AYW 50th Story Series | Parc Smith, CEO

The American YouthWorks community has been growing for 50 years now! In the AYW 50th Story Series, you’ll hear from staff and board members who are new and who have been with AYW for decades. Thank you to everyone in the AYW community for your dedication to creating Opportunities to Grow & Serve!


What roles and positions have you had at AYW?
How long have you been working with AYW?
As a Staff Member, what have you learned or what has been your experience at AYW?
How has AYW changed since you started as a staff member?
What is a hobby or interest you’d like to share?
Anything else to share with our audience?

 

What roles and positions have you had at AYW?

I started as a Crew Leader, then a staff position, in our Conservation Corps program working in the field in a position that is now held by AmeriCorps members. This was when the whole program was built around two 15 passenger vans. I eventually became the Lead Crew Leader, where I led my fellow Crew Leaders as well as my crew. I then moved into the program coordinator position, then program director. It was wanted of me to be involved in the exec team, and for 15 years now, I’ve been the CEO.

 

How long have you been working with AYW?

I just had my 30th anniversary on December 11th!

 

As a Staff Member, what have you learned or what has been your experience at AYW?

I’ve learned a ton about how many approaches can work. You may think you have the best idea, but it’s amazing how other people, with other abilities and experiences can be just as or more right. This is a continuous lesson for me — many approaches can work.

 

How has AYW changed since you started as a staff member?

We went from a very small organization to a much larger one — we’ve grown tremendously! And I think we’ve become much more advanced in the requirements to deliver youth development and even the project work has become much more complex. We moved from only being grant funded to having a revenue-generating, project-based funding model. We’ve diversified funding streams and the complexities of generating agreements with many different types of entities — from government agencies to other nonprofits and foundations. It’s a much more complex effort to do the cool work we do. The compliance and scrutiny that comes along with government and foundation funding requires us to be much more incredibly purposeful in the way we manage the programs and meet criteria.

What’s stayed the same, though, is the heart around giving young people opportunities to gain new perspectives, to see their own value, and do hard things and have a good time doing them.

 

What is a hobby or interest you’d like to share?

I play the drums and have long studied traditional folkloric dance and music practices.

 

Anything else to share with our audience?

Gratitude for the incredible relationships and experiences that this work has afforded me, from getting to connect with so many people that care about young people and care about their communities, to getting to work with and build relationships with all the organizations, from local to national agencies, people who care about the outdoors and affordable housing and all the community issues we care about as well. Opportunities to connect on a personal and professional level. AYW really is a vessel for doing good in the universe. Really grateful for it.

 

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