Tbilisi City Hall rolls out multiple schemes to support education and healthy lifestyles for impoverished youth
Tbilisi City Hall is delivering a wide range of initiatives to support education and promote healthy lifestyles among children and teenagers from families registered in the unified database for socially vulnerable households with a score below 70,000, according to the Tbilisi City Hall press office.
Tbilisi Mayor Kakha Kaladze provided an update on these active schemes, managed by the Municipal Department of Healthcare and Social Services, during today’s municipal government meeting.
“City Hall fully funds enrollment for under-18s from socially vulnerable families at the National Youth Palace, local sports clubs, swimming pools, youth community centres, and art schools. On average, these schemes provide financial backing for ten thousand students every year.
Young people can choose from a variety of extra-curricular activities, including music, choreography, elocution, fine and applied arts, and academic study groups. City Hall also covers training costs for football, gymnastics, swimming, wrestling, and various other sports,” Kakha Kaladze stated.
According to the Mayor, eligible students have the right to select one activity or club within each of the three core programmes, meaning an individual student can choose up to three different activities in total.
The Tbilisi Mayor further informed the public that access to these services can be requested by submitting a direct application to the administration of the respective educational or sports facility, or to the management of the National Youth Palace.
Other News
Flyone launches direct flights connecting Chisinau and Batumi
29.06.2026.17:45
The airline Flyone has launched direct flights from the Moldovan capital to Batumi, according to TAV Georgia, the operating company of Tbilisi and Batumi International Airports.
The operator confirmed that Batumi International Airport has already welcomed its inaugural flight from Chisinau.
“The first passengers arriving in Batumi from Chisinau were welcomed with a symbolic celebratory event. Operating an Airbus A320, the airline carried 182 passengers from the Moldovan capital to Batumi on its maiden flight, while the return Batumi–Chisinau leg brought back 161 passengers, signalling robust demand for the new route.
For the summer aviation season, Flyone will operate Chisinau–Batumi–Chisinau flights three times a week. At this stage, flights are scheduled for Mondays and Thursdays, with a Wednesday service being added to the timetable from July 14.
Flyone is a Moldovan carrier with its primary hub located at Chisinau International Airport, operating scheduled and charter flights across Europe and the Middle East. Notably, the airline’s subsidiary brand, Flyone Armenia, also operates at Batumi International Airport, executing flights from the Armenian capital three times a week. The Flyone fleet, including its Armenian subsidiary, comprises more than 10 aircraft, primarily consisting of Airbus A320 and A321 models,” TAV Georgia stated.