McCraren Compliance

U.S. Department of Transportation Announces New Efforts to Combat Human Trafficking

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) is recognizing World Day Against Trafficking in Persons with several actions to raise awareness and prevent human trafficking, including new collaboration among transportation sector leaders and recognition of innovation at the state and local level.

Human Trafficking

“Transportation workers and the traveling public have a key role to play in the fight against trafficking – which is why it’s so important for everyone to recognize the signs and be prepared to report it,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

Everyone can learn more about the signs of human trafficking and share the National Human Trafficking Hotline (1-888-373-7888) — an important resource to report a tip or ask for help.

Secretary Buttigieg announced the appointment of 15 members of the DOT Advisory Committee on Human Trafficking, which includes a cross-section of stakeholders from both industry and labor, including representatives from the aviation, bus, law enforcement, maritime, port, rail, and trucking sectors. Committee members also include lived experience experts and representatives of trafficking advocacy organizations and law enforcement. The Committee will develop a report with recommendations for countering human trafficking, and an assessment of best practices by transportation stakeholders and human trafficking violations involving commercial motor vehicles.

Secretary Buttigieg also announced the winner and runners up of the Department’s 2023 Combating Human Trafficking in Transportation Impact Award, which incentivizes innovative and shareable solutions to combat human trafficking in the transportation industry.

In addition, Secretary Buttigieg announced the release of the Department’s new Transportation Leaders Against Human Trafficking (TLAHT) training for transportation employees and members of the traveling public, which highlights the intersection of human trafficking and transportation, provides general and transport-specific indicators of human trafficking, and emphasizes reporting methods.  DOT’s 55,000 employees have received initial and recurrent training to recognize and report human trafficking since 2012.  TLAHT comprises nearly 600 transportation and travel industry stakeholders.  Transportation leaders can join the effort by signing a pledge on behalf of their organization and accessing modal counter-trafficking resources online.

Additional actions that the Department is taking this month to combat human trafficking include:

Some of the other ways in which the Department is working to combat human trafficking include:

For more information about the Department’s efforts to end human trafficking, click here.


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Original article published by DOT

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