Why should you trust the information on this web page?

Volunteering on Public Lands in the USA

How To Find & Access Opportunities

credits and disclaimer and Why should you trust the information on this web page?

Federal and state public lands in the USA include:

  • National Parks
  • National Forests
  • National Monuments
  • Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
  • National Geologic Trails
  • National Historic Trails
  • National Historic Sites
  • State Parks
  • State Forests

The most urgent volunteering need:

Please send a hand-written letter or an email directly to each of your federal, state and local officials - your US Senators, your US Congressional Representative, your state legislators, your county and city governments - their contact information is easy to find on any Internet search. Tell each of them that you believe public lands are vital to the health and well-being of the USA, that you believe they benefit our country both environmentally and economically, and that you vote based on their support of preserving and FULLY FUNDING the maintenance of public lands.

There are endless numbers of lobbyists for mining companies, timber companies, unethical ranchers (and not all ranchers are unethical), and others clamoring to end protections for public lands, to get rid of public lands (privatize them all), etc. Your representatives are hearing from these lobbyists constantly - and getting money from them. If lobbyists get their way and privatize public lands, this will not only take away lands that belong to ALL people of the USA, this will not only take away irreplaceable natural beauty and historical sites, this will also decimate the livelihoods of towns and businesses all over the the USA whose prosperity is tied directly to the preservation of these lands. But if you pressure your elected officials, it DOES make a difference.

This is absolutely the most-needed, the most critical volunteering need. Please take the time and make this happen ASAP!

Onsite volunteering on public lands:

The majority of volunteering activities on public lands do not provide housing, but a few do do. If they do, they will be quite clear about it on the official web site, but if you aren't sure, write and ask (but please check the web site thoroughly - no one likes to receive calls or emails with questions that are easily, obviously answered on the web site).

All opportunities require volunteers to be at a certain place and time, at their own expense, to volunteer - as in, if you are in a different state, you have to pay for your own transportation to the place the host organization wants volunteers to be in order to participate. Want to volunteer at a national park in Hawaii? You have to pay yourself to get yourself to Hawaii.

There are many different volunteering opportunities on federal and state public lands, and the opportunities change year-to-year. I've summarized the opportunities below and broken them into three different categories, but note the list is not comprehensive, not every site has all of these opportunities, and any opportunity can be longer or shorter than I've noted below - the time commitment required from assignment to assignment, and site-to-site, can vary GREATLY:

Requires several weeks / long term commitment:

  • Campground and day use site hosts (you usually must provide your own hard top camper to live in, but your camping and entrance fees are waived)
  • Fire lookouts (offers free accommodation, and some of these are fully paid, short-term jobs)
  • Visitor center staffing
  • Interpretive volunteers (leading short educational programs, leading tours, etc.)
  • Leading or helping to run events or projects, like National Public Lands Day, a Citizens Science project,
  • General office help (filing)

Requires a few or several days commitment (some assignments provide simple accommodation, like free tent camping, but you may be required to provide your own tent, bedding, etc.):

  • Building and restoring trails
  • Wildlife and plant monitoring and inventory
  • Archeology

Usually can be just one-day commitments:

  • Noxious weed identification and removal
  • Participating in Citizen Science projects

Volunteering roles and activities on public lands are managed and organized by different groups. Some projects are lead by federal or state and employees and some are lead by nonprofit organizations, often called "Friends of...", in partnership with federal or state offices.

To find volunteering opportunities on public lands, use your favorite search engine, such as Google or Bing, to search the name of a national park, national forest, national monument and each of these phrases as a separate search:

  • volunteer
  • wildlife monitoring
  • archeology
  • noxious weed removal
  • citizen science

So, for instance:

  • Mammoth Cave National Park volunteer
  • Mammoth Cave National Park citizen science

You can start your search by making a list of all the public lands within your geographic area. For instance, if you are in Oregon, you can search each of these terms to find all public lands in Oregon:

  • Oregon National Parks
  • Oregon National Forests
  • Oregon National Monuments
  • Oregon Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
  • Oregon National Geologic Trails
  • Oregon National Historic Trails
  • Oregon National Historic Sites
  • Oregon State Parks
  • Oregon State Forests

Then pick a specific park where you might want to volunteer and manually search the site, or go back to your favorite search engine and look for the name of the public land and the word volunteer. For instance:

  • Tillamook State Forest Volunteer
  • Siuslaw National Forest Volunteer

Also look at state fish and wildlife department web sites for volunteering opportunities.

