RYA web banner

The biennial YACVic Rural Youth Awards celebrate the amazing achievements and contributions of young people and youth sector workers anywhere in rural or regional Victoria.

No one knows rural and regional Victoria like the people who live and work here. We know the place-based youth participation and innovation you contribute, and your ambition to make your community better for the next generation.

Our 2024 ceremony was held on Thursday 26 September at Parliament House.

For more information, see our FAQs.

Congratulations to our winners

Young person leading change in rural or regional Victoria 

  • Lana Pagram (she/her) and Layla Sheedy (she/her), Ocean Mind Inc., Greater Geelong 

Youth Worker making a difference in rural or regional Victoria  

  • Adam Walsh (he/him), Junction Support Services, Wodonga

Outstanding youth project promoting diversity and inclusion in rural or regional Victoria  

  • The Hangout, Swifts Creek and Omeo District 

Outstanding youth participation in mental health & well-being 

  • Isabelle Gilliam (she/her), headspace Geelong, Geelong

Outstanding youth participation in community-based disaster resilience   

  • Resilient Alpine Youth Squad, Bright

Young people producing outstanding content in a media or social media environment 

  • Gippsland Youth Advisory Group, Centre for Multicultural Youth (CMY) Traralgon

Young Peer worker of the year 

  • Zoe Tizard (she/they), RYAG 

Find out more about our shortlisted finalists.

Meet our previous winners

Meet the winners from 2022

On Tuesday 13 December 2022 Youth Affairs Council Victoria (YACVic) held its Rural Youth Awards. The celebration brought together young people and those working in the sector to celebrate our amazing youth workers and innovative youth projects from across country Victoria.

Designed and hosted by the YACVic Rural team, with guests from across the state, we recognised the achievements of young people and our rural youth sector.

Young person leading change

Winner: Will Burns, Swan Hill

Will has become known for his passion to improve young people’s outcomes in areas of consent and sexual reproductive health. He has helped develop and facilitate a variety of sessions, consultations and groups across the Mallee region, including the Sexuality and Gender Alliance Group (SAGA), the SHOUT project and other guest speaker appearances in schools. Through this, Will has demonstrated strong leadership and mentoring skills in this space and is applauded for the quick-witted, insightful energy he brings.

Finalists:

  • Brea Dorsett – Foyer Foundation & The Flamingo Project, Shepparton
  • Elena Sewell-Dolphin – LINE Wangaratta Inc, Wangaratta
  • Will Burns – Youth Inc, Swan Hill Rural City Council
  • Rachel Wilks – Beyond the Bell, Warrnambool
  • Jessica Kei – Robinvale Youth Group, Swan Hill Rural City Council

Youth worker making a difference

Winner: Renetta Millington, Wangaratta

Rennetta is a case practitioner who works hard to provide high level support to young people and their families in the Adolescent Support and Finding Solutions Program. She is dedicated to working in a transparent manner to ensure young people with multiple and complex needs can access the support they need and achieve positive outcomes. Rennetta advocates for young people by helping them to navigate complex systems, and gains their trust in her service delivery.

Finalists:

  • Kyle Hayes – Youth Live4Life, Woodend
  • Rennetta Millington – North East Support and Action for Youth (NESAY), Wangaratta
  • Ruth Nugent – NESAY, Wangaratta
  • Will Burns – Youth Inc, Swan Hill Rural City Council
  • Shantelle Thompson – Kiilalaana Warrior Kii Maani (Growing Warrior Heart Gathering), Mildura

Outstanding youth project

Winner: Shantelle Thompson, Mildura

Shantelle and her team at Kiilalaana Warrior Kii Maani (Growing Warrior Heart Gathering) are an incredible source of inspiration, support and cultural mentorship for young First Nations women in the Northern Mallee. Shantelle provides opportunity through weekly gatherings to share, connect, heal and grow together. Since launching the program late in 2021, Shantelle has created a space where young First Nations women come together, learn self-acceptance and awareness,  and can support the dreams of future generations.

Finalists:

  • Youth Take Over – NCLLEN, Buloke & Loddon LGA’s
  • Big Life Warrnambool Student Wellbeing – Shane Wilson
  • Making A Difference South West Vic, Warrnambool – Rachel Wilks
  • Robinvale Youth Group – Jessica Kei
  • Kiilalaana Warrior Kii Maani (Growing Warrior Heart Gathering), Mildura – Shantelle Thompson

Outstanding youth participation in education, training or employment

Winner: Sienna Gladstone, Warrnambool

Sienna is a regional student activist who specialises in the areas of mental health and consent education, using her own lived experience to better herself as an advocate and as a person. She is a full-time student who works 2 jobs, is a member of her local council, on the Student Executive Advisory Committee for VicSRC, and group mentor of 40 students across the state on how they can make changes within their own communities.

