Vote in the municipal elections 2–8 April & 13 April

Municipal elections 2025

Healthy municipality, healthier student. The students of today resolve the challenges facing tomorrow’s Helsinki.

HYY’s municipal election programme

Public transport to help students get to campuses

Public transport is clearly the most popular way of getting around among students (Students’ City 2023). Smoothly running, affordable public transport helps students study full time and supports their wellbeing.

Affordable public transport:

  • Restoring HSL’s student discount to 50% must be included in the Helsinki City Strategy. Sufficient discount on public transport tickets ensures that students can make their way to campuses affordably and ecologically.

Multilingual and dynamic Helsinki

The City of Helsinki must ensure that all students in Helsinki have the opportunity to study, work and lead a balanced life. The city must acknowledge internships and employment opportunities as a key element of international students becoming attached to Helsinki. By supporting internships, the City of Helsinki promotes students’ employment opportunities and improves the city’s ability to retain people.

In accordance with Helsinki’s operational programme on work-, study- and entrepreneurship-based immigration, the city group’s main goals include ‘the city’s role as a partner for companies and employers as well as in attracting international experts, companies and investors to the area’, ‘ensuring that the process of settling down in the area is a smooth one for international experts, families and companies’ and ‘developing and increasing its English-language services and communication as well as improving their customer orientation and quality’.

Trilingual Helsinki:  

  • The following goal is included in Helsinki City Strategy: By the end of the council term in 2029, Helsinki offers municipal services in Finnish, Swedish and English comprehensively to all residents of the municipality.

Services and employment opportunities in support of language skills:  

  • The city provides services in English and facilitates the learning of Finnish and Swedish through internships, for instance.
  • The city must continue and develop activities that aim at resolving issues related to the availability of internship positions for international students in cooperation with students, higher education institutions and companies.

Affordable housing for students

Student housing foundations have a key role in providing housing for students in the Capital Region. Helsinki must support the operation of student housing foundations and ensure that students have a sufficient number of affordable, high-quality apartments that meet their needs available for them.

Housing is the single largest monthly expense that students have. The sufficient availability of affordable student housing thus has direct positive effects on students’ financial situation as well as their wellbeing. Affordable housing is one of the main factors that make it possible to study full time.

High-quality student apartments make Helsinki an attractive city for students and reinforce its status as a centre of education and research.

Significant increase to student housing production:

With the number of student places increasing, the number of student apartments in relation to the constantly growing number of students is extremely small. Student apartments built along good traffic connections offer solutions to reconciling the obligation to construct parking spaces between different forms of property management. A sufficient number of plots within a reasonable distance from higher education campuses must be reserved for apartments constructed by student housing foundations within Helsinki and the other municipalities of the Capital Region:

  • A concrete annual production goal of 1,000 new student apartments must be set in the city strategy.

Vision for student housing in the Capital Region:

A long-term vision is created for student housing in the Capital Region to serve as a strategic guideline for the development of student housing in the Capital Region. The main goals of the vision must include increasing the number of student apartments as part of the solution to students’ housing shortage. The vision is created jointly by the Capital Region’s cities, higher education institutions and student housing foundations to ensure that the requirements of the student apartments of the future can be anticipated in it. The strategy takes into account the preservation of the diversity of different areas as well as local needs for the student housing stock. When developing the student housing stock, data on students’ wishes for their living arrangements from surveys commissioned by Hoas, for instance, must be taken into account. Other interest groups may also be utilised in suitable ways when creating the vision.

  • A long-term vision for student housing created jointly by the City of Helsinki and the Capital Region’s other higher education cities, higher education institutions and student housing foundations in order to resolve students’ housing shortage is included in the city strategy.

Seamless health services throughout and after studies

Delays on care pathways are expensive from both human and societal perspective. If a student cannot access appropriate specialised healthcare services at municipal level, the delay may lead to so-called supporting visits. During these visits, the valuable resources of student health care are used for treating the patient even though their need for specialised health care has already been acknowledged. Supporting visits put a strain on the resources of student health care and slow down other students’ access to appropriate treatment.

Delays on care pathways may lead to a situation in which the eventual need for treatment ends up increasing in specialised healthcare services, too. Making students wait is expensive from both human and societal perspective.

When the FSHS refers a patient from basic health care to specialised health care, the criteria and the processing systems for the referrals should be coordinated with student health care. Currently, the referral process requires a lot of manual work and puts an unnecessary strain on the healthcare system.

Reducing the need for supporting visits:  

  • Higher education students’ care pathways between the FSHS and municipal health care are developed to ensure that students get timely access to specialised health care. This reduces the strain on the FSHS and frees up resources for the FSHS’s preventive work and basic health care. This, in turn, improves students’ access to appropriate health services.

