Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 129— - NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE STATE GRANT PROGRAM › Part Part I— - Investment in National Service › § 12572
Grant recipients and federal agencies must use part of their grant money or service slots to run or support national service corps that meet local needs. The law lists five main corps: an Education Corps (tutoring, mentoring, school supports, college prep, arts; measured by things like attendance, student achievement, graduation rate, and college enrollment), a Healthy Futures Corps (help people get and use health care, prevention, and health education; measured by access to services, prevention participation, and health literacy), a Clean Energy Service Corps (weatherize homes, do energy audits, build energy-efficient housing, restore parks and trails, and run youth corps for ages 16–25; measured by homes weatherized, energy cost savings, people trained, and acres or miles improved), a Veterans Corps (help veterans and military families with benefits, education, jobs, housing, and mentoring; measured by housing for vets, veterans in education or training, and services provided), and an Opportunity Corps (help low-income people with financial literacy, housing, job training, hunger relief, tech access; measured by financial literacy, housing units built or improved, job-training access, and similar indicators). For some youth programs, at least 75% of participants must be disadvantaged youth. The law also allows other community programs (rural service teams, public health and emergency-preparedness programs, mentoring expansion, reentry and campus programs, professional corps, and more). The Corporation sets rules for which programs qualify, works with federal agencies to develop extra indicators, and may encourage programs that mix generations. Tutors must have a high school diploma and training unless they are school students in a school-run cross-grade tutoring program. Tutoring must use high-quality, research-based curriculum that matches state standards. The Corporation gives priority to certain projects, like health programs that train people for health careers and serve medically underserved areas, and clean-energy programs that recruit and train economically disadvantaged participants. Within 60 days after each fiscal year ends, the Corporation must report to Congress on how funds and slots were allocated, how many went to each program, how programs did on their indicators, and how it coordinated these programs with other federal volunteer programs.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 12572
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73