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Rebuilding New Jersey after COVID-19: Advancing a Healthy, Resilient, Sustainable and Fair Garden State [EXTERNAL EVENT]


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A virtual workshop co-hosted by the New Jersey Climate Change Resource Center (CCRC), New Jersey Climate Change Alliance, and Eagleton Institute of Politics. The CCRC is co-directed by the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy and the Rutgers Climate Institute, both of which serve to engage many programs from throughout the University, other academic institutions, and other partners in the public, private and non-governmental sectors.

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This virtual convening brings together leaders from across a breadth of sectors to discuss opportunities for restarting New Jersey’s economy, post COVID-19, in ways that intersect health equity and social well-being with addressing climate change, building inclusive and vibrant communities, and expanding opportunities for civic engagement. These discussions will inform efforts of the Governor’s Restart and Recovery Commission by focusing on ways that COVID recovery efforts can advance other shared public policy goals by:

  • Promoting health equity and social well-being, and ensuring adequate resources to support the state’s public health infrastructure, enabling it to prevent, protect against, quickly respond to, and recover from health emergencies;

  • Building a state budget that provides direct support to households and businesses hit hardest by COVID-19 in ways that create living wage jobs and that support a sustainable future for New Jersey;

  • Ensuring that rebuilding and COVID-19 recovery investments address changing climate conditions;

  • Supporting investments in community assets that enhance cultural, historic, and natural resources, as well as those that promote social cohesion; and

  • Honoring democratic principles.

Moderator: Kiki Jamieson, Ph.D., President; The Fund for New Jersey

DAY ONE

FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1pm–3:30pm

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First Panel: Setting the Stage

  • Demographic and Economic Realities Facing New Jersey – James W. Hughes, Ph.D., University Professor; Rutgers, The State University – An Overview of Demographic and Economic Realities;

  • Short and Longer-Term Fiscal Realities – Richard F. Keevey, Executive in Residence; Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy; Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey;

  • Realities of New Jersey’s Health Inequities – Denise V. Rodgers, MD FAAFP; Vice Chancellor of Interprofessional Programs at Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences (RBHS);

  • New Political Realities Post COVID-19 – John Weingart, Associate Director, Eagleton Institute of Politics; Rutgers, The State University.

Second Panel: Opportunities to Intersect COVID-19 Rebuilding Efforts with state climate, health, energy, social and economic goals

  • Ana Baptista, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Professional Practice and Chair of Environmental Policy and Sustainability Management Program

  • Brandon McKoy, President, New Jersey Policy Perspective;

  • Robert Kopp, Ph.D., Professor and Director, Institute of Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Sciences, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey;

  • Jorge Santos, Chief of Staff, New Jersey Economic Development Authority

  • Randall Solomon, Executive Director, Sustainable Jersey

DAY TWO

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1pm–3:30pm

REGISTER FOR DAY TWO

Third Panel: Short and Medium-term Opportunities and Challenges Moving Forward

  • Richard Lawton, Executive Director, New Jersey Sustainable Business Council

  • Barbara George Johnson, Executive Director; John S. Watson Institute For Public Policy, Thomas Edison State University;

  • Anisa Costa, Chief Sustainability Officer, Tiffany & Company

  • Kevin Sumner, Facilitator, Public Health Associations’ Collaborating Effort (PHACE);

  • Tom Wright, President and CEO, Regional Plan Association

Panelist Biographies

Moderator

Kiki Jamieson, Ph.D., President; The Fund for New Jersey

Panel 1: Setting the Stage

James W. Hughes, Ph.D., University Professor; Rutgers, The State University

Richard F. Keevey, Executive in Residence; Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy; Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey

Denise V. Rodgers, MD FAAFP; Vice Chancellor of Interprofessional Programs at Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences (RBHS)

John Weingart, Associate Director, Eagleton Institute of Politics; Rutgers, The State University

Panel 2: Opportunities to Intersect COVID-19 Rebuilding Efforts with State Climate, Health, Energy, Social and Economic goals

Ana Baptista, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Professional Practice and Chair of Environmental Policy and Sustainability Management Program

Robert Kopp, Ph.D., Professor and Director, Institute of Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Sciences, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

Brandon McKoy, President, New Jersey Policy Perspective

Jorge Santos, Chief of Staff, New Jersey Economic Development Authority

Randall Solomon, Executive Director, Sustainable Jersey and the Sustainability Institute at the College of new Jersey

Panel 3: Short and Medium-term Opportunities and Challenges Moving Forward

Richard Lawton, Executive Director, New Jersey Sustainable Business Council

Barbara George Johnson, Executive Director; John S. Watson Institute For Public Policy, Thomas Edison State University

Kevin Sumner, Facilitator, Public Health Associations’ Collaborating Effort (PHACE)

Tom Wright, President and CEO, Regional Plan Association