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CONTACT: 202-564-7873 202-564-4355
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
EPA Announces $3.6 Million in Environmental Job Training Grants to Provide Unemployed Residents with Job Opportunities Cleaning Up and Reducing Pollution Nationwide
“A key aspect of the success of the program is the partnership between grantees and the private sector to design curricula based on local markets with an eye toward hiring graduates, which is why there is a 71percent placement rate,” said Gina McCarthy, EPA Administrator. “We link our investment in communities with brownfields to enable residents from lower income communities that surround many of these sites with training opportunities.” Graduates of the program develop a comprehensive set of skills to secure full-time, sustainable employment in many areas of the environmental field and average an hourly starting wage of $14.00. This has resulted in an excellent cumulative job placement rate. Program graduates obtain employment within their own communities, areas often historically affected by blight, economic disinvestment, and sites contaminated with solid and hazardous wastes. Rather than filling local environmental jobs with professionals outside of these communities, these grants help provide an opportunity for local residents to secure careers that make a visible impact cleaning up their neighborhoods, creating a locally skilled workforce. Graduates obtain employment in fields such as: recycling, brownfields assessment and cleanup, wastewater treatment, stormwater management, emergency response, oil spill cleanup, solar installation, and Superfund site remediation.
The 18 grantees are:
· Hunters Point Family; San Francisco, Calif. · City of Durham, N.C. · Memphis Bioworks, Tenn. · City of Milwaukee, Wis. · Los Angeles Conservation Corps, Calif. · Cypress Mandela Training Center; Oakland, Calif. · St. Nicks Alliance; Brooklyn, N.Y. · Civic Works; Baltimore, Md. · Community Development Corporation of Tampa, Fla. · Limitless Vistas; New Orleans, La. · City of Camden, Ark. · Energy Coordinating Agency; Philadelphia, Penn. · Lewis and Clark County, Mont. · Alaska Forum · Northstar Center for Human Development; Hartford, Conn. · City of Detroit, Mich. · The Workplace, Inc.; Bridgeport, Conn. · Mo-Kan Regional Council; St. Joseph, Mo.
Since the EWDJT program’s inception in 1998, the EPA has funded 239 job training grants totaling more than $50 million. More than 12,800 individuals have completed training, and of those, more than 9,100 have secured employment in the environmental field. More information on environmental workforce development and job training grants: http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/pilot_grants.htm More information on EPA’s brownfields Program http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/
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