The American Climate Corps website and application portal are now live! This historic program will connect 20,000 Americans to careers in climate solutions—and build the workforce we need to lead the global clean energy economy.
Your climate career starts here! Find an American Climate Corps opportunity that’s right for you.
Updated April 22, 2024
In April 2021, Evergreen released a memo titled Building the Civilian Climate Corps, which describes how to build a new CCC that puts Americans to work fighting the climate crisis. Since then, we have been working hard, alongside partners from across the climate movement, to make sure bold investments in an ambitious Climate Corps were included as the Senate negotiated an infrastructure package.
And on July 14, we got great news: funding for the CCC was included in Senate Democrats’ $3.5 trillion reconciliation package. To celebrate, we raised a pint and dove into policy details with three allies who have been leading the charge for a Civilian Climate Corps. Moderated by Evergreen Campaigns Director Lena Moffitt, the conversation featured:
Here are five top moments from our virtual happy hour that help break down the Civilian Climate Corps and why it’s such a big deal.
Sen. Markey is one of the biggest champions in Congress for the new CCC. He and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) introduced visionary Climate Corps legislation this past April, and since then he’s been fighting to include CCC funding in President Biden’s infrastructure package. The day of this Policy + Pints event, we’d learned that the Civilian Climate Corps made it into the Senate Democrats’ proposed budget resolution—a key first step in the budget reconciliation process, meaning the new CCC had made it over a key Congressional hurdle. Sen. Markey raised a glass to the hard work of the climate allies who’d brought us to that moment. Climate activists had been dealt lemons for years, but that was a lemonade day.
As advocacy director for the Sunrise Movement, Lauren has helped connect the youth climate movement with leaders in Congress. During Policy + Pints, she explained what a new CCC would mean for young people and how it could help transform the American economy.
It’s clear: A new Civilian Climate Corps is both wildly popular and deeply inspiring. Data for Progress polling shows that a majority of all voters (65%) support it—and members of Sunrise marched hundreds of miles, and staged a sit-in outside the White House, in support of it.
Tonya Gayle’s work with Green City Force is an incredible example of how the new CCC can be a force for climate justice. When you think of a Climate Corps, think of the work that GCF is doing already, but in communities across the country.
Their corpsmembers come from New York City public housing and work in their home communities to help residents save money on utility bills, grow their own food, and much more. GCF has deployed corpsmembers to tackle climate issues in New York City for more than a decade, and helped its corps graduates onto a range of good career paths. The new Climate Corps would support organizations like GCF around the country, and Tonya clearly laid out her vision for that national approach during Policy + Pints.
Supporting Tonya’s vision, Sen. Markey detailed how the Climate Corps would advance environmental justice and support workers. High-road labor standards including a $15/hour minimum wage, healthcare and childcare benefits, and opportunities for pre-apprenticeships with local unions would ensure that CCC membership can sustain working families and create pathways to good union jobs. And requirements that the corps direct 50% of investments to frontline environmental justice communities, recruit 50% of its members from those same places, and respect community input on projects would help ensure that the new CCC is advancing climate justice.
The Climate Corps’ ambitious aims—kickstarting a climate workforce mobilization, fighting for environmental justice, and more—are why it’s so central to President Biden’s climate agenda. During Policy + Pints, Sen. Markey, Lauren, and Tonya laid out a clear vision for what the new CCC will look like in action and how advocates are fighting to bring it across the finish line. We’ll raise a glass to that!