Click on the link below;
Youth work strategy implementation board meeting: 20 March 2025 [HTML] | GOV.WALES
Cliciwch ar y ddolen isod;
Cyfarfod bwrdd gweithredu strategaeth gwaith ieuenctid: 20 Mawrth 2025 [HTML] | LLYW.CYMRU
Click on the link below;
Youth work strategy implementation board meeting: 20 March 2025 [HTML] | GOV.WALES
Cliciwch ar y ddolen isod;
Cyfarfod bwrdd gweithredu strategaeth gwaith ieuenctid: 20 Mawrth 2025 [HTML] | LLYW.CYMRU
We would like to inform you that the call for applications for the Advisory Council on Youth (CCJ) 2026–2027 is now open.
The Advisory Council is a key body within the Council of Europe, contributing to youth policy and supporting meaningful youth participation.
🗓️ Application deadline: 18 May 2025 at 18:00 CEST
The eligibility criteria can be found under the above link.
Galwad am Geisiadau ar gyfer y Cyngor Ymgynghorol ar Ieuenctid (CCJ) 2026 – 2027.
Hoffem roi gwybod i chi fod yr alwad am geisiadau ar gyfer y Cyngor Ymgynghorol ar Ieuenctid (CCJ) 2026–2027, bellach ar agor. call for applications for the Advisory Council on Youth (CCJ) 2026–2027
Mae’r Cyngor Ymgynghorol yn gorff allweddol o fewn Cyngor Ewrop, sy’n cyfrannu at bolisi ieuenctid ac yn cefnogi cyfranogiad ystyrlon ieuenctid.
🗓️ Dyddiad cau ar gyfer ceisiadau: 18 Mai 2025 am 18:00 CEST
Mae’r meini prawf cymhwysedd i’w gweld o dan y ddolen uchod.
| Mae’r Cynllun Strategol newydd bellach wedi ei gyhoeddi. Cynllun sy’n amlinellu’r blaenoriaethau am y pum mlynedd nesaf a gallwch ei ddarllen yn llawn drwy ddilyn y ddolen hon. Mae’r cylchlythyr diweddaraf hefyd wedi ei gyhoeddi sydd yn cynnwys y newyddion diweddaraf a gallwch ddarllen am y ddatblygiadau pellach drwy ddilyn y ddolen hon. Os oes gennych unrhyw gwestiynau neu am drafod ymhellach mae croeso i chi gysylltu; 0345 6033 221 comisiynyddygymraeg.cymru ************************* The new Strategic Plan has been published. This outlines their priorities for the next five years and you can read it in full by following this link. The latest newsletter has also been published which contains information about their latest developments and you can read that by clicking on this link. If you have any questions or want to discuss further, please feel free to get in touch. 0345 6033 221 welshlanguagecommissioner.cymru |



Consultation on draft Guidance: A safer life online for women and girls – Ofcom
Ofcom are consulting on draft guidance, which sets out nine areas where technology firms should do more to improve women and girls’ online safety by taking responsibility, designing their services to prevent harm and supporting their users.
The Online Safety Act 2023 makes platforms – including social media, gaming services, dating apps, discussion forums and search services – legally responsible for protecting people in the UK from illegal content and content harmful to children, including harms that disproportionately affect women and girls.
Ofcom has already published final Codes and risk assessment guidance on how we expect platforms to tackle illegal content, and they’ll shortly publish the final Codes and guidance on the protection of children. Once these duties come into force, Ofcom’s role will be to hold tech companies to account, using the full force of their enforcement powers where necessary.
But Ofcom is also required to produce guidance setting out how providers can take action against harmful content and activity that disproportionately affects women and girls, in recognition of the unique risks they face.
The draft Guidance identifies a total of nine areas where technology firms should do more to improve women and girls’ online safety by taking responsibility, designing their services to prevent harm and supporting their users.
Alun has a long career of public service, he served as Deputy Home Secretary and in 1997 he introduced Community Safety Partnerships, Youth Offending Teams and the Youth Justice Board.
He was Secretary of State for Wales from 1998 to 1999 and then as the first First Secretary of Wales (later known as First Minister) and Leader of Welsh Labour from 1999 to 2000.
Most recently he served as South Wales Police and Crime Commissioner from 2012 to 2024.
Throughout his career he has been an advocate for children and young people, and is on record as a longtime supporter of votes for 16 year-olds, and even at one time suggesting that 14 year-olds should vote and be introduced to the democratic system while still supported in education to do so.
Since retiring from public office Alun has become an Ambassador for Action for Children and is a passionate supporter of their work to tackle child criminal exploitation.
We welcome the knowledge and dedication that Alun will bring to his role as our new President, croeso cynnes i ti Alun!

