Leah Cantor

Leah Cantor is the leader for this wonderful Georgia based crew. She is originally from New York and has a Bachelors Degree (BS) from Florida State University in Secondary English Education. (6th -­‐12th) She also has a Masters Degree (MAT) from CUNY Queens College in Elementary Education (1st-­‐6th). She brings a varied background to this crew- having experience teaching in both indoor and outdoor settings. With NorthWest Youth Corps, she worked as an AmeriCorps teacher at an Outdoor Alternative High School. She worked for over a year at Pok­‐O­‐MacCready Outdoor Education Center in which she was able to get paid to take students Kindergarten to College aged on hikes, bike rides, rock climbing and other fun and exciting outdoor activities. She has also worked for The SCA doing various programs for the past four years. The one she started with and has the most experience with is National High School Crews. She started her wonderful SCA career in Natchez Trace Parkway, MS teaching students how to do various forms of trail work-­‐ the main focus being on building a bridge for Bridle pass (horses). Her next gig with The SCA was in Chattahoochee National Forest, GA. Leah and her crew focused on trail closures, re­‐routing, building new trail, and fence construction. Next, she had the pleasure of leading with the greatest agency contact of all time (Mr. Steve Lowe) in Harpers Ferry, WV. She enjoyed her time so immensely, that she decided to go back there for a second summer as well. Here her crew focused on tree removal, trail building, (Re-­ routing, building, laying mulch), and Historic Virginia worm-­fence construction. Her next experience with The SCA was attending the Dr. Pepper/Snapple Convention in Texas. Here, along with four others, she focused on getting the public involved with planting native grass and removing trash in a local park. Her next gig with The SCA was with leader teams. She was lucky enough to be put on a Fall 2012 Virginia Crew with four other wonderful people. Here, she was able to step up her trail skills and she was working with peers- as opposed to high school students, which was a fun change of pace. In this crew they focused on creating a new trail where the owner of the park had been hoping one would be built for years. We focused on fence construction out of rustic timber that we chainsawed down. Our team also built a dead-­man retaining wall out of rustic timber we also cut down. The next SCA leader team she was given a chance to be a part of was something she will never forget. She was lucky enough to be chosen to be a part of the wonderful Hurricane Sandy Relief Team. Here, the crew focused on tree removal with chainsaws and general trail maintenance on both hiking and biking trails. This crew went around to 6 different state parks in New Jersey during the 14 days. She felt accomplished in doing her part to help the general public after a major natural disaster.
Her personal goal for this program is to re-­center her focus on moving forward with her outdoor education life, while gaining experience supervising her peers. Her professional goal for this program is to become a better leader for The SCA, learning how to adapt her ways to maximize the potential for each of her members.

Leah Cantor

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The Leader Team Program is a new SCA program model that is primarily focused on fulfilling SCA’s mission to create the next generation of conservation leaders.   Successful completion of this program qualifies a member to serve as an SCA leader themselves, ideally immediately following the Leader Team Program. 

Leader Team Members will first work as part of the leader team for three months in the spring in one location, then (if they graduate) either: take on the Project Leader position for a larger, “standard” team of Corps members for the three-month summer team in that location, or take on a leader position for another SCA program. 

 The project for this leader team is the Army Corps of Engineers Visitor Use Survey Program (ACE VUS).  This is a two-year-old SCA partnership that provides members a valuable opportunity to help the Army Corps of Engineers monitor the use of its beautiful recreational sites across the country.  Teams will: collect, organize and download interview data; use a schedule of randomly selected sample sites for specific dates; collaborate with SCA leader and ACE staff; maintain proper care of supplies and equipment; and much more.   The team will also design and carry numerous conservation projects and community service projects, both at the sites they are monitoring and elsewhere in the local community.  This gives the members an opportunity to interact with project staff, develop their leadership skills, and leave a lasting impact in their community.