Youth EchoWelcome to Youth Echo Youth Echo is a three-year programme funded by the City Bridge Foundation through the Propel Grant, designed to put young people at the heart of change in Haringey. The programme aims to empower young people to lead system change actions to tackle roots causes of racial inequity and interrelated poverty and violence through targeted actions Working in partnership with North London Partnership Consortium and the Godwin Lawson Foundation, Youth Echo amplifies the voices of young people from Black and Minority Ethnic communities, supporting them to influence the systems and services that shape their lives. From health and education to employment and community safety, we create spaces where young people are not just heard, but actively shape solutions. Through social action projects, mentoring, and pathways into employment, we equip young people with the skills, confidence, and opportunities to lead. The result is a growing movement of empowered young people driving meaningful change across their communities; their voices are not only valued, but impossible to ignore. "I feel Youth Echo is an amazing approach in Haringey and one that is very unique in terms of how young people can be referred and offered support. I have found the team extremely kind, open, and transparent about what the goals are... Your team listens to the real concerns of young people in the community." Funded by Home Why the Programme is needed? Programme Partners Youth Echo's Offer Blogs Workshops for Schools & Community Organisations About Haringey Youth Organisation Network What HYON offers? Haringey Youth Organisation Network Members Hub Programme Impact North London Youth Charity Turns a New Page Exposure is a north London youth communications charity based in Haringey with three decades experience supporting young volunteers to deliver impactful campaigns reaching over a million people. Exposure turns 30 this year and to mark this celebration, Anjola Fashawe, one of the young people it has impacted has written this incredible piece that we are delighted to share through HYON. In the article Anjola Fashawe shares how Exposure changed her life and how its best years are still ahead "I first walked through the doors of Exposure when I was 16, anxious and unsure I belonged in creative media. What I found was a community that told me otherwise." Exposure has been giving young people in north London a creative space and platform to publish their work and reach a wide audience since 1996. Founder Andreas Koumi set up Exposure in a small room at the Muswell Hill Centre with a grant from Haringey Council. No smartphones, no social media, just a belief that young people facing multiple disadvantages deserve a genuine voice. This year, the charity turns thirty, and I'm proud to be part of its story. It has grown into a multi-award-winning youth communications charity working with over 200 young people every year, but its soul hasn't changed. It's still that same space where you can bring your full self, find your voice, and truly be heard. "I'm living proof. At 20, I'm a lead peer mentor supporting the next generation of young people coming through, building my journalism career through an apprenticeship at The i Paper, and profiling fellow Exposure alumna Little Simz, the north London rap artist who was awarded both the Mercury Prize and BRIT Award. " This summer marks a new chapter. Andreas is stepping back, and Fran O'Connell, who has been at the heart of Exposure for 15 years, becomes CEO in June. "Fran knows our young people. She knows what we stand for," says Andreas. "I am handing over the baton with enormous pride." Fran has supported my journey at Exposure over the years and I know firsthand how much she cares about every young person she meets. Central to her vision is digital inclusion, making sure young people most at risk of being left behind have the skills and access they need. A new partnership with the Snap Foundation connects young people to professional networks that would otherwise feel completely out of reach and there's a real commitment to hiring leaders who come from the same communities Exposure serves. "I've seen what happens when a young person finds their voice," Fran says. "It changes everything, their confidence, their sense of what's possible, their future. I want Exposure to reach further and make sure that opportunity is there for every young person, whatever their background." As it enters this new chapter, Exposure is looking for two new trustees, people who share a genuine commitment to young people and can bring expertise in fundraising, digital media, finance, charity governance or equality and inclusion. The role will entail four or Four to five trustee meetings a year, with hybrid options available. To find out more or express interest contact: [email protected] | exposure.org.uk Manage Cookie Preferences