Local AmeriCorps Grants Terminated
Spartanburg, S.C. (April 30, 2025) – AmeriCorps announced late on April 25, 2025 that our United Way of the Piedmont AmeriCorps grants have been terminated.
The termination of United Way’s local grants is part of widespread cuts to more than $400 million in grant funding to AmeriCorps services across the United States. Tens of thousands of service members nationwide have suddenly lost their living allowances, benefits, and workforce development opportunities.
Locally, AmeriCorps cuts impact 25 service members, 14 organizations, and four public schools across Spartanburg and Cherokee counties. AmeriCorps State & National Members and Volunteers In Service to America (VISTA) Members play a critical role in advancing education, housing stability, financial security, and health access in our region. United Way’s AmeriCorps programs also rely on the leadership of community partners who host and mentor AmeriCorps Members throughout their service year. The loss of these service members is deeply felt across our community.
Impact on Local Community
- 25 total members terminated, including 18 full-time VISTAs and 7 part-time direct service members
- 14 organizations impacted, including:
- A Place to Call Home
- Benjamin E. Mays Family Center
- Converse University
- Greer Relief
- KNOW(2)Cherokee
- PAL
- ReGenesis Health Care
- Spartanburg Academic Movement
- St. Luke’s Free Medical Clinic
- Strategic Spartanburg
- The Bridge at Green Street
- The Bethlehem Center
- USC Upstate
- United Way of the Piedmont
- 4 public schools affected by direct service loss, including:
- Cleveland Academy of Leadership
- Jesse S. Bobo Elementary
- Lone Oak Elementary
- Mary H. Wright Elementary
- Disaster relief teams demobilized: Two AmeriCorps NCCC teams, which provided over 1,100 hours of disaster relief and prepared nearly 400 tax returns for local families, were also terminated early.
In 2024 alone, our AmeriCorps VISTA program generated over $2 million in economic impact locally. Since 2008, the program has contributed more than $26 million to our region’s economy. In the first semester of our AmeriCorps Teacher Support Specialist direct service program, we saw an average of 55% of students with improved academic performance in classrooms where members served. The loss of these resources will significantly reduce our community’s capacity to address pressing issues.
“We’re disheartened by the sudden loss of critical services that AmeriCorps Members have brought to local organization partners and the greater community,” says Paige Stephenson, United Way of the Piedmont President & CEO. “Many of these members were dedicating their years of service in full-time capacities, carrying out the AmeriCorps mission to bring out the best in our community and America. We are working to support our members as they navigate an early exit to service and find the best path forward to address the gap left by the termination of our AmeriCorps grants.”
You can take action to protect AmeriCorps by contacting your Congress members in the following ways:
- Email your Members of Congress in less than two minutes using an easy Contact Congress email tool.
- Call your lawmakers using a simple call script and instructions. This is an important way to share more about your personal experience with AmeriCorps as an alumni, supporter, or program partner.
For any media inquiries, please reach out to Paige Stephenson at pstephenson@uwpiedmont.org.







