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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Gavin Cordon PA & Victoria Jones

Teenagers 'should be trained to help in crises like coronavirus'

Teenagers are an "untapped" resource when it came to dealing with emergencies.

That is according to a report by the Royal United Services Institute military thinktank.

They are urging the Government to provide "resilience" training for teens so they can help support the authorities in civil contingencies like floods or the coronavirus outbreak.

It called for 16-to 18-year-olds to be offered training during the school holidays in "crisis preparedness" and "emergency response".

They would also be taught "information literacy" so they could help combat "fake news" in the event of a major cyber attack or disinformation campaign.

Participation would be voluntary, although teenagers would be encouraged to take part through the award of additional Ucas points for those aiming for university or tax credits for those entering the jobs market.

The report said experts would be seconded by the Home Office to conduct the training which would be carried out during a three-week course over the summer or two week-and-half courses at other times of the year.

Those who successfully completed the programme - including follow up "refresher" sessions - would enter a command-and-control system connected to the blue-light services, so they could be called up for duty during a crisis.

The report said such a scheme - modelled on similar programmes in a number of Scandinavian countries - would give the Government a capacity to "surge" in an emergency.

"Youth is a resource in national security. It is, however, rarely treated as such. That is a loss," the report said.

"Indeed, with increasing non-kinetic threats against liberal democracies it is vital to involve the wider population in preparedness and crisis response."

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