Grace Longmire, 17, is no stranger to civic engagement. Appointed District 8 youth commissioner in August 2024, Longmire has spent the past year-plus connecting Sacramento youth and local lawmakers.
โI realized my voice matters after watching the BLM protests back in my teens,โ Longmire says. โMy parents taught me that real change comes from lawmakers, and I wanted to be part of that.โ
A major focus of Longmireโs work is Vote 16, which seeks to lower the voting age for local and school board elections to 16 and 17.
Longmireโs advocacy is rooted in her family. Her mother helps survivors of sex trafficking, domestic violence, and foster children. Longmire volunteers in her community, now communicating directly with youth and bringing their views to city leaders. City Council District 8 includes the South Area neighborhoods Meadowview, Parkway and North Laguna/North Laguna Creek.
โIโm someone that youth can talk to,โ Longmire says. โSometimes, adults in power can be intimidating, but I can share the perspective of the youth and advocate on their behalf.
Longmire and other Sacramento youth advocates are in early talks with City Council members about theย local implementation of Vote 16 , aiming for a 2028 ballot measure.
โEverything elected officials do locally affects youth directly. If we have policies on education, resources, or safety, we should have a say in whoโs making those decisions,โ Longmire says.ย
LaJuan Allen, executive director of Vote 16 USA, points out the movementโs national significance.
โYoung people have some of the most innovative solutions to their communitiesโ most pressing issues,โ Allen says. โVoting at 16 helps instill the habit of civic participation early, making our democracy stronger, more just, and more representative.โ
Vote 16 USA, founded in 2015 by Generation Citizen, now operates independently, supporting youth-led advocacy and providing resources nationwide.
โVoting is habitual,โ Allen says. โThe earlier we establish that habit, the stronger and more representative our democracy becomes.โ
The movement has been successful in several cities. Berkeley and Oakland allow youth to vote in school board elections, while Albany allows them to vote in all municipal elections.
According to Vote 16, nearly 1,500 youth voters were registered in 2024 by Election Day in Berkeley and Oakland, with about a third casting ballots.ย
Brattleboro, Vermont, also approved a voting age of 16, and Newark, New Jersey, allows youth to vote in school board elections. Maryland allows 16- and 17-year-olds to vote in school board, city council, and mayoral elections.
โResearch shows that young voters often turn out at higher rates than older counterparts in areas like Maryland, where the voting age has been lowered, and their participation encourages wider community engagement,โ Allen says.
Vote 16 also has succeeded internationally. The Vote 16 USA timeline highlights how countries, states, and communities worldwide have adopted a 16-year-old voting age, from early Latin American and European adopters to recent U.S. expansions.

The timeline shows how the movement has spread across time and borders. Each step represents a community empowering its youngest citizens, proving that trusting youth with the ballot strengthens democracy for all.
Reyes Rios, 16, vice chair of the Sacramento Youth Commission, says his interest in politics grew from witnessing conflict at school.
โI saw fighting between Black and brown communities,โ Rios says. โThey were dealing with the same issues, but they werenโt connected.โ
Rios argues that civic participation is most effective when introduced earlier.
โAt 16, you still have structure,โ he says. โYouโre in school, you have routines. Thatโs the best time to build the habit of voting, not when youโre 18 and everything hits you at once.โ
Beyond youth commissioners, other local organizations have begun to engage as well. Celine Qin, founder and executive director of The Reclamation Project, says her organization recently joined discussions on how Vote 16 could start locally. The nonprofit is a globally recognized, youth-led social justice organization, empowering historically marginalized communities and youth to battle systems of oppression, trauma, violence, and poverty in Sacramento.
โThis is really the genesis of the effort,โ Qin says. โRight now, itโs about outreach and education, helping people understand what Vote 16 actually means.โ
Qin emphasized that political education already exists within much of youth organizing.
โYoung people are already dealing with the consequences of political decisions every day,โ she says. โVoting is just one piece of civic power, but it matters.โ
Elected officials are also engaging in the effort. Councilmember Mai Vang, who is campaigning for Congress, echoes the importance of youth involvement.
โYoung people will inherit a world they didnโt create. They need to be at the table making decisions, and that starts with being able to elect their representatives,โ she says.
Vang highlights Sacramentoโs youth-led initiatives, noting that programs like the Sacramento Childrenโs Fund demonstrate the impact of centering youth in policymaking. She is optimistic about adopting Vote 16 locally.

โThis could be a potential ballot measure in 2028,โ Vang says. โThe voters who supported the Sacramento Childrenโs Fund understand the importance of investing in our youth, and I strongly believe they will support this measure as well.โ
Still, the movement faces skepticism. Not everyone believes lowering the voting age will affect turnout.
Wesley Hussey, a political science professor at Sacramento State, says studies regularly show that younger voters participate at lower rates than older voters, regardless of generation.
โYounger voters are less likely to vote,โ Hussey says. โThatโs not because they donโt care, itโs because theyโre young. Theyโre in school, working, trying to establish themselves.โ
On global issues, Hussey adds that international conflicts tend to influence politically engaged voters rather than draw new ones.
Longmire, Rios, Qin, LaJuan, and Vang all emphasize that youth engagement is more than lowering the voting age. It is about developing a generation that is informed, empowered, and involved.
โThis is your moment,โ Vang says she tells young people. โTime waits for no one, and we need your brilliance at the table.โ
โJust be authentically you. Speak up, participate, and make sure your voice is heard. Youth representation matters, and itโs our responsibility to engage in shaping the policies that affect us,โ Longmire adds.ย
As Sacramento youth push forward with Vote 16, the city leads the way in a movement that could transform civic engagement and amplify the voices of the next generation.
