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Name: Saito, Bruce
Current Position: Director

It’s been 29 years between stints at the California Conservation Corps (CCC) for Bruce Saito, who Governor Jerry Brown named as its new director in August 2015.

The 64-year-old Long Beach Democrat spent the entire time at the Los Angeles Conservation Corps in various capacities. 

Saito received his bachelor’s degree in 1976 from San Francisco State, where he majored in art. He joined the CCC straight out of college and rose to the level of program manager by the time he left in 1986. The conservation corps movement was in its infancy and the CCC, now the oldest and largest in the nation, was just a year old when he joined.

The CCC hires men and women, 18-25 (up to 29 for veterans), for a year of natural resource work and emergency response. The program was modeled after the Civilian Conservation Corps, established by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1933, during the Depression.

The CCC, now housed in the state’s Natural Resources Agency, was created during Brown’s first go-round as governor. He envisioned “a combination Jesuit seminary, Israeli kibbutz and U.S. Marine Corps boot camp.”

Its homepage promises “Hard work, low pay, miserable conditions . . . and more!” That’s a quote from the corps’ irrepressible third director, B.T. Collins (1979-81), a disabled Green Beret war hero and Governor Brown’s former chief of staff. He helped put the CCC on the map, most notably when he drank a cup of Malathion to assure corps members they would be safe working in pesticide-treated areas. He died at age 52 of a heart attack.

Corps members maintain trails, restore riparian zones, plant trees, remove exotic plant species, work on construction projects, help when floods hit and fight fires in the wild. Organizations pay the CCC to do the work.

Along with getting paid and learning some skills, corps members can complete their high school diploma through independent CCC schools. The CCC also offers scholarships for corps members interested in higher education or vocational training.

Saito was part of the CCC team in 1976 that created the model for youth development and environmental enhancement programs at a time when there were few other 501 (c)(3) non-profits in existence.

He was recruited by the L.A. Conservation Corps after former U.S Secretary of Commerce Mickey Kantor founded it in 1986. He was named executive director in 1995, and has overseen dozens of conservation, education and support programs and services in primarily low-income communities throughout Los Angeles County.

Saito was executive director emeritus and senior advisor at the L.A. Conservation Corps since 2014. He has served as president of The Corps Network board of directors and presided over the California Association of Local Conservation Corps (CALCC).     

Saito replaces David Muraki, a 2007 appointee of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The governor, faced with a huge budget deficit, attempted to eliminate the CCC in 2009, but failed. Martha Diepenbrock served as interim director for a short time.

The position requires Senate confirmation and the compensation is $154,795.

 

To Learn More:

Legacy Achievement Award Winner: Bruce Saito (The Corps Network)

Bruce Saito’s Story (The Durfee Foundation)

Bruce Saito (Los Angeles League of Conservation Voters)

Governor Brown Announces Appointments (Office of the Governor)

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