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Green For All Founder Joins White House As
Green Jobs Advisor
WASHINGTON, DC, March 10, 2009 (ENS) -
Van Jones, an early green jobs visionary will join the White
House Council on Environmental Quality as special advisor for green jobs,
enterprise and innovation, CEQ Chair Nancy Sutley announced Monday.
Jones is the founder of Green For All, an organization focused on creating
green jobs in impoverished areas.
He is also the co-founder of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights and
Color of Change, and was the author of the 2008 New York Times best-seller,
"The Green Collar Economy. "
"Van Jones has been a strong voice for green jobs and we look forward to
having him work with departments and agencies to advance the President's
agenda of creating 21st century jobs that improve energy efficiency and
utilize renewable resources," Sutley said.
"Jones will also help to shape and advance the administration's energy and
climate initiatives with a specific interest in improvements and
opportunities for vulnerable communities," she said.
The Council on Environmental Quality coordinates federal environmental
efforts and works with agencies and other White House offices in the
development of environmental policies and initiatives.
The Council's Chair serves as the principal environmental policy adviser to
the President. In addition, CEQ reports annually to the President on the
state of the environment and oversees federal agency implementation of the
environmental impact assessment process.

Van Jones (Photo courtesy Green For All)
When he moves into the White House on March 16, Jones will begin helping to
shape and implement job-generating climate policy. He will work to ensure
equal protection and equal opportunity in the administration's climate and
energy proposals and publicly advocate the administration's environmental
and energy agenda.
Green For All, based in Oakland, California, is a national organization
dedicated to building an inclusive green economy. It was launched at the
Clinton Global Initiative in New York on September 26, 2007.
"It's time the African American community had a part in the discussion on
climate change," said Jones at the launch. "We're not going to solve global
warming just with expensive consumer choices like buying hybrid cars and
shopping for organic food. People need to realize that you don't have to be
white or wealthy to benefit from going green."
New leadership for Green For All will come from Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins, who
is presently the head of the South Bay AFL-CIO Labor Council and Working
Partnerships USA. She will join Green For All this month as its chief
executive officer.
"Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins is one of the nation's most brilliant, inspirational
and creative problem solvers for working families," said Jones. "She has a
proven track record of success. Under her leadership, Green For All will
deliver on the promise of a green economy that is strong enough to lift
people out of poverty."
Ellis-Lamkins said, "I see the work of Green For All as an antidote to fear
and pessimism - a statement that we can tackle the difficult problems of
poverty, quality employment and environmental sustainability."
"Van going to work for the Obama White House affirms three things: the
quality of Green For All's accomplishments over the last 14 months; the
quality of Van's work over the last 20 years; and, the dedication of
President [Barack] Obama's White House to the vision of an inclusive green
economy," said James Rucker, Green For All board member and executive
director of ColorofChange.org.
In its first 14 months, Green For All has grown into an organization with a
multi-million dollar annual budget, 32 staff members and an online network
of 70,000 people.
It has won a string of victories, most notably $500 million for green-job
training as part of the $48 billion for job training and education in
President Obama's Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
By securing job training for hundreds of thousands of workers from urban
communities for the emerging green job market, Green For All believes new
avenues of opportunity will open for those who have traditionally been left
behind by the nation's economic growth. It also will extend the fight
against global warming to the neglected streets of cities like Oakland,
Detroit, Baltimore and New Orleans.
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Environment News Service (ENS) 2009. All rights reserved.
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