The latest report from the climate scientists of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) finds, "It is unequivocal that human influence has warmed the atmosphere, ocean and land.” Global temperatures have risen more since 1970 than in any half century since before the last ice age, more than 100,000 years ago. Severe heatwaves that occurred once every fifty years are now occurring five times as often. Its “code red for humanity.” Climate change is taking a heavy toll on workers. More than a quarter of Americans suffered from the effects of extreme heat in the summer of 2020, including nausea, cramps, fainting, confusion, and decreased ability to focus–and the toll is no doubt even heavier in 2021’s dreadful summer heat, which reached 116F in Portland, Oregon, leading to the death of farm workers and others from heat exposure. LNS is dedicated to giving working people the means to respond effectively to the threat of climate change–and to the opportunity it provides to rebuild our economy on a climate-safe, worker-friendly basis. We specialize in bringing together “unlikely bedfellows” who discover that they share common interests in protecting the climate. This issue of Making a Living on a Living Planet features an Op-Ed by Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, and Ramon Cruz, president of the Sierra Club, calling on Congress to provide “transformative resources to fund a just transition that addresses public schools, climate and good jobs.” And it includes an update on federal infrastructure legislation–focused in particular on the new support offered for one of the keys to climate protection–public transit. How can infrastructure and other climate-protecting policies be made worker-friendly? LNS is focusing on how to include provisions for a “just transition” that will provide good jobs and guaranteed livelihoods for workers affected by climate policy and climate change. We are launching a series of webinars growing out of our Just Transition Listening Project, which gathered the experience of more than a hundred union, community, and other leaders on how to ensure that the transition to a climate-safe economy is a just transition. And our Canadian allies, the fossil-fuel workers organized in the group Iron+Earth, are opening negotiations with the Canadian government on just transition legislation. And at its recent Convention, the Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance (APALA), featured an agitating and inspired opening keynote by labor and environmental justice activist Pamela Tau Lee, who called for an APALA vision-led model for just transition. LNS also published my latest Strike! commentary, “How to Protect Workers by Protecting the Climate,” and published by PM Press, my latest book Common Preservation in a Time of Mutual Struggle. Effective response to the climate crisis is not just something for government or business leaders. Our communities and workplaces can only be saved if people organize themselves to save them. But how can that happen? Common Preservation describes scores of examples of people transforming themselves from isolation and powerlessness to cooperative action for mutual benefit–what it calls “common preservation.” Common preservation is what LNS is all about. In solidarity, Jeremy Brecher |