Title 42 › Chapter 129— NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE › Subchapter I— NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE STATE GRANT PROGRAM › Part I— Investment in National Service › § 12572
Grant recipients and federal agencies must spend part of their money or service slots on a few named national service corps that meet local needs. The main corps are: an Education Corps (tutoring, mentoring, after‑school and expanded learning, college prep, service‑learning, arts); a Healthy Futures Corps (help people get and use health care, prevention education, patient health literacy, translation, rural health, childhood obesity work); a Clean Energy Service Corps (weatherize and retrofit low‑income homes, energy audits, build energy‑efficient housing, recycling and park restoration, teach youth; youth corps for ages 16 through 25); a Veterans Corps (help military families, recruit veterans into service, help vets get education, benefits, jobs, mentoring, and targeted help for disabled, unemployed, older, or rural veterans); and an Opportunity Corps (financial literacy, housing construction/repair and placement, job training and placement help, hunger relief, and community tech programs). Each corps has specific measures it must try to improve (for example, attendance and graduation for education, access and prevention for health, number of homes weatherized and acres cleaned for clean energy, numbers of veterans served, and financial literacy and housing counts for opportunity). The Healthy Futures Corps gets priority for medically underserved areas and for programs that help participants enter health careers. Some youth programs must have at least 75 percent disadvantaged participants. The federal Corporation that runs national service sets rules about which programs qualify, picks priorities, and works with other agencies to create extra measures. It allows other program types, such as rural community service, emergency preparedness, mentor expansion, reentry programs for court‑involved people, foster‑care mentoring, campus programs, professional placements, veterans programs, and intermediaries that build nonprofit capacity. Tutoring programs must use tutors who have a high school diploma and have finished pre‑ and in‑service training (except for school‑managed cross‑grade student tutors). Tutoring must follow high‑quality, research‑based curricula that match state standards. The Corporation must report to Congress within 60 days after each fiscal year on how funds and positions were used, how many were provided to each corps, how the corps did on their measures, and how the programs are being coordinated with related 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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60