Call up Redford in a year or so and ask him then... He'll be singing a different tune,
		
		
	 
Redford is a woman, lol
Keystone pipeline: How many jobs really at stake?
(MoneyWatch)  President Obama's move Wednesday to reject a permit to build the 
Keystone XL pipeline  drew fire from supporters of the project, with a spokesman for House  Speaker John Boehner telling CBS that the decision threatens to "destroy  tens of thousands of American jobs." 
Yet exactly how  much work Keystone, a proposed 1,700-mile pipeline that would transport  oil from Alberta, Canada, to the Texas Gulf Coast, would generate  remains in dispute. Transcanada (
TRP), the energy giant bidding to build the pipeline, projects the undertaking would 
create 20,000 jobs in the U.S., including 13,000 positions in construction and 7,000 in manufacturing. 
That figure, based on a report by a consulting firm 
hired by Transcanada  to assess the project's economic impact, has been widely cited by  Keystone backers on Capitol Hill. Other estimates advanced by supporters  of the pipeline have been even more optimistic, with the 
U.S. Chamber of Commerce claiming it could create 250,000 permanent U.S. jobs. 
But  subsequent analysis suggests that Keystone's job-creating potential is  more modest. The U.S. State Department calculated last year that the  underground 
pipeline would add  5,000 to 6,000 U.S. jobs. One independent review of Keystone puts that  number even lower, with the Cornell University Global Labor Institute 
finding that the pipeline  would add only 500 to 1,400 temporary construction jobs. The authors of  the September report also said that much of the new employment stemming  from Keystone would be outside the U.S. 
Transcanada itself cast doubt  on its employment forecast when a vice president for the company told  CNN last fall that the 20,000 jobs Keystone would create were temporary  and that the project would likely yield only "hundreds" of permanent  positions. 
 Another reason for the discrepancy appears  to stem from what that 20,000 figure really means. As Transcanada has  conceded, its estimate counted up "job years" spent on the project, not  jobs. In other words, the company was counting a single construction  worker who worked for two years on 
Keystone as two jobs, lending fuel to critics who said advocates of the pipeline were overstating its benefits. 
The Cornell researchers concluded:
 
The construction of KXL will create far fewer jobs in the U.S. than its proponents have claimed and may actually destroy more jobs than it generates.... 
 
The claim that KXL will create 20,000 direct construction and  manufacturing jobs in the U.S. is unsubstantiated. There is strong  evidence to suggest that a large portion of the primary material input  for KXL -- steel pipe -- will not even be produced in the U.S.
In a statement, 
President Obama attributed the  decision to block construction of the pipeline to "the rushed and  arbitrary deadline insisted on by Congressional Republicans," saying it  "prevented a full assessment of the pipeline's impact, especially the  health and safety of the American people, as well as our environment."
The furor is likely to continue, highlighting the intense election-year politics around Keystone. In 
urging Obama to approve the project, for instance, Boehner said on Wednesday that the pipeline would create 100,000 new jobs.
Keystone pipeline: How many jobs really at stake? - CBS News