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Thirty years into epidemic, AIDS remains a threat

Every day I meet people who care passionately about their communities and the men, women, and children who live there. For each person or family in those communities, there are causes that mean much to them. To help illustrate or publicize those causes, people wear bracelets, carry signs, or wear ribbons. Folks fighting breast cancer have become very good about placing a pink ribbon on thousands of items to carry their message. This marketing tool is highly effective because the general public truly believes that anyone can be diagnosed with cancer. It is an illness that does not discriminate.

They would be correct in this assessment!

But what about the less well known ribbon, the red one? Who stands behind that ribbon and why? In the 1990s, AIDS activists were inspired by the ribbon medium, and decided to make ribbons for the people who fight against AIDS. The ribbon that represents AIDS became red as this is the color of passion.

During the Tony awards, a photo was taken of the actor Jeremy Irons, who had the bright red ribbon pinned on his chest. Most people who see the red ribbon assume that the person wearing it is a gay man or a person with a gay son. Although the virus is almost 30 years old, many people still believe it affects only gay men. They think to themselves, “I don’t need to wear a red ribbon, because I could never become infected.”

They would be terribly wrong in their assessment!

The Centers for Disease Control estimates that 468,578 people were living with AIDS in America at the end of 2007, around 20,000 more than 2006. An estimated 3,792 children aged under 13 were living with AIDS at the end of 2007. The vast majority of these children acquired HIV from their mothers during pregnancy, labor, delivery or breastfeeding.

In the 34 states with a history of confidential name-based reporting, adult or adolescent males accounted for nearly three-quarters of new HIV diagnoses, more than two-thirds of whom were infected by male-to-male sexual contact. However, heterosexual contact accounted for 83 percent of diagnoses among women and 14 percent among children. Injection drug use was the transmission route in 10 percent of male and 16 percent of female diagnoses in 2007. HIV was diagnosed in 159 children in 2007, all but 20 who became infected by mother-to-child transmission.

So, based upon these numbers, heterosexuals, homosexuals, children - all of us - are susceptible to contracting the virus.

Dec. 1 is World AIDS Day. When I get dressed, I’m going to pin a red ribbon on my lapel. I’m going to wear it with passion for a cause I believe in and fight for daily. I hope that you will join me in this effort and wear your red ribbon.

With 18,000 infected people in Michigan, we will wear it for our brothers, sisters, parents, co-workers, friends and children.

AIDS affects all of us, and all of us can help fight AIDS.

Big Summer for No Worker Left Behind

Wow, this was a big summer for No Worker Left Behind, one of the initiatives I created at the Department of Energy, Labor and Economic Growth. As our nation struggles economically, eyes have turned toward Michigan to learn about our signature workforce effort and Michigan’s cutting edge programs to build a green economy. This summer, national media outlets including the New York Times, USA Today, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, NPR, Huffington Post, CNBC, CNN and MSNBC all inquired about No Worker Left Behind (NWLB).

The biggest moment came when President Obama chose Michigan and Macomb Community College, to announce his proposal to make the largest investment in community colleges in 60 years. The President gave his seal of approval for NWLB and he told the rest of the nation to take notice.

“I want to applaud Governor Granholm for the No Worker Left Behind program,” said President Obama. “It’s providing up to two years’ worth of free tuition at community colleges and universities across the state. The rest of the country should learn from this effort.”

There can be no bigger compliment than the President of the United States calling No Worker Left Behind a model for the nation. It was even more special that he did it after being introduced by Joe Iezzi, a former autoworker who found a great new career as a  climate control specialist at Henry Ford hospital in West Bloomfield after retraining at Macomb Community College.

Why is everyone so excited about NWLB?  As we start the third year of the program, nearly 90,000 people have enrolled into training through NWLB - that puts us on pace to obliterate Governor Granholm’s original goal of putting 100,000 people into training over three years.

NWLB creates a more strategic, demand driven workforce system capable of focusing on growing economic sectors and what our employers actually need. Too often, past systems have overlooked the existing needs of employers.  NWLB works with these employers to assess their actual workforce needs and aligns our education system to fulfill those needs.

NWLB is built on the proven link between higher education, higher employment and higher wages.

As a result of NWLB, many more Michiganders are engaged in long-term training, rather than short-term training or solely on job search assistance.  NWLB moves from workforce maintenance to workforce transformation.  It represents a fundamental shift from “quick fixes” that alone cannot address the needs of our dislocated workers, to an investment in increasing educational attainment that carries market-useful credentials.  With NWLB, Michigan leads the nation in shifting our focus to where President Obama and Congress are heading – reframing workforce investment policy to focus on people getting the skills they need to prosper in the 21st century economy.

