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CONTACT: Worldwatch Institute |
An Open Letter to the New Education Secretary
WASHINGTON - December 19 - Worldwatch is pleased to publish this open letter from prominent education and environment leaders urging the newly nominated U.S. education secretary, Arne Duncan, to consider the importance of education in carrying out President-elect Barack Obama's environmental agenda.
Dear Mr. Duncan:
Congratulations on your nomination. As you jump into the daunting challenge of bolstering our sagging education system, you have a powerful opportunity presented by the need to create a carbon-free economy.
President-elect Obama has astutely perceived the linkages between climate change, economic stimulus, energy security, and job training by declaring that the transition to a green economy is his "top priority." The missing link in this system is the critical role that education can play in quickly making the green economy a reality. By working with him to include a major role for education in his green economy plans, you'll help advance his agenda - and yours.
Transforming our nation's economic, energy, and environmental systems to move toward a green economy will require a level of expertise, innovation, and cooperative effort unseen since the 1940s to meet the challenges involved.
Creating millions of new green jobs through targeted investment and spending is one thing; filling those jobs with qualified candidates is quite another thing. This transition will require a massive job training (and retraining) effort on the part of business, government, and education if it is to scale up quickly.
But green manufacturing workforce development programs are just one piece of what is needed; the green economy will not be driven by manufacturing workers alone. Architects, engineers, planners, scientists, business managers, financial experts, lawyers, entrepreneurs, political leaders, resource managers, and many others, as well as workers - not to mention environmentally literate consumers - will all be needed to drive the green economy.
American workers, managers, and professionals at all levels and in all sectors must understand the foundations of a green economy as represented in leading environmental and sustainability education programs. These foundations call for redesigning the human economy to emulate nature: operating on renewable energy, creating a circular production economy in which the concept of ‘"waste" is eliminated because all waste products are raw materials or nutrients for the industrial economy, and managing human activities in a way that uses natural resources only at the rate that they can self-regenerate (the ideas embodied in sustainable forestry, fishing, and agriculture).
To produce such a literate workforce and citizenry, America will need to make major new investments in our educational systems to implement the green economy and keep new green jobs from migrating out of America.
It has been well proven that an investment in education and innovation - in human capital - is without a doubt the best investment that can be made in long-term, across-the-board economic growth.1 Public investments in education for a green economy will more than pay for themselves, just as the post-Sputnik education programs did in the 1950s and ‘60s and the G.I. Bill did in the 1940s.2
In addition, "Education for a Green Economy" is a politically unifying strategy:
- A serious commitment to global competitiveness and innovation appeals to a wide range of stakeholders: Americans concerned with security and energy independence, economic development, climate change, and the environment; blue-collar workers and citizens calling for increasing investment in new "green jobs"; parents, students, and teachers; clean technology and green venture capital firms; and the academic community.
- Recent legislation authorizing investments to support sustainability programs in higher education, improve education in STEM fields (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics), and build healthy, high performance "green schools" (both K-12 and higher education) have passed with broad bipartisan support, but have yet to be significantly funded.
We, the undersigned, therefore respectfully urge you to support the following proposed Presidential agenda as it pertains to your department:
An Action Agenda for a Healthy, Just, and Sustainable Economy
• The President should announce a sweeping initiative to support education as a cornerstone of our new clean energy future. This initiative should be part of an economic stimulus package with a focus on green jobs and green education to help Americans of all ages, all backgrounds, and all walks of life transition to the green economy.
• The President should launch a series of White House Conferences on Creating Healthier, Greener Communities and Economies. Conference themes, co-sponsored with key federal agencies, would focus on building a more equitable and green economy, promote social equity, and support service learning to engage youth in greening local communities.
• Support a national goal of 100% of renovation and new school construction to meet "Green Schools" Standards by 2012. Declare a Department of Education policy to support a national goal that 100 percent of newly constructed or rehabilitated schools (both K-12 and higher education) to become "Green Schools" to lower energy costs and greenhouse gas emissions, and provide opportunities for formal and non-formal environmental education.
• Support legislation to direct 1% of climate change cap-and-trade revenues to education for a green economy. This comprehensive education bill would advance education for a green economy through major adjustments to K-12 education, school-to-work programs, higher education, professional re-education, and consumer and public education, in order to equip our American workforce and citizenry with the needed skills and knowledge to maximize environmental and economic gains in the transition to a green economy. Related legislation to significantly expand and improve environmental education in our public K-12 schools (the No Child Left Behind Act) should also be supported.
• Establish a strong record of funding existing education programs through the President's budget requests for the University Sustainability Program, environmental education programs at the Environmental Protection Agency, National Science Foundation and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the new Energy Efficiency Grants and Loans program at the Department of Energy.
• Make new Administration appointments:
a. Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary of Education, Education for a Green Economy
b. Senior Policy Advisor to the NOAA Administrator, Climate Change Education
c. Environmental Education Advisor, Council of Environmental Quality
d. Senior Policy Advisor to the Director of the US Peace Corps, Sustainability and Environmental Education
• Direct all federal resources agencies to develop and conduct "education for a green economy" and climate change literacy training for all personnel to familiarize them with challenges, needs, and appropriate responses for each agency.
One of the most hopeful signs for the future is the rapidly developing consensus that investment in a clean/green economy is the best way to improve national security, create millions of jobs, restore U.S. economic leadership, and stop large-scale climate disruption that could undercut modern civilization. It is time to reorient the education system to make this a reality-humanity is depending on us.
