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AmeriCorps is on the chopping block – despite research showing that the national service agency is making a difference in local communities

AmeriCorps is on the chopping block – despite research showing that the national service agency is making a difference in local communities

  • AmeriCorps, a national service agency, is facing an uncertain future despite its positive impact on local communities.
  • The Trump administration has canceled over 1,000 grants, ending stipends for more than 32,000 AmeriCorps volunteers, and plans to eliminate the independent agency with a $1.2 billion annual budget.
  • AmeriCorps has been instrumental in supporting nonprofits, providing vital services such as food banks, youth programs, public health initiatives, and job training, benefiting hundreds of thousands of people each year.
  • Research suggests that dismantling AmeriCorps would harm the organizations it supports and take a toll on communities, with studies showing that AmeriCorps volunteers can increase nonprofit volunteerism by up to 71% and donations by three times.
  • Experts, including sociologist Pamela Paxton, urge lawmakers to consider the evidence demonstrating AmeriCorps’ positive impact and preserve the program to strengthen nonprofits and increase civic engagement in local communities.

Many AmeriCorps crews, like this one seen at work in Maine in 2011, restore and renovate public parks. John Patriquin/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images

Hundreds of thousands of U.S. nonprofits provide vital services, such as running food banks and youth programs, supporting public health initiatives and helping unemployed people find new jobs. Although this work helps sustain local communities, obtaining the money and staff they require is a constant struggle for many of these groups.

That’s where AmeriCorps often comes in. The independent federal agency for national service and volunteerism has facilitated the work of approximately 200,000 people a year, placing them through partnerships with thousands of nonprofits that provide tutoring, disaster relief and many other important services.

But Americorps’ fate is now uncertain. In April 2025, the Trump administration canceled more than 1,000 grants, suddenly ending the stipends that were supporting more than 32,000 AmeriCorps volunteers. On June 5, a judge ordered that these grants be restored in Washington D.C. and 24 states in response to a lawsuit they had filed. The judge also ordered that all volunteers who had been deployed in those places be reinstated “if they are willing and able to return.”

The Trump administration has also put most of AmeriCorps administrative staff on leave and indicated that it wants to eliminate the independent agency, along with its US$1.2 billion annual budget. AmeriCorps doesn’t appear in a detailed 2026 budget request the administration released on May 30.

I’m a sociology and public affairs professor who has studied nonprofits and volunteering for decades. My research suggests that dismantling AmeriCorps would harm the organizations that rely on national service members and take a toll on the communities that benefit from their work.

AmeriCorps explains what the independent national service agency does.

What AmeriCorps does

AmeriCorps traces its roots to the mid-1960s, when Volunteers in Service to America, known as VISTA, was founded as a domestic counterpart to the Peace Corps. Several earlier service programs were consolidated when Congress passed the National and Community Service Trust Act in 1993. AmeriCorps was officially launched in 1994 – and VISTA became one of its programs.

Since then, AmeriCorps members have built housing and infrastructure, delivered disaster relief, tutored in low-income schools, provided health care and helped older adults age with dignity in both urban and rural communities across the nation.

AmeriCorps includes a variety of programs, each designed to address specific public needs. Some AmeriCorps volunteers provide direct services, such as tutoring, food delivery and in disaster response efforts. Others focus on building the long-term capacity of local nonprofits through volunteer recruitment, fundraising strategy and community outreach.

AmeriCorps volunteers, whom the agency calls “members,” are placed in thousands of nonprofits, schools and local agencies. Many of them are recent college graduates or early-career professionals. Some programs specifically ask people over 55 to serve. Those “senior” volunteers support children through the Foster Grandparents program, volunteer for organizations or assist other older people through the Senior Companions program.

Many AmeriCorps volunteers are paid a modest allowance for this work that runs about $500 per week. AmeriCorps senior volunteers receive smaller sums in hourly stipends to offset the costs of volunteering.

