Quantcast
advertisement
BLACK ENTERPRISE » White House Home » White House Blogs » White House News » Politics Coverage » The Obama Store

White House Blogs

 

Obama Promotes the Importance of Fatherhood

Joyce Jones Jun 20, 2009

President Barack Obama delivered a poignant and candid speech on the importance of fatherhood and personal responsibility before a group made up largely of young males and representatives of community mentoring organizations who attended a town hall meeting in the East Room of the White House on Friday.
The president and members of his staff spent [...]

Filed Under: White House Blogs

Black Media in the White House

Derek T. Dingle Mar 30, 2009

On Feb. 9, I achieved the career milestone of interviewing President Barack Obama -- his first magazine Q&A. In the 15-minute phone interview, we talked about the prospects of his multi-prong economic agenda and his administration's plans to bolster small business. That same day, I had a seat in the East Room of the White [...]

Filed Under: White House Blogs

Obama Pledges Persistence

Derek T. Dingle Mar 24, 2009

Persistence. That’s the message that President Barack Obama ended with last night as he took a battery of questions from the press during his news conference on the economy.
He held his second presidential press conference after a week in which he unveiled another multi-trillion dollar of packages: the small business leading fix; another bailout [...]

Filed Under: White House Blogs

Transcript: Q&A by Obama, Brown

BlackEnterprise.com Mar 3, 2009

President Barack Obama: Hello, everybody. Good to see you. Where are the Brits? They're over there.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown: In fact, they're everywhere. (Laughter.)
President Obama: Are they? They're spread out?
All right, my understanding is we're going to do four questions, and we'll just alternate. I'll start off with Jennifer Loven of AP.
Question: Thank you, sir. [...]

Filed Under: White House Blogs

advertisement

Green Energy, Black Jobs

0408_pol-van-jones_edited-11

President Barack Obama is not only the first black president, but the first green president, said Van Jones, special adviser for green jobs, enterprise, and innovation with the White House Council on Environmental Quality.

With unemployment rates for African Americans at 13.3% in March, compared with the national average of 8.5%, blacks are in dire need of economic growth. Obama is sending help, in the form of green jobs, as a pathway “out of poverty to prosperity,” said Jones during a conference call, adding that his goal is to dispel the myth that green jobs are not for African Americans.

“Cities produce 75% of greenhouse gas emissions. We cannot beat global warming without greening our cities,” he said. “Buildings don’t weatherize and retrofit themselves. The solutions for global warming are jobs and contracts in the urban environment.

Of the $787 billion in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan, $20 billion will specifically target green endeavors in energy efficiency and weatherization. The Department of Labor will receive $500 million for job training money and the Department of Energy has $3.2 billion to invest in energy efficiency and conservation projects.

“There is a wingspan on those jobs that go from GEDs to Ph.D.s -- every kind of person, every color, every class can participate and I think it is important that all communities get in on the ground floor of this stuff,” Jones said.

Under the plan, the federal government will give money to governors and mayors who will distribute the funds throughout their communities. Jones hopes that organizations such as the National Urban League will compete for and begin to train people to participate in the green energy revolution.

In addition, recent guidance from the Office of Management and Budget will make sure that the money is dispersed in a way that is consistent with equal opportunity employment, local hiring, and support for disadvantaged and small businesses.

Click here to subscribe to BLACK ENTERPRISE




Leave a Reply



advertisement



advertisement
advertisement