Creating a Green Collar Work Force: Include Our Inmates
Posted on Sat Oct 11, 2008 at 03:32:00 PM EST
Tags: Green Economy, Green Jobs (all tags)
The Green Collar Economy is activist and political advisor Van Jones' new book. Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. wrote the forward
The premise: We can solve both our economic crises and our environmental problems with one solution: creation of green collar jobs, a green collar work force and a green economy.
Jones says we cannot drill and burn our way out of our energy and environmental problems. Here's what we can do to solve the crisis, and at the same time, address our declining economy, poverty and inequality. [More...]
In a nutshell, create a green collar work force.
"Give the work that most needs to be done to people who most need the work."
Put people to work in green jobs. Examples: installing solar panels, weatherizing buildings, manufacturing wind turbine parts, build plug-in hybrid vehicles, construct solar farms, wind farms and wave farms.
This will create thousands of contracts and millions of jobs, producing billions of dollars in economic stimulus.
"The green collar work force would be the "2.0 version" of the blue collar work force, upgraded to meet today's environmental challenges.
Green collar jobs are not high-tech and futuristic....Most are middle-skill jobs...that require more education than high school but less than a four year degree. These jobs are within reach for lower-skilled and low-income workers, as long as they have access to effective training programs. These jobs are the first step on a pathway to economic self-sufficiency.
Another advantage: These jobs are not readily outsourced.
Why I like this approach: It's also about "reclaiming thrown away lives....about gathering up people -- at risk youth, veterans coming home from war, people living in poverty" -- and those released from prison-- and giving them a second chance while solving our most important problems.
Jones cites our high incarceration statistics and the disproportionate numbers of African Americans who are incarcerated. His plan calls for honoring equal opportunity for all.
To solve our global problems, we need to engage and unleash the genius of all people, at all levels of society. Some of the minds that can solve our toughest problems are undoubtedly trapped behind prison bars, stuck behind desks in schools without decent books or isolated in rural communities. A green economy that is designed to pull them in -- as skilled laborers, innovators, inventors, and owners -- will be more dynamic, more robust, and better able to save the earth.
...equal protection and equal opportunity go hand in had. Especially for the vulnerable, we have a duty to do two things: we must minimize their pain and maximize our gain. We are one human family. So on a good day, we should not leave anyone out. And on a bad day, we should not leave anyone behind.
The role for Government:
helping to finance money-saving weatherization and solarization for low income homes, reinvesting in science and math programs in public schools, supporting vocational and technical training in the green trades, and shifting money from the failed incarceration industry to smarter, cheaper programs that get better results by focusing on emotional healing, economic opportunity, and rehabilitation.
Jones calls for the creation of a new coalition to create his "Green New Deal" which he calls the "Green Growth Alliance." The five main partners would be Labor, social justice activists, environmentalists, students and faith organizations. These partners, Jones says, would ally themselves with "green business" and "change the face of politics in this country."
Jones views faith as essential to the movement. It's about opposing theocracy but not theology; denouncing bias in the Christian church while not branding all Christians as bigots; and separating fundamentalism from faith.
He talks about the need to engage people of color in the movement and the need for slogans. Perhaps the best is "Green Jobs, Not Jails."
It speaks to the full range of urban concerns, addressing simultaneously issues of economic justice, criminal justice and environmental justice....My hope is that it will someday be adopted and embraced by the entire green movement as the central goal guiding our efforts.
Jones says our new President must take a leadership role in this. One suggestion: Creation of a Civic Justice Corps to provide the huge numbers of people being released from prison with a path to living wage green jobs and careers."
Similar programs are already underway in some cities. They need to be expanded.
For more on Jones' unique and inspiring proposals, get a copy of The Green Collar Economy. His outlook is positive, a great relief from the doom and gloom take on economic and environmental news we see everywhere else. Also check out his organization, Green For All.
Finally, two suggestions I'd make: Giving inmates time off their sentences if they complete green jobs training while in prison and creating incentive programs to encourage green employers to hire former offenders.
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