Above: From @ClimateJobsIL Twitter feed on Sept. 5, 2021, "BREAKING: @GovPritzker just signed Illinois' historic clean energy legislation into law!"
In mid-September Illinois passed the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act—a law to move the state to 100% clean energy by 2050 while creating thousands of new clean energy jobs. The legislation is the product of a multi-year effort and months of negotiations between the environmental/climate/faith/environmental justice-based Clean Energy Jobs Coalition, the renewable developers’ Path to 100 Coalition, and the newly formed labor coalition Climate Jobs Illinois. According to Climate Jobs Illinois, the law “sets the strongest clean energy labor standards in the country” and “promises to raise the bar for other states seeking to enact new labor and employment policies for building and maintaining clean energy developments.” According to Labor Network for Sustainability Senior Organizer Mike Cavanaugh, “What happened in Illinois is the result of years of deep organizing work, hard conversations, real compromises and a collective commitment to responsibly addressing climate, jobs and equity. There’s a lot to learn from the Illinois experience–and a lot on the line to ensure that everyone is held accountable for successful implementation of this ambitious bill.” In an article by Michael Sainato published in The Real News, Pat Devaney, secretary-treasurer of the Illinois AFL-CIO, said, “We have a lot of jobs in the energy sector and particularly in fossil fuel generation, so for us to come forward with a proactive plan [for transitioning] from fossil generation to clean energy, I think, really says a lot about labor’s commitment to combating climate change.” Retweet this » Climate Jobs Illinois says the bill will create thousands of new clean-energy union jobs, expand union apprenticeships for Black and Latinx communities, increase energy efficiency for public schools and safeguard thousands of union workers at the state’s nuclear plants. The Climate Jobs Illinois executive committee includes Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters, Illinois Education Association, Illinois Federation of Teachers, International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers Union, the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) State Council, IBEW Local 134, International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150, Laborers International Union of North America Great Lakes Region, Laborers International Union of North America Midwest Region, Service Employees International Union State Council and United Auto Workers Region 4. Sources |