An
opportunity too good to miss
Across the country, you’ll find
millions of working families whose wages haven’t budged in a generation, even
as the cost of living has skyrocketed.
Many of these same communities
are now getting hit hardest by floods, droughts, storms, and other climate
disasters.
How are workers going to withstand rising climate risks if their paychecks don’t even cover the bills, while corporate polluters rake in profits?
How are workers going to withstand rising climate risks if their paychecks don’t even cover the bills, while corporate polluters rake in profits?
Our communities don’t
experience climate change and inequality as two isolated issues, but as
interlinked crises.
A Green New Deal offers an
immense opportunity to tackle both crises at the speed and scale that justice
and science demand. It’s a bold, essential plan to transition to a clean
energy economy built on good, union jobs that leaves no worker — or community —
behind.
It’s a roadmap rooted
in solid, realistic changes that are already happening. From the
Midwest to the South to the coasts, communities are retrofitting buildings to
save energy, replacing lead pipes to ensure clean water, and restoring green
spaces to reduce climate-related flooding.
Meanwhile, broad local coalitions are pushing for investments in local wind and solar manufacturing, clean and affordable light rail, wetlands restoration, smart electric grids, and sustainable family farming.
These programs are models for a
national Green New Deal. They’re already creating high-paying jobs, slashing
pollution as well as energy bills, and supporting community-led efforts to
prevent climate disasters. Our generational task of bringing wages up and
climate pollution down is both doable and indispensable — and it starts with
massively scaling up these local solutions.
Some politicians try to divide
us by saying we have to choose between good jobs and healthy communities. This
is a false choice.
In fact, a Green New Deal is an
opportunity to create millions of good union jobs, clean up
our air and water, and become more resilient in the face of
the climate crisis.
It’s an opportunity to cut energy costs by providing cheaper, more efficient choices for clean energy and transportation. And it’s an opportunity to build a more just economy — and society — by investing directly in the workers and communities who got the worst deal in the economic status quo.
It’s an opportunity to cut energy costs by providing cheaper, more efficient choices for clean energy and transportation. And it’s an opportunity to build a more just economy — and society — by investing directly in the workers and communities who got the worst deal in the economic status quo.
For far too long, the
wealthiest corporations have profited from a system that allows workers and
communities — especially low-income families, immigrants, and people of color —
to bear the brunt of toxic pollution, climate disasters, and economic
insecurity.
We can change this.
We don’t lack ideas — frontline
communities are already generating realistic solutions. And we don’t lack
funding sources — the corporations profiting from low wages and climate
pollution have the funds to support a transition to a new economy.
What we really need to make the
Green New Deal real is for people of conscience to work together, grow our
movement, and push our representatives to invest in a just transition for our
communities.
Right now, political will is
mounting.
More than 100 members of Congress have already endorsed a Green New Deal, and that number continues to grow. So does the panoply of environmental, labor, and justice groups backing the idea — including our own.
More than 100 members of Congress have already endorsed a Green New Deal, and that number continues to grow. So does the panoply of environmental, labor, and justice groups backing the idea — including our own.
As that movement gains
momentum, so does our resolve to lay the groundwork for a new economy — one
powered by family-sustaining wages and clean energy.
If that goal seems big, it’s no
bigger than the problems our communities face. That, after all, is what this
Green New Deal moment is all about: an invitation to all of us to name
solutions that match the scale of our problems.
Héctor J. Figueroa is President
of 32BJ Service Employees International Union, the largest property services
union in the country. Ben Beachy is the Living Economy Director of the Sierra
Club, the nation’s largest grassroots environmental organization. Distributed
by OtherWords.org.