Rocky Mountain Youth Corps 2020 Annual Report

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Annual Report 2020 on si is M Rocky Mountain Youth Corps engages young people in the outdoors,

inspiring them to use their strengths and potential to lead healthy, productive lives. We teach responsibility for self, community and environment through teamwork, service and experiential education.

VisionRocky Mountain Youth Corps will be the leader in NW Colorado to provide

diverse opportunities for young people to participate in outdoor based service and education for their growth, respect and responsibility to self, community and environment. We will do this through strong sustainable collaborations with project, program, and funding partners and the creation of a youth development center.


Dear Friends of Rocky Mountain Youth Corps, We hope this Annual Report finds you all healthy, happy, and back to a somewhat normal life! 2020 was a year to remember for many reasons. Here at RMYC, we found the COVID experience to be challenging and stressful, and yet we emerged with greater awareness and efficacy than before. Despite the increased protocols, safety measures, program adaptations and hardships, we were able to serve over 500 youth and young adults through our natural resource internship, youth corps, and conservation corps programs. We were proud to be able to operate at a 95% level to provide very needed outlets, interactions, and experiences for our members. Getting our young people outdoors working together to make our communities and environment safe and healthy gives them a sense of pride, confidence, and accomplishment that has been lacking during the isolation of the pandemic. The demand for youth and young adult programs is at an all‐time high and we are ready to accommodate! We cannot adequately express our gratitude for our numerous project, program, and funding partners in helping us to rise to the challenge. We truly could not do it without you! We look forward to new beginnings in 2021 as we embark on our next 5‐year Strategic Plan. Our four Strategic Initiatives are: Clarify Long‐Term Vision and Core Values; Develop a Succession Plan for All Key Positions; Strengthen Long‐Term Sustainability through Diversified Funding and Increased Endowment and Planned Giving; and Enhance Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Across All Areas of the Organization. We welcome your participation in any of these endeavors!

With sincere appreciation,

Staff

Board of Directors

GRETCHEN VAN DE CARR chief executive officer Gretchen Van De Carr Paige Baker MARK WERTHEIMER Chief Executive Officer Board President chief operating officer CHRISSY LYNCH chief financial officer LAUREN HEWITT/ ANNIE KAKELA accounting & payroll manager KATE WARNKE development associate RYAN BANKS program director PAIGE BAKER president PETE KRASKA / ALAN CHAPMAN AVROM FEINBERG vice­president office, warehouse, & facilities manager GREGORY HENION treasurer LIZ HARTSTEIN internship program manager & program coordinator PAUL SACHS secretary DEB PROPER past president LAUREN VANDENHURK education & evaluation manager ADAM ALSPACH CHRISTINA ELDERKIN / ROB DUDDY MARGI BRIGGS-CASSON conservation corps program manager FRANK MAYER ASHLEY ROSCOE DARCY OWENS-TRASK assistant conservation corps program manager SHERRI SWEERS CARLYN LAWATSCH youth program manager SCOTT WITHER HANNAH CLUNE assistant youth program manager SUZANNE MUNN Advisory Board


Impact “I feel so honored to have been a small piece of such an incredible trail community, especially in such uncertain 琀mes. I am lucky and grateful to have had a job when others are struggling to find one, and to be moving my body and challenging myself every day."

"I learned something new about myself, and especially how I learn to work and deal with people of different values and mindsets."

533 Program Par琀cipants

“My leaders inspired me to be a be琀er worker and a be琀er person. They inspired me to be a good leader, to work harder on the projects, get outside more, and to always be kind and respec琀ul to others.”

83 Partnering Agencies

205 Project Weeks

7,902 Trees Thinned/Removed for Wildlife Mi琀ga琀on 171 miles of Trail Constructed/Improved Maintained

12 miles of Fence Constructed/Removed Repaired

515 Signs Installed

8,280 昀 of Water Diversion Structures Installed/Improved/Maintained

11,629 Square Feet Rock Moved/Cleared/Collected

Revenues and Expenditures

REVENUES $3,468,108

EXPENDITURES $3,265,252


YVSS

YAMPA VALLEY SCIENCE SCHOOL YVSS has been a cornerstone of the 6th grade experience for all Routt County youth, both public and private since 2000. 2020 marked our 20th anniversary and after much deliberation, we made the difficult decision to postpone the program until the Spring of 2021. The COVID­19 pandemic continues to require difficult decisions and the safety and well­being of our staff, students, and partners is our utmost priority. YVSS is an essential educational experience for all 6th grade students and we hope to provide a deeper and more memorable experience for this year’s students than we could have this past Fall. We have designed a curriculum with safety protocols that will allow us to operate in the Spring and Fall of 2021.

