
Van Jones is at the forefront of a movement that has the potential to put America's economy and environment back on the right track. He has taken the Green movement, traditionally the realm of sandle wearing Berkeley vegans, and brought it to at risk Oakland youth. The Green movement has long needed to be brought to urban cores where incinerators, ports and airports are the norm, but as we all know, West and East Oakland have bigger problems to deal with. Van however has managed to roll the tenets of the Green movement into a business plan that trains and employs at risk and formerly incarcerated youth to build a Green economy.

Thanks to Jones's organization, Green for All, youth will be trained to do things like install solar panels and weatherize homes. Hopefully in the future this movement can help create green-collar jobs manufacturing wind turbines and environment frendly automobiles. This approach shys away from ramblings about the plight of polar bears, and reframes the Green movement as an environmental and economic necessity.
With our economy in the sorry state that its in, many think the environment will have to be relegated to a back burner. Van Jones and others make the point that we can kill two birds with one stone by putting unemployed blue-collar workers back to work in a green economy; thus saving the environment while rekindling our economy with some alternative energy. Listen to audio of Van explaining his vision to TIME Magazine here.
Come out to see Van Jones discuss the green collar economy and eco-populism tonight with home grown luminaries Aya de Leon, Barbara Lee and Danny Glover. Click the link to order The Green Collar Economy: How One Solution Can Fix Our Two Biggest Problems by Van Jones.
Props to O-Scene and the homegirl Ashley from Green for All
5 comments:
This is fantastic!
As someone working for a green business at a time when the concept of "green collar jobs" as a viable solution to our country's economic woes has yet to be given the credence it deserves, it's great to see this kind of creative thinking.
Now if only I could get my brother to work on things like this...*sigh*
Yeha, dude is nice. I've been hearing about him for awhile and they're been working on the ground in the Bay and it just makes so much sense. If you listen to the audio he articulates it better than I can, but its this type of creative thinking that will hopefully be embraced by this incoming administration. He get so tied to shitty ways of doing stuff, I hope we take a chance on this one.
Imagine if they would of just put that $700b into the "green economy" in the first place... Imagine if we invested tax money into a green infrastructure that was publicly owned and operated, and we actually owned our own power resources. Why should certain individuals and companies get rich off of natural/renewable resources that ought to belong to the public anyways? I think there is a future to the green economy, but it is going to take a whole lot of work to make it a reality, and it needs to be community controlled if it is to be reflective of a democratic society.
fixed that link man....thanks.
As it turns out, Van Jones was speaking at the conference/exhibition that I was at last week. Here's the link to his presentation:
http://www.greenbuild365.org/GreenExpoVideoDetail.aspx?GreenExpoID=18
(Sadly, I wasn't able to attend his speech because I was there to man our booth. Still, pretty cool!)
Post a Comment