25 Days To Global Youth Service Day
GYSD is a great time to connect youth directly with policymakers . This can be done by encouraging individual communication with their elected officials, facilitating in-person meetings, participating in public meetings/events, or connecting with (or creating) youth councils/boards in your area.

Did you know that there are over 500,000 elected officials in the United States - and that less than 1% of them are at the federal level?
  • Only 537 (President, Vice President, Congress) are federal.
  • There are around 7,000 state legislators nationwide + 50 governors.
  • The other 493,000+ are local elected officials!

There are over 3,000 counties, 13,500 school districts, and more than 19,000 cities and towns in the United States... and almost every one of those has some form of elected government, including county executives, county councils, school board members, mayors, city councils, and township officials. These local officials aren’t often featured in national media, but they make most of the decisions that affect our daily lives.

Call, e-mail, or write to your elected officials - find resources to help you below in the Promotional Tools section.

Meet with your elected officials. YSA’s Engaging Public Officials Toolkit has tips and templates for you to contact your officials.
  • Attend (or organize) a day at your state capitol or city hall. You can also request a meeting with any elected official any time. Remember, they’re there to serve you! Just make sure to request meetings at least a few weeks in advance.
  • There are many local government meetings (like city council or school board meetings) that are open to the public and include time for public comments. You can find this information via their website, local newspaper, or public access channel.
  • Host a Service Stop site visit.

Connect youth with their peers who hold formal leadership positions like on youth boards or youth councils. If your city, county, school district, state legislators, or governor don’t have a youth leadership group like this, encourage them to start one.
GYSD TOOLS & RESOURCES
Planning Tools: Engaging Public Officials

Generating public support for an issue can further your own efforts. Take the time to advocate for yourself and your issue. Make your voice heard. Download "Engaging Public Officials" for tips and advice.

to have your Mayor or Governor officially recognize Global Youth Service Day.
Promotional Tools: How to Contact Your Elected Officials

Call, e-mail, or write to your elected officials:

Find all your elected officials’ contact information via the League of Women Voters or Common Cause .


Send official messages to your representatives directly from Facebook, Twitter, and news sites as a verified constituent using the ePluribus plug-in for Chrome .

Use ResistBot to deliver messages to your elected officials by texting a keyword (see full list on their website) to 50409.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
GYSD Update: Help Youth Learn and Practice Civic Skills

Effective activists need civic skills to articulate their views and listen to others. If we expect youth to participate, then these skills must be taught and we must create a culture in which discussion of public issues saturates all aspects of young people’s lives.


Youth Service Briefing: Host a Service Stop for Policymakers

Most policymakers attend events all over the community – why not invite them to participate in a service project or site visit with your group/organization? By engaging them in a service project or a visit to your program site, you begin to build a relationship with them and can include a discussion around the issues related to the service project.

GYSD is powered by Youth Service America with funding from:
Michael Minks, Editor-in-Chief