Sanders announces annual State of the Union essay contest for high schoolers


Six hundred students from 47 different schools submitted essays for the eighth annual State of the Union contest.

BURLINGTON- Sen. Bernie Sanders has launched the ninth annual State of the Union essay contest that gives Vermont high school students the opportunity to share their perspective on how to solve problems that our nation faces.
Each January, the president of the United States delivers a “State of the Union” speech to a joint session of Congress, in which he outlines his priorities for the coming year. And each year, Sanders invites Vermont high school students to describe a major issue facing our country and what they would do to solve that problem.
The 250- to 500-word essays can be on any issue of national importance. A volunteer panel of Vermont teachers will judge the essays on the students’ ability to articulate an issue and propose a solution, without regard to the students’ political views.
Sanders will invite the 20 finalists to a roundtable discussion at the Vermont Statehouse, and will enter their essays in the Congressional Record – the official archive of the United States Congress.
More than 3,500 students from high schools throughout Vermont have written essays in the past eight years, covering a wide range of important issues such as the declining middle class, climate change, health care, the national debt, gun safety, the rising cost of a college education, and many others. Last year’s winner, Maggie Parker from Woodstock Union High School, was selected from 585 essays. She wrote about the importance of protecting LGBTQ rights.
The deadline for student essay submissions is Wednesday, January 9, 2019.  For more information call (800) 339-9834, email katarina_lisaius@sanders.senate.gov. or visit www.sanders.senate.gov/stateoftheunion.

The Deerfield Valley News

797 VT Route 100 North
Wilmington, VT 05363

Phone: 802-464-3388
Fax: 802-464-7255

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