COVID­19 swept our nation just weeks before the 14th Annual

Moonshine Ski & Dine We made the difficult decision to cancel the in person portion of the event. We are beyond grateful that our sponsors, local businesses, donors, and supporters remained with us for the online raffle. We raised over $12,000 for our local Youth Corps and Yampa Valley Science School.


Youth Corps

HIGHLIGHTS

YOUTH CORPS Youth Corps provides consistent steppingstone experiences for youth ages 11­18. Service Learning Crew (SLC), ages 11­13, a comprehensive community service program that provides education about citizenship, volunteerism, and self development, engaged 103 youth, including continued SLC programming in the Yampa Valley. 123 Community Youth Crew (CYC) participants (ages 14­15) were paid while gaining valuable job and life skills. CYC expanded to Grand County in addition to operating in Routt, Summit, Rio Blanco, Garfield, Lake, Eagle, and Pitkin Counties. Camping throughout northwest Colorado, 72 Regional Youth Crew (RYC) participants (ages 16­18) spent 2 residential weeks working on habitat restoration and trail projects. We also added a Junior Leader position that provided an opportunity to develop leadership skills for youth 16­18 years old in Routt county. Junior Leader participants worked for 10 weeks through the summer with our SLC crews!

Personal Development Highlights

As a result of their participation, youth increased resiliency, self­esteem, job readiness, and leadership skills. Youth Corps education consists of lessons, activities, and reflection focused on job readiness, healthy life skills, environmental education, substance use and risks thereof, and civic and social responsibility. It is designed with continuity, building on lesson content and complexity throughout the age­level crews. Residential camping offers opportunities for deeper engagement in social learning and to connect with non­profit, government, and other local agencies.

Project Highlights

SLC organized 15 parades for two geriatric facilities in Routt County and wrote over 100 letters to the people in those facilities. They built a pollinator garden from scratch at Bee Grateful, weeded/watered Soda Creek Elementary School, built a mile of trail at North Routt Charter School, removed thousands of invasive plants at Stagecoach State Park, maintained a mile of trail in the Sunlight subdivision, deep cleaned all Soroco school busses, repainted the water drainage indicators in Steamboat Springs, dug 50ft of trench around an irrigation pond, and picked up 20 bags of trash on Yampa Street. CYC Routt County crews supported property improvements at Carpenter Ranch. Lake County crews worked with Cloud City Wheelers to help build a new trail system around Turquoise Lake. Summit County crews worked with the town of Breckenridge to construct the Barney Ford Climbing Trail. In 2020 our CYC crews completed 84,480 ft of trail construction/maintenance, built 10,560 ft of drainage, constructed/maintained 21,120 ft of fence, planted 35 Pine saplings and 100 Willows, built 20 ft of rock wall, installed 80 signs, hiked in 3 gates and 2 culverts, and removed thousands of invasive plants! RYC constructed/maintained 14,784 ft of trails, repaired 13,728 ft miles of fence, constructed 1,426 ft of fence, removed 16,896 ft of fence, and built 55 ft of rock barrier. RYC youth spent three weeks working with Colorado Fourteeners Initiative on Mt Elbert, Colorado’s highest 14er and they built trails at Sylvan Lake State Park in Eagle County!

“I really enjoyed working outdoors. I learned a lot about sustainability with camping and teamwork. I think the main reason it was so impactful for me was because of how the group handled challenges and adversity.”


CONSERVATION CORPS Highlights CONSERVATION CORPS Rocky Mountain Youth Corps engaged 175 members, 27 leaders and 3 field coordinators over the course of the Summer and Fall season.

Personal Development Highlights

In addition to wages earned, 156 total participants received AmeriCorps Education awards for completing their full season totaling over $352,000! Crewmembers demonstrated significant increases in resiliency, confidence, job skills, and healthy lifestyles choices.

