❓ Mr Whitely asks the Minister for Community Development about the results of the Youth Minister's Positive Image Award. The Minister, Ms McHale, provides details of the nominees and finalists.
AnsweredQoN 663Legislative Assembly
Asked
10 December 2001
Member
Portfolio
Community Development, Women’s Interests, Seniors and Youth
QuestionView source ↗
POSITIVE IMAGE AWARD 663. Mr WHITELY to the Minister for Community Development, Women’s Interests, Seniors and Youth: Will the minister inform the House of the results of the youth minister’s positive image award, announced on Friday? Ms McHALE
AnswerView source ↗
I thank the member for his question. I was privileged to host a function on Friday for nominees from 28 metropolitan and regional school districts in Western Australia. They were chosen from 100 outstanding students statewide. The award recognises the quiet achievers - those students who in their own way make a contribution to either their school community or the broader community. The nominations uncovered some remarkable stories and circumstances, and demonstrate the positive attitudes, attributes and behaviour of our young people that are so noteworthy. That is why the award is so strongly supported by schools across the State. From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
POSITIVE IMAGE AWARD
Will the minister inform the House of the results of the youth minister’s positive image award, announced on Friday? Ms McHALE replied: I thank the member for his question. I was privileged to host a function on Friday for nominees from 28 metropolitan and regional school districts in Western Australia. They were chosen from 100 outstanding students statewide. The award recognises the quiet achievers - those students who in their own way make a contribution to either their school community or the broader community. The nominations uncovered some remarkable stories and circumstances, and demonstrate the positive attitudes, attributes and behaviour of our young people that are so noteworthy. That is why the award is so strongly supported by schools across the State. From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
Ms McHALE replied: I thank the member for his question. I was privileged to host a function on Friday for nominees from 28 metropolitan and regional school districts in Western Australia. They were chosen from 100 outstanding students statewide. The award recognises the quiet achievers - those students who in their own way make a contribution to either their school community or the broader community. The nominations uncovered some remarkable stories and circumstances, and demonstrate the positive attitudes, attributes and behaviour of our young people that are so noteworthy. That is why the award is so strongly supported by schools across the State. From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
I thank the member for his question. I was privileged to host a function on Friday for nominees from 28 metropolitan and regional school districts in Western Australia. They were chosen from 100 outstanding students statewide. The award recognises the quiet achievers - those students who in their own way make a contribution to either their school community or the broader community. The nominations uncovered some remarkable stories and circumstances, and demonstrate the positive attitudes, attributes and behaviour of our young people that are so noteworthy. That is why the award is so strongly supported by schools across the State. From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
POSITIVE IMAGE AWARD
Will the minister inform the House of the results of the youth minister’s positive image award, announced on Friday? Ms McHALE replied: I thank the member for his question. I was privileged to host a function on Friday for nominees from 28 metropolitan and regional school districts in Western Australia. They were chosen from 100 outstanding students statewide. The award recognises the quiet achievers - those students who in their own way make a contribution to either their school community or the broader community. The nominations uncovered some remarkable stories and circumstances, and demonstrate the positive attitudes, attributes and behaviour of our young people that are so noteworthy. That is why the award is so strongly supported by schools across the State. From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
Ms McHALE replied: I thank the member for his question. I was privileged to host a function on Friday for nominees from 28 metropolitan and regional school districts in Western Australia. They were chosen from 100 outstanding students statewide. The award recognises the quiet achievers - those students who in their own way make a contribution to either their school community or the broader community. The nominations uncovered some remarkable stories and circumstances, and demonstrate the positive attitudes, attributes and behaviour of our young people that are so noteworthy. That is why the award is so strongly supported by schools across the State. From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
I thank the member for his question. I was privileged to host a function on Friday for nominees from 28 metropolitan and regional school districts in Western Australia. They were chosen from 100 outstanding students statewide. The award recognises the quiet achievers - those students who in their own way make a contribution to either their school community or the broader community. The nominations uncovered some remarkable stories and circumstances, and demonstrate the positive attitudes, attributes and behaviour of our young people that are so noteworthy. That is why the award is so strongly supported by schools across the State. From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
From the 28 nominees, six finalists were announced on Friday. They will go forward to the Youth Awards Showcase to be held next year. The six finalists are Lili Murg from John Curtin College of the Arts, Ted Forrester from Bindoon Catholic Agricultural College, Kylie Forth from Wyalkatchem District High School, Michael Harding from Rockingham Senior High School, Jessie Giles from Mt Lawley Senior High School, and Ben Rees-Mogg from Manjimup Senior High School. I congratulate the finalists and their families on their achievements.
Explore WA Government Data
Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.
Explore more
Government Gazette
Appointments, regulatory notices, planning changes.
Hansard
Debates, questions, speeches and sentiment.
Tabled Papers
Reports and documents tabled in Parliament.
Committees
Committee profiles and recent reports.
Regulations
Subsidiary legislation with filters and summaries.
Bills
Proposed laws and parliamentary progress.
Acts
Current WA legislation and summaries.
Explanatory Memoranda
Bills with EMs (text/PDF) available.
Members
MP profiles, party breakdown and rankings.
Pollie Rankings
Data-driven rankings across 19 categories.
Amendment Chains
Track how schemes and regulations evolve over time.