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Biden pushes 'green jobs' for the middle class

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 27, 2009
US Vice President Joe Biden pushed "green jobs" Friday as a way to help the middle class weather hard economic times, saying better pay and social benefits will flow from producing environmentally friendly goods and services.

Biden traveled by train to Philadelphia the first meeting of a White House Task Force on Middle Class Families, that has as its centerpiece President Barack Obama's plans to invest 20 billion dollars in a "cleaner, greener economy."

"So what exactly are 'green jobs'?" Biden wrote in an article published Friday in the Philadelphia Inquirer. "They provide products and services that use renewable energy resources, reduce pollution, and conserve energy and natural resources," he stated.

Citing findings from the Council of Economic Advisers, Biden said green jobs pay 10 to 20 percent more than other jobs and are more likely to be unionized.

"Building a new power grid, manufacturing solar panels, weatherizing homes and office buildings, and renovating schools are just a few of the ways to create high-quality green jobs that strengthen the foundation of this country," he wrote.

He said Philadelphia was working with its unions, universities and community colleges to tap into the 500 million dollars the administration recovery plan has earmarked for "green job training."

"Investing in green jobs also means keeping up with the modern economy. At a time when good jobs at good wages are harder and harder to come by, we must find new, innovative opportunities," the vice president said.

Biden was joined by several cabinet members, including the secretaries of agriculture, labor, housing and urban development, and energy.

He toured a facility at the University of Pennsylvania that monitors and conserves the university's use of electric power at its west Philadelphia campus.

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US lawmakers urge 'greener' Capitol
Washington (AFP) Feb 26, 2009
Top Democratic lawmakers Thursday urged Congress architect Stephen Ayers to switch the Capitol's century-old power plant from burning coal to using natural gas, in keeping with an initiative launched in 2007.







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