Green Jobs Bend OR

Local resource for green jobs in Bend, OR. Includes detailed information on local businesses that give access to staffing agencies, employment agencies, career centers as well as information on recruiting centers and content on green jobs.

National Employment Service (NES)
(541) 317-4150
158 NE Greenwood Ave
Bend, OR

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Labor Contractors
(541) 382-0445
1900 Ne Division St Ste 108
Bend, OR

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Staffing Services Inc
(541) 318-5950
846 NW Colorado Ave.
Bend, OR

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Mid-Oregon Personell Svc
(541) 382-0445
629 Sw Black Butte Blvd
Redmond, OR

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Laborers' International Union Of North America
(541) 382-4872
265 Se Scott St
Bend, OR
 
Rbw Associates
(541) 389-7500
64723 Boonesborough Ct
Bend, OR

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MTR Inc
(541) 312-4345
424 NW Columbia St
Bend, OR

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Pace Medical Staffing
(541) 312-5849
2955 North Highway 97
Bend, OR

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Superior Staffing Inc
(405) 632-2222
2216 SW 2nd Ct SUITE Apt 1
Redmond, OR

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Worksource Oregon Employment Department
(541) 388-6070
1645 NE Forbes Road
Bend, OR
 
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Green Jobs: How To Communicate About Them and Get One Too

Green Jobs: How To Communicate About Them and Get One Too

March 29, 2010   Josh Dorfman

Framing green choices in terms of the things Americans care about is essential if we’re going to get people on board with real change. Take green jobs. Lots of people want work that aligns with their values so they can feel good about being paid to make the world a better place. Green jobs can deliver on that promise. As I write in my latest article on Huffington Post ( How To Sell Green Jobs to America ), the green jobs are already here. We in the green community are just doing a lousy job of communicating about those jobs in ways that get people excited and generate broad-based support for creating more of them.

I’m fortunate to have a green job. And I know that millions of others would like to have a green job too. It’s why I dedicated the last chapter of The Lazy Environmentalist on a Budget to landing a green job. To me, it’s obvious how intrinsically linked our lifestyles are to the work we do. Heck, the work we do takes up most of our waking hours, so clearly it has an impact on how we feel, how we live, where we live, and almost all the other choices we make.

In many ways my TV show is very much about green jobs too. That’s because in most episodes I’m working with professionals across numerous industries to see if I can green the way they run their business, or in other words, their job. If I can get these non-green folks to embrace greener practice...

Click here to read the rest of this article from The Lazy Environmentalist