By: Emma Fantuzzo
About the CPA Team:
The Corps Project Assistance (CPA) Team was created by The Corps Network for the purpose of aiding the National Park Service (NPS) in scoping and creating cost estimates of facility-related projects at small to medium-sized parks across the country. These projects are meant to be carried out by crews consisting of NPS staff and Service and Conservation Corpsmembers. These parks often lack the staff capacity and funding to undertake the work on their own.
The CPA Team works with regional National Park Service Maintenance Action Teams (MAT) to identify and coordinate project work. Projects are funded through the Great American Outdoors Act. We spoke with Midwest Regional MAT Coordinator Seth Nelson about his Corps experience with Minnesota Conservation Corps and how it led him to a career with the National Park Service.
Q: How did you get involved in Corps?
Seth: I began as a Corpsmember with a Corps called Minnesota Conservation Corps (MCC). We worked for a few different agencies regularly, Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota DNR and Koochiching County Lands and Forestry.
While working for Voyageurs National Park, I liked the idea of working in a boat every day and being on the water. I grew up spending time and recreating on the lake. So, it was one of those things that made me say “Hey, this could be a really cool deal if I could end up working here.”
I was also drawn in by the AmeriCorps education award stipend. I hadn’t gone to college and so the idea that I could get money toward college after serving for with MCC, led me to join.
Q: What were memorable takeaways from your Corps experience?
Seth: A big highlight for me was that I found what I wanted to do for my career. Before the Corps, I had never been exposed to National Park work. I had been to Voyageurs National Park before, but I didn’t really think of it as a place where I could work. Working with the Corps, doing work at different campsites, building new trail systems, boardwalks and bridges and maintaining the other trails systems I grew to love the work there. I worked through the youth Corps at Voyageur National Park for close to four years.
Q: What did you do after your Corps experience and how did you end up at NPS?
Seth: After working in Voyageurs for several seasons with the Corps, the Maintenance Supervisor at Voyageurs pulled me aside and said he liked my hard work and work ethic so he asked me to come and work there for him as a seasonal maintenance worker the following year, so that is what started my National Park Service Career. That fall I used my education voucher that I earned through the Corps to help me go to college for Parks and Recreation Management. I would go to school every fall and work for the National Park Service in the summers for the next 4 years.
I ended up working six seasons as a seasonal employee at Voyageurs for anywhere from four to six months depending on what I was doing with school. When I graduated, I began looking for a full time job in the Park Service and landed a Park Superintendent position for the city parks department, which was a great gig out of college. I got the position because of my Corps and NPS background. I did that for two years but as a guy who likes to be outside and working in nature, the city environment wasn’t my element, I needed to be back working with the woods and water.
I kept in contact with people I met at Voyageurs and one day I got a call about a permanent position that was open there, I applied for that position and got it and that’s how I ended up back with the NPS but as a permanent employee this time.
The position was called an FMSS Specialist, and I did maintenance inventory, wrote projects, managed park fleet and assisted on projects throughout the park.
After a couple years in that position, I got a Maintenance Supervisor position, which was really cool because I was able to work with Corps again. I was hiring Corps and bringing them on. I would have up to three Corps a year working in the park for me with different projects. It was great to go from starting at the Corps level and then be bringing Corps on to work with NPS. I brought on all different Corps: Student Conservation Association, Conservation Corps Minnesota & Iowa, Montana Conservation Corps, American Conservation Experience, etc.
Q: What do you do in your current position?
Seth: In my current position I manage a fund source for the Midwest Region of the Park Service and also get to work with the Corps again as 15% of my funding must go towards youth projects and Corps, so I am very involved with the Corps now, even more so than when I was a supervisor.
I am working with nine Corps projects this year alone from my fund source. I work directly with the Corps leadership to get the agreements written, the budgets signed, projects developed and placement of the Corps in the parks.
My focus with Corps is to get them into newer, smaller parks that have never had help from Corps before.
Smaller parks are a bit apprehensive of getting a Corps crew because they don’t have many staff to oversee or assist with the youth projects but through my experience working with the Corps I am able to work with them and help them through the process. Depending on the project, the Corps typically don’t need much oversight and once shown the project and what outcomes the park would like, they can take it from there and go to work.
It is beginning to take traction and now small parks that have never had Corps before are wanting to work with them every year.
I feel as if I have come full circle from a new member of a Corps to now developing projects and funding several Corps throughout the park service, it is a pretty good feeling and I plan to continue working with Corps and providing as many opportunities I am able too.
Q: What advice do you have for prospective Corpsmembers or Corpsmembers looking for a career with NPS?
Seth: What I would recommend to those folk is just take advantage of everything you can, the experiences, the training, all that and work hard, do your best. It gets noticed.
You will especially be noticed if you’re out front and willing to take stuff on and doing a great job when you’re there.
Whether you are interested in maintenance, cultural resources or natural resources, interpretation or law enforcement, there is something in the NPS for you.
The Park Service isn’t going to chase you, you have to chase it. Go after it, reach out to those people. Keep in contact with your supervisors and let them know your intent.