Finalists:

  • Sienna Gladstone – VicSRC, Warrnambool
  • Isabella Holmes – VicSRC, Bacchus Marsh
  • James Bush – The East Gippsland H.E.Y (Healthy Equal Youth) Project
  • Rachel Wilks – Beyond the Bell, Warrnambool
  • Youth Take Over – NCLLEN, Buloke & Loddon LGAs

Outstanding youth participation in health, mental health or wellbeing

Winner: Ethan Bloom, Warrnambool

Ethan is a friendly, resilient young leader who has used his lived experience to become a role model and community advocate for younger LGBTIQA+ young people. He has been involved in the Yumcha Safe Diversity Group for 5+ years, and has participated in community celebrations and days of awareness. These include raising the rainbow flag for International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, Intersexism and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT), and designing art that is reflective of self that has been part of the Traffic Signal Box campaign and 16 days of activism. Ethan is passionate about creating new ways for young people to be involved in the community.

Finalists:

  • Sienna Gladstone – VicSRC, Warrnambool
  • James Bush – The East Gippsland H.E.Y (Healthy Equal Youth) Project, Bairnsdale
  • Adele Mills – Corryong Neighbourhood Centre, Corryong
  • Charlotte Smithett – Drouin
  • Ethan Bloom – Yumcha Safe Diversity Crew, Warrnambool

People's choice award

As voted by YACVic's Young Members from rural and regional Victoria.

Winner: Brea Dorsett – Foyer Foundation & The Flamingo Project, Shepparton

From youth homelessness to becoming a powerful advocate, Brea has worked so hard to become the leader that she is today.  Brea has lead research into gender equality, spoken in parliament, started conversations in radio/local media about mental health, body image, and youth wellbeing, founded two businesses and been a mentor for many other young people.

Meet the winners from 2020

On Wednesday November 18, 2020 Youth Affairs Council Victoria (YACVic) held its Rural Youth Awards. The celebration brought together young people and those working in the sector to celebrate our amazing youth workers and innovative youth projects from across country Victoria.

Designed and hosted by our YACVic Activators and Rural team, with guests from across the state, we recognised the achievements of young people and our rural youth sector.

Young person leading change in rural or regional Victoria


Winner: Janelle Graham from Shepparton 

Janelle is a young, rural youth advocate who is passionate about transforming the education system to become more accessible to young people from backgrounds of socioeconomic disadvantage, and young people being meaningfully partnered with to influence service system reform. Janelle works tirelessly to ensure that the voices of and issues affecting young, disengaged and disenfranchised young people living in rural Victoria are represented and centered at the highest levels of organisational and Government policy development and service and program design, delivery and evaluation. She has overcome much adversity over the years, including youth homelessness, mental ill-health and health challenges and significant intergenerational trauma and uses her own lived experience to support and educate others.


Youth worker making a difference in rural or regional Victoria

Winner: Ken Innes from Mildura

Ken is the program co-ordinator at the Kokoda Youth Mentoring Program at Mallee Support Accommodation Program. Ken is known for supporting young people involved in the program beyond the 12-month commitment, engaging in activities to better know these young people, hearing their stories and understanding what supports they require. Ken takes the time to genuinely get to know these young people, being an incredible role model for each young person that are involved. Ken encourages these young people to make positive change and outcomes in all areas of their life including education, employment and connection to family and community. Even through COVID-19, Kenn continues to strive towards making the program bigger and better, ensuring young people are provided with additional support and programs now more than ever.

Outstanding Youth Project in rural or regional Victoria

Winner: The Keeping In Touch Project (KIT) Project from Bendigo

 The Keep In Touch (KIT) project is a youth lead initiative that runs across the Loddon Campaspe region. The project assists in making access to Youth Mental Health services is regional and rural Victoria easier online and offline. The project focuses on identifying gaps & designing solutions to local problems showing a real commitment to their regional community (in all their diverse experiences). The current focus of the project is to support and empower young people to achieve and maintain good Mental Health during and following COVID-19. Much of the focus is on building young people’s ability to identify their own Superpower and their internal resilience. This opportunity has provided young people with a range of opportunities to undertake public speaking, attend events and develop leadership skills.

Young People’s Choice Award

Winner: The Youth Advisory Board (YAB), Central Highlands LLEN!

