EPA Announces Green Jobs Training for South Tucson // Local graduates to clean up contaminated city sites (AZ)
(7/19/11) SAN FRANCISCO –
Today in South Tucson, the EPA awarded a $300,000 grant to the City
for environmental workforce development and job training to
recruit, train, and place unemployed, predominantly low-income
residents in jobs to clean up polluted areas.
The funding is part of a national award of more
than $6.2 million to 21 grantees throughout the country. The
training program will put 39 trainees through a 28-week training
cycle that will include courses on hazardous waste operations,
asbestos and lead inspections, underground storage tank operation
and cleanup, and green and alternative cleanup practices.
“These job training grants are not just
helping to create jobs, they’re helping create green jobs
that protect the health of local families and residents and prepare
communities for continued economic growth,” said Mathy
Stanislaus, Assistant Administrator for EPA's Office of Solid Waste
and Emergency Response. “Creating green jobs proves that we
don’t have to choose between cleaning up our air and our
water or creating jobs in our communities. It’s possible to
do both at the same time.”
“The City of South Tucson values the investment the EPA has
made and continues to make in this community. The City has been
successful in the management of previously funded Brownfields
Community Wide Assessment grants, the most recent being funded with
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds,” said South
Tucson Mayor Jennifer Eckstrom. “We are confident that
similar successes will be attained with this grant because of our
community's needs and our preparation in developing and
implementing it. Our residents, community organizations, and
employers look forward to working with the EPA to change lives and
substantially improve our city.”
Graduates of the program are equipped with skills and certifications in various environmental fields including lead and asbestos abatement, environmental site sampling, construction and demolition debris recycling, energy auditing and weatherization, as well as solar panel installations and green building techniques. Graduates use these skills to improve the environment and people’s health while supporting economic development in their communities. The program has also trained and helped employ residents in the Gulf Coast responding to and cleaning up the BP oil spill, revitalizing New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina, and aiding in the response and clean up of the World Trade Center.
Since 1998, EPA has awarded more than $35
million under the Environmental Workforce Development and Job
Training Program. As of May 2011, more than 6,683 individuals have
been trained through the program, and more than 4,400 have been
placed in full-time employment in the environmental field with an
average starting hourly wage of $14.65. The development of this
green workforce will allow the trainees to develop skills that will
make them competitive in the construction and redevelopment fields.
Trainees are often residents who live in the disadvantaged
communities that will benefit the most through these
projects.
For the full list of grantees and more information on
Environmental Workforce Development and Job Training
program: http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/job.htm
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