At
a press
conference, the legislators also discussed the new Civilian Climate Corps
Washington
(April 20, 2021) – Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and Congresswoman Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14) today reintroduced the Green New Deal Resolution (GND). The
lawmakers announced the reintroduction, alongside co-sponsors and leaders from
the labor, environmental justice and climate movements, at a press conference
in front of the National Mall, a project whose renovation was funded in part by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal.
“The
Green New Deal isn’t just a resolution, it is a revolution,” said
Senator Markey. “In the past two years, the Green New Deal has become the
DNA of climate action, and the principles of jobs, justice, and climate action
are now widely represented in legislation and state and local actions across
the country. The Green New Deal provides the framework we need to confront the
intersecting crises our country faces -- climate change, a public health
pandemic, racial injustice, and economic inequality. We can transform our
economy and our democracy for all Americans by addressing the generational
challenge of climate change. We have the technology to do it. We have the
economic imperative. We have the moral obligation. We just need the political
will.”
“The
Green New Deal has three core components: jobs, justice and climate,” said
Rep. Ocasio-Cortez. “The dozens of bills that have sprung from this
resolution since we introduced it two years ago all contain 1) a commitment to
creating good-paying union jobs; 2) prioritizing frontline and vulnerable
communities disproportionately affected by climate change - including
communities of color, indigenous land, deindustrialized communities and fossil
fuel hubs; and 3) reducing greenhouse gas emissions from human sources by 40 to
60% within 10 years and net-zero global emissions by 2050, in line with the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s finding that global temperatures
must not increase more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrialized levels
in order to avoid the most severe impacts of climate change.”
A copy of the resolution can be found
HERE.
13 new co-sponsors joined the Green
New Deal resolution this year: Senator Alex
Padilla (D-Calif.) and Representatives Kaiali’i
Kahele (HI-01), Tony Cardenas (CA-29), Cori Bush (MO-01), Sara
Jacobs (CA-53), Jake Auchincloss (MA-04), Nikema
Williams (GA-05), Jamaal Bowman (NY-16), Mondaire Jones (NY-17),
Ritchie Torres (NY-15), Marie Newman (IL-03), Katie
Porter (CA-45), and Teresa Leger Fernández (NM-03).
The
Green New Deal resolution envisions a 10-year national mobilization, akin to
FDR’s New Deal, that would put millions to work in good-paying, union jobs
repairing the nation’s infrastructure, reducing air and water pollution, and
fighting the intertwined economic, social, racial and climate crises crippling
the country.
In
the two years since the Green New Deal was first introduced, lawmakers in both
chambers of Congress have continued to introduce more than a dozen pieces of
legislation across multiple sectors of the economy that build upon the
principles from the resolution. Two new bills were introduced just this
week:
The Green New Deal for Cities and the
Civilian
Climate Corps for Jobs and Justice Act.
“In
2019 we made it our mission to pass a Green New Deal. Three years later, we are
still facing the ticking time bomb of the climate crisis, but now alongside the
highest levels of joblessness since the Great Depression,” said Varshini
Prakash, Executive Director of Sunrise Movement. “We are in a civilization
altering moment in our history and it’s time for America’s political leaders to
muster the courage and moral clarity to pass the Green New Deal, launching
America’s biggest job creation program in a century while combating climate
change. At a crucial moment like this, politicians have a choice to make: they
can heed the call demanded by science and justice to build back better through
a Green New Deal, or they can cower to the fossil fuel industry and force us
down a path of destruction, towards the fires that burned our homes to rubble
and the floods that took our family and friends with them. Young people have
made our choice clear – and now we demand politicians join us by passing a
robust Civilian Climate Corps and ushering in the decade of the Green New Deal.”
"Climate
change is already a threat to Flight Attendants' safety at work," said
Sara Nelson, international president of the Association of Flight
Attendants-CWA. "Extreme turbulence is becoming more common and more
dangerous, while extreme heat and cold threaten our safety at home and the
ability to operate at work. Weather events are disrupting more flights and
shutting down airport infrastructure altogether. Inaction is not an option. The
Green New Deal and Civilian Climate Corps would address the concurrent
emergencies of the climate catastrophe and runaway inequality. We can protect
our planet and create millions of good, union jobs at the same time. We can't
afford to wait."
The
Green New Deal Resolution is endorsed by: Association of
Flight Attendants - CWA, Service Employees International Union, People's
Action, Corazon Latino, CENTER FOR POPULAR DEMOCRACY, Indivisible, The Green
New Deal Network, Working Families Party, Greenpeace USA, Sunrise Movement,
Justice Democrats, Organic Consumers Association, Climate Justice Alliance,
Future Coalition, Labor Network for Sustainability, National Domestic
Workers Alliance, Common Defense, NDN Collective, United for Respect, Sierra
Club, League of Conservation Voters, United We Dream, 350.org, Grassroots Global Justice Alliance, Indigenous
Environmental Network, Chiron Communications, Blue America, Sisters Health
& Wellness Collective, Rachel Carson Council, US High Speed Rail
Association, Marked By COVID, Courage California, FracTracker Alliance and more.
