Via Shutterstock.

Via Shutterstock.

There are many serious problems facing today’s teens, twenty-somethings, and early thirty-somethings—the generation known, for better or worse, as millennials. Problems far greater than waiting less than an hour for a brunch table or whatever normcore is.

Common Sense Action—a self-proclaimed “nationwide Millennial advocacy organization”—has identified serious issues facing millennials and, at a conference yesterday, outlined their policy agenda. The Agenda for Generational Equity, is “the first-ever comprehensive national policy agenda designed to speak to the needs and concerns of Millennials.” Real concerns, like the fiscal policy, how to deal with the $1.2 trillion national student loan debt, entitlement reform, and national service. The AGE, which is the culmination of a year of research with support from the Bipartisan Policy Center, outlines ideas and potential plans for dealing with such problems.

“It doesn’t matter whether you’re 18 or 80, these issues are important,” CSA Co-Founder and CEO Sam Gilman said in a statement. “We want to bring fresh Millennial perspectives to today’s political debates.”

The essence of the CSA’s 70-page agenda is basically boiled down to three main points. The first is “advancing generational fairness by sustaining a social safety net for future generations.” The second is “increasing Millennial mobility by investing in education, workforce development, and infrastructure.” And finally, to “[repair] politics by engaging more young Americans in active citizenship through voting and national service.”

The AGE outlines ways to achieve this through different policy reform proposals and things that politicians can do to ensure the future is safe for millennials. You can read the full policy agenda below: