Chicago Sun-Times

A historic vote that gave us tools to save the planet

- BEN JEALOUS @BenJealous Ben Jealous is executive director of the Sierra Club and a professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. His book “Never Forget Our People Were Always Free” was just published.

Vice President Kamala Harris is sure to be remembered every March in Women’s History Month as the first woman and the first person of color to serve our nation in that position. As notable as those two facts are, she may grow to be known just as much for a single vote in the Senate that helped save the planet.

Last August, she broke the 5050 deadlock between Democrats and Republican­s in the Senate to pass the Inflation Reduction Act. That historic package, along with the Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act that Harris had crisscross­ed the country in 2021 to build support for, gives us a once-in-a-generation chance to protect the climate and build a cleaner, fairer economy.

Both laws bear Harris’ mark. For example, the two packages provide billions to replace diesel school buses with electric ones and an additional tax credit for purchases that counties and cities make on their own. As a senator, Harris repeatedly sponsored bills to electrify the nation’s school buses. Similarly, she championed proposals to help recovery in low-income communitie­s that bear a disproport­ionate burden of pollution and climate; the IRA includes $60 billion directed to help those places.

Harris’ role inside and outside Washington on environmen­tal issues isn’t surprising. When she was elected San Francisco’s district attorney 20 years ago, she started one of the first environmen­tal justice units in a prosecutor’s office. When she moved on to be California’s attorney general, she fought to protect the state from fossil fuel interests, winning tens of millions in civil settlement­s and a criminal indictment against the pipeline company responsibl­e for an oil spill off Santa Barbara, as well as suing the federal government to block fracking off the coast. It’s a path others have been able to follow in the years since (Columbia University keeps a database of attorneys general’s environmen­tal actions now).

It’s a concern that runs deep. Like I did, Harris grew up in environmen­tally conscious northern California in a household deeply involved in the civil rights movement. She learned early that conservati­on was a good thing, so much so that she has joked she couldn’t understand as a youngster why people she knew said conservati­ves were bad.

The Biden-Harris administra­tion has provided leadership on the issue. With Congress, they’ve given us the tools to clean up pollution, to boost communitie­s’ resilience to climate-related natural disasters like wildfires, and to create good jobs in clean manufactur­ing across the country in unpreceden­ted ways. Through the infrastruc­ture and inflation reduction packages, the United States can spend more than double protecting Earth than we spent putting astronauts on the moon.

“I think we all understand we have to be solutions- driven. And the solutions are at hand,” Harris said at a climate summit earlier this month. “We need to make up for some lost time, no doubt. This is going to have an exponentia­l impact on where we need to go.”

It’s time for the rest of us to pick up those tools and build. There are powerful interests that would be more than happy to let the inertia that allows people and places to be treated as disposable continue indefinite­ly. Our planet can’t afford that, and we have to marshal a movement to prevent it.

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Vice President Kamala Harris speaks alongside President Joe Biden at an event celebratin­g the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act last September at the White House.
ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY IMAGES Vice President Kamala Harris speaks alongside President Joe Biden at an event celebratin­g the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act last September at the White House.
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