Project Highlights

Highlights included the completion of a four­year project in partnership with the Colorado Fourteeners Initiative (CFI) and the National Forest Foundation rerouting portions of the South Mt Elbert trail. Crews worked diligently to create a more sustainable route to the summit of Colorado’s highest mountain and one of the most popular 14,000 ft peaks in the US Rockies. The project featured restoration of the existing old trail in addition to cutting new hiking tread for the reroute and fortifying steep sections with rock retaining walls and staircases to prevent soil displacement and erosion. The crew was lauded by CFI project partner Loretta McEllhiney, as “one of the best youth corps crews we have worked with in our 26 years of working on the 14ers." Project partners reported that crew leaders were highly communicative, eager to learn, and super motivated, which influenced the work culture of the entire crew. RMYC’s Wildfire and Chainsaw crew was engaged in a multitude of roles on the Middle Fork Fire including but not limited to indirect hand line construction, snagging operations, fire effects monitoring, mapping and scouting. In addition to fire suppression efforts, fire resources and the incident command team provided ample opportunities for training and exposure to a wide variety of fire fighting career paths. Crew members toured the Middle Fork Helibase, visited the local Colorado Division of Fire Control and Prevention Office, learned about unmanned aerial systems and gained technical and professional knowledge from a wide array of incident personnel. Crew members also aided the Incident Command Post with logistics and provided public outreach and information to concerned citizens on trailheads entering the southern Zirkel Wilderness. I’ve grown, learned, and worked harder than I ever have in my life. I’ve had some of my highest highs paired with some of my biggest challenges and I can’t thank my incredible crew, my wonderful Assistant Crew Leader, and all the other folks at RMYC enough for making this summer one of the best.”

"RMYC has significantly developed my leadership, risk management, communication, problem solving, interpersonal, logistics, and organization skills. My tolerance for adversity has also been elevated from this program."


NATURAL RESOURCE

INTERNSHIP

Program

Despite the challenges presented by COVID­19 we were still able to provide meaningful hands­on educational opportunities for 30 individuals. Positions included Archaeology, Hydrology, Wilderness Characteristics Surveying, Fluid Minerals, Visitor Information Services, Vegetation and Soils Assessment, Inventory, and Monitoring (AIM), and Survey/Cadastral assignments in collaboration with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM); and a Wilderness Trails Crew, Vail Pass Winter Recreation Crew, and a Veteran Fire Corps Crew with the United States Forest Service (USFS). One of our Vegetation and Soils Assessment, Inventory, and Monitoring interns, Franki Anaya, successfully secured a position with the BLM in Kremmling, CO and is now leading a crew of RMYC interns. It is wonderful to see the career development continuum in the Natural Resource field and RMYC is thrilled to continue collaborating with Frankie in this new capacity.

“RMYC truly makes decisions that uphold their vision and mission. I was hired during an unprecedented pandemic and the knowledge I gained was directly relevant to my major, so thank you to the RMYC staff for providing me with an opportunity to learn and grow. I have already noticed other career avenues opening up for me.” ­ John Roberts, Oil and Gas Reclamation Intern

Macy Perrin

RMYC CORPSMEMBER OF THE YEAR

Macy Perrin first came to RMYC in 2019 and has completed 10 weeks of work with RMYC’s Youth Corps over the last 2 years. Macy came out to the community as a person who uses they/them pronouns towards the end of 2020. This level of vulnerability, strength, and sense of self worth is something we can all strive for! Macy was born and raised in Northwest Colorado and joined the corps because they have always been drawn to nature and believed that opportunity "literally just seemed like the coolest thing ever!” Macy continued working with RMYC because of the experiences and the way it helped them grow as a person. Macy feels that they have life­ long friends built from this experience and that it was never about the money; they would pay to do something like this! Macy felt that the embrace and support from crewmates and their Crew Leader helped them overcome social anxiety and gain more confidence in themselves through their Corps experience at RMYC. All the support contributed to Macy’s decision about being open about their identity. Macy's leaders and staff agreed and saw their growth, honoring them with multiple notice's of exemplary performance for the leadership and teamwork demonstrated with crew members, work ethic, motivation, and having a positive outlook and growth mindset through some incredibly challenging interpersonal happenings on crew. Macy “ALWAYS volunteered for dish duty and was the first to offer support on technical skills and personal support to struggling peers.” Macy noted that "I didn't even need to try staying positive because it was natural. I had a good attitude about manual labor, and always expressed how awesome it is that we were getting paid to camp. SO COOL!"


