Carrick-on-Suir Neighbourhood Youth Project organised a Family Fun Day recently to celebrate their 20th anniversary.
The event took place in Ballylynch, where Foróige began in Carrick-on-Suir in 1997. The day was a huge success, with past and present Foróige members, along with local residents enjoying a BBQ, music, and entertainment from the Beat 102103's Beat Fleet.


The Minister for Children and Youth Affairs, Katherine Zappone TD visited the Gateway Youth Project in Athlone on Monday.
She saw the range of work done by the project: the Be Healthy Be Happy Programme carried out through art; she got a taste of the music development work done by the young people in conjunction with Music Generation; the Leadership for Life programme facilitated in the Athlone Community College; and talked to the young people who participated in the Leadership for Life programme carried out with the army earlier in the summer.
Young people from Foróige Philadelphia and the Irish Immigration Centre will meet with dignitaries from the Irish government on an upcoming day trip to New York. The group will visit the Irish Consulate in the city, as well as visiting the New York Irish Hunger Memorial where they will learn more about the Great Irish Famine.
The Dermot Earley Youth Leadership Initiative was officially launched in Antrim recently, and marks the first time that the programme will run in Northern Ireland.
Foróige Chairperson, Sandra McIntyre, and Foróige CEO, Seán Campbell joined GAA Officials at the event in Antrim GAA County Offices.
The launch was also attended by young people who are taking part in the programme, their parents, and representatives from Antrim GAA.
Foróige member Robin Duke is among the young people who have traveled to the USA to take part in The Benjamin Franklin Transatlantic Fellows Summer Institute Programme at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The purpose of the intensive short term exchange program is to foster relationships among young Europeans and Americans, and to build strong linkages and an awareness of shared values. The four week program will enable teenagers, ages 16-18, to explore U.S.
Foróige member Robin Duke is among the young people who have traveled to the USA to take part in The Benjamin Franklin Transatlantic Fellows Summer Institute Programme at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The purpose of the intensive short term exchange program is to foster relationships among young Europeans and Americans, and to build strong linkages and an awareness of shared values. The four week program will enable teenagers, ages 16-18, to explore U.S.