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Van Jones: Not the “green-jobs czar,” but “the green-jobs handyman.”

March 15, 2009

Green construction workerLast week Obama picked Van Jones to be green jobs adviser. You can read a longer story on whether the position is needed and whether he will be effective in it at the American Prospect, where I’m quoted:

When drafting his charter on green jobs, Jones “has to include the Department of Energy, the Department of the Interior, the Department of Transportation, Education, all of them,” says Joseph Romm, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and editor of climateprogress.org.

Jones will be (presumably) charged with ensuring that a green-jobs policy is on every department’s and agency’s agenda, and he has to penetrate the turf-protection culture that exists in these entities to do that. But before he can, he will have to come up with a compendium of policy ideas that are both translatable and custom-fitting to each agency’s structure. “If you really want to provide millions of green jobs, then somebody in the White House has got to be nagging about this at every agency,” Romm said.

I had written last week: Let’s not call this a green jobs czar, as no doubt some will be inclined to do. The president has a great many special assistants and we don’t call them czars. Jones is going to be a special advisor in the White House and that job is hard enough without loading on more expectations.

As you might expect, Jones has thought about this matter and has a better term than my “special advisor,” which he offered in a Greenwire interview excerpted below:

E&E: What will be your new role within CEQ, and why did you decide to join this administration?

Jones: The title is special adviser for green jobs, enterprise and innovation. … As we begin to move toward a clean-energy economy, we have an opportunity to have equal opportunity from the very beginning, making sure all Americans can take part.

E&E: Will you also advocate the president’s agenda among the public?

Jones: That’s still in development. Part of my job description does have me available to advocate publicly, but I think we’re going to be focusing primarily internally for the near term.

E&E: Do you consider yourself Obama’s “green-jobs czar,” as some have dubbed you?

Jones: No, I’m the green-jobs handyman. I’m there to serve. I’m there to help as a leader in the field of green jobs, which is a new field. I’m happy to come and serve and be helpful, but there’s no such thing as a green-jobs “czar.”

E&E: Some might call you a burgeoning eco-celebrity — you scored a big profile in the New Yorker and loud applause at Vice President Biden’s recent jobs summit in Philadelphia — do you have political aspirations of your own?

Jones: No, I don’t. I am passionate about having people applaud the results and not the rhetoric. That’s the next stage. … We’re into a “show” more than “tell” time, and that’s what I want to see. The administration is committed to seeing people who don’t have jobs right now getting jobs. That’s where all of the applause needs to be directed.

E&E: You’ve advocated “greening the ghetto” in the past; how much of the $787 billion economic stimulus will go toward greening inner cities, and where will the money go?

Jones: HUD has somewhere in the neighborhood of $10 billion to do energy-efficiency retrofits and weatherization. I know [HUD] Secretary [Shaun] Donovan is going to be passionate about getting that money spent well. But I’m not in a position now to comment on all of the details, the particulars of how the various agencies are planning to spend the money.

E&E: A Rutgers University report published today suggests that most green job openings will not be new occupations, but rather traditional occupations with a new layer of “green” skills and credentials. For example, laborers and building contractors who need specialized training and certification to perform home weatherization audits. Do you agree?

Jones: Yes. That’s one of the exciting things about this. Sometimes people think we’re talking about some exotic occupation from Mars that nobody’s ever heard of. That we’re talking about George Jetson or Buck Rogers when we’re thinking about green jobs. We’re not talking about solar ray-guns; we’re talking about caulking guns as one of the major tools we’re going to need to be smarter with energy. Those are jobs our existing work force, with a little training, can start doing right away.

E&E: Going forward, what role should the private sector play with regard to creating and keeping green-collar jobs?

Jones: The president has made very clear that he wants the majority of these jobs to be private-sector jobs. I think that’s appropriate. Entrepreneurship, innovation and the free market will solve a lot of these problems. We just have to get the rules right and get the supports in place so our new industries can take off.

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5 Responses to “Van Jones: Not the “green-jobs czar,” but “the green-jobs handyman.””

  1. ecostew says:

    New report on climate-related decision support:

    http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=12626

  2. Er, where do I send my resume?

  3. Informative and enlightening. I’ve added your blog to my “reading material.” Thnaks for keeping me updated!

  4. Your post is very well crafted and I have learned. I’ve added your blog to my reading material. Thanks for the update!