Governor
Rell: ‘Green Collar’ Training
Program Will
Provide Increased Job Opportunities for Residents
VIDEO
- Watch a Video of the Governor's Speech at Cheney Tech.

Governor
M. Jodi Rell said today that a “Green Collar” training
program she has proposed for the state’s technical schools
will prepare Connecticut’s students for future job opportunities
in environmental and energy conservation careers.
“Experts
say there is the potential for hundreds of thousands of ‘Green
Collar’ jobs to open up in communities across our nation
over the next decade,” Governor Rell said during a visit
to Howell Cheney Technical High School in Manchester. “We
want Connecticut’s students to be at the head of the line
for those jobs – with the training, confidence and expertise
they need to succeed.
“Reducing
our reliance on fossil fuels and reducing Greenhouse gases that
cause climate change will require an increase in energy efficiency
and the expanded use of renewable energy,” Governor Rell
said. “This kind of change will present many new opportunities.
It means new opportunities in designing and manufacturing the products
and systems we will need for commercial and residential construction
and renovation. And it means new opportunities in installing and
maintaining solar panels, insulation, new windows and the other ‘clean-tech’ solutions
we’ll be relying upon.”
In
her budget address to the General Assembly on February 6, Governor
Rell proposed an investment of $125,000 for the development of
a “Green Collar” training initiative in the Technical
High School System. There are 18 schools with more than 10,000
full-time and 5,500 part-time students in the technical high school
system.
Governor
Rell was joined at Cheney Technical High School by Robert Varney,
Region One Administrator for the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency; Dr. Mark McQuillan, Commissioner of the state Department
of Education; Gina McCarthy, Commissioner of the state Department
of Environmental Protection; and Dr. Abigail Hughes, Superintendent
of the Connecticut Technical High School System.
After
touring Cheney Tech and speaking with faculty and students, Governor
Rell said, “With the investment I have proposed, we will
continue our national leadership on climate change initiatives
while beginning to build a real foundation for a strong ‘Green
Collar’ training program. This new program will help make
certain that our technical schools provide hands on instruction
that will lead our students to where the jobs of the future are
going to be. This is an initiative that will result in well-paying
jobs for our people and a strong future for our state.”
If
the proposed funding is approved by the Legislature, the technical
schools will be able to expand upon programs now offered in construction-related
fields to incorporate training in “green” technologies,
Governor Rell said. This would be an important extension of curriculum
and training now offered in electrical, HVAC and plumbing disciplines
at the technical schools, she noted.

Cheney Tech Principal
Bruce Sievers greets
Dr. Abigail Hughes,
Superintendent of the Connecticut Technical High School System,
Dr. Mark McQuillan,
Commissioner of the state Department of Education, and Governor Rell
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