Program + Project Partners RMYC values the many organizations and agencies that we partner with to fulfill our mission. We would not have success for our participants or the communities and environments we serve without our diverse and strong collaborative partnerships. CORPORATION FOR NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE Engaging young adults in intensive community service work with the goal of meeting the critical needs of the community and environment, we are proud to partner with AmeriCorps, providing service opportunities to young adults across the country. THE COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES Office of Behavioral Health funds prevention programs that aim to reduce rates of substance use disorder. Guided by prevention science, these programs lower risk by building protective factors­­proven strategies that help children and teens bond with their families and communities. OBH has supported RMYC's Youth Corps programs for nearly a decade. COLORADO YOUTH CORPS ASSOCIATION Transforming lives and communities through service, personal development, and education statewide, CYCA aspires to be the leader in conservation and service and empowers corps to change lives statewide. RMYC is honored to be a partner. THE CORPS NETWORK RMYC is a proud member of The Corps Network, providing critical leadership to the corps movement and to the nation’s service and conservation corps as they tackle some of America’s greatest challenges. 21ST CENTURY CONSERVATION SERVICE CORPS RMYC is proud to be a member of the 21st Century Conservation Service Corps. The 21CSC is a bold national effort to put thousands of young Americans and veterans to work protecting, restoring, and enhancing America’s great outdoors and cultural and community resources. The program is operated through a public­private partnership between government, industry, non­profit and community organizations, working together to foster the next generation of community leaders and resource stewards. GREAT OUTDOORS COLORADO (GOCO) invests a portion of Colorado Lottery proceeds to help preserve and enhance the state's parks, trails, wildlife, rivers, and open spaces. RMYC receives both project funding, and program support through GOCO's Generation Wild initiative. NATIONAL FOREST FOUNDATION Engage Americans in promoting the health and public enjoyment of our National Forests, which are at the core of America’s natural riches, and yet, today these treasures are threatened by unprecedented challenges. RMYC is proud to partner with the National Forest Foundation.

Ace Hardware Bee Grateful Farm BLM Colorado River Valley BLM Kremmling Field Office BLM Little Snake Field Office BLM National Operations Center BLM White River Field Office BookTrails Carpenter Ranch Nature Conservancy Casey's Pond Senior Living Community City of Craig City of Leadville City of Rifle City of Steamboat Springs Cloud City Wheelers Coalition for the Poudre River Watershed CO Department of Natural Resources CO Divison of Reclamation Mining & Safety CO Fourteeners Initiative CO Mountain College­Timberline Campus CO Parks and Wildlife CO State Land Board CO Youth Corps Association CPW ­ Colorado State Forest State Park CPW ­ Radium State Wildlife Area CPW ­ Rifle Falls State Park CPW ­ Stagecoach State Park CPW ­ Steamboat Lake State Park

CPW ­ Sylvan Lake State Park Craig­Scheckman Family Foundation CSU Routt County Extension Office Denver Water Eagle County Friends of the Dillon Ranger District Friends of the Yampa Friends of the Eagles Nest Wilderness Friends of Wilderness (Zirkel) Garfield County Generation Wild ­ Get Outdoors Leadville! Generation Wild ­ Garfield County Outdoors Headwaters Trails Alliance Lake County Lake County Mineral Belt Trail Committee Main Street Steamboat National Forest Foundation NPS ­ Dinosaur National Monument NPS ­ Rocky Mountain National Park Parachute Recreation District Perry­Mansfield Pitkin County Precision Repair Public Lands Service Coalition Rio Blanco County Roaring Fork Mountain Bike Association Roaring Fork Outdoor Volunteers Roaring Fork Valley Horse Council

Roundup Riders of the Rockies Routt County Humane Society Routt County Riders Routt County United Way State Land Board Summit County The Corps Network The Greenlands Reserve Town of Battlement Mesa Town of Breckenridge Town of Eagle Town of Frisco Town of New Castle Town of Oak Creek Town of Parachute Town of Silverthorne Town of Winter Park USFS ­ Arapaho ­ Roosevelt NF USFS ­ Bridger­Teton NF USFS ­ Medicine Bow­Routt NF USFS ­ Pike­San Isabel NF USFS ­ White River NF Wildlands Restoration Volunteers Yampa River Botanic Park Yampa Valley Austism Program Yampa Valley Sustainability Council Yampatika


Chainsaw Level

$10,000+

Pulaski Level

Myrtle L Atkinson Foundation Routt County ­ HRC Routt County United Way Tony and Emily Seaver Shadek Family Foundation Steamboat Ski & Resort Corp State of CO ­ COVID Relief Funds State of CO ­ Office of Behavioral Health The Corps Network COVID Relief Fund Yampa Valley Community Foundation

