Congratulations to California Conservation Corps on winning a 2025 Project 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 Washington, DC. Click here to learn more about #CorpsCon25. Click here to learn more about #CorpCon25 awards. Click here to learn about the 2025 Project of the Year finalists.
California Conservation Corps
California Conservation Corps’ (CCC) Backcountry Trails Program (BCTP) has been running for 45 years. It is the longest-running targeted program of the CCC and has been an AmeriCorps program since AmeriCorps began, 31 years ago. This lengthy duration is a testament to the transformative power of the program. In 2024, BCTP fielded seven crews with a collective 92 Corpsmembers immersed in the CA wilderness.
Since it began in 1979, the Backcountry Trails Program crews have maintained 13,767 miles of trails and worked on 25,000 check steps. More importantly, 93% of program alumni have said that the program changed their life for the better. The five and a half month long program recruits from all over the United States. 60% of members are recruited internally from current CCC participants and 40% are recruited from outside the CCC. Members are placed into one of seven crews of between 12 to 15 Corpsmembers, a Backcountry Trails Camp Supervisor, a Cook, and 1 to 6 agency sponsors serving as technical advisors.
Crews work in remote locations, up to 30 miles from society. Camps are rudimentary with food, mail, and supplies being delivered weekly by pack mules or helicopter. The remote and isolated nature of the crews fosters community, friendship, and respect among Corpsmembers. Crews create their own events, celebrate holidays, bond through music and conversation, and more. This past season, crews served in locations including Big Basin State Park and John Muir Wilderness, Inyo National Forest; Kings Canyon National Park, Yosemite National Park, Sequoia National Park and Granite Chief Wilderness, Tahoe National Forest; and more.
Having an agency sponsor is a unique feature of the program and allows Corpsmembers to gain one-on-one training and mentorship, while sponsors train prospective employees. Corpsmembers participate in at least four classes each week throughout the season. These classes cover topics such as knot tying, flora and fauna identification, and resume building. Corpsmembers are also trained to be competent backpackers and by mid-season are able to explore their surroundings on weekend trips in small groups. Upon completion of the program, Corpsmembers receive a scholarships and a Public Lands Corps Certificate that confers noncompetitive hiring status to qualifying federals jobs.
The focus of project work is typically on trail maintenance and construction. Crews develop expertise on the work, and the area where they are working, over their term. In 2024 crews treated a combined 366 miles of trail, resulting in 329 miles of trail being improved. Improvements included 21,802 ft. of new trails constructed, 199.28 miles of maintenance, 160 logs cut out, and much more.
Many CCC members come to the Corps with little to no experience. For Corpsmembers who wish to dive deeper into trail work, being in nature, and serving their community, BCTP offers an immersive experience. One Corpsmember said of their experience, “Backcountry gave me a living experience I’ll most likely spend the rest of my life trying to wrap my head around. It’s challenging to find the works to encapsulate the small astonishments in the every day, or what it takes to be intimately known by 12 strangers.”
The CCC views their program as a gateway to conservation work and says that they hope members will succeed and advance to be able to be the forefront of change.