There's also friends-of groups, like Discover Your Forest, a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the discovery of the Deschutes and Ochoco National Forests and Crooked River National Grassland in Central Oregon.

To find camp hosting opportunities, which allow you to live for free in exchange for your service for several weeks or an entire season on a public land, use these searches in your favorite search engine (remember: you usually must have your own hard-top camper to apply to be a camp host, and you will often be required to provide photos and copies of your title for proof)

  • public lands camp host
  • National Park camp host
  • Siuslaw National Forest camp host (or whatever public land in which you are interested)

Other hosts

Here are some nonprofit organizations that often have overnight volunteering opportunities that take place on public lands. Some that take many days:

  • HistoriCorps engages volunteers to save historic places across the United States, many of them in national parks, state parks and other public lands, from settlers' log cabins in expansive wildernesses to architecturally-rich homes in deeply historic urban environments. HistoriCorps provides all meals, tools, training, personal safety equipment, and materials. The most popular trips fill up VERY quickly - sometimes within hours of being announced..

  • The American Hiking Society sponsors several excellent volunteer excursions every year, constructing or rebuilding footpaths, cabins and shelters in some of the USA's most beautiful parks and historic sites.

  • Sierra Club Outings help to state and federal land agencies. Service trips range from helping with research projects at whale calving grounds in Maui to assisting with archaeological site restoration in New Mexico.

If you live in Oregon, or will be traveling in Oregon, look for one-day volunteering opportunities on public lands by SOLVE. These opportunities involve litter cleanup, invasive plant removal project or native planting. If you live in another state, there might be a similar organization that organizes similar activities, including tree planting, in county and city parks and wetlands - you will be able to find them using your favorite search engine.

National service

AmeriCorps NCCC is a full-time, residential, team-based program for young adults, age 18-24 (with no upper age limit to serve as a team leader). In many ways, it continues the legacy of the Civilian Conservation Corps. NCCC Teams, comprised of 8-10 members, complete multiple projects that address essential community needs throughout the United States. During the 10-month service term, members receive lodging, transportation, uniform and meals. Upon the completion of the program, members are eligible to receive the Segal AmeriCorps Education Award equal to the maximum Pell Grant amount: $6095, as of Oct. 1 2018. AmeriCorps NCCC Traditional Corps projects can include environmental stewardship and conservation projects, like constructing or repairing hiking trails in local and national parks and removing exotic vegetation and planting new trees. Projects can ALSO include activities not on public lands, like filling and placing sandbags in local communities to mitigate the impact of natural disasters like flooding, assisting veterans, homeless and senior citizen populations, constructing and rehabilitating low-income housing, and educating citizens on sustainability and energy conservation practices.

What About County & City Public Lands

Counties and cities have their own city parks and wetlands, and many of the agencies that manage the public spaces welcome volunteers, either through a program of their own or in partnership with a nonprofit that recruits, screens and manages the volunteers. Use your favorite search engine to search for the name of your area and activities like tree planting or park cleanup or native planting or evasive plant removal to find volunteering opportunities in your county and city parks and wetlands. Also go to the web sites of the city or county offices for these public lands and see if they have information for volunteering there. 
 

 
 
 
 
Suggested books:

 
Volunteering: The Ultimate Teen Guide (It Happened to Me)

 
Doing Good Together: 101 Easy, Meaningful Service Projects for Families, Schools, and Communities

 
Volunteer Vacations: Short-Term Adventures That Will Benefit You and Others

 
Children as Volunteers: Preparing for Community Service

Some cautions:

Also see:

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© 2010-2023 by Jayne Cravens, all rights reserved. No part of this material can be reproduced in print or in electronic form without express written permission by Jayne Cravens.

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