$1,000-$ 9,999

Anonymous Ace Hardware Alpine Bank Anschutz Family Foundation Big Agnes Borden Endowment Fund of the YVCF Battlement Mesa Ladies Golf Association Community Grants Fund of YVCF The Drunken Onion John and Mary Ann Duffey William and Judith Emerson Charitable Fund Fair and Square Construction, Inc. Fox Construction Jeff and Trigg Gerber Gerber Berend Design Build Jim and Susan Larson

Hard Hat Level

Anonymous ABC Fund of the YVCF BAP! Peggy Bass Berglund Bryan and Karen Bomberg Chaos Ink Robert J Dowling Susan Dreska Ross and Sally Dyer Hawkridge Endowment Heart of Steamboat Foundation Honey Stinger

Luck Family Foundation Ed and June MacArthur Morris Family Old Town Hot Springs Stu Roberts and Lulu Gould Bill and Barbara Sanders Hans and Susan Schell Jim and Nancy Shepard Marilyn Staff Ski Corps Employee Environmental Fund of the YVCF Steamboat Sotheby's International Realty Denny and Joy Swanson The Nature Conservancy Three Moon Fund of the YVCF Mountain Tap Brewery Bob and Deane Weiss

$500-$ 999

Kroger Lauinger Family Fund of the YVCF Murray Family Fund Rick and Katie Riemenschneider Robison­Bouquet Fund of the YVCF James and Barb Ross Steamboat Powdercats Steamboat Sotheby's International Realty Community Fund Peter and Gretchen Van De Carr Mona Warren Yampa Valley Bank

DONORS & CONTRIBUTORS

David Berolzheimer Foundation City of Steamboat Springs ­ HRC COVID­19 Emergency Fund of the YVCF Craig­Scheckman Family Foundation Bill and Debbie Feiges Jeffery and Brooke Fesperman Valerie Gates Gates Family Foundation GOCO Garfield County Iron Horse Family Foundation Suzanne Munn


DONORS & CONTRIBUTORS

Trailblazer Level

$250-$ 499

Anonymous Jon Adams B&K Distributing Central Park Liquor Dave and Jacqueline Desposato Sterling ­ Dorman Foundation Esther Drebelbis Mark and Vanda Dyson Fred Emerich and Keren Meister­Emerich Bob and Audrey Enever Ron and Lisa Famiglietti Avrom Feinberg and Erica Gallagher Paul and Bridget Ferguson Greg and Kate Friedman Donna Garth Glas Deffryn Ranch Larry and Maggie Glueck Daniel and Lauren Hewitt Britta Hiester

Groundbreaker Level Anonymous Kathleen Alexander Adam and Pearson Alspach Tom Baer Carol Baily Heidi Barbee and Norbert Samlowski Richard and Nancy Barr Cam and Jill Boyd Margi Briggs­Casson Beau Bush Charles Bush Pat Carney Central Park Management Evan Christopher Cogswell Construction Inc. Martin and Pat Craighead Gavin and Cindy Crain Barry and Robin Crossan Maureen Crouch Ron Davies and Sue Chen Davies Chris and Eileen Diamond Steve and Pinky Downs Ed and Barb Dowski Patrick and Mary Duddy Jack Dysart and Carole Milligan Scott and Sherri Ford

Friend Level

Anonymous Julie Alkema Raymond and Theresa Amoruso Russel and Carol Atha Silas and Grace Axtell The Ayads Timothy J Baechle Eide Bailly CPAs & Business Advisors Brad and Paige Baker Ann Baker Easley The Baldwins Steve and Janet Banks Ben and Millie Beall Harv Holtzman and Rachel Bellis Lawrence and Ursula Berkowitz Joe and Lynne Bier Ben Blair Connie Blair Bohmer Family Jacquelin Buratovich Kim Butler Sean and Jenny Carey Chuck and Lynn Cerasoli Jeff and Elissa Chapman Dan and Patty Chovan Clement Family JoAnn Clune Kelly and Susan Colfer Colorado Group Realty Ron and Kerry Contarino Norah and Stella Crofts Erica Crosby Anne Marie Desmond