Here are a handful of articles/videos/audio that represent the highlights of the summer:

Here in Michigan, a state ravaged by devastating layoffs in the automotive industry, and where unemployment stood at 14.1 percent in May, a collaboration between the state’s workforce development agencies, its largest employers and local community colleges has pioneered an innovative system that moves workers from automotive jobs into a burgeoning green economy. The Fast Start program is proving that through cooperation and detailed planning, the region can create a stream of “just-in-time workers” who are in great demand in the growing solar industry after four months of intensive, college-level training.

Saginaw’s move to develop employable workers is just part of an ambitious statewide program, called No Worker Left Behind, designed to retool workers and give them the training they require for jobs in biotechnology, advanced manufacturing, health care and other industries.

In the midst of the deep economic slump, thousands of laid-off Michiganders are going back to school to learn new skills in one of the biggest retraining efforts the state has seen.

The surge of unemployed residents flooding into classrooms has been sparked by the 2-year-old No Worker Left Behind program, a state initiative that provides up to two years of free tuition at Michigan community colleges, universities and some trade schools.

President Barack Obama took to a stage in Warren Tuesday afternoon and provided an outline of his plan to overhaul the nation’s community college system — something he described as an “undervalued” resource. At the heart of his plan is the goal for the United States to have the highest percentage of college graduates among all nations.

For almost a decade, Heather Vaughn worked as a spot welder at a factory in Jonesville, Mich., making auto parts for General Motors and others. In February, the plant was sold, and Vaughn, along with 300 other workers, was laid off in a phone call.

I was kinda like, ‘Huh,’” Vaughn told the Huffington Post. “I’d worked there nine years. That was my nine year anniversary.” The plant stayed open and rehired more than 100 workers, but Vaughn wasn’t one them. After joining the ranks of unemployed in Michigan — 12.7 percent of the state’s workforce, the highest rate in the nation — Vaughn is hoping a state program can train her to become an X-ray technician.

Gerald Crouterfield believes in the power of prayer, and good fortune.

Last September, the 40-year-old former automotive parts worker from Standish, Mich., was laid off from his job at auto parts supplier Tubular Metal Systems, where he built turbo pipes for GMC’s hulking Duramax diesel truck. Seeking a new direction, he attended a local job fair and connected with “No Worker Left Behind,” a state program to retrain unemployed workers.

By October, the organization had arranged and paid for Crouterfield to enroll at Delta College, a community college in nearby Saginaw, Mich., in an accelerated five-month program to train for a new career in the chemicals industry. He graduated in February and begins work at Dow Chemical in April.

Millions of Americans are making dramatic career turnabouts in this withering recession as a range of industries — including those involving cars, finance, real estate and construction — are shedding hundreds of thousands of jobs, many of which analysts say likely won’t return for years, if ever. Meanwhile, fields such as health care, clean energy, computer science and the government are expected to grow robustly in coming years.

Will you help beat AIDS?

Will you take just a few minutes, right now, and click on the following link to help smack down AIDS in Michigan and around the world?

http://www.aidswalkdetroit.org/faf/donorReg/donorPledge.asp?ievent=292243&lis=1&kntae292243=7E63ED5A76D04C81A799A9960DF2EBDF&supId=267821444

Almost exactly nineteen years ago today, my friend Greg Witcher died of AIDS.  He was all of 32 years old, a reporter for the Wall Street Journal in Detroit, in the prime of life. I was staying with Greg the night he died, because Roy Roulhac, who was somehow taking care of Greg while keeping up his professional life, was on a work trip.  Greg died on my watch.

Last month, I agreed to join the board of the Michigan AIDS Coalition, because I realized I’m not done fighting for Greg.

My first concrete act will be to join thousands of others on Sunday, September 20 in Royal Oak for AIDS Walk Detroit.  If you’d like to join me in the walk, please e-mail me at asl@andylevin.org.  Most of you can’t do that. But you can make a donation, whatever you can afford, whether $5 or $50 or $500 or $5,000, to support me and more importantly people living with AIDS and people whom we can prevent from becoming infected with HIV.

