Claire Harbage/NPR
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Members of the Montana Conservation Corps (MCC) work on trails near Tally Lake in northwestern Montana. Claire Harbage/NPR
During the Great Depression, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt created the Civilian Conservation Corps to improve the country s public lands, forests, and parks. Now, nearly a hundred years later, President Biden is trying to bring a similar version of it back. He wants to launch the Civilian Climate Corps to address the threat of climate change.
NPR s White House correspondent Scott Detrow and National Desk Correspondent Nathan Rott report on Biden s plan and how it could play out.
Embed Members of the Montana Conservation Corps (MCC) work on trails near Tally Lake in northwestern Montana. President Biden wants to retool and relaunch one of the country s most celebrated government programs: the Civilian Conservation Corps. MCC crews are already doing some of the work envisioned in Biden s climate proposal. Claire Harbage/NPR
toggle caption Claire Harbage/NPR
Members of the Montana Conservation Corps (MCC) work on trails near Tally Lake in northwestern Montana. President Biden wants to retool and relaunch one of the country s most celebrated government programs: the Civilian Conservation Corps. MCC crews are already doing some of the work envisioned in Biden s climate proposal.
Tuesday, May 11, 2021 by Scott Detrow (NPR)
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Members of the Montana Conservation Corps (MCC) work on the trails near Tally Lake in northwestern Montana. President Biden wants to retool and relaunch one of the country s most celebrated government programs: the Civilian Conservation Corps. MCC crews are already doing some of the work envisioned in Biden s climate proposal. Image credit: Claire Harbage
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With college classes going online because of COVID-19, Joe Spofforth put his double-major in political economies and educational studies on hold to move West and find work. When the pandemic was over, he’d go back.
MORE The Civilian Conservation Corps put young men back to work during the Great Depression. Here, CCC members saw down dead trees in a burned area near Belton, Mont. Photo by George A. Grant - National Park Service History Collection
With college classes going online because of COVID-19, Joe Spofforth put his double major in political economies and educational studies on hold to move West and find work. When the pandemic was over, he d go back. You can get real into this stuff, the 21-year-old Ohioan said, grinning at his mountain surroundings as his fellow Montana Conservation Corps crew members saw, chop and lop branches and logs away from a dirt path trail work.