Belen Reyes
Congratulations to Belen Reyes on winning a 2025 Corpsmember of the Year Award! Awardees will be recognized at The Corps Network’s National Conference – #CorpsCon25. The conference will be held March 11 – 13, 2025, in Arlington, VA. Click here to learn more about #CorpsCon25. Click here to learn more about #CorpCon25 awards. Click here to learn more about the 2025 Corpsmember of the Year nominees.
“Belen’s positive influence has been felt across the Corps, among her peers, and in the larger community.”
Belen Reyes has served four AmeriCorps terms with San Jose Conservation Corps (SJCC). Her experience taught her the importance of community, environmental stewardship, and service. She has gone above and beyond; serving on a Corpsmember Council, being a leader on SJCC’s Zero Waste Team, and working with the Youth Liberation Movement (YLM) on advocacy work. Belen has grown as an individual, embraced and owned her personal hardships, and used them to inform the ways she can help others.
Before joining SJCC, Belen had discontinued high school due to the COVID-19 pandemic and was juggling multiple jobs to make ends meet. After a fire destroyed her home in 2022, she moved into a family shelter where she learned about San Jose Conservation Corps. SJCC offered her everything she was looking for including a path to a diploma and affordable on-campus housing.
Belen says that her experience at SJCC was a transformational journey. As a Level 2 Corpsmember on the Zero Waste team, Belen has led waste audits, CCC Signage Reviews, and various events crucial to meeting her team’s annual goals. Belen also went to Guam as part of a AmeriCorps Disaster Response deployment to assist after Typhoon Mawar. In 2024, Belen achieved her high school diploma and took a role as an administrative assistant to learn about the metrics and operations of nonprofit work around zero-waste initiatives. Belen says, “I am deeply committed to caring for our planet and am dedicated to mitigating the effects of climate change in my work.”
Her commitment can also be seen in her service on the SJCC Corpsmember Council where she has been able to share her ideas and even represent the Corps at the California Association of Local Conservation Corps annual conference. Outside of the Corps, Belen has been involved with the Youth Liberation Movement (YLM) a group of young leaders who work to break generational cycles of trauma. In a full circle event, Belen has been able to help consult on her living experience in the SJCC campus’ tiny homes. She has helped to redesign the tiny homes to improve other Corpsmember’s quality of life.
Belen hopes to be the first in her family to graduate college and plans to enroll at San Jose State University in Spring 2025 using her AmeriCorps Education Awards. She would like to pursue a medical career helping children and making a lasting impact on young people’s lives. She also hopes to make an impact advocating for youth affected by housing and food insecurity, generational trauma, and systemic oppression.
The Corps model helped Belen find her path. She would like to increase awareness of existing programs like AmeriCorps to help inspire young people to choose a career in service. Of her own service terms, Belen shares, “I gained confidence, resilience, and the knowledge that I can help others navigate their own challenges and find purpose.”