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Can green jobs be the engine of recovery from the economic meltdown?
Can something as common as building materials represent an
opportunity to create jobs, help the needy and save the planet? NOW
looks at two "green" projects keeping furniture, paint, cabinets
and other building supplies out of landfills and getting them into
the hands of those who need them most.
Will they be devastated by the economic meltdown, or do they signal
a possible way out?
Based in the Bronx, New York, Greenworker Co-operatives aims to set
up worker-owned green businesses. The first of these is Rebuilders'
Source, a store that sells recycled and donated building materials
at affordable prices - items that would otherwise have ended up in
a landfill.
"My vision now is a completely green South Bronx," says Bronx-born
entrepreneur Omar Freilla, the founder of Greenworker
Co-operatives, "with businesses throughout the area that are owned
and run by people living in the area together."
On the other side of the country, in southern California, Materials
Matter matches donations of furniture and high-quality building
materials with individuals, organizations and homeless shelters
that use the materials to literally rebuild lives, but the
faltering economy has had an impact.
"We have to decide whether the value of that donation will be worth
the cost of transportation," says Materials Matter co-founder
Alison Riback on her blog. "[The economic downturn] put a huge dent
in our 'always say yes to a donation' philosophy."