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Updated:   2026-02-04

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Authors Pellerin  
Principle Coauthors: Bonta  
Coauthors: Aguiar-Curry   Ávila Farías   Davies   Elhawary   Fong   Jeff Gonzalez   Mark González   Hoover   Krell   Ortega   Quirk-Silva   Ransom   Celeste Rodriguez   Michelle Rodriguez   Solache   Stefani   Wallis   Zbur   Ahrens   Alanis   Alvarez   Bains   Bauer-Kahan   Bennett   Berman   Boerner   Bryan   Calderon   Caloza   Carrillo   Castillo   Chen   Connolly   DeMaio   Dixon   Flora   Gabriel   Gallagher   Gipson   Hadwick   Haney   Harabedian   Hart   Irwin   Jackson   Johnson   Kalra   Lackey   Lee   Lowenthal   Macedo   McKinnor   Pacheco   Papan   Patel   Patterson   Petrie-Norris   Ramos   Rivas   Rogers   Blanca Rubio   Schiavo   Schultz   Sharp-Collins   Soria   Ta   Tangipa   Valencia   Ward   Wicks   Wilson  
Subject None
Relating To
Title Relative to National Human Trafficking Awareness Month.
Last Action Dt 2026-01-05
State Introduced
Status Passed
Flags
Vote Req Approp Fiscal Cmte Local Prog Subs Chgs Urgency Tax Levy Active?
None None None None None None None Y
i
Leginfo Link  
Bill Actions
2026-01-20     Coauthors revised.
2026-01-20     Read. Adopted.
2026-01-12     Referred to Com. on RLS.
2026-01-12     From committee: Be adopted. Ordered to Third Reading. (Ayes 10. Noes 0.) (January 12).
2026-01-06     Introduced measure version corrected.
2026-01-05     Introduced.
Versions
Introduced     2026-01-05
Analyses TBD
Latest Text Bill Full Text
Latest Text Digest

1.0" ?> 20250HR__007599INT 99 INTRODUCED 2026-01-05 CORRECTED 2026-01-06 REVISED 2026-01-20 2025 0 HR 75 INT Introduced by Assembly Member Pellerin (Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Bonta) (Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Ávila Farías, Davies, Elhawary, Fong, Jeff Gonzalez, Mark González, Hoover, Krell, Ortega, Quirk-Silva, Ransom, Celeste Rodriguez, Michelle Rodriguez, Solache, Stefani, Wallis, Zbur, Ahrens, Alanis, Alvarez, Bains, Bauer-Kahan, Bennett, Berman, Boerner, Bryan, Calderon, Caloza, Carrillo, Castillo, Chen, Connolly, DeMaio, Dixon, Flora, Gabriel, Gallagher, Gipson, Hadwick, Haney, Harabedian, Hart, Irwin, Jackson, Johnson, Kalra, Lackey, Lee, Lowenthal, Macedo, McKinnor, Pacheco, Papan, Patel, Patterson, Petrie-Norris, Ramos, Rivas, Rogers, Blanca Rubio, Schiavo, Schultz, Sharp-Collins, Soria, Ta, Tangipa, Valencia, Ward, Wicks, and Wilson) LEAD_AUTHOR ASSEMBLY Pellerin PRINCIPAL_COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Bonta COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Aguiar-Curry COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Ávila Farías COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Davies COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Elhawary COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Fong COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Jeff Gonzalez COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Mark González COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Hoover COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Krell COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Ortega COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Quirk-Silva COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Ransom COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Celeste Rodriguez COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Michelle Rodriguez COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Solache COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Stefani COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Wallis COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Zbur COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Ahrens COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Alanis COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Alvarez COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Bains COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Bauer-Kahan COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Bennett COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Berman COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Boerner COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Bryan COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Calderon COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Caloza COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Carrillo COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Castillo COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Chen COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Connolly COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY DeMaio COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Dixon COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Flora COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Gabriel COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Gallagher COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Gipson COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Hadwick COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Haney COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Harabedian COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Hart COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Irwin COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Jackson COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Johnson COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Kalra COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Lackey COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Lee COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Lowenthal COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Macedo COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY McKinnor COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Pacheco COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Papan COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Patel COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Patterson COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Petrie-Norris COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Ramos COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Rivas COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Rogers COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Blanca Rubio COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Schiavo COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Schultz COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Sharp-Collins COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Soria COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Ta COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Tangipa COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Valencia COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Ward COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Wicks COAUTHOR ASSEMBLY Wilson Relative to National Human Trafficking Awareness Month. National Human Trafficking Awareness Month

WHEREAS, For more than two centuries, the United States has worked to protect human rights, promoting a just and free society and advancing the dignity of all human beings. The government continues to demonstrate serious and sustained efforts to address human trafficking; and

WHEREAS, Classified as a felony, human trafficking is a crime that involves the use of force, fraud, or coercion to recruit, harbor, transport, provide, or obtain a person for the purpose of labor and commercial sexual exploitation; and

WHEREAS, According to the United States Department of State’s annual Trafficking in Persons Report, human trafficking cases have been reported in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and United States territories; and

WHEREAS, The International Labour Organization has reported that economic and food insecurity are directly linked to an increase of both forced child labor and child sex trafficking; and