Coordinating the referral systems:  

  • The referral systems of HUS and the FSHS are harmonised in a way that facilitates the smooth progression of treatment without unnecessary manual work. As a result of this, the city and HUS are able to allocate their resources more efficiently.
    • Municipal election panel by HYY and the University of Helsinki

      Come to the municipal election panel organised by HYY and the University of Helsinki!

      How would different parties develop public transport in Helsinki? What kind of solutions are offered for housing? How do we get more international experts to Helsinki? Come and find out at Think Corner at 5 pm on 1 April!

      What: Municipal election panel by HYY and the University of Helsinki

      Where: At Think Corner

      When: At 5–7 pm on 1 April 2025

       

      Host: Roosa Welling, Ylioppilaslehti’s editor in chief

      Panellists:

      • Jenni Pajunen, National Coalition Party, city councillor
      • Atte Harjanne, Greens, MP
      • Eveliina Heinäluoma, Social Democrats, MP
      • Paavo Arhinmäki, Left Alliance, deputy mayor
      • Wille Rydman, Finns Party, minister of economic affairs
      • Terhi Peltokorpi, Centre Party, city councillor
      • Pentti Helin, christian democrats, chair of christian democrats of Helsinki

       

      The panel is also livestreamed on Think Corner’s website.

      The panel is organised in Finnish.

       

      Accessibility information: All premises at Think Corner are accessible. The accessible entrance is through the lobby with lifts located at the corner of Yliopistonkatu and Fabianinkatu. Lifts are available for moving between the floors. Floors K1 and 2 have physically accessible toilet premises.

    • Municipal election panel by HYY’s Environmental Committee and the John Nurminen Foundation

      Helsinki promises ambitious climate responsibility and the protection of marine nature. Is the Capital Region genuinely a pioneer in nature conservation, or is nature only mentioned in election promises and festive speeches?

      What: Election panel by the John Nurminen Foundation and HYY’s Environmental Committee: The environment speaks in the municipal elections

      Where: At Think Corner (at Yliopistonkatu 4) & through a livestream

      When: At 5.00–6.15 pm on 2 April 2025

       

      At our panel, we will ask the mayoral candidates of the four largest parties in Helsinki how they would lead Helsinki from the perspective of the Baltic Sea and the environment.

      The panellists are Atte Harjanne from the Greens, Daniel Sazonov from the National Coalition Party, Eveliina Heinäluoma from the Social Democrats and Paavo Arhinmäki from the Left Alliance.

      What does research tell us about the environmental issues at hand? A scientific perspective on the themes is provided by Professor Emeritus, former chair of Finland’s Climate Change Panel, Markku Ollikainen.

      The panel is organised by the John Nurminen Foundation and HYY’s Environmental Committee.

What municipal elections?

The municipal elections in Helsinki are held to elect 85 councillors to the City Council, the highest decision-making body in the City of Helsinki. The council decides on matters including the city’s financial affairs and the organisation of the city administration. It also appoints the City Board and the members of committees, fills the most important posts in the city and selects the mayor and deputy mayors.

Above all, municipal elections are a reflection of local democracy. The city councillors make decisions on matters that are close to the everyday life of all residents of Helsinki.

Further information on the City Council and its operation is available on the City of Helsinki’s website.

Further information on the City Council

Voting

Voting is the basic right of all adult citizens. Finnish citizens living in Finland as well as foreigners of age living in the country permanently have the right to vote in the municipal elections.

 

On election day, 13 April, everyone entitled to vote may only vote at the polling station of their own voting area. During advance voting 2–8 April, however, you can vote at any advance polling station in the country. Advance voting abroad takes place 2–5 April.

At the polling station, voters must present an ID. However, you do not need to bring the notice of voting rights with you.

Further information on voting
    • Advance polling stations near campuses

      City Centre

      • Shopping Centre Citycenter, 2nd floor: Kaivokatu 8, 00100 Helsinki
      • Helsinki Central Library Oodi, 3rd floor: Töölönlahdenkatu 4, 00100 Helsinki
      • City Hall: Pohjoisesplanadi 11–13, 00170 Helsinki
      • Visitor Centre of the Little Parliament: Arkadiankatu 3, 00100 Helsinki

       

      Kumpula

      • Arabianranta Library: Hämeentie 135 A, 00560 Helsinki

       

      Meilahti

      • Töölö Library: Topeliuksenkatu 6, 00250 Helsinki

       

      Viikki

      • Viikki Library Viikinkaari 11, 00790 Helsinki