Blogging to the Middle
Jared Bernstein, the Executive Director of the Middle Class Task Force and the Vice President's Chief Economist, puts recent events on clean energy and the economy into perspective:
Hey, taskforce fans. We’re just back from Denver where we hosted our fourth meeting. It
was on the green economy and the opportunities therein for middle-class
folks. VP Biden was joined by all kinds of interesting partners from
our world, including Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis; Secretary of
Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan; Secretary of Agriculture
Tom Vilsack; Deputy Secretary of Energy Dan Poneman; United States
Trade Representative Ron Kirk; and Special Advisor for Green Jobs,
Enterprise and Innovation at the White House Council on Environmental
Quality, Van Jones.
Once again, the Vice-President
hosted a town-hall style meeting because that’s the best way for him
and the rest of this crew to learn what middle-class families are going
through right now, and how these issues resonate with them.
(Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a middle class task force even at the Denver Museum of Science and Nature in Denver, Colorado, Tuesday, May 26, 2009. Official White House Photo by David Lienemann)
Those who’ve been with us from the
beginning will notice that this is our second taskforce meeting on this
topic of green jobs. This is no accident: our emphasis on green energy
occurs at the intersection of two of the Obama Administration’s most
important policy initiatives: protecting the environment and creating
good jobs.
On the first point—fighting back
against global warming—this past week has been a good one. On Tuesday
the President hosted an historic event
where stakeholders who have been at odds for years on this stuff came
together to support a much higher mileage standard for vehicles. (BTW,
IMHO one of President Obama’s more important skills is the ability to
take folks who traditionally line up on opposite sides and bring them
together—you see it in health care too.)
The administration’s plan to promote clean energy use also made some headway in Congress last week.
Then there’s green jobs, which we
define broadly (and loosely—there is no official definition) as jobs
that help to improve the environment in some way. That includes blue
collar workers building out the smart grid to efficiently move the wind
power (green, renewable energy) across the land. It includes
"weatherizers" who can diagnose and repair the energy inefficiencies in
your house or business. And it includes the green manufacturers who
made those wind turbines or the scientists and lab technicians who
developed those renewable energy sources and weatherization materials.
It’s important to see the connection
between these various initiatives: our clean energy agenda, mileage
standards, and green jobs. By setting higher mileage standards and by
promoting incentives to use clean energy (while reducing our dependence
on foreign oil), we create new demand for the science, techniques,
products, and tools to meet the standards. We help to grow the market
for more efficient engines and new production techniques that reduce
carbon emissions. And a growing market means more jobs for middle-class
families.
Now, with new markets come new labor
demands, and new demand requires new supply. In this case, we’ll need
more workers with the skills to meet the demands, and that’s a big
focus of our Denver meeting. We’re announcing a great, new green jobs
training program funded by $500 million from the Recovery Act.
So, go green, and go taskforce!
(Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a middle class task force even at the Denver Museum of Science and
Nature in Denver, Colorado, Tuesday, May 26, 2009. Official White House Photo by David Lienemann)



