In more ways than one, the Obama administration has tied youth service with energy efficiency, environmental education and employment (5-E) opportunities. Last time we visited this promise, we found that President Barack Obama signed the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act of 2009, which funded existing programs with similar objectives to his proposed corps.
Still, we rated it In the Works because there wasn't a new and separate Youth Service Corps with an explicit "5-E" mission.
Now there is one, at least on paper.
In April 2010, Obama announced the America's Great Outdoors Initiative, which included a 21st Century Conservation Service Corps. The corps would teach environmental stewardship, civic responsibility and job skills in "natural and cultural resource management."
We also checked to see if the proposed corps would engage "disconnected and disadvantaged young people," as Obama had promised. The 21st Century program would target youths from cities and low-income backgrounds who typically cannot experience the outdoors, as well as young native americans, girls and young adult women.
The new youth corps is not up and running yet. A federal advisory committee is hashing out details, with recommendations due later this summer. A variety of existing federal youth service programs will employ about 12,000 people this summer, according to the U.S. Department of the Interior. The new corps would place these programs under one umbrella organization and expand it to 100,000 members each summer by 2017.
We also found YouthGo.gov, which is part of the U.S. Department of the Interior's youth initiative. The website already provides a job-search engine for paid and unpaid summer internships within the federal government. The website lists internship programs with federal agencies in fields related to energy efficiency and environmental service, such as the Department of Energy, the Bureau of Land Management, and the National Park Service, among others.
Despite the new youth corps' small and late beginnings, the Obama administration has fulfilled its goal of funding some "5-E" service programs for disadvantaged and disconnected youths. Now federal agencies are in the process of creating a new corps. We rate this a Promise Kept, though we'll keep an eye out to see how it develops.