These are just small indicators of the magnitude of the climate emergency we face. And yet, where is the emergency response on the part of governments, corporations -- and of our labor movement? The answer is, nowhere. A recent report by the Energy Institute found that, despite endless conferences, speeches, resolutions, and agreements to reduce climate destruction, global greenhouse gas emissions increased last year. And they are expected to rise further in the year ahead. It is time for those who have so far been contemplating climate destruction with indifference to stop, look, and listen. Climate change is not about something far away and long in the future. It is not about something that is only happening to someone else. This is about us and our children. It is time in particular for those of us in the labor movement to take a fresh look at what climate change means for our movement and for us as individuals and workers. What is benignly referred to as "the climate issue" is destroying the very basis of our existence -- as individuals and as a movement. Too many unions are dug in on policies that do not challenge -- or even exacerbate -- the expanding extraction and burning of fossil fuels. But there are other, better options for workers and organized labor. We at the Labor Network for Sustainability are dedicated to helping our labor movement to explore them. In this issue of Making a Living on a Living Planet you can read about some of the things that unions, workers, and their allies are doing to fight climate change -- and to do so in ways that also create good jobs and reverse inequality and injustice. You'll see how 340,000 union truck drivers just forced UPS to provide air conditioning in their trucks and worksites to protect them from devastating heat. How the Boston Green New Deal is simultaneously protecting the climate and providing good jobs through its youth jobs corp and its program to provide free, sustainably-grown food for all public school students through a worker-owned coop in a low-income community. How the government of Canada is promoting a "Sustainability Jobs Act" to create sustainable jobs and support workers and communities. And how climate justice advocates in Appalachia and the Gulf South have joined together to fight the fossil fuel industry's threats to their regions. Rather than hiding our eyes from the climate threat, let's open our eyes to what we can do to fight it. |