###
Ocasio-Cortez, Markey reintroducen la resolución del Nuevo Acuerdo
Verde
En una conferencia de prensa, los legisladores también discutieron
las nuevas propuestas de ley de CCC y "GND para las ciudades", parte
de la creciente familia de legislación GND
13 copatrocinadores nuevos se unieron a la resolución del Nuevo
Acuerdo Verde
El martes por la mañana, el
Senador Ed Markey y la Representante Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez reintrodujeron la
resolución del Nuevo Acuerdo Verde (GND). Los legisladores anunciaron la
reintroducción, junto con copatrocinadores y líderes de los movimientos
laboral, de justicia ambiental y climático, en una conferencia de prensa frente
al National Mall, un proyecto cuya renovación fue financiado en parte por el
New Deal del presidente Franklin D. Roosevelt. Se puede encontrar una copia de
la resolución
AQUI.
La resolución del Nuevo Acuerdo
aspire crear una movilización nacional sobre los siguientes diez años, similar
al New Deal de FDR, que proporciona empleos sindicales que pagarían bien a millones
de personas, reparando la infraestructura de la nación, reduce la contaminación
del aire y el agua, y lucha contra las crisis económicas, sociales, raciales y
climáticas interconectadas que golpean nuestro país. 13 copatrocinadores
nuevos se unieron a la resolución del Nuevo Acuerdo Verde este año: el Senador
Alejandro Padilla y los Representantes Kaiali’i Kahele, Tony Cardenas,
Cori Bush, Sara Jacobs, Jake Auchincloss, Nikema Williams, Jamaal Bowman,
Mondaire Jones, Ritchie Torres, Marie Newman, Katie Porter, y Teresa Leger
Fernández.
Desde que se introdujo por
primera vez el Nuevo Acuerdo Verde hace dos años, los legisladores de ambas
cámaras del Congreso han seguido presentando más de una docena de legislación
en múltiples sectores de la economía que se basan en los principios de la
resolución del Nuevo Acuerdo Verde. Esta semana se presentaron dos nuevas
propuestas de ley: el Nuevo Acuerdo Verde para las ciudades y el Civilian
Climate Corps.
La resolución del Nuevo Acuerdo
Grande de 2021 también está respaldada por las siguientes organizaciones:
Association of Flight Attendants - CWA, Service Employees International Union,
Peoples Action, Corazon Latino, CENTER FOR POPULAR DEMOCRACY, Indivisible, The
Green New Deal Network, Working Families Party, Greenpeace USA, Sunrise
Movement, Justice Democrats, Organic Consumers Association, Climate Justice
Alliance, Future Coalition, Labor Network for Sustainability, National
Domestic Workers Alliance, Common Defense, NDN Collective, United for Respect, Sierra
Club y más.
“El Nuevo Acuerdo Verde no es
solo una resolución, es una revolución,” dijo el Senador Markey en una
declaración. “En los
últimos dos años, el Nuevo Acuerdo Verde se ha convertido en el ADN de la
acción climática, y los principios de empleo, justicia y acción climática ahora
están representados ampliamente en la legislación y las acciones estatales y
locales en todo el país. El Nuevo Acuerdo Verde brinda el marco que necesitamos
para enfrentar las crisis interconectadas que golpean nuestro país: cambio
climático, una pandemia de salud pública, injusticia racial y desigualdad
económica. Podemos transformar nuestra economía y nuestra democracia para todos
los estadounidenses al abordar el desafío generacional del cambio climático.
Tenemos la tecnología para hacerlo. Tenemos el imperativo económico. Tenemos la
obligación moral. Solo necesitamos voluntad política.”
“El Nuevo Acuerdo Verde tiene
tres componentes centrales: empleos, justicia y clima”, dijo la Representante
Ocasio-Cortez en una declaración. “Las docenas de propuestas de ley que han surgido de esta
resolución desde que la presentamos hace dos años todos contienen 1) el
compromiso de crear empleos sindicales que pagan bien; 2) priorizar las
comunidades vulnerables y de primera línea afectadas de manera desproporcionada
por el cambio climático, incluyendo las comunidades de color, la tierra
indígena, las comunidades desindustrializadas y los centros de combustibles
fósiles; y 3) reducir las emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero de origen
humano entre 40% y 60% en 10 años y llegar a las emisiones globales netas cero
para 2050, en línea con el hallazgo del Panel Intergubernamental sobre Cambio
Climático que las temperaturas globales no deben aumentar más de 1,5 grados
Celsius por encima de los niveles preindustrializadas para evitar los impactos
más severos del cambio climático.”
###