The Columbus Dispatch

Reimagine Appalachia would create well-paying jobs

- Rick Bloomingda­le, Timothy Burga, William Longdrigan and Josh Sword Guest columnists

There’s nothing new about divide and conquer. A thriving economy and sustainabl­e environmen­tal policies are not mutually exclusive. Actively addressing climate change must go hand-in-hand with economic and environmen­tal revitaliza­tion.

Now is the time for working people and their unions, community activists, environmen­tal and racial justice organizati­ons to come together and demand of our elected officials a better future that puts working people and their communitie­s first.

A coalition born in the heart of coal country, Reimagine Appalachia, shows that we can and must have economic opportunit­y and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

We — the presidents of the State Labor Federation­s of the AFL-CIO in Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky — know that federal climate infrastruc­ture investment­s must include robust labor and community standards to benefit working people and communitie­s across the region.

In May, we joined Reimagine Appalachia to release its newest report, “Maximizing Value — Community and Labor Standards.”

The report is full of real-world examples that show how these standards have created good jobs in the past — and can do so throughout Appalachia.

Following the Reimagine Appalachia plan would create over half a million well-paying, family-sustaining jobs in our four states alone.

It would modernize our electric grid and repair the damage left behind by absentee corporatio­ns. It would invest in the jobs of the future by expanding universal broadband and growing clean, efficient manufactur­ing. It would restore communitie­s neglected by deindustri­alization and historical­ly marginaliz­ed by outright discrimina­tion.

Reimagine Appalachia understood that the national climate debate needed to engage working people across our region and address their desire for better jobs — because “if you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu.”

What did we learn? To succeed and build the future we want, we must invest in Appalachia­ns.

Federal infrastruc­ture investment must require strong union rights and good wages on permanent jobs — e.g., manufactur­ers — and on constructi­on projects, including apprentice­ship slots that provide on-the-job training.

On constructi­on, collective bargaining agreements that last throughout a project, “project labor agreements” (PLAS), are the gold standard.

For example, Cincinnati and surroundin­g municipali­ties used their demand for electricit­y to drive investment in a utility-scale solar project in Appalachia­n Ohio. This is one example showing that, when done right, climate infrastruc­ture investment will create good union jobs and a pathway to the middle class. When we invest in workers, our communitie­s prosper inside Appalachia and across the country.

Reimagine Appalachia’s newest white paper also highlights other examples from Cleveland, Columbus and Pittsburgh that could be scaled up and replicated across our region.

We’ve seen in the past when industries evolve, working people and the most vulnerable get left behind. Public policy has focused too exclusivel­y on bridging dislocated workers to retirement or retraining them for lower-wage, nonunion jobs they don’t want in places they don’t want to move to.

To revitalize local communitie­s requires a targeted, first-source hiring model that gives priority to dislocated coal miners and other workers in the industry, women and people of color for good, union jobs.

In recent decades, significant projects across the country, multibilli­on-dollar investment­s in public transit or other infrastruc­ture, have incorporat­ed targeted hiring programs for women and workers of color. It’s time we ensure that all workers have equal access to opportunit­ies to build a better future for themselves and their families.

Now we need to ensure that all of the climate infrastruc­ture provisions proposed by President Joe Biden — including labor and community requiremen­ts — are included in the budget reconcilia­tion package which is now being drafted by congressio­nal committees. And we expect every member of Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal delegation to support these provisions and to vote in favor of the Build Back Better package and the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill when they are considered this fall.

Richard W. Bloomingda­le is the president of the Pennsylvan­ia AFL-CIO. Tim Burga is the president of the Ohio AFL-CIO. William J. Londrigan is the president of the Kentucky AFL-CIO. Josh Sword is the president of the West Virginia AFL-CIO

Reimagine Appalachia is a national coalition of nonprofit organizati­ons.

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