News:

FORUM HAS BEEN UPGRADED  - if you have trouble logging in, please tap/click "home"  and try again. Hopefully this upgrade addresses recent server issues.  Thank you for your patience. Forum Manager

MESSAGE ABOUT WEBSITE REGISTRATIONS
http://mahoningvalley.info/forum/index.php?topic=8677

Main Menu

In Toledo, green is the favorite color

Started by irishbobcat, December 29, 2008, 10:15:57 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

irishbobcat

In Toledo, green is the favorite color



By Charita Goshay
CantonRep.com staff writer
Posted Dec 27, 2008 @ 10:03 PM

If you've been in northern Ohio for any length of time, you knew we were in a recession long before CNN got wind of it.

As cities in the Rust Belt continue to gasp for air, Toledo has found a way to add 6,000 jobs.

That isn't a typo.

Toledo and its surrounding communities are in the process of re-emerging as a "green belt."

Every one of us knows a 30-something who might have done this community a world of good had he or she been able to stay. Toledo may have found a way to bridge the gap between those young adults who want to stay and the growing number of renewable energy and energy-efficient companies that need educated workers.

Toledo and Lucas County officials have formed a Green Jobs Partnership, a training and job-placement mechanism to meet the growing needs of green-collar start-ups.

Toledo Mayor Carty Finkbeiner is buttonholing Gov. Ted Strickland to establish an Ohio Center for Renewable Energy and sustainable Development Center at the University of Toledo, which has engaged in solar-cell research since the 1980s.

GREEN SPROUT

One advantage Toledo has over other cities is its glass industry. Toledo is the home of Owens Corning, which gives the area a head start — but not an insurmountable one — in the manufacturing of solar panels.

According to the American Solar Energy Society, green-collar companies created 8.5 million jobs in 2006. There are estimates the industry could employ 40 million people by 2030, which sounds far off until you remember that nine years ago, we were living in mortal fear of Y2K.

In Canton, the arrival of the Hydrotech Corp. is a heartening "green" sprout. Last year, there was some talk about Canton's possibly becoming a site for manufacturing turbines for wind energy. That may sound far-fetched too, until you look at places such as Holland, and see windmills in Lake Erie, spinning alongside Browns Stadium.

Change can be difficult to envision and even harder to embrace. In 1903, the president of the Michigan Savings Bank advised Henry Ford not to bother with the automobile industry, stating, "The horse is here to stay, but the automobile is only a novelty — a fad."

TREE-HUGGING?

Northern Ohio is suffering because we failed to embrace change, even as the economy was shifting beneath us. We thought that if we just stayed behind the factory gate, the world eventually would come to its senses. For years, people in Toledo clung to the auto industry for dear life, and even as recently as this month, appeals were made to salvage still-crucial jobs at the Chrysler-Jeep plant there.

The difference is, instead of rearranging the deck chairs, Toledo has begun building its own life raft.

More than a few people still scoff at the notion of a green-collar economy. Because the industry sputtered in the 1970s, they see it as little more than tree-hugging. But guess what else is green?
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Toledo is going Green, Now Canton. Why not Youngstown? Why not the rest of Ohio?


Dennis Spisak
Mahoning Valley Greens
Ohio Green Party

www.ohiogreens.org

www.votespisak.org/thinkgreen/