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Environment

The Green-Collar Solution: Saving the Economy and the Environment

By Thomas L. Friedman, The New York Times. Posted November 5, 2007.


Van Jones has been on a crusade to help underprivileged African-Americans and other disadvantaged communities understand why they would be the biggest beneficiaries of a greener America.
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Van Jones is a rare bird. He's a black social activist in Oakland, Calif., and as green an environmentalist as they come. He really gets passionate, and funny, when he talks about what it's like to be black and green.

"Try this experiment. Go knock on someone's door in West Oakland, Watts or Newark and say: 'We gotta really big problem!' They say: 'We do? We do?' 'Yeah, we gotta really big problem!' 'We do? We do?' 'Yeah, we gotta save the polar bears! You may not make it out of this neighborhood alive, but we gotta save the polar bears!' "

Mr. Jones then just shakes his head. You try that approach on people without jobs who live in neighborhoods where they've got a lot better chance of getting killed by a passing shooter than a melting glacier, you're going to get nowhere -- and without bringing America's underclass into the green movement, it's going to get nowhere, too.

"We need a different on-ramp" for people from disadvantaged communities, says Mr. Jones. "The leaders of the climate establishment came in through one door and now they want to squeeze everyone through that same door. It's not going to work. If we want to have a broad-based environmental movement, we need more entry points."

Mr. Jones, who heads the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in Oakland, which helps kids avoid jail and secure jobs, has an idea how to change that -- a "green-collar" jobs program that focuses on underprivileged youth. I would not underestimate him. Mr. Jones, age 39, and a Yale Law School grad, exudes enough energy to light a few buildings on his own.

One thing spurring him in this project, he explained, was the way that the big oil companies bought ads in black-owned newspapers in California in 2006 showing an African-American woman filling her gas tank with a horrified look at the pump price. The ads were used to help bring out black votes to defeat Proposition 87. That ballot initiative proposed a tax on oil companies drilling in California, the money from which would have gone to develop alternative energy projects. The oil companies tried to scare African-Americans into thinking that the tax on the companies would be passed on at the pump.

"The polluters were able to stampede poor people into their camp," said Mr. Jones. "I never want to see an N.A.A.C.P. leader on the wrong side of an environment issue again."

Using his little center in Oakland, Mr. Jones has been on a crusade to help underprivileged African-Americans and other disadvantaged communities understand why they would be the biggest beneficiaries of a greener America. It's about jobs. The more government requires buildings to be more energy efficient, the more work there will be retrofitting buildings all across America with solar panels, insulation and other weatherizing materials. Those are manual-labor jobs that can't be outsourced.

"You can't take a building you want to weatherize, put it on a ship to China and then have them do it and send it back," said Mr. Jones. "So we are going to have to put people to work in this country -- weatherizing millions of buildings, putting up solar panels, constructing wind farms. Those green-collar jobs can provide a pathway out of poverty for someone who has not gone to college."

Let's tell our disaffected youth: "You can make more money if you put down that handgun and pick up a caulk gun."

Remember, adds Mr. Jones, "a big chunk of the African-American community is economically stranded. The blue-collar, stepping-stone, manufacturing jobs are leaving. And they're not being replaced by anything. So you have this whole generation of young blacks who are basically in economic free fall." Green-collar retrofitting jobs are a great way to catch them.

To this end, Mr. Jones's group and the electrical union in Oakland created the Oakland Apollo Alliance. This year that coalition helped to raise $250,000 from the city government to create a union-supported training program that will teach young people in Oakland how to put up solar panels and weatherize buildings.

It is the beginning of a "Green for All" campaign (greenforall.org) that Mr. Jones -- backed by other environmental activists like Majora Carter from Sustainable South Bronx -- is launching to get Congress to allocate $125 million to train 30,000 young people a year in green trades.

"If we can get these youth in on the ground floor of the solar industry now, where they can be installers today, they'll become managers in five years and owners in 10. And then they become inventors," said Mr. Jones. "The green economy has the power to deliver new sources of work, wealth and health to low-income people -- while honoring the Earth. If you can do that, you just wiped out a whole bunch of problems. We can make what is good for poor black kids good for the polar bears and good for the country."

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View:
teach eco as survival
Posted by: kuro_neko on Nov 7, 2007 7:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Becoming green should be seen as a step towards survival and independence. In a disaster FEMA is not going to save you, that's what Katrina taught us. Health costs are sky-rocketing, the cheap food in the stores and fast-food restaurants are killing us. Schools in many cities are starting to teach kids about growing gardens, organic food and how to prepare that food for lunches. This knowledge needs to be passed down to the parents. Growing things like potatoes, cooking herbs like basil, finding and supporting farmers markets. Increasingly farmers markets are accepting food-stamps - but parents need to learn how to prepare these food. Sauteeing in olive oil vs. frying. Cooking with beans and rice, lentils, split peas, black eyed peas, protein-rich grains like amaranth and quinioa, cutting down on the amount of meat in one's diet (cheaper, healthier, greener). Using crockpots to make meals. Stocking up on cans, beans, grains, pastas, spices, etc. in bulk (saves money, and helps keep a full pantry in event of any disasters, economic or weather-related). Poor families in other countries often had their own kitchen gardens, even in urban cities: containers on balconies growing tomatoes, herbs, chilis, peppers, every little bit counts. Composting kitchen waste helps reduce garbage and saves on garbage-utility costs. Reusing instead of buying and throwing out disposable goods. Americans during the Depression were great conservationists b/c it was an economic necessity. During the war people had their own kitchen gardens called 'victory gardens'. It will help make people more independent and self-sufficent and safer if they do these things, so they are less helpless and having to rely on FEMA if there are emergencies, b/c time and time again FEMA has let down certain communities. We need to take survival into our own hands.

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