After Years of Grassroots Efforts, Illinois Passes Nation-Leading Climate & Equity Bill

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Contact: 
Renner Barsella, renner.barsella@sierraclub.org
Hannah Lee Flath, hannahlee.flath@sierraclub.org, 860-634-0225

SPRINGFIELD, IL -- Today, Governor Pritzker signed the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (SB2408) into law, marking one of the nation’s most groundbreaking advancements in climate justice and workforce transition. 

“This landmark legislation is a historic step forward for climate justice in Illinois, the Midwest, and the nation. As the largest polluter in the Midwest, and historically a major coal-producing state, Illinois is now on course to show what a just transition to a clean energy future can look like, lifting up workers and communities while achieving our climate goals,” said Sierra Club Illinois Director Jack Darin. “We have shown not only that jobs, justice, and climate are inextricably linked, but also that there are tangible policy solutions here that could be a useful model for lawmakers in DC and across the country. Sierra Club unequivocally opposes nuclear energy, and though this bill includes difficult compromises, it overwhelmingly supports true clean energy resources like wind, solar, and energy efficiency, putting Illinois on track to replace all retiring dirty energy, including Exelon’s nuclear fleet, with 100% clean energy.”

Quotes from local Sierra Club leaders across the state are available at the end of this release.

Sierra Club joined other environmental advocates with the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition in support of the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, which sets bold targets to: 

  • Put Illinois on a path to 100% renewable energy by 2050 by increasing Illinois’ Renewable Portfolio Standard to 40% by 2030, 50% by 2040, and setting an ultimate goal of 100% clean energy by 2050, generating approximately $10 billion for Illinois renewables. 

  • Prioritize clean energy investments, job training, hiring, ownership, and new business creation in BIPOC, low-income, and environmental justice communities through some of the most progressive programs in the nation, including: 

    • a $50 million/year expansion to the Illinois Solar for All Program launched under the Future Energy Jobs Act, 

    • over $80 million/year to build a network of workforce hubs and contractor development programs, 

    • over $35 million/year for business development grants and low-cost inclusive capital access, 

    • minimum diversity and equity requirements for all renewable energy projects and support for BIPOC contractors. 

  • Completely decarbonize Illinois’ energy sector by 2045 with retirement tiers for coal and gas plants based in part on plants’ proximity to environmental justice communities and local pollution impacts. This approach marks an important shift in climate policy that prioritizes emissions reductions first from plants with the worst environmental justice impacts rather than a singular focus on greenhouse gas emissions.   

  • Create just transition programs for communities and workers impacted by power plant and mine closures, including a Displaced Energy Worker Bill of Rights to support job training and placement needs, scholarship funds, and health care support. 

  • Tackle Illinois’ heavily polluting transportation sector by committing millions over the next decade to expanding access to and adoption of electric vehicles, public transit, and medium-duty and heavy-duty vehicles with the objective of 40% of the benefits going to environmental justice and economically disadvantaged communities. 

  • Install rigorous new ethics standards with restrictions and transparency into utility finances and lobbying activities. 

Many of the policy pillars in the final bill were developed over nearly three years through a statewide coalition engagement process that solicited feedback, collaborated to set priorities, and fostered community driven ideas. A bill called the Clean Energy Jobs Act was born in 2019 from these dialogues with over 50 different communities across the state and through a coalition-wide participatory decision making process. In the years that followed, the coalition hosted five Lobby Days at the Illinois statehouse, during which hundreds of participants urged their legislators to ensure that the energy bill would prioritize climate and equity. 

“Environmental justice is about environmental racism. To address one requires addressing the other,” said Dulce Ortiz of Waukegan, co-chair of Clean Power Lake County and Executive Committee member of the Woods and Wetlands Sierra Club Group. “This bill allows my community to embrace a healthy, clean energy future beyond coal. It prioritizes the closure of fossil fuels in environmental justice communities that have borne the burden of coal and gas plants for decades. It includes aggressive but achievable dates by which fossil fuel plants must eliminate all of their carbon emissions. These provisions will save lives - especially Black and brown lives in frontline communities.”

Sierra Club hosted dozens of town halls with partners to create opportunities for constituents to share bottom-up feedback on energy legislation with their local legislators. The Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition delivered more than 20,000 petitions to Governor Pritzker’s office and in 2021 alone, Sierra Club and Clean Power Lake County volunteers called more than 40,000 constituents across Illinois to urge them to contact their legislators in support of a climate and equity bill.

“The passage of this bill is a significant win not just for Chicago, but for southern Illinois too,” says Sierra Club Shawnee Group Chair Jane Cogie of Carbondale. “Over the past two years, Sierra Club volunteers have worked with other local organizations in booths at farmer's markets, at town and county forums, and through community conversations to gather ideas and collect petitions from our southern Illinois neighbors. Our collaboration contributed to this historic bill and I can’t wait to see policy solutions benefit the southern Illinois communities that helped shape them.”

