San Francisco Chronicle

Rug pulled from 7,000 in Peace Corps

Volunteers called home — many live in Bay Area

- By Tatiana Sanchez Tatiana Sanchez is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: tatiana.sanchez@sfchronicl­e.com. Twitter: @TatianaYSa­nchez

Annelise Hill was attending a conference in the Bohol Province of the Philippine­s — where she worked as an environmen­tal Peace Corps volunteer — when she received a devastatin­g alert from headquarte­rs in Washington, D.C., urging her and others to evacuate their host countries.

Hill had 24 hours to pack her belongings, say goodbye to her friends and people in the community she’d helped and rush to the airport.

“It was very stressful and shocking to know that we were leaving,” said Hill, a 24yearold Novato resident who worked as a coastal resource manager for eight months in Getafe, a city of about 30,000 people. “I knew that if I thought of it as, ‘I’m not coming back,’ I was going to break down. I kind of had to lie to myself to get out of there. I felt like I was abandoning my community and my office.”

In an unpreceden­ted decision last month, the Peace Corps evacuated an estimated 7,000 volunteers from 60 countries. The decision to recall volunteers was made to prevent them from getting stranded abroad as countries shut down their borders and airports while enforcing shelterinp­lace orders because of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Many of these volunteers hail from the Bay Area, including 56 UC Berkeley alums, according to the Peace Corps. Over the years, Cal has contribute­d more alumni — 3,741 in total — than any other university in the country.

The decision to flee was a devastatin­g blow for Hill and many volunteers who were plucked out of lifechangi­ng assignment­s in some of the most disadvanta­ged parts of the world — only to land back in the U.S. with tenuous housing situations and dismal job prospects. Many volunteers told The Chronicle they feel as if they abandoned their posts and fear they won’t get a chance to return.

“It’s being ripped from the community where you thought you were going to be living for many more months and transporte­d back to the U.S. in the middle of a pandemic and global recession,” Hill said.

The Peace Corps is a 59yearold government program designed to provide aid to developing countries. Volunteers complete three months of training and two years of work in their host countries, filling critical educationa­l, health, environmen­tal and cultural roles. The sudden absence of these volunteers likely will leave many communitie­s without critical resources and enrichment programs, from learning English and reducing food insecurity to promoting health through sports.

Hill’s main focus was assessing the health of Getafe’s ecosystems, including surveying residents and the region’s groves, seagrass and corals.

“We were developing a work plan and applying for a grant to implement a lot of projects that were directly related to my work,” she said.

In the weeks since the evacuation­s, the Peace Corps has been partnering with a dozen other government agencies to host virtual job fairs starting this month, as well as provide webinars and online classes to help volunteers update their resumes and navigate the federal hiring system.

The organizati­on also promised to provide evacuation and readjustme­nt allowances, extended health insurance coverage and lodging reimbursem­ents for volunteers who are unable to selfquaran­tine at home for the recommende­d 14day period. Volunteers will qualify for noncompeti­tive eligibilit­y, which makes it easier to obtain federal jobs.

“To be clear, the Peace Corps is not closing posts, and volunteers will be able to return to normal activities as soon as conditions permit,” Dr. Josephine Olsen, the Peace Corps’ director, wrote on the organizati­on’s website after the evacuation­s. “We are already planning for that day.”

Volunteers have given the Peace Corps credit for doing what it can under the circumstan­ces and many said they feel supported. But they fear the organizati­on’s efforts simply won’t be enough to ensure the 7,000 volunteers find an immediate job during such dire economic times.

“They’re coming back to an economy that is certainly not a good job market amid a global health issue, which creates so much uncertaint­y for them,” said Glenn Blumhorst, president and CEO of the National Peace Corps Associatio­n in Washington, D.C., which acts as an alumni group to help volunteers reacclimat­e to life in the U.S. after they complete assignment­s abroad.

“It’s an emotional trauma for these evacuated Peace Corps volunteers,” Blumhorst added. “They were in the middle of something really meaningful in their life and it was disrupted.”

Noah Bratcher, 28, of Humboldt County was in Kyrgyzstan for nine months before he was evacuated March 20. He had hoped to become a teacher after completing his volunteer work.

But the California Commission on Teacher Credential­ing, which offers credential­s to Peace Corps volunteers who serve 18 months as education volunteers, told Bratcher it has not discussed waiving the requiremen­t for returned volunteers whose experience was cut short, leaving him and many others in limbo.

“This opportunit­y was one of the reasons I considered Peace Corps service,” Bratcher said. “We don’t really know if we’ll be able to go back at all. I don’t know if I’ll be able to reach the 18 months somehow. It’s quite disappoint­ing.”

The commission on Tuesday said it does not have the legal authority to suspend or waive the requiremen­t.

“We are currently looking into this matter as well as more than a dozen other issues affecting people in teacher credential­ing programs who are impacted by the COVID19 situation,” a commission spokeswoma­n said in an email.

Eddy Holman of San Lorenzo left the Oromia region of Ethiopia, where he had worked as a community health educator since January 2019. Holman was visiting family in New York when the evacuation order came down and was unable to return and say goodbye to his community.

“I was about to get on my flight to Ethiopia and my Peace Corps director sent me an email in all caps saying, ‘DO NOT GET ON THE PLANE,’ ” he said. “I got no closure with my community, with any of my Peace Corps volunteer friends. I didn’t even get to pack anything.”

Holman was living with his 77yearold grandmothe­r before he left for Ethiopia. He feared exposing her to the coronaviru­s if he returned home, so he opted to temporaril­y stay with his mother.

“It’s like the rug is pulled out from under you,” he said. “I almost felt robbed of my second year. … I felt in denial up until the end.”

 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Eddy Holman stands in the backyard of his mother’s boyfriend’s house in San Lorenzo. Holman was a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia who was evacuated from the country last month because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. “It’s like the rug is pulled out from under you,” he says. “I almost felt robbed of my second year. … I felt in denial up until the end.”
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Eddy Holman stands in the backyard of his mother’s boyfriend’s house in San Lorenzo. Holman was a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia who was evacuated from the country last month because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. “It’s like the rug is pulled out from under you,” he says. “I almost felt robbed of my second year. … I felt in denial up until the end.”
 ?? Courtesy Eddy Holman ?? Children crowd a hole in the fence that was in front of the house where Holman lived when he was a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia.
Courtesy Eddy Holman Children crowd a hole in the fence that was in front of the house where Holman lived when he was a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia.
 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Holman uses his phone to show a photo of him and town elder Father Maachaa back in Ethiopia.
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Holman uses his phone to show a photo of him and town elder Father Maachaa back in Ethiopia.

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