PRESIDENTS MESSAGE 



To the Congress of the United States: 



I transmit herewith for the information of the Congress a letter from the Chairman of the 

 National Resources Committee with the accompanying report entitled: "Little Waters: 

 a Study of Headwater Streams and Other Little Waters: Their Use and Relations to the 

 Land." 



This report treats of a subject with which the physical well-being of our people is inti- 

 mately bound up, yet to which, in the past, too little attention has been paid. We have 

 grown accustomed to dealing with great rivers, with their large problems of navigation, of 

 power, and of flood control, and we have been tempted to forget the little rivers from which 

 they come. The report points out that we can have no effective national policy in those 

 matters, nor in the closely related matter of proper land uses, until we trace this running 

 water back to its ultimate sources and find means of controlling it and of using it. 



Our disastrous floods, our sometimes almost equally disastrous periods of low water, and 

 our major problems of erosion, to which attention has been called by the reports of the 

 National Resources Board, the Mississippi Valley Committee, the Soil Erosion Service, and 

 other agencies, do not come full-grown into being. They originate in a small way in a 

 multitude of farms, ranches, and pastures. 



It is not suggested that we neglect our main streams and give our whole attention to 

 these little waters but we must have, literally, a plan which will envisage the problem as it 

 is presented in every farm, every pasture, every wood lot, every acre of the public domain. 



The Congress could not formulate, nor could the Executive carry out the details of such 

 a plan, even though such a procedure were desirable and possible under our form of govern- 

 ment. We can, however, lay down certain simple principles and devise means by which 

 the Federal Government can cooperate in the common interest with the States and with 

 such interstate agencies as may be established. It is for the Congress to decide upon the 

 proper means. Our objective must be so to manage the physical use of the land that we 

 will not only maintain soil fertility but will hand on to the next generation a country with 

 better productive power and a greater permanency of land use than the one we inherited 

 from the previous generation. The opportunity is as vast as is the danger. I hope and 

 believe that the Congress will take advantage of it, and in such a way as to command the 

 enthusiastic support of the States and of the whole public. 



FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT 

 THE WHITE HOUSE, 



January 30, 1936. 



