Statue Of Liberty National Monument
Oh, Ranger!
I never imagined starting a career working in such a spectacular site as the Statue of Liberty National Monument! In 1999, I joined the National Park Service as a maintenance secretary. Next, I was assigned to work in management as secretary to the superintendent. Both jobs were rewarding but temporary.
Because working in the National Park Service was a joyous experience, I decided to apply for another job within the agency. I was hired shortly thereafter to work in a permanent position for the Interpretation Division as an office clerk.
Following the events of September 11, 2001, I was given the position of park guide due to an increased need for frontline staffing and new demands within the agency. The transition from working with the public by phone to actually answering their questions in person was difficult, but gradually I developed the necessary skills and my confidence increased.
Throughout my years at the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, I have come to enjoy interpreting and educating visitors on our nation's history. It's rewarding to be approached by visitors after a tour and hear them say that they enjoyed my presentation.
I get to meet people from all around the world and educate them on Lady Liberty's purpose and symbolic meaning. My Latin background enables me to conduct my talks in English and Spanish. Having bilingual employees within the agency helps us to increase the numbers of people we reach. It makes me proud to belong to an organization as great as the National Park Service.
News from the Parks
December 2, 2008 - 1:03pm
For students of astronomy, Sunday and Monday night is the equivalent of a World Cup Final, a new Mac operating system, and a Zeppelin reunion show all rolled into one. That’s because, as Horizons guest blogger Pete Spotts noted in his post Sunday, Jupiter, Venus, and the moon will gather to direct a lopsided frown at North America, an arrangement that won’t happen again for another 44 years.
December 2, 2008 - 12:59pm
Fans of the hit movie “Twilight,” inspired by Stephenie Meyer’s vampire series, are swarming tiny Forks on Washington’s Olympic Peninsula, where the novels are set, and checking out “Twilight”-themed tours, hotel packages and even food.
December 2, 2008 - 12:56pm
People from across the country gathered in Golden Gate Park's National AIDS Memorial Grove Monday to observe the 20th annual World AIDS Day.
December 2, 2008 - 12:37pm
Remember when Arizona Sen. John McCain criticized spending millions of taxpayer dollars to fund the DNA of grizzly bears in Montana during one of the presidential debates? “That’s us,” said David Restivo, a Roberts Wesleyan College alumnus and visual information specialist at Glacier National Park in Montana.
December 2, 2008 - 12:35pm
As the Great Smoky Mountains National Park prepares to celebrate its 75th year, students of history and geology are pondering questions that go back much farther than the park's creation in the 1930s. The most fascinating queries to them concern the actual formation of the mountains, their age and topography.
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