While speaking in Utah, President Obama announced a
new program that will combat climate change while training 75,000
veterans for jobs in the solar industry.
The President said:
I am announcing a new goal to train 75,000 workers to enter the solar industry by 2020. As part of this, we’re creating what we’re calling a solar ready vets program that’s modeled after some successful pilot initiatives that have already been established over the last several years.It’s going to train transitioning military personnel for careers in this growing industry at ten bases including right here at Hill, and as part of this effort we’re also going to work with states to enable more veterans to use the post-9/11 GI Bill for solar job training.It’s one of the many steps we’re taking to help nearly 700,000 military veterans and spouses get a job. In fact, about thirty percent of the federal workforce is now made up of veterans. I’ve said it before, and I think employers are starting to catch on if you really want to get the job done, hire a veteran.
The plan is smart because it trains tens of
thousands of transitioning military personnel and spouses for a civilian
job in an industry that is growing ten times faster than the national
average. The president also pointed out the military bases that get a
substantial percentage of their energy from the sun save money that can
applied towards other goals and missions.
The nation has undergone a dramatic shift from a
president who fought a foreign war for oil (Bush and Iraq) to a forward
thinking president who is using growing clean energy industry industries
to train veterans of the Bush wars for good paying jobs.
The plan that the President unveiled isn’t just good
politics. It’s also common sense. No veteran should have to take a
low-paying service industry job because they can’t find anything else.
It is part of our national obligation to everything possible to help
those who served succeed when they return home.
President Obama is creating opportunities for today’s veterans to acquire the jobs of tomorrow.
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