

“I think the world of Job Corps. I watched a lot of people turn their lives around in the process. They are 100% the reason I’m in the job I’m in today.”
Before Job Corps, Sara had completed a couple of years at community college, but she didn’t know what she wanted to do next. Her roommate found out about Job Corps, and they both decided to join.
She enrolled in Weber Basin Job Corps Center in the Finance and Business program. She learned essential financial skills, but it never felt right as a long-term career option. When a friend told her about the fire program at Wolf Creek Job Corps Civilian Conservation Center in Oregon, something clicked.
Sara transferred to Wolf Creek to pursue Forestry Conservation and Firefighting training. She became the lead of the firefighting crew, regularly training on firefighting equipment, learning fire safety, earning vital credentials for firefighting, participating in research and more.
“After transferring to Wolf Creek Job Corps, I finally understood that I needed to be working with nature, and I loved the Wildland Firefighting program,” Sara said. “Also, my time learning business and computers at Job Corps allowed me to streamline computer programs, build websites, and become proficient with spreadsheets, marketing and reports. These skills set me apart from many other arborists and helped catapult my career.”
“After transferring to Wolf Creek Job Corps, I finally understood that I needed to be working with nature, and I loved the Wildland Firefighting program,” Sara said. “Also, my time learning business and computers at Job Corps allowed me to streamline computer programs, build websites, and become proficient with spreadsheets, marketing and reports. These skills set me apart from many other arborists and helped catapult my career.”
After Job Corps, Sara decided to stay in the Forest Service and went to Oregon State, where she was eventually hired full time as an arborist. After six years at Oregon State, she took a position at the University of Washington as lead arborist.
Sara has more than two decades at the University of Washington as an urban forest specialist, becoming a board-certified master arborist, the highest level in the industry, in the process.