Sunderland Echo

Have your say on youth issues

YOUTH PARLIAMENT ENCOURAGES TEENAGERS TO GET INVOLVED AND SHAPE THE COUNTRY’S FUTURE

- By David Allison david.allison@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @davidallis­on88

Sunderland’s Youth Parliament is encouragin­g teenagers and other young people across Wearside to have their say on the issues that matter to them.

The Make Your Mark vote, which runs until October 6, is the largest consultati­on of young people in the country and is open to anyone aged between 11 and 18.

Last year saw 8,002 young people (30% of those eligible) vote in Sunderland and almost 980,000 nationally take to the polls to have their say on the topics that matter most to them.

This year Sunderland Youth Parliament (SYP) are aiming to get 10,000 of their peers voting.

The top five issues in the ballot box will then be debated by the UK Youth Parliament in the House of Commons this November, an event which representa­tives from SYP will attend.

Thomas Crawford, 18, from Hastings Hill and chairman of SYP, said: “Sunderland’s young people need to be heard, and that’s why it’s essential that the UK’s largest youth consultati­on is promoted.

“Just shy of one million young people voted nationwide last year, the youth voice of Wearside needs to be part of that and heard on a local and national level.”

SYP, a group of 22 young people, aged 11 to 18, works to give a voice to children and teenagers in Sunderland.

The group regularly meets with staff from Together for Children as well as Sunderland’s councillor­s and MPs.

Sue Carty, director of quality and performanc­e at Together for Children, said: “Through Make Your Mark all young people in the city can have a say on what matters to them.

Voting can be done online at www.ukyouthpar­liament.org.uk/makeyourma­rk/local-authority/ and schools across the city will also shortly be receiving ballot papers.

“Just shy of one million young people voted last year” THOMAS CRAWFORD

 ??  ?? Members of Sunderland Youth Parliament are encouragin­g young people to vote in the Make Your Mark ballot.
Members of Sunderland Youth Parliament are encouragin­g young people to vote in the Make Your Mark ballot.

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