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Orange County Conservation Corps <br />Santa Ana Workforce Investment Board <br />Exhibit A Request for Proposal <br />The Youth Service Provider Network <br />PY 2008/2009 <br />PROPOSAL NARRATIVE <br />ABOUT OUR PROGRAM <br />Executive Summary <br />The Orange County Conservation Corps (OCCC) is a nonprofit, certified local conservation corps, <br />one of 12 certified local conservation corps in California. As a certified local conservation corps, <br />the OCCC operates under the California Public Resources Code which mandates several <br />program components including paid work experience, job training, education, life skills and pre- <br />employmenttraining. The OCCC must maintain its certification each year through an annual <br />certification review. <br />The OCCC incorporates a variety of youth and workforce development best practices into its <br />program design. The OCCC has been recognized by two national youth serving organizations <br />for demonstrating best practices. The OCCC was one of 14 organizations to be recognized in <br />2002 by The Corps Network (TCN), formally The National Association of Service and <br />Conservation Corps (NASCC), for "Excellence in Corps Operations (ECO). This was a four year <br />award from 2001-2005 that was recently renewed for 2006-2010. In 2003 the OCCC was <br />recognized by the National Youth Employment Coalition and was selected as a PEPNet Awardee <br />for 2003-2007 for "Demonstrating Effective Practices in the Field of Youth Employment and <br />Development". The OCCC was also recognized by the Orange County League of Conservation <br />Voters as the Orange County Environmental Education Program of the Year for 2005. <br />Our Mission: The Orange County Conservation Corps serves young, at-risk adults through <br />employment, training and educational programs that build self-sufficiency and benefit the <br />community through conservation-related projects. <br />The OCCC normally employs more than 280 youth each year from throughout Orange County to <br />work on projects developed by the OCCC for local cities, county agencies, and other nonprofit <br />agencies in the county. As a transitional work and job training program, the OCCC recruits and <br />employs 18-25 year old young adults, and trains them to carry out the job duties needed to <br />complete a variety of OCCC projects, primarily in habitat/trail/park restoration, construction, <br />and recycling. These work projects, along with other OCCC program components and activities, <br />are designed to fulfill OCCC's mission. <br />The various OCCC program components provide OCCC participants (corpsmembers), with paid <br />work experience to learn work skills and develop a work ethic while OCCC work projects and <br />activities develop a sense of community responsibility and leadership skills. The OCCC also <br />requires corpsmembers to be enrolled in an education program to further their formal <br />education. <br />Page 1 of 24 <br />