
Stirling volunteer scoops two top prizes after more than 200 hours giving back
A Stirling teenager who has volunteered more than 200 hours for a local sporting organisation picked up a pair of top prizes for her efforts this week.
Ellie Hodge, 16, is a dedicated volunteer for Active Stirling and was nominated for two gongs at the Young Scot Awards 2025 held in Glasgow on Monday evening after being shortlisted from more 400 nominees all over the country.
Her nomination praised her passion for making sport and physical activity, with Ellie put forward for the Health and Wellbeing Award at the glittering ceremony at the city's Platform venue.
She walked away with that prize - but more was to come later on as she was also named the overall Young Scot of the Year.
Ellie said: 'I still can't believe I won! Volunteering with Active Stirling has given me so many opportunities to learn, grow, and meet incredible people.
'I've gained so much confidence and I love helping to make sport accessible for everyone. It means so much to be recognised at the Young Scot Awards.'
Ellie recently joined Active Stirling as a relief ice guard, but still plans to keep up her volunteering commitments during the school holidays.
Among those commitments have seen the teenager support a wide range of programmes including The PEAK holiday camps, Health Walks, Bikes Without Barriers, SportAbility and Inspire Stirling.
She has also completed specialist training in autism awareness, disability in sport, and sighted guiding.
Ellie was presented with the award on the night by the Minister for Children, Young People and the Promise, Natalie Don-Innes MSP.
First Minister John Swinney shared a message of congratulations with the teenager, saying: 'Ellie is the embodiment of resilience, kindness and leadership.
'Her work supporting others, particularly those with additional needs, is not only inspiring but deeply impactful. She is a shining example of how Scotland's young people are changing lives and building stronger communities.
'Congratulations to the finalists and to young people from every corner of Scotland.
'Thank you for what you are doing to help your communities, for your dedication, your enthusiasm and for going above and beyond to make Scotland the place we want it to be – a place of connection, kindness and compassion.'
Natalie Wilson, Employability & Volunteer Officer at Active Stirling, said: 'Ellie is an extraordinary young person.
'Her passion, kindness, and commitment to helping others truly stand out. We're so proud of her achievements and are delighted to see her journey progress from volunteering to employment with us.
'She is a fantastic role model for other young people in Stirling and beyond.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
5 days ago
- The Independent
The Lionesses' future success hinges on this one thing
As we watched our Lionesses storm to victory, their success reminds us of the magic that happens when young people have the space to play and dream. From their early days of using jumpers for goalposts to achieving international glory, our local parks and pitches are the very first arenas in which our nation's sporting legends are born. Yet there is a troubling contradiction: while England continues to bask in the success of our Lionesses once more, the government is pressing ahead with reforms that put these spaces at risk. The uncomfortable reality is that there is a continuing erosion of children's access to parks, playing fields, playgrounds and pitches. An enduring truth is that green spaces shape us when young, keep us healthy as we age, and serve as places where lasting friendships are formed, memories are made, and first goals are scored. Our sporting heroes did not emerge from nowhere. Each and every one of them was forged in their local parks, school playing fields and community pitches, nurtured by communities who recognised the value of these spaces. Parks and green spaces are not just nice to have; they are quiet societal powerhouses. Annually, they help save the NHS £111 million through associated health and mental health benefits, the equivalent of the salaries of 3,500 nurses. These spaces are also estimated to provide over £34bn in health and wider wellbeing benefits each year. Sadly, despite this overwhelming evidence, we are witnessing their steady decline. 800 parks and playgrounds have closed in just the last decade, a significant loss that has disproportionately impacted the communities that need them most. One in three children now lack access to a nearby park or place to play, limiting the opportunities that National Play Day exists to celebrate. This decline stems from multiple factors. All too often these spaces are treated as afterthoughts in new developments – the lone seesaw amid the concrete – demonstrating that we need for a more holistic joined-up approach to the services needed to enable new communities to thrive. Meanwhile, over the longterm, our green spaces are under-resourced, as local authorities face difficult choices between funding essential services and maintaining green spaces that bind communities together. The reality is that those who need green spaces the most – those from lower-income families, ethnically diverse communities and young people – are feeling this impact first. With rising youth inactivity costing billions to the economy each year, and one in five children experiencing probable mental health disorders, the importance of protecting these spaces for our children's health, wellbeing, and play has never been clearer. Still, government policy is moving in the opposite direction. Its Planning and Infrastructure Bill, which is currently going through the House of Lords, would see Sport England removed as a statutory consultee on planning decisions. This seemingly technical change would weaken protections for playing fields, potentially seeing thousands of pitches lost forever to development. This decision not only risks undermining access to sport at the exact moment when participation in girls' and women's sports is soaring, it threatens to accelerate this decline at precisely the moment we need to be reversing it. We are now putting in jeopardy the very infrastructure that creates sporting excellence while celebrating its results. The need for systemic change in planning policy has never been more urgent. The removal of Sport England from its essential role in planning decisions must be reversed. Planners, developers, and local authorities should recognise green spaces as essential infrastructure, not luxury add-ons, and we need minimum standards for green space provision in new developments. Long-term, we need a national spatial strategy to guarantee sufficient levels and quality of local green space, with greater investment in local planning to ensure community voices are heard in the process. This is where organisations like Fields in Trust play a vital role. As the UK's charity dedicated to protecting parks, playing fields, playgrounds and green spaces, we have legally safeguarded 3,000 green spaces across the country, giving 9 million people the opportunity to live within a 10-minute walk of permanently protected space. Our work ensures these precious areas remain available for communities to enjoy forever. From grassroots pitches to Euros finals, the continuum of opportunity begins in local parks and playing fields. The choice before us is stark: protect these spaces now or lose them forever. We can choose to honour our champions by safeguarding the spaces that helped shape them, or we can celebrate their success while condemning future generations to watch from concrete sidelines. If we want future Lionesses to roar, we must ensure they have somewhere to learn how to play first. Their triumph demands nothing less.


Cambrian News
15-07-2025
- Cambrian News
Sarn Helen runners kept busy with plenty of races
Son and daughter Emlyn and Ellie took on the 2.4 Future Outlaw race with Ellie finishing 1st in the U15 category in 17:27 with Emlyn crossing the line in 18:59.


BBC News
13-07-2025
- BBC News
Free swimming sessions for children in East Yorkshire
Children across East Yorkshire will be able to swim for free throughout the summer. East Riding Leisure are offering free swimming sessions for children aged 16 and under from 19 July to 1 leisure centres are involved in the scheme and will host two free one-hour sessions per Nick Coultish said: "This is a great benefit not only for children but also gives parents, carers and grandparents the opportunity to have fun and stay active." The centres holding free swimming sessions are:BeverleyBridlingtonDriffieldFrancis Scaife in PocklingtonHaltempriceHornseaSouth HoldernessWithernseaThe sessions will operate on a first come, first served basis. No bookings are timetable for free swimming sessions can be found on the council's website. Listen to highlights from Hull and East Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here. Click here to download the BBC News app from the App Store for iPhone and here to download the BBC News app from Google Play for Android devices.