In a recent Another Voice column (“Energy policies can be pro-business, pro-environment”), the authors gets things half right.
The Climate and Community Protection Act (CCPA), the focus of their
article, is also pro-community and pro-working families! If enacted, the
CCPA would commit New York State to a just transition to 100 percent
renewable energy by 2050.
This transition would impact the entire economy, from energy
generation to transportation to how we heat and cool our buildings. It
would require that state agencies apply climate and equity filters to
all decision making. This would ensure that no New Yorkers get left
behind during the transition and that state government is accountable to
climate goals.
The CCPA was perhaps the first climate
bill in the country to take justice for communities and workers
seriously. It acknowledges the disparate impacts of climate change on
vulnerable communities and would support implementation of
community-based climate solutions. The bill would redirect 40 percent of
existing state climate and clean energy funding to vulnerable
communities to enhance climate resiliency and reduce energy poverty by
opening up access to renewables and energy efficiency.
The CCPA would also set job standards for industries called into
action by public sector investments so that workers and their families
can thrive as our economy transitions.
Global consensus has been reached that we’re now living through an
intensifying climate crisis. The CCPA is a commonsense response to this
crisis and represents a transformative strategy for achieving a just
transition for all New Yorkers.
Clarke Gocker
Buffalo
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To read the text of the Climate and Community Protection Act and see the bill's co-sponsorship in the NYS Senate, click here
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