Please hit this link now to donate:

http://www.aidswalkdetroit.org/faf/donorReg/donorPledge.asp?ievent=292243&lis=1&kntae292243=7E63ED5A76D04C81A799A9960DF2EBDF&supId=267821444

You may also visit the event’s homepage at:

http://www.aidswalkdetroit.org/faf/home/default.asp?ievent=292243&lis=1&kntae292243=840F54CBECAC4584B06A298F10714A03

Greg grew up in Anacostia, the poorest part of Washington DC.  Through brains and charm and the help of a few good people, he got a full scholarship to a fancy boarding school and then to Williams College, where I met him.  He was the president of the Black Student Union when someone burned a cross on campus.  I remember running to his room and waking him up to tell him.  He was hardly a radical, and a reluctant protest leader.  But he did what justice demanded of him.  The picture of Greg speaking to the mass rally many of us organized that day is part of Williams history.

After college, Greg became a reporter for the Boston Globe and then the Wall Street Journal.  We overlapped in Boston when I was an organizer there and in Detroit when I was in graduate school in Ann Arbor and in DC around holidays, because Greg never forgot where he came from and he got back to see his mom in Anacostia frequently.  Sadly, she outlived her youngest son.

HIV slowly sucked the lifeforce out of Greg.  He wasted away before my eyes, until he was only skin and bones and pain — shot through with his mordant sense of humor, right till the end.

We’ve made embarrassingly little progress in the battle against HIV and AIDS since then. Will you take a small step to help do more?  Please click on this link and donate what you can.

http://www.aidswalkdetroit.org/faf/home/default.asp?ievent=292243&lis=1&kntae292243=840F54CBECAC4584B06A298F10714A03

Please share this message with others as you see fit.

Green Jobs: From Hype to Reality – and Hope

These days, it seems like the news is full of talk about green jobs. Here in Michigan, where we have lost thousands of good-paying jobs, the potential to leverage our water, wind, solar and advanced-manufacturing resources to create jobs makes the discussion about green jobs all the more exciting.

But how many green jobs actually exist? How can we create more of them? When can we expect a meaningful number of Michigan citizens to be working in the green economy?

On May 11, we started to answer these questions with the release of the Michigan Green Jobs Report, the first rigorous empirical study of the green economy in Michigan that includes specific green work in five areas:

1. agriculture and natural resources

2. clean transportation and fuels

3. increased energy efficiency

4. pollution prevention and environmental cleanup

5. renewable energy production

The results were impressive and represent a baseline to track future growth and change in Michigan’s green economy.

We found that Michigan currently has 109,067 private-sector green jobs, including 96,767 direct jobs and 12,300 support jobs. Already, green jobs make up 3 percent of private-sector employment.

Clean transportation and fuels is the largest green economy sector in Michigan, with just over 40 percent of green jobs. This is probably unique among the 50 states and reflects both our automotive heritage and a potential center of growth as hybrid and electric vehicles and advanced batteries develop.

While the report did not attempt to project green job growth, it suggests that there is huge potential for expansion over both the short and long term.

From 2005 to 2008, a sample of 358 green-related firms added over 2,500 jobs to Michigan’s economy. They grew by 7.7 percent at a time when Michigan’s overall private-sector employment actually shrank 5.4 percent.

Among renewable energy firms in this sample, the growth rate hit 30 percent. Renewable energy production, which today is Michigan’s smallest green sector, may be the fastest growing.

There’s more good news: the green economy appears to be a hotbed of entrepreneurial activity. Among the sample of 358 green-related firms, over 70 appeared to be newly created since 2005, accounting for nearly 600 new jobs already.

What is more, green jobs tend to pay well. Thirteen of the top 15 sectors of green employment boast average weekly wages above Michigan’s overall private sector average, several of them far above.

And green jobs encompass a wide range of occupations and skill levels. As the green economy grows, it appears there will be room and need for many types of workers to lend a hand and brain.

Education and training are key issues for green employers. In multiple focus groups, employers emphasized the need for basics in math and reading with additional skills to be acquired on the job or in formal training in community colleges and universities.

The best news of all may be what Michigan’s 109,000 green jobs do not represent. These jobs were largely already in place before Michigan adopted a requirement that 10 percent of our energy come from renewable sources by 2015; before we required regulated utilities to spend a portion of their revenue on energy efficiency measures for their customers; before Michigan created incentives to manufacture advanced batteries here; before the implementation of President Obama’s Recovery Act, which, among other things, will pour $243 million into Michigan to weatherize the homes of low-income residents.

The green economy is real and here to stay. Future reports may show that public policies spurring the growth of the sustainable economy mean many more good jobs for Michiganders and all Americans. Now we know – that’s not hype, it’s hope. And the administration is continuing to go anywhere and do anything to create these green jobs – and attract them – here in Michigan.

To view the entire Green Jobs Report, visit:

www.michigan.gov/documents/nwlb/GJC_GreenReport_Print_277833_7.pdf