Those of you who were able to attend last Thurasday’s National Youth Work Conference in Cardiff, while it’s still fresh-ish in your minds, would you mind taking a few minutes to share your thoughts and impressions?
Please follow this link tinyurl.com/adbrth to a short survey to tell the team what worked, what didn’t so much, and everything in between!
Thank you to everyone who came!

They embed an international approach into every level of our education system. Taith is for people in every part of Wales, and in every type of education setting. The sectors eligible for funding are:
CWVYS members WCIA have been given funding from the Taith programme to support new applicants, and those who have previously been unsuccessful, to apply for Taith Pathway 1 funding for an international project.
If you would like to know more, please contact Michi via michaelarohmann@wcia.org.uk
You can find out more about Pathway 1 here; https://www.taith.wales/funding-page/pathway-1/support/
Pathway 1 is open for applications until the 27th of March 2025.

Q&A support session for Pathway 1 2025
On the 5 March at 12.00 – 13.00 Taith will be hosting a webinar which will be a great opportunity for you to bring forward any questions you have to the Taith team about Pathway 1 projects Register to attend *HERE*

This year Taith are launching a small grants scheme that promises a simpler process and is aimed at those who have not applied before;
https://www.taith.wales/news/taith-is-launching-a-small-grants-scheme/
Organisations can apply for up to £60,000 within this new scheme. For those wishing to apply for more than £60,000 (up to the maximum available per sector) they can do so via the Large Grant scheme.
Organisations can apply for only one option in each funding call.
The Small Grants scheme has a shorter and simpler application form.
If you have any questions please feel free to contact enquiries@taith.wales or michaelarohmann@wcia.org.uk

https://eystwales.bamboohr.com/careers/71?source=aWQ9MTU=
For an informal chat about this role please contact Fateha@eyst.org.uk
Deadline for applications is Thursday 27th Feb at 23.59 2025
https://eystwales.bamboohr.com/careers/73?source=aWQ9MTU=
For an informal chat about this role please contact Helal@eyst.org.uk
Deadline for Applications is Thursday 6th March at 23.59
To apply for any of these roles please complete the relevant online application form.
If you are having any issues with the online application please contact recruitment@eyst.org.uk

Scouts Cymru have two vacancies at the moment, one for a Marketing and Communications Manager and one for a Policy and Engagement Officer, you can find the details here;
https://scoutscymru.org.uk/job-vacancies/
Please submit your CV and a covering letter to admin@scoutscymru.org.uk
The deadline for submission of applications will is Midday on the 12th of March 2025

The closing date to apply is the 12th of March.

https://www.urdd.cymru/cy/swyddi/staff-haf-tymhorol/
Staff Haf: Ebrill 14eg hyd at Awst 31ain 2025 / Tymhorol: Ebrill 18fed hyd at Tachwedd 30ain 2025
Lleoliad: Gwersyll yr Urdd, Llangrannog Dyddiad Cau: 10fed o Fawrth
https://www.urdd.cymru/cy/swyddi/swyddog-gweithgareddau-x4/
Lleoliad: Gwersyll yr Urdd, Llangrannog Dyddiad Cau: 10fed o Fawrth
I weld holl Swyddi arall gyda’r Urdd sydd yn agor i ceisiadau ar hyn o fryd, ewch i https://www.urdd.cymru/cy/swyddi/

