Update from Washington State: SustainableWorks secures Recovery grant.
In May of 2009, we reported on a major legislative victory for clean-energy jobs in Washington, thanks to deep community involvement and champions in the state legislature. Now, the application process for those funds is complete, and a great organization called SustainableWorks won a Recovery grant.
We have an exciting update from Washington State!
A few months back, we reported on a major legislative victory
for clean-energy jobs in Washington, thanks to deep community
involvement and champions in the state legislature.
The Washington
State legislation (Senate Bill 5649) paved the way to create thousands
of good, green-collar jobs, by designating that funds from the Recovery
Act support energy-efficiency retrofit programs.
This ground breaking legislation was passed because of the hard work of leaders in the Sound and Spokane Alliance.
Green For All worked with community advocates and members of the
legislature to ensure that the bill benefited community members and
included job quality standards.
Now, the application process for those funds is complete, and a great organization called SustainableWorks
won a Recovery grant. Thanks to SB 5649 and Recovery Act funding,
SustainableWorks will expand its work to facilitate energy-efficiency
retrofits in moderate-income neighborhood.
SustainableWorks
already has experience pioneering retrofit projects in small commercial
and residential buildings in Spokane, WA. It has proven that a highly
trained workforce, paid family wages, can provide cost effective energy
retrofit services. SustainableWorks is now a statewide non-profit
pioneering neighborhood-based, large-scale energy efficiency projects.
In
addition to this experience, SustainableWorks is a good pick for
Recovery funds because it is committed to providing quality jobs and
opportunities for new workers to enter the workforce. The program
requires that all contractors pay Washington State prevailing wages
with benefits to all employees. It also requires that all contractors
use at least 20% apprentices on its projects and that 25% of these
apprentices must be new first-year apprentices. With the support of
Electrical Workers, Plumbers and Pipefitters, Laborers, Sheet Metal
Workers Unions and others, SustainableWorks has agreements to place
individuals from underserved communities directly into apprentice
programs that usually require a long waiting period. These unions have
demonstrated their commitment to making the building trades accessible
to all.
SustainableWorks will require contracted employees to
receive extensive training so that its workforce can perform energy
retrofit work more efficiently than past models. This, combined with
simplifying the process for consumers, will result in a program that
can be sustainable for the long haul.
The energy retrofit work
SustainableWorks will do with Recovery funds is part of a continuum of
programs to help low-income Washington residents reduce their energy
costs through energy saving home retrofits. The Washington State Low
Income Weatherization program performs free energy retrofits in
low-income households. SustainableWorks will provide retrofits in
moderate-income homes that don’t qualify for the low-income program.
It will combine utility incentives and Recovery funding to make certain
that the costs for the retrofits are covered up-front with low interest
loans, and fully paid for over time with energy savings.
SustainableWorks is also grounded in a community organizing model
that is critical to reaching homeowners who are either unaware of
energy savings opportunities or are not pursuing them because of the
costs involved. SustainableWorks can reach these households and help
them save energy, organizing one moderate-income neighborhood at a time.
It
is very exciting to see the next step in the process, as landmark
legislation on the federal and state levels (the Recovery Act and SB
5649) begins to turn into jobs, opportunity, and environmental
sustainability for people and communities in Washington State.
For more stories of how the green economy is growing across the United States, see our new Green Economy Roadmap.