With the recent passage of the federal economic recovery bill, now comes the even harder part -- turning those dollars into good, lasting jobs for Californians.
The $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act will
provide roughly $45 billion to help heal California’s deep economic wounds. The White House projects the
bill will result in nearly 400,000 new California jobs. But what kind of jobs will be
created and how will we decide which ones to fund?
This package offers the single greatest opportunity
to jumpstart our state’s transition to a 21st century economy by investing in California’s clean energy future and creating good jobs, while
also reducing greenhouse gas emissions. We must both
revive our ailing economy while confronting the threat
of climate change. We can and must do both.
Creating jobs quickly, however, does not mean that
California should sacrifice the opportunity to do it
right. We deserve a process to allocate the stimulus
funds that is clear, transparent and accessible. And
we deserve funding priorities that provide the greatest
number of good, long term jobs that provide lasting
environmental and social benefits.
Countless advocates successfully pushed for the package
to support “green-collar jobs”– jobs that pay family-supporting wages, have a career path, and contribute
to environmental sustainability. The federal investments
in the stimulus package have the potential to achieve
these goals by improving energy efficiency, upgrading
our transmission grid, and providing much-needed job training to low-income residents to build up the next generation of
green-collar workers.
With California mired in an economic crisis, getting
funds out the door and into the best job-creating projects must be our top priority. To make
that happen, the state must follow these four core
principles:
Transparency: In contrast to Sacramento’s backroom budget negotiations, California must have
a clear, transparent process for the public to provide
input and track where the money is going. With Californians
pinching every penny in their own households and lacking
confidence in state government, residents must be assured
they are receiving the benefits of their hard-earned tax dollars. California must meet or exceed
the high level of federal oversight President Obama
has set.
Support a triple bottom line: Good green jobs will bring a triple benefit by creating
economic sustainability for employees and business
owners, improving the environment, and building up
communities, especially those most at risk in this
economic downturn. California’s policymakers must ensure that newly created jobs
provide family-supporting wages and benefits with a career pathway
and promote the preservation or restoration of the
environment. Doing so will maximize economic growth
and ensure the responsible use of taxpayer dollars.
Rebuild Clean and Green: Policymakers should apply forward-thinking energy efficiency standards to all stimulus
projects, including transportation and buildings. We
must seize the opportunity to put our communities on
the path to sustainable economic progress. Reducing
our energy use and cutting greenhouse gas emissions
is a smart, long-term, economic growth strategy.
Shared prosperity: While hard times have fallen on every corner of the
state, some California communities are suffering more
than others. As we build a new clean energy economy,
we must ensure lower income communities and communities
of color across the State receive long overdue investments.
State leaders must target job training for people and
regions too often left out of economic opportunities,
re-employ dislocated workers, and ensure broad sharing
of the opportunities created by the stimulus. The state’s community college system and State-approved apprenticeship programs are perfectly suited
to help build career ladders for millions of low-income Californians.
We have joined with dozens of the states most influential
and respected environmental, social justice, labor,
and workforce organizations to form the California
Green Stimulus Coalition. As federal stimulus dollars
arrive in California, the Coalition will work to ensure
that our leaders deploy them in a way that builds a
strong and equitable California. Now let’s seize the $45 billion opportunity to take California in a new clean
and green direction.
by
Phil Angelides, Warner Chabot and Angela Glover Blackwell