Vacancies – Welsh Centre for International Affairs
The deadline to apply is the 9th of March.
CWVYS members ASH Wales have created a number of engaging resources to help you promote this year’s No Smoking Day, which takes place on the 12th of March.
The theme is Every Minute Counts, which links to research suggesting smoking just one cigarette can take 20 minutes off a life. With this in mind they are hoping to encourage as many groups as possible to run 20 minute sessions with young people around the risks of smoking.

Here is a direct link to the toolkit they have created for Youth Groups; Youth Club Toolkit No Smoking Day 2025
If any of our members run a session, ASH Wales would love to see photos and hear how it goes! You can let them know at communications@ashwales.org.uk
They are also happy to help highlight your activities through their media channels and explore opportunities for local press coverage.
You can find more information on their website here; No Smoking Day Resources – Action on Smoking and Health
Here is another peek at some of the social media graphics they’ve made, which are available to download from the ASH Website;

Yes, it’s true. This time Margaret and Richard really have retired.
It’s a significant moment for Valleys Kids: Margaret and Richard have decided it’s time for them to retire. On January 14th, Margaret has been working for exactly seventy years; she feels that this is a good milestone to mark the end of her remarkable career. By contrast, Richard appears to have made up his mind during a recent event when people came together to share memories of their time in Valleys Kids as beneficiaries and volunteers. He saw that those he best remembered as children and young people were now pensioners and grandparents! And so, both are now stepping away from the final roles they performed for us, as Ambassadors for Valleys Kids and as Co-ordinators within our Valleys Voices Programme.

Their journey here began with a shared vision for the role that can be played in society by grass roots community development. Starting with the Penygraig Basement Project in 1977, aimed at helping young people at risk of getting into serious trouble, they have built our charity from the ground up. Forever pioneers, they steered us into the provision of excellent services in areas such as play, youth work, the arts, community well-being, and therapeutic approaches – touching thousands of lives.
Margaret and Richard were instrumental in the development and expansion of Valleys Kids, helping to shape the values and programmes that would make it relevant across a range of localities. They dedicated their careers and their lives to fostering a unique approach to supporting and empowering individuals, families, and communities through understanding and responding to local needs. It involved providing “professional friendship” for all and giving a central role to volunteers. Working in partnership locally and nationally to deliver opportunities of many kinds, they helped to create strong and abiding links with other organisations such as the local council, the Welsh Government, the Millennium Centre, the Tate, and the Royal Academy. Individuals ranging from Lord Hunt to Archbishop Desmond Tutu bought into this vision and supported Valleys Kids.
We are incredibly grateful to Margaret and Richard for their leadership, wisdom, and the countless hours they have devoted to making Valleys Kids what it is today. With gratitude and respect, we all acknowledge the unique contribution they have made over nearly five decades – a period characterised by dedicated service and unwavering commitment to our mission. Their legacy is one of compassion, resilience, and profound impact in fostering well-being, generating opportunities and bringing new life to some of the Rhondda’s most iconic buildings.
Phil Evans, the Chair of Valleys Kids Board of Trustees said: “Please join me in expressing our heartfelt thanks to Richard and Margaret. We wish them fulfilment and happiness in a most well-deserved retirement. For us, they represent all that is exceptional about the third sector, especially its resilience in the face of funding challenges and the way in which it unites people of all backgrounds behind great causes which benefit those who face trials and adversity. As our organisation continues to adapt to a changing world, one where the need for engagement with communities is as acute as ever, we will strive to ensure that their legacy and example will remain at the heart of Valleys Kids and its work.”
We at CWVYS wish them both well in this next chapter, and say a huge thank you for all they have given to youth work in Wales over their many dedicated years in the sector.