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Home | Business & Economy | Social Entrepreneurship | Green jobs and inner-city youth

Green jobs and inner-city youth

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image Van Jones (image: luxomedia/Flickr)

Attorney and social activist Van Jones jump-started a training program to teach inner-city youth in the San Francisco area how to install solar panels.

Presidential candidates are talking about jump-starting the economy with what they are calling "green-collar" jobs, and the idea is catching on in Washington.  Last December, President Bush signed into law an energy bill that authorizes $125 million to train up to 30,000 people for green jobs.  Attorney and social activist Van Jones is co-founder of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in California is credited with providing the energy to pass the green jobs act.

But after Jones made the connection between green jobs and reducing inner-city problems, he began pushing for green jobs in Oakland.  Last June, Oakland became the first city in the country to create a Green Jobs Corps program.  Jones also launched the Green-for-All Campaign to get Congress to back the energy bill jobs proposal, to write the check for that $125 million and start training young people for green collar jobs.

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Subscribe to comments feed Comments (2 posted):

Anon on 09 September, 2008 01:26:01
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Some fact checking is required. Oakland was not the first city to have a Green Job Corps Program. The District of Columbia started an alternative model Green Summer Job Corps with it's Department of the Environment before Oakland's was created.
DC is really making strides toward being the greening city - and capital city - on the planet.
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Julia Bonds on 10 September, 2008 12:01:18
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Thanks Van Jones-you are my hero!
I am a white Appalachian American and the only issue that can save us and bring us all together is Green Jobs. Green For All. Green is the only color that we should be concerned with. There will be nothing left for our children if we don't switch to renewable energy now! Green is the color that will bring the world together.
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