Terry Huffington and Ralph Dittman Randy and Lisa Lewis Liman Family / Twin Enviro Services Robert and Sharon Mattison Klaus and Pamela Meyer Mohn Family Megan Moore­Kemp Victor Padilla and Laurene Maxwell Ken and Deb Proper Tom and Pam Ruehle Steamboat Sticker Paul and Arianthe Stettner Tegtmeyer Family George and Jenny Tempest Norbert and Melanie Turek Eric Uhlberg Vanderbosch Family W.W. Grainger, Inc. Mark Wertheimer and Kim Brooks

$100-$ 249

Marda Frazer David Wallace and Betsy Frick Wayne and Lisa Adamo Ted and Patty Grossman Julie Hagenbuch Dan and Beth Hagney Doug and Ellen Hayes Kent and Grace Holt Mike and Barbara Hughes Isabelle Brogan Michelle Isaeff Brad and Kathy Iversen Kyle Jackson Gail Jensen Jerry Johnson and Becky Lewis Jeanine Keating Bart and Nancy Kounovsky Ron and Sue Krall Catherine Kurtz Bob and Melrose Kuusinen Penny Lewis Meghan Loury Bob Maddox Walter and Cristina Magill Ren and Heather Martyn Loretta McEllhiney

$1-$ 99

Trish Donahue Dan and Cher Dooley Matt and Shannon DuHadway Gary Engel Sue Fegelein Flanigan Family Richard Florence Kevin and Shannon Fonger Charles Frasch Fritsen Family Melissa Gibson Pascal and Deb Ginesta Ben and Sarah Glassmeyer Steve and Cindy Goldman Deborah Gooding Ethan Guerra Joe Haines Frankie and Heidi Hannah Curtis and Laura Hanock Duke and Sherril Hanson Karla Harding Greg Henion Tom and Jennifer Henninger Sally Hertzog Emily Hines Janet Hollifield Sara House Frani Jenkins Fred Honebein and Anne Kakela Randy Kelley Jon and Kady Kocik Tom Krabacher Angie Krall

Meissner Associates David Metzger David and Tresa Moulton Michael and Danielle Nelson Niedermeier Family Lisa Nutkin Michael O'Hara Charlie and Karen Pharris Chuck and Maria Porter Nathan and Megan Proper Paula Ross Paul and Annie Sachs Carl Sangree Ryan Sawyer Tom and Lesley Schuldt Kerry and Jennifer Shea Ben Stroock & Adrienne Mooney Stroock Tall Tulips Flower Shop Kathleen Titus Tridle Charity Gift Fund Brandon and Emily Warren Carrie Warren­Gully Julie Weinberg Scott Wither Len Zanni and Jeanne Mackowski

Keith and Stacey Kramer Joe and Alyssa Laliberte Kyleigh Lawler Jeff and Sherri Leigh Jan Levy Lindsey Simbeye Lobeck Family Jimmy and Lisa Lorenz Kerry and Chrissy Lynch Janette Manke Laraine Martin Dean and Karen Massey Frank and Kim Mayer Jeff and Sally Messinger George Blau and Linda Miller Lois Mitchell Peter Morelli and Elizabeth Diamond Kevin Moya Callahan Nelly Navarro Georgianne Nelson Eric and Mary Nilsson Brandon Oliff Orozco Family Jordan and Emily Osterman Peilet Family Billy and Susan Petersen Mike and Michelle Petix Brian Petra Maurice and Barbara Quirk Jessica Reagon Megan Richard Janice Richter Bud and Jane Romberg

Dean and Ann Rosemeyer Genevieve Rosengren Jacob Rotmensch and Nadine Foster Jess Ryan Ellie Sangree Natalie Sattler Robin Schepper Rob and Betsy Schwartz John Sharman and Jennifer Robinson James and Amanda Shingles Alan and Lynn Sidman Yampa Valley Engineering Nathan and Michelle Stewart Stoller Family Tim Sullivan Marian Tolles Wesley and Laura Trimble Christina Van Assendelft VandenHurk Family Connor and Logan VanOveren Clay Waller Skip and Kate Warnke Bob and Paula Weaver Josh Weber Wells Fargo Andy and Jayme Weynard Andrew Wilkinson Barbara Wilson Leah Wolf Martin Elizabeth Wood Wade Wykert


Boots on the Ground

The hard work, perseverance, and grit of our program participants is a true inspiration. Special thanks to our crewmembers, leaders, field coordinators, and interns. Last year rocked because of you!

rockymountainyouthcorps.org


w w w.rockymountainyouthcorps.org

991 Captain Jack Drive Steamboat Springs, CO 80487


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