With our best wishes for your success,
David E. Blockstein, Ph.D., Senior Scientist, National Council for Science and the Environment
Judy Braus, Senior Vice President of Education, National Audubon Society
Antony D. Cortese, Sc.D., President, Second Nature
Kevin J. Coyle, Vice President for Education, National Wildlife Federation
Brian A. Day, Executive Director, North American Association for Environmental Education
James L Elder, Ph.D., Director, Campaign for Environmental Literacy
Christopher Flavin, President, Worldwatch Institute
Judy Walton, Ph.D., Acting Executive Director, Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education

1 Comment so far
Show AllI commend the Worldwatch Institute for this thougtful and constructive contribution to public discourse about maximizing the positive effects of economic stimulus packages. There is much common sense and wisdom in the approach they recommend.
I am especially encouraged by their emphasis on the wide range of workforce development programs that are needed, and their recommendation that this kind of workforce development will require major new investments in our educational systems (as referenced by the following excerpts).
“But green manufacturing workforce development programs are just one piece of what is needed….”
“To produce such a literate workforce and citizenry, America will need to make major new investments in our educational systems…”
However, it seems that much too often the policy recommendations from even the most progressive and environmentally literate organizations focus on what “top level” leadership should do, instead of also making it clear how much it really matters what “middle range” leadership does, and what “grassroots” leadership does. Everyone is involved when it comes to determining the markets which supply the “ways of earning a living”. All of us have important responsibilities associated with resolving a significant number of very serious challenges in the months and years ahead.
So while I am in complete agreement with the Worldwatch Institute on the following policy recommendation:
“The President should announce a sweeping initiative to support education as a cornerstone of our new clean energy future. This initiative should be part of an economic stimulus package with a focus on green jobs and green education to help Americans of all ages, all backgrounds, and all walks of life transition to the green economy.”
I would also like to add to this discussion reference to an article which I just completed which provides some details about what “middle range” leadership and “grassroots” leadership can do.
The following text provides some excerpts from an approximately 3,700 word article of titled “Transitioning from Less Solution-Oriented Employment to More Solution-Oriented Employment”, an article which has just been published (on December 21, 2008) at the website of The Interfaith Peacebuilding and Community Revitalization (IPCR) Initiative. The article can be accessed there (at www.ipcri.net) or through the following link: http://ipcri.net/images/Transitioning-from-Less-Solution-Oriented-Employment.pdf
The 8 sections of the article are:
Introduction
The “1000Communities2” Proposal
What are Community Visioning Initiatives?
What are “Community Teaching and Learning Centers”?
How would the “sister community” concept work?
Transitioning from Less Solution-Oriented Employment
to More Solution-Oriented Employment
Problems that may arise
Concluding Comments
An abridged text of the section of the article with the heading “Transitioning from Less Solution-Oriented Employment to More Solution-Oriented Employment” is included below.
Transitioning from less solution-oriented employment to more solution-oriented employment
Section 6 of the “1000Communities2” document is titled “A 15 Step Outline for a ‘1000Communities2’ Version of a Community Visioning Initiative”. Step 12 of this 15 Step Outline begins as follows:
Step 12 Summary Presentations and Job Fairs
(Approximate Time Required: 4 weeks)
A. Goals…
3) Specifically, information will be provided on how residents can deliberately focus their time, energy, and money so that their actions
a) can have positive repercussions on many fields of activity relating to solutions
b) can result in an increase in the “ways of earning a living” which are related to solutions and action plans
The following passage is also included as “Special Commentary” for Step 12:
“By now, there will have been sufficient public discourse for those people with understanding about high level shifts in investment portfolios to have learned something about what directions future shifts will be leaning towards. The job fairs which come at the end of the Community Visioning Initiative process provide opportunities for all key stakeholders in the community (businesses, organizations, institutions, government, etc.) to demonstrate their upgraded awareness—and their interest in the welfare of the community—by offering and facilitating new employment opportunities… and thus helping with a just transition from patterns of investment which in only limited ways represent solutions to prioritized challenges to patterns of investment which in many ways represent solutions to prioritized challenges.”
Especially important to this kind of transition will be a community’s capacity to identify local specific “engines of economic stability”. The 15 Step Outline for a “1000Communities2” version of a Community Visioning Initiative (mentioned above) includes Step 3 “Preliminary Surveys”. One question which is recommended for such “Preliminary Surveys” is as follows: (for all of the questions, see Section 9 of the “1000Communities2” document)
Question #5: Identifying Engines of Economic Stability
Many people seem to be worried that “the economy” will collapse if some form of “voluntary simplicity” philosophy becomes more and more accepted… and yet many of the challenges of our times have chronic elements (see Appendix 1), suggesting that it may require decades, generations, or even centuries to overcome such challenges. (There will be work to do….)
a) Please name as many engines of economic stability and methods of economic conversion as you can which you believe would result in communities that
minimize resource requirements
maintain ecological sustainability
maintain a high level of compassion for fellow human beings
and which represent what a significant majority of community residents surveyed
would describe as a high quality of life.
Important Note: Having responses to the above question (and many others, through “Preliminary Surveys”) from 150 key leaders from a significant variety of fields of activity in the community will, by itself, be a significant contribution to the “(reconfiguring) the embodied energy from the industrial age, and applying it to the development of sustainable systems” (see quote at the beginning of the complete article).
[end of excerpt from the complete “Transitioning from….” Article]
If there was sufficient public discourse along the lines outlined in this article “Transitioning from Less Solution-Oriented Employment to More Solution-Oriented Employment”, it is possible that a greater percentage of the “economic stimulus packages” currently being considered would focus on activities with the highest potential for a positive “multiplier effect”.
With Kind Regards and Best Wishes,
Stefan Pasti, Founder and Outreach Coordinator
The IPCR Initiative