Congratulations to Montana 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.
Montana Conservation Corps
Immersed in a narrow stream channel, with mud up to their knees, a crew of AmeriCorps members from Montana Conservation Corps (MCC) is “busy as beavers,” serving at the nexus of drought resiliency, watershed conservation, wildlife stewardship, and sustainable ranching.
MCC’s Rewilding Montana’s Prairie initiative comes in response to years of severe drought in the Northern Plains. Surrounded by the Montana prairie, the crew is pounding four-foot-long posts into the streambed and weaving these together with willow branches and grass clumps. These simple but effective Beaver Dam Analogs, or BDA’s, will slow runoff and minimize channel erosion; pool water to help raise groundwater levels and nourish the mesic wildlife habitat; and support the growth of grasslands needed by local cattle ranchers who pride themselves on generations of stewardship of these landscapes.
The Rewilding Montana’s Prairie initiative has evolved over time. MCC’s roots are in the backcountry wilderness, not on the prairie. For more than 30 years, MCC crews have worked in the mountains, helping maintain and improve the trails and habitats of national parks and forests. In 2011, MCC launched their Big Sky Watershed Corps, a program that places individual AmeriCorps members with partner organizations to conduct watershed research, community education, and other natural resource projects. The Prairie initiative builds on the success of BSWC and the relationships developed.
In 2021, with support from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, MCC piloted a single crew to work on drought resilience projects on the prairie. In 2024, MCC worked with a variety of partners to have three “Mesic Strike Team” crews focused full-time on BDA projects. They plan to add a fourth crew going forward.
The success of this initiative is built upon relationships and trust. MCC staff have worked diligently to identify local champions, and AmeriCorps members have immersed themselves into the rural ranching communities where they serve. MCC members attend community meetings, serve pancakes or spaghetti at local fundraisers, and have enjoyed plenty of local beef whenever they are offered.
The impact of the Rewilding Montana’s Prairie initiative can be seen in multiple places. First there is the impact on the land. In 2024, the three dedicated Mesic Strike Teams fabricated 1,232 BDA’s and similar structures, improving 654 acres of riparian areas, and improving 25 miles of streams. In total, across all MCC crews in 2024, members installed 2,586 structures. The initiative was highlighted in the governor’s 2023 drought management plan.
There is also the impact on the AmeriCorps members themselves, who gain invaluable hands-on experience. Some have continued with the Corps in leadership positions or transitioned into careers in stream restoration. Several alums have noted the powerful experience of having an immediate and visible impact on the land and having the opportunity to forge relationships with the ranching families involved.
“We built well over 250 structures this year and saw the impact almost immediately,” said one MCC AmeriCorps member. “There was less sediment in the stream because of what we did. The grass was even greener in areas we worked on in the spring than anywhere else in the area. This stuff works and I’m really proud of the impact we had!”
As another said: “This is why I’m an AmeriCorps member…These ranchers are simply some of the best stewards of the land and all we need to do is organize and be ready and willing to work hard. I’m so thankful I got this opportunity!”
Finally, there is the impact on the ranching communities. Before engaging with MCC’s Mesic Strike Crews, these rural areas likely had little experience with national service programs. The Rewilding Montana’s Prairie initiative has created a positive identity for AmeriCorps in rural Montana communities and created a brand synonymous with capacity building to achieve community-based outcomes.
“I don’t think people understand what kind of work we’re getting done and the partnership we have here in Central Montana,” said one rancher. “We have local, statewide, and national and international organizations working together on public and private lands in areas that this is simply not known for. At the center of it all is a bunch of young MCC folks helping to lead the planning, landowner engagement, and ultimately getting the work done on the ground. I think over the last year, those MCC folks have built well more than 500 structures, which is absolutely astonishing. Maybe even more importantly, the MCC folks have immersed themselves into our local communities and we’ve learned so much from each other. I don’t think you can put a true value on those connections. It’s just been so amazing and I can’t wait to get more done in the future.”