Visitor Center Volunteer
ORGANIZATION: National Park Service
Please visit the new page to apply.
Overview:
As a uniformed volunteer with the National Park Service, the volunteer serves as a front-line representative of the agency. The volunteer is responsible for providing current, accurate information about El Morro National Monument and the National Park Service (NPS) to visitors, along with information on surrounding areas.
Special Physical Requirements:
Volunteer will potentially spend a significant amount of time standing. From time to time, the volunteer may be asked to drive a government vehicle. Volunteer will rove park trails of uneven terrain. Park trails climb 250 feet and are moderately strenuous. Volunteer can assist with light trail maintenance and occasional snow removal, following park safety protocols and in accordance with the volunteer's own comfort level and physical abilities.
Supervisory Controls
The volunteer works under the direct supervision of the Lead Interpretive Ranger. After receiving specific instructions, the volunteer performs routine assignments independently. The supervisor is available when problems or unusual situations arise. Supervisor spot checks routine work for accuracy, with closer review performed for more difficult or non-routine assignments.
Complexity
The volunteer contacts visitors, conducts sales, disseminates information and is occasionally required to perform multiple tasks. Assignments are primarily repetitive, consisting of clearly defined tasks. Questions regarding non-routine tasks are referred to the supervisor.
Goal / Outcome of job:
The results of the incumbent's activities contribute to visitor enjoyment and understanding of the park area and the public’s appreciation of the National Park Service mission. These activities affect the NPS and its employees, visitors, land managers, and neighbors.
Compensation
Housing and utilities are provided on site. There is no stipend or monetary compensation.
Housing:
Please Note: Volunteers must work 32 hours a week to receive park housing.
Housing is provided on site, free of charge. Depending on availability, the housing may be either an efficiency apartment, or it may be shared housing in a bunkhouse, where the volunteer has his/her own bedroom, and the living room, kitchen, bathroom, and communal spaces are shared (0 to 2 other housemates). If the volunteer has their own RV, there is also an RV pad with full hookups available in the monument.
Description of El Morro National Monument
All other rocks in America do not together hold so much history as do those of El Morro National Monument. Rising 200 feet above the valley floor, this massive sandstone bluff was a welcome landmark for weary travelers. A reliable waterhole hidden at its base made El Morro (or Inscription Rock) a popular campsite. Beginning in the late 1500s Spanish explorers and soldiers, followed by American surveyors, immigrants and soldiers, passed by El Morro. While they rested in its shade and drank from the pool, many inscribed their signatures, dates and messages. Ancestral Puebloans, living in an 800-room pueblo on top of the bluff over 700 years ago, began this trend by carving hundreds of petroglyphs. El Morro was proclaimed the second National Monument in the National Park system on December 8, 1906. The vast continuum of human history inscribed upon the rock and preserved in the ancient ruins makes El Morro National Monument a handbook of cultural history of the Southwest. The majestic bluff, shady pool, high desert forest (7200 ft.), and sweeping vistas make this a natural wonder as well.
Start Date - 2023-03-01
End Date - 2023-05-31
Activities include: Conservation Education;General Assistance;Historical Preservation;Tour Guide/Interpretation;Visitor Information;Night Sky / Astronomy
Difficulty_Level: Not Difficult
Hosts Housing Amenities: Bunk House;RV/Trailer Pads;Other
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About National Park Service
Location:
1849 C Street NW, Washington, DC 20240, US
Mission Statement
The National Park Service preserves unimpaired the natural and cultural resources and values of the National Park System for the enjoyment, education, and inspiration of this and future generations. The Park Service cooperates with partners to extend the benefits of natural and cultural resource conservation and outdoor recreation throughout this country and the world.
Description
The U.S. National Park Service, www.nps.gov, cares for special places saved by the American people so that all may experience our heritage. We care for more than 400 national parks and help communities preserve their historic places and open spaces.
CAUSE AREAS
WHEN
WHERE
HC 61 Box 43Ramah, NM 87321
DATE POSTED
March 3, 2023
SKILLS
- Environmental Education
- Interpreter
- Outdoor Recreation
- Water Recreation
GOOD FOR
- People 55+
REQUIREMENTS
N/A