Start/End Dates: May 11, 2024 - August 1, 2025
Compensation: $640 per week + housing
Application Due: February 9, 2025
Fish and Feathers Internship Program seeks to engage ethnically and racially diverse young professionals in natural resource careers.
You must be (additional requirement):
A U.S. citizen or legal resident.
Have a valid driver’s license and a good driving record.
* A personal vehicle is recommended for this position.
Position Description:
Fish and Feathers is a program funded by the National Park Service (NPS) and administered by Environment for the Americas. Our goal is to provide our national park partners with talented interns who are eager to learn and to engage with local communities. The intern will focus on supporting, implementing, and leading community outreach programs that focus on fishing and birding activities. The overall goal is to increase diverse community engagement with NPS partners during the program and in years to come.
Responsibilities:
Qualifications:
Major studies relevant to this position:
Successful candidates will have a background and/or coursework in the following areas or a strong interest in the outdoors with experience fishing and/or birdwatching.
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About this Site:
The primary duty station, Page, Arizona, sits at an elevation of 4,117 feet. From May to August, temperatures can reach highs of 100°F and lows around 40°F. Average highs during these months are typically 80-90°F, with lows around 60-70°F. Monsoons and flash floods are possible, but the weather is often sunny and clear. The area’s terrain includes lakes, rivers, cliffs, and canyons, and rattlesnake encounters may occur.
Page, Arizona, offers multiple grocery stores, gas stations, pharmacies, medical facilities, and other health and wellness services. The town has an airport, with three additional airports within a five-hour drive. Given the abundance of public lands nearby, a reliable vehicle is essential for the intern to explore the area.
Typically, 50-75% of a workday will be indoors and 25-50% outdoors. In dangerously hot temperatures, outdoor work is paused or modified to ensure the safety of all staff, team members, and visitors. Full outdoor workdays are common in favorable weather. Interns should be prepared to work in high sun and heat exposure and navigate uneven terrain, including leading and hosting visitors in these conditions.
Interns in this program will receive 480 hours towards Public Land Corps (PLC) Hiring Authority. See below on information about:
Public Land Corps Non-Competitive Hiring Authority (PLC)
The Public Land Corps Non-Competitive Hiring Authority is a special hiring authority available to qualifying interns. The intern must be between the ages of 18 and 30 years old, inclusive, or a veteran up to age 35 and complete 640 hours of work on an appropriate conservation project to be eligible for this hiring authority. Upon successful completion of the PLC project(s), the intern is eligible for two years to be hired non-competitively into a federal seasonal, term, or permanent position. The applicant must apply to a PLC-eligible position advertised on USAJobs.gov and selected off a non-competitive certificate of eligibility. For more information, see DOI Personnel Bulletins 11-02 , 12-13, and 17-03.
EEO Statement
Environment for the Americas provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employmentand prohibits discrimination and harassment of any type without regard to race, color, religion, age, sex, national origin, disability status, genetics, protected veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or any other characteristic protected by federal, state or local laws.This policy applies to all terms and conditions of employment, including recruiting, hiring, placement, promotion, termination, layoff, recall, transfer, leaves of absence, compensation and training.