Green Equity Toolkit Webinar November 18, 2009 10:00 – 11:00 AM Pacific Presented by: This is an audio and visual presentation.  Join us on the phone: U.S. & Canada: 866.740.1260  Toll: 303.248.0285  Access Code: 6533415 This call will be recorded and made available on racewire.org.
Questions You can submit questions via chat and we’ll answer as many as we can during the Q&A period at the end of presentation. Do not use ‘raise hand’ button.
Green Equity Toolkit Webinar  Overview  Toolkit Context & Overview  Terry Keleher, ARC [email_address] Equity Strategies  Yvonne Liu, ARC [email_address] Case Study  Elsa Barboza, SCOPE [email_address] Questions & Answers  via chat.
An expanded and equitable green economy can: •  positively transform all our communities,  •  sustain our whole environment, and  •  lift the quality of all our lives.  But only if race, gender and economic equity are explicit goals of green development.
The Huge Potential of Green Jobs American Recovery & Reinvestment Act: $200 billion for program areas that generate green jobs. $5 billion invested in energy efficiency and renewable energy could create 5 million jobs.  Public spending on green initiatives can create 20% more jobs than traditional economic stimulus.
Green Gone Gray •  Race & Gender Inequities:  White men dominate jobs in all green sectors and sectors most job creation is expected. (White men: 80.7% of energy jobs. Women: only 1.5% of energy efficiency jobs.)  •  Low-quality jobs:  “green” jobs can be low paying and no more likely to be unionized or have safe working conditions. (Green manufacturing jobs pay 60% less than auto sector.)
Framing Green Jobs  Expansively •  Green  applies to the  natural  and  built  environment. It includes people and communities.  •  Ecosystems are all-inclusive and interconnected. Any part left behind affects the whole.  •  The concept of “green” is holistic and humane. “ Eco -friendly is  people -friendly.”
Framing Green Jobs  Equitably •  Green development must strive to evenly distribute opportunities, benefits and safeguards. •  Disadvantaged communities should be first in line to reap the benefits of the green economy.
Green Jobs Defined Green-Collar Jobs are “well-paid, career track jobs that contribute directly to preserving or enhancing environmental quality.  --Green For All
Equity Principles Equal Opportunity & Fair Treatment Excellence & Efficacy  Health & Wellness  Human Rights and Workers’ Rights Sustainability & Security Transparency & Accountability
Equity Outcomes 1.  Transparent and participatory planning Equitable distribution of high quality jobs Expanded employee-sponsored benefits Elimination of employment barriers and bias Race and gender parity goals in contracting Green entrepreneurship opportunities 7.  Healthy and safe workplaces 8.  Local hiring and contracting Expanded workforce development
Success Indicators: Examples Number and percentage of women and people of color… •  employed in high-quality new green jobs; compared to their percentage in local area  •  holding senior/supervisory level positions •  hired locally and owning local businesses awarded contracts
Suggestions for Using Toolkit Create a broad-based community alliance. Ask public officials to adopt equity principles, participatory process, full data collection. Support proposals with explicit gender and race equity outcomes, using equity strategies. Actively monitor and evaluate programs, using suggested indicators and data sources.
Equity Strategies & Examples
Equity Handles
Three Equity Examples
Green Job Training
Green Social Entrepreneurship
Los Angeles Case Study Strategic Concepts in Organizing and Policy Education (SCOPE)
Questions & Answers You can submit questions via chat.
Further Information Green Equity Toolkit:  arc.org/greenjobs Applied Research Center:  arc.org SCOPE:  scopela.org Terry Keleher tkeleher@arc.org Yvonne Liu yliu@arc.org Elsa Barboza ebarboza@scopela.org

Green Equity Toolkit Webinar

  • 1.
    Green Equity ToolkitWebinar November 18, 2009 10:00 – 11:00 AM Pacific Presented by: This is an audio and visual presentation. Join us on the phone: U.S. & Canada: 866.740.1260 Toll: 303.248.0285 Access Code: 6533415 This call will be recorded and made available on racewire.org.
  • 2.
    Questions You cansubmit questions via chat and we’ll answer as many as we can during the Q&A period at the end of presentation. Do not use ‘raise hand’ button.
  • 3.
    Green Equity ToolkitWebinar Overview Toolkit Context & Overview Terry Keleher, ARC [email_address] Equity Strategies Yvonne Liu, ARC [email_address] Case Study Elsa Barboza, SCOPE [email_address] Questions & Answers via chat.
  • 4.
    An expanded andequitable green economy can: • positively transform all our communities, • sustain our whole environment, and •  lift the quality of all our lives. But only if race, gender and economic equity are explicit goals of green development.
  • 5.
    The Huge Potentialof Green Jobs American Recovery & Reinvestment Act: $200 billion for program areas that generate green jobs. $5 billion invested in energy efficiency and renewable energy could create 5 million jobs. Public spending on green initiatives can create 20% more jobs than traditional economic stimulus.
  • 6.
    Green Gone Gray• Race & Gender Inequities: White men dominate jobs in all green sectors and sectors most job creation is expected. (White men: 80.7% of energy jobs. Women: only 1.5% of energy efficiency jobs.) • Low-quality jobs: “green” jobs can be low paying and no more likely to be unionized or have safe working conditions. (Green manufacturing jobs pay 60% less than auto sector.)
  • 7.
    Framing Green Jobs Expansively • Green applies to the natural and built environment. It includes people and communities. • Ecosystems are all-inclusive and interconnected. Any part left behind affects the whole. • The concept of “green” is holistic and humane. “ Eco -friendly is people -friendly.”
  • 8.
    Framing Green Jobs Equitably • Green development must strive to evenly distribute opportunities, benefits and safeguards. • Disadvantaged communities should be first in line to reap the benefits of the green economy.
  • 9.
    Green Jobs DefinedGreen-Collar Jobs are “well-paid, career track jobs that contribute directly to preserving or enhancing environmental quality. --Green For All
  • 10.
    Equity Principles EqualOpportunity & Fair Treatment Excellence & Efficacy Health & Wellness Human Rights and Workers’ Rights Sustainability & Security Transparency & Accountability
  • 11.
    Equity Outcomes 1. Transparent and participatory planning Equitable distribution of high quality jobs Expanded employee-sponsored benefits Elimination of employment barriers and bias Race and gender parity goals in contracting Green entrepreneurship opportunities 7. Healthy and safe workplaces 8. Local hiring and contracting Expanded workforce development
  • 12.
    Success Indicators: ExamplesNumber and percentage of women and people of color… • employed in high-quality new green jobs; compared to their percentage in local area • holding senior/supervisory level positions • hired locally and owning local businesses awarded contracts
  • 13.
    Suggestions for UsingToolkit Create a broad-based community alliance. Ask public officials to adopt equity principles, participatory process, full data collection. Support proposals with explicit gender and race equity outcomes, using equity strategies. Actively monitor and evaluate programs, using suggested indicators and data sources.
  • 14.
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17.
  • 18.
  • 19.
    Los Angeles CaseStudy Strategic Concepts in Organizing and Policy Education (SCOPE)
  • 20.
    Questions & AnswersYou can submit questions via chat.
  • 21.
    Further Information GreenEquity Toolkit: arc.org/greenjobs Applied Research Center: arc.org SCOPE: scopela.org Terry Keleher tkeleher@arc.org Yvonne Liu yliu@arc.org Elsa Barboza ebarboza@scopela.org

Editor's Notes

  • #10 I would leave this short. … and you say this aloud: If a job improves the environment, but doesn’t provide a family-supporting wage or a career ladder to move low-income workers into higher-skilled occupations, it is not a green-collar job.”