WHEREAS, Since 2018, the United States Department of Labor reports an increase of 69 percent of children being illegally employed and exploited, and in the last fiscal year, the department found that 835 companies it investigated employed more than 3,800 children in violation of federal labor laws; and

WHEREAS, The California Child Welfare Council found that anywhere from 50 percent to 80 percent of victims of commercial sexual exploitation, including child sex trafficking, are or were formerly involved with the child welfare system; and

WHEREAS, According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime’s (UNODC) 2022 Global Report on Trafficking in Persons, boys represent the fastest growing segment of identified human trafficking victims, and gender norms and masculine stereotypes hinder identification of male trafficking victims. This false perception plays out in several ways that are damaging to boys and men who have experienced trafficking; and

WHEREAS, In a 2015 human trafficking shelter assessment, there were only 1,800 beds specifically designated for survivors. Of those, only two were reserved for men. The Trafficking in Persons Report from the United States Department of State reported that in 2023, 133,943 victims of human trafficking were identified, which is less than 2 percent of the shelter beds available; and

WHEREAS, The 2014 U.S. Trafficking in Persons Report highlights labor trafficking by forced criminality (LTFC), yet this problem remains underidentified. LTFC refers to all labor trafficking where the labor or services the victim is being forced, coerced, or defrauded into performing could otherwise be classified as a crime. Because all LTFC victims have committed a crime, they are often misidentified as criminals, and often do not have access to the protections and services that would become accessible to them if they were appropriately identified as victims, and victims of LTFC often do not self-identify and rarely report the crime to law enforcement; and

WHEREAS, California has more immigrants than any other state and because immigrants are specifically targeted for both sex and labor trafficking, California continues to fight for the well-being, security, and safety of immigrants; and

WHEREAS, According to a 2013 United States Department of Justice study examining the race of sex trafficking victims, 40.4 percent were Black, 23.9 percent were Hispanic, and 4.3 percent were Asian; and

WHEREAS, The Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s “Snapshot on the State of Black Women and Girls: Sex Trafficking in the U.S.” states that to better understand the high rates of sex trafficking among Black women and girls, research has indicated the continued sexualization of Black women and girls’ bodies, which has played out since slavery. The myths around Black women and girls’ hypersexuality and the continued treatment of Black girls as older than their age must be explored when looking at the data surrounding the prevalent rates of domestic sex trafficking of Black girls; and

WHEREAS, According to the United States Department of State’s annual Trafficking in Persons Report, racial and ethnic minority groups, the 2SLGBTQIA+ community, and indigenous populations are extremely vulnerable to exploitation due to social, legal, and cultural marginalization. Studies show that Native American women and girls are victims of human trafficking at a much higher rate compared to the overall population; and

WHEREAS, A 2024 study conducted by the Covenant House found that 68 percent of youth who had either been trafficked or engaged in survival sex or commercial sex had done so while homeless, and that 40 percent of all homeless youth identify as 2SLGBTQIA+. The U.S. Trans Survey states, across the spectrum of agency, 50 percent of transgender women, 19 percent of transgender men, and 23 percent of nonbinary people are economically dependent on the commercial sex industry; and

WHEREAS, Climate change can increase vulnerability to human trafficking when populations disproportionately impacted by social, legal, and cultural marginalization experience unexpected displacement from disaster, sudden loss of livelihood, and an imminent need for safety; and

WHEREAS, These same groups are more likely to be affected by climate change as it places them in more vulnerable situations, and, consequently, makes them more vulnerable to human trafficking; and

WHEREAS, In 2015, the United States Advisory Council on Human Trafficking was established by Congress and sits as the world’s preeminent human trafficking advisory body. It is led by survivors of human trafficking and advises federal policy makers on antitrafficking policies; and

WHEREAS, According to the United States Department of State’s 2022 Trafficking in Persons Report, meaningful inclusion of survivors as antitrafficking experts must be further integrated across global antitrafficking efforts and accepted as a norm. Partnership between governments, multilateral organizations, and survivors of human trafficking not only improves antitrafficking efforts, but also dismantles the risk of misconceptions, shame, retraumatization, and reexploitation of survivors within their communities, empowers survivors, promotes equity within organizations, and reduces vulnerability to revictimization; and

WHEREAS, The State of California must ensure that all forms of trafficking are acknowledged, including the potentially 5,600,000 children experiencing trafficking within the voluntourism industry of child orphanages abroad and the selling of children taken from their parents in the name of “rescue adoptions”; and

WHEREAS, In recent years, there has been an increased emphasis in the anti-human trafficking sector on the value of public health and rights-based approaches to addressing human trafficking. A public health approach to violence prevention is an effective way of ending violence by focusing on the health, safety, and well-being of the entire population, rather than focusing on individual instances of violence and punishment for crime; and

WHEREAS, The State of California is dedicated to protecting victims of human trafficking and ensuring they are not themselves criminalized, and the State of California commits to continuing to collaborate with skilled professionals at the local, state, and national levels conducting investigations, collaborations, and trainings, organizing public outreach, promoting awareness, and directly assisting victims of human trafficking; now, therefore, be it

Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, That the Assembly recognizes the month of January 2026 as National Human Trafficking Awareness Month; and be it further

Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution. CORRECTIONS: Heading—Lines 3 and 6. REVISIONS: Heading—Line 6.