BETHEL SCHOOL DISTRICT — Nicole Laumb of Graham, Wash. recently began a 10-month term of service in the National Civilian Community Corps (NCCC), an AmeriCorps program. Laumb, based out of the AmeriCorps regional campus in Sacramento, Calif., was formally inducted into the program on November 8, 2012.
Laumb arrived at her regional campus in October to begin a month of training. This training, which prepared the over 300 Corps Members for full-time service with AmeriCorps NCCC, emphasized teamwork, leadership development, communication, service learning, and included certification by the American Red Cross.
Laumb will be responsible for completing a series of six- to eight-week-long service projects as part of a 10- to 12-person team. Their first service projects will end in mid-December, at which time the teams will break for the winter holidays and begin a new project in a new location in January.
Before serving in NCCC, Laumb attended Graham-Kapowsin High School before going to Pacific Lutheran University and studying Journalism and Sociology. Laumb is the daughter of Randy and Cindy Laumb of Graham. Laumb said, “I chose to do a term of national service because I always enjoyed the service projects I was involved with growing up. I thought it would be great to extend that kind of service into something more in-depth and hands on. I love working with people and Americorps offered the environment I was looking for along with a great reputation.”
AmeriCorps NCCC is a residential national service program that supports disaster relief, the environment, infrastructure improvement, energy conservation, and urban and rural development. Fifty-six teams composed of over 600 Corps Members and Team Leaders began service projects in November throughout the Pacific and Southwest regions, based in Sacramento in Denver respectively. There are three additional NCCC campuses located in Perry Point, Md., Vinton, Iowa, and Vicksburg, Miss., each of which is a hub for its respective area of the country.
AmeriCorps NCCC members, all 18 to 24 years old, complete at least 1,700 hours of service during the 10-month program. In exchange for their service, they receive $5,550 to help pay for college. Other benefits include a small living stipend, room and board, leadership development, team building skills, and the knowledge that, through active citizenship, they can indeed make a difference. AmeriCorps NCCC is administered by the Corporation for National and Community Service. For more information about AmeriCorps NCCC, visit the website at www.americorps.gov/nccc
