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OSM Seal Watershed Groups Invited to Sponsor Summer Intern
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Project proposals are now being accepted for the summer Internship Program. These web pages will provide your organization with information needed to submit an application - please read it carefully before filling out the application.

Applications will be accepted until all positions are filled.


The Interns The Office of Surface Mining recruits nationally for top students with a wide variety of fields. Our competitive stipend generates a pool of one to two hundred student applicants each year. From this pool the Office of Surface Mining selects the top three applicants for each project and the sponsor organization conducts telephone interviews and makes the final selection.

The Office of Surface Mining seeks students with such skills and interests as:

Project Proposals

Successful project proposals will contribute to the development of regional awareness of watershed problems and AMD. Some of the ways in which projects achieve this goal through:

All internships last twelve weeks and it must be feasible to complete the proposed project in that amount of time. Projects must produce a significant product and provide an educationally meaningful experience for the intern. Clerical work, sales, tours and unskilled tasks are not acceptable intern duties.

Costs Interns will receive a stipend of $2000 and.

Interns may be compensated as either contractors to your agency to complete their projects or as employees, in which case your agency is responsible for withholding taxes and worker's compensation.

Also, if your proposed project involves travel (for research, meetings, surveys, etc.) your organization must reimburse the intern for that mileage. The Office of Surface Mining provides for $500 in office supplies and travel.

Office Space No matter how outstanding the proposal, a project cannot work without suitable workspace, therefore office space must be determined before the application is submitted. Work space needs will vary with the specific nature of each project and agencies may need to be creative in finding space. Interns generally do not need their own office but they do need easy access to a phone, fax machine and computer with e-mail and internet access, and a desk of their own from which to work. Housing We ask that all hosts do everything possible to find suitable housing for the intern. While interns do not need luxury accommodations, it is necessary that they be housed in clean, well-kept quarters with adequate kitchen facilities. Housing must provide personal space separate from the intern's work environment. This means that:
  1. Interns should not live with their immediate supervisor.
  2. Interns should not live in the same building in which they work unless there is a locked separation between their living and working spaces.
  3. Each intern should have his or her own bedroom.

In past summers interns have lived in rented group houses and apartments, buildings owned by the sponsor organization, bed and breakfasts, and homes of community supporters.



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PageMaster: Marykatherine Gonzalez, mgonzale@osmre.gov
Office of Surface Mining
1951 Constitution Ave. N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20240
202-208-2585