The YAB are advocates and leaders in the Central Highlands community. They speak up about issues in an honest way and use their connections to their community to advocate for change and raise awareness of issues that are critical for young people such as LGBTIQA+ equality and safety, environmental awareness/climate strikes, lived experiences of disability, poor mental and physical health, isolation, family Violence, youth justice and community connection. They have worked hard to remain independent and focused on issues that they know other young people care about in their community.

YACVic Rural Hall of Fame

Winner: Pauline Neil

Pauline has been a youth worker since 1985 and is also the co-founder at Live4Life, an innovative, evidence based and local community driven response to youth mental illness and suicide prevention.  She has extensive experience in the youth sector, primarily in local government. Pauline’s roles have always been to seek to develop the community’s capacity to better understand and support young people in regional Victoria, which require a different focus to that of metro Melbourne. Pauline helps rural communities confront difficult issues in their own community. An advocate of place-based responses supports her ethos that these community driven actions are an essential ingredient to making a difference. Pauline always creates opportunity for meaningful inclusion and involvement of the young people she works with, many of whom have gone on to great thing things in their lives.

Congratulations to the winners, all the finalists and thanks to Hon. Ros Spence MP, Minister of Youth, Kane Sparks, Ardu Cubillo, Tessa Jenkins, and Katherine Ellis  for presenting the awards.

Meet the winners from 2018

On Wednesday 26 September 2018 Youth Affairs Council Victoria (YACVic) held its inaugural Rural Youth Awards. The celebration brought together young people and those working in the sector to celebrate our amazing youth workers and innovative youth projects from across country Victoria. 

Designed and hosted by our YACVic Activators and Rural team, with guests from across the state, we recognised the achievements of young people and our rural youth sector.

Young people leading change in rural or regional Victoria

Rural Young Person winner Lizzie Harms from Leongatha

Winner – Lizzie Harms from Leongatha

Lizzie wanted to develop a conversation about gender equality and respect in her community. She set up a workshop for hundreds of young women from across a number of secondary schools in Gippsland to work with Clementine Ford and gave young women the language and confidence to articulate their feelings about the world they live in. While this was occurring, young men gathered to discuss the importance of equity and respect for women — truly kick-starting a community wide conversation.  Lizzie continues show up for young people, at every opportunity she is given, or can find for herself.

Youth workers making a difference in rural or regional Victoria 

Lee Ann Rural Youth Worker from Portland winner

Winner – Lee Anne Nelson from Portland

Lee Anne is the Youth Resource Officer in Portland, is the Chair of the Glenelg Youth Network and is a key member and contributor to the youth and community sector in the region. Lee Anne embodies a strong sense of collaboration and partnership, working tirelessly to improve opportunities for young people. Whatever the issue, the community can count on Lee Anne to be there to provide support whether in a strategic role such as chairing the Local Learning and Employment Network to working on a Friday night at the Blue Light Disco. With her no nonsense attitude and dedication she is one of the unsung heroes of the community.

Innovative Youth projects or programs in rural or regional Victoria

Rural Youth Projects winners Youth Live4Life Inc

Winner – Youth Live4Life Inc

Youth Live4Life Inc. was founded in the Macedon Ranges Shire and has expanded to Benalla Rural City and Glenelg Shire. It is an innovative, evidence based and local community driven response to youth mental illness and suicide prevention. The program focuses on a whole of community approach to mental health education and suicide prevention in order to build resilient young people and communities.  Over 8,100 secondary school aged young people have undertaken mental health education and over 1000 teachers, parents and community members have been trained in Youth Mental Health First Aid. 

YACVic Rural Hall of Fame

Rural Hall of Fame winner Kane Sparks from Swan Hill

Inductee – Kane Sparks from Swan Hill

Kane is the Senior Youth Support Officer at Swan Hill Rural City Council. Kane’s knowledge and expertise in youth engagement and participation has established his reputation as a leader in this field. Kane’s ability to successfully engage with young people and facilitate youth participation in a co-design model has resulted in opportunities and support needed for young people to feel connected to their community. Kane always put young people first and is prepared to do whatever he can in his power to ensure that young people in Swan Hill are given as many opportunities as possible.

Congratulations to the winners, all the finalists and thanks to the Hon Minister for Youth Affairs Jenny Mikakos MP for presenting the awards.

Contact us

For any questions about the Rural Youth Awards, please contact our team:

Brodie Henery (he/him), Rural Development Coordinator – Southern Mallee
0474 506 000 or Rural.SM@YACVic.org.au

Brit Watts (they/she), Rural Young Worker – Great South Coast
Rural.GSC@YACVic.org.au