology enterprise is still in its infancy. We will reap
even greater benefits as long as we sustain the intellectual partnership and public confidence that
have moved biotechnology
forward thus far. We must strengthen our efforts to improve
science education for all A mericans
and preserve and promote the freedom of scientific inquiry. We must protect patients from the
misuse or abuse of sensitive medical informationand provide Federal regulatory
agencies with sufficient
resources to maintain sound, science-based review and
regulationof
biotechnology products. And we must strive to ensure that
science-based regulatory
programs worldwide promote public safety, earn public
confidence, and guarantee fair and
open international markets.
NOW,THEREFORE, I, WILLIAM J. CLINTON,
President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the
Constitution and laws of
the United States,do hereby proclaim January 2000 as National
Biotechnology Month. I call upon
the people of the United States to observe this month with appropriate
programs, ceremonies, and activities.
INWITNESS WHEREOF, I have here unto
set my hand this nineteenth day of January,in the year of our Lord two thousand,
and of the Independence
of the United States of America the two hundred and
twenty-fourth.
WILLIAM
J. CLINTON
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