Because of the incredible grassroots movement behind the Clean Energy Jobs Act, many of its central tenets were included in the omnibus bill introduced by Governor Pritzker in May. Throughout this summer, volunteers held numerous actions across the state to demand a fossil free future for Illinois as stakeholders and negotiators worked through a political impasse to reach a compromise that satisfied the coalition’s climate and equity priorities. Sierra Club plans to continue its work to engage communities and ensure a robust implementation of this groundbreaking piece of legislation.

Sierra Club leaders from across Illinois released the following statements:

YOUTH: Teen Action Team leader Sia Shetkar: “It’s such a relief to finally see that our legislators are truly fighting for our generation’s future. I am thrilled to see how Illinois transforms under the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, and one day have one of the clean energy jobs that organizers, legislators, and negotiators have worked so hard on to create this new bill.”

PEORIA: Bob Jorgensen, Heart of Illinois Group Sierra Club Chairperson: “Our community in Peoria knows first hand the impact fossil fuels have on our health and community. We also know the economic toll when plants close without warning or transition planning. Our experience here contributed to shaping this historic legislation, and the solutions it implements will have lasting benefits on communities like ours that have been harmed by big coal.”

VENEDY: Dale Wojttkowski, Kaskaskia Group Chair: “We engaged Sierra Club members, local community stakeholders and hundreds of others from across the state, to build energy legislation from the ground up. This new law puts people first and communities like ours first, because it was communities like ours that made it happen, every step of the way.”

ROCKFORD: Steven Hall, Co-Chair, Northwest River Valley Group: “This bill was written by people, not utilities. Climate policy should reflect the concerns and needs of the people it affects the most, and this legislation is revolutionary in the way that it does that and centers equity. This law is the first step in ensuring all Illinoisans benefit from clean energy policy.“

EDWARDSVILLE: Toni Oplt, Executive Board Member of Piasa Palisades Group and Chair of Metro East Green Alliance  “Sierra Club members and partners invested hundreds of hours engaging communities across the state. That feedback process has given us one of the boldest climate and equity laws in the nation, and because of that, it will be communities like ours in southern Illinois that reap the benefit.”

URBANA: Alice Englebretsen, Political Chair, Prairie Group: “Hundreds of community members from across East Central Illinois engaged in the public process that built this historic legislation. This bill gives our coal mine communities an opportunity to train in the clean energy sector for good jobs, and offers support to communities transitioning away from dirty energy. For that reason, communities across the state, including ours in East Central Illinois, can rest easy knowing that our energy, climate, and community health have an equitable roadmap for decades to come.”

WARRENVILLE: Connie Schmidt, River Prairie Group Chair and Chapter Chair: “For us, this legislation represents years of community input, collaboration with stakeholders, and grassroots advocacy work. Because these processes engaged community members like us here in Glen Ellyn, this bill truly represents the will of the people. CEJA aims to put Illinois on a path to a more just, equitable, and cleaner future, which all Illinoisans deserve.”

SPRINGFIELD: Jake Carman, Sangamon Valley Group volunteer: “For us in Springfield, these last few weeks have illustrated that there is no clean or safe way to burn coal. This legislation sets all of Illinois on path to a more equitable and climate resilient future. It was communities like ours that made this bill possible, and communities like ours that will be essential to continuing the work to see it implemented.”

PLAINFIELD: Portia Gallegos, Sauk-Calumet Group volunteer: “We’ve engaged with stakeholders across the state. Members and supporters, over years of work, came together to build and pass this historic law. This bold advancement will reshape industries, and put Illinois on a path to a more just, more equitable, and cleaner future.”

GENEVA: William Koehl, Valley of the Fox Group and League of Women Voters of Illinois: “Sierra Club volunteers have spent hundreds of hours engaging communities and legislators to make sure every voice was heard and no community was left behind. In Geneva, we worked hard to ensure we end our reliance on the Prairie State coal plant. Transitioning to renewable energy is better for everyone, whether you live next to the plant or get power from the plant from afar, and this bill will ensure that communities impacted by the inevitable transition are heard and supported along the way.” 

WINTHROP HARBOR: Verena Owen, co-founder of the Beyond Coal Campaign: “This bill reflects a historic statewide engagement process, that ensured that communities in every corner of this state--including communities like those in Lake County that have suffered from the disastrous legacy of pollution and divestment--have been heard and benefit from the clean energy future we’ve set before us.”

CHICAGO: Gavin Hamilton, Chicago Group volunteer: “Hundreds of hours of community dialogue contributed to the creation of this landmark bill. Sierra Club members and partners from across the state engaged in a collaborative effort that won us one of the most groundbreaking and equity focused climate laws in the country. This is a huge win for Chicago, Illinois, the climate and environmental justice.”

MOLINE: Kristen Bergren, Eagle View Group volunteer: "Today, Illinois took a giant leap toward decarbonizing Illinois' electric sector, a critical step to combatting the effects of climate change in Illinois and beyond. This new law puts people first, not polluters, and should act as a blueprint for other states across the U.S."