Fox40 News in Sacramento, Calif., covers the Trump administration’s reduction of AmeriCorps’ ranks in April 2025.

Helping nonprofits gain traction

AmeriCorps has long funded research that assesses its impact.

One such study found that every dollar invested in national service generates $11.80 in benefits for society, such as higher earnings, better mental and physical health, and economic growth. Additionally, every federal dollar spent on national service produces $17.30 in savings across other government programs through reductions in public assistance, health and criminal justice spending.

As part of AmeriCorps’ research grants program, I have received funding to study civic engagement and AmeriCorps programming.

In one of those studies, which I conducted with two former colleagues at the University of Texas at Austin in 2021, we found that VISTA volunteers were able to help nonprofits gain volunteers. After two years, an organization with that support had 71% more volunteers than those that didn’t participate in the VISTA program.

We also found that the longer a nonprofit had a staffer supported by the VISTA program, the more its overall pool of volunteers increased.

Nonprofits with VISTA volunteers also had three times as many donations two years later, compared with nonprofits without VISTA service members. But the total value of donations the nonprofit obtained didn’t always rise. That is, we found that VISTA builds people power, but not necessarily fundraising revenue.

Findings like these indicate that AmeriCorps hasn’t just helped the people it serves or the people who volunteer through the program. It also strengthens nonprofits and increases engagement within local communities, reinforcing the civic fabric that knits communities together.

As members of Congress and the White House decide whether to preserve AmeriCorps, I hope they consider the evidence that demonstrates this worthwhile program’s positive impact.

The Conversation

Pamela Paxton has received funding from the Office of Research and Evaluation at AmeriCorps.

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Q. What is AmeriCorps and what does it do?
A. AmeriCorps is an independent federal agency for national service and volunteerism that facilitates the work of approximately 200,000 people a year, placing them through partnerships with thousands of nonprofits that provide tutoring, disaster relief, and other important services.

Q. Why is AmeriCorps facing uncertainty about its future?
A. The Trump administration has canceled over 1,000 grants, ended stipends for more than 32,000 AmeriCorps volunteers, and indicated a desire to eliminate the independent agency and its $1.2 billion annual budget.

Q. What impact does AmeriCorps have on local communities?
A. Research suggests that dismantling AmeriCorps would harm organizations that rely on national service members and take a toll on communities that benefit from their work, as AmeriCorps strengthens nonprofits and increases engagement within local communities.

Q. How much money do AmeriCorps volunteers typically receive for their work?
A. AmeriCorps volunteers are paid a modest allowance of about $500 per week, while senior volunteers receive smaller hourly stipends to offset the costs of volunteering.

Q. What is the impact of AmeriCorps on nonprofits and local communities?
A. Studies have found that AmeriCorps helps nonprofits gain traction by increasing volunteer numbers (71% more) and donations (three times as many), but not necessarily fundraising revenue, indicating that it builds people power rather than just revenue.

Q. Why is the Trump administration considering eliminating AmeriCorps?
A. The administration wants to eliminate the independent agency and its $1.2 billion annual budget, although the exact reasons are unclear.

Q. What is the significance of AmeriCorps’ research on national service?
A. Research conducted by AmeriCorps has found that every dollar invested in national service generates $11.80 in benefits for society, such as higher earnings, better mental and physical health, and economic growth.

Q. How does AmeriCorps support older adults through its programs?
A. The Senior Companions program places volunteers over 55 to support children through the Foster Grandparents program, volunteer for organizations, or assist other older people.

Q. What is the current status of AmeriCorps grants and volunteers?
A. A judge ordered that canceled grants be restored in Washington D.C. and 24 states, and all reinstated volunteers who had been deployed in those places are to be brought back “if they are willing and able to return.”

Q. Who has spoken out against eliminating AmeriCorps?
A. A sociology and public affairs professor, Pamela Paxton, has expressed concerns that dismantling AmeriCorps would harm organizations that rely on national service members and take a toll on communities that benefit from their work.