Human Trafficking of School-aged Children
📢 Important Update: New Child Abuse Reporting Timeline
Effective Immediately
As a result of Senate Bill 571, passed during the 89th Texas Legislative Session, there has been a critical amendment to Texas Family Code §261.101(b). This change directly impacts the timeline for reporting suspected child abuse or neglect.
🔹 What’s Changed? The required timeframe to report suspected child abuse has been reduced from 48 hours to 24 hours after first suspecting that a child has been abused or neglected.
🔹 Who Does This Affect? This change applies to all professionals who are required by law to report suspected abuse or neglect, including educators and nurses.
This information is an important update regarding the timeline for reporting suspected child abuse or neglect in Texas. Due to the passage of Senate Bill 571 during the 89th Texas Legislative Session, there has been a significant amendment to the Texas Family Code §261.101(b). The key change is that the timeframe for reporting suspected child abuse has been shortened from 48 hours to 24 hours. This means that professionals who are legally obligated to report such suspicions, including educators and nurses, must now do so within 24 hours of first suspecting abuse or neglect. This update is crucial for ensuring timely intervention and protection for children who may be at risk.
Human trafficking is the recruitment, harboring, transporting, or procurement of a person for labor or services for the purpose of involuntary servitude, slavery, or forced commercial sex acts. While human trafficking is a global problem, it is also a Texas problem. School-aged children are vulnerable to the manipulation and exploitation tactics of traffickers. Unfortunately, law enforcement has confirmed cases of trafficking occurring on school grounds, at school events, and even carried out by classmates.
Traffickers are brutal, and victims are often subjected to serious, life-altering manipulation, and control through the use of threats of violence, physical, sexual, or emotional abuse, and withholding of basic necessities. Many children do continue to attend school while being trafficked, and as such, are in contact with school personnel on a regular basis. This means that because of your role as an education professional, you may be in a position to identify and report human trafficking, thus facilitating the child’s rescue by law enforcement.
A Form of Abuse
Human trafficking is defined as a form of abuse or neglect under the . All individuals have a duty to immediately report suspected abuse or neglect to law enforcement or the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS), but , requires education professionals to do so within 24 hours of suspecting the abuse or neglect. As a school employee, your training on abuse and neglect provides a foundation for you to recognize and report suspected human trafficking.
No Human Trafficking Signage
No Human Trafficking Signage pertaining to the criminal offenses of human trafficking is now available. ²ÝÝ®ÊÓÆµ has three sample signs below (based on location) that the LEA may be used directly or as a template for local development.
No Human Trafficking Signage in English and Spanish (Color Block) 8x11 | 11x17
No Human Trafficking Signage in English and Spanish (Black & White) 8x11 | 11x17
No Human Trafficking Signage in English and Spanish (Combined) 12x18
Each school shall post warning signs at conspicuous places reasonably likely to be viewed by all persons entering the premises.
(19 TAC §103.1403)
Training and Resources
Below is the Texas RISE to the Challenge training. Also included is a human trafficking manual for school personnel developed by the Task Force. Additional resources may be available in your area.
- Introduction to Human Trafficking for Education Professionals: Texas RISE to the Challenge (PDF, 2193 KB)
- Human Trafficking Power and Control Wheel (outside source)
- — Texas Gateway Module
The purpose of this module is to assist and equip educators in meeting the training requirements for the Commissioner's Rule (19 TAC §103.1401) on reporting Child Abuse, Neglect, including Trafficking of a Child. Each district and open-enrollment charter school must maintain records that include the name of each staff member who participated in training (19 TAC §103.1401). It is the responsibility of the LEA to track the participation and completion of this training module locally.
Human Trafficking in America's Schools
Released by the U.S. Department of Education, this helps school officials: understand how human trafficking impacts schools, recognize the indicators of possible child trafficking and develop policies, protocols, and partnerships to address and prevent the exploitation of children.
Reporting
Identification of possible human trafficking is important, but subsequent reporting is crucial. If you suspect a child is a victim of human trafficking, please contact:
- 911 in case of emergency
- Local law enforcement, or
- DFPS at 1-(800)-252-5400