HR-1144-119
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by Voice Vote.
Sponsored by Christopher Smith (R-NJ)
What it does
This bill would reauthorize federal anti-human trafficking programs through FY2029 across multiple departments and agencies. It would create a new Department of Health and Human Services program to help trafficking survivors reintegrate into society, update country ranking criteria in the State Department's annual Trafficking in Persons Report, and require anti-trafficking efforts to be embedded in U.S. foreign assistance programs. It would also reauthorize International Megan's Law, which requires registered sex offenders to notify authorities of international travel plans.
Who benefits
Survivors of human trafficking, both internationally and domestically, who would gain access to new reintegration services. Law enforcement agencies that receive federal funding and coordination support for anti-trafficking operations. Foreign nationals in countries subject to U.S. anti-trafficking pressure through the Tier ranking system. Potential trafficking victims who may be protected by stronger prevention efforts embedded in foreign assistance. Advocacy organizations and service providers that receive federal grants under reauthorized programs.
Who is hurt
Countries currently on the Tier 2 Watch List that would face stricter criteria for remaining on or being removed from that list, potentially affecting their eligibility for certain U.S. foreign assistance. Registered sex offenders subject to continued and reauthorized travel notification requirements under International Megan's Law. U.S. foreign assistance recipient countries that may face new conditions tied to anti-trafficking compliance. Federal agencies that would take on expanded reporting and programmatic responsibilities without guaranteed new funding.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that human trafficking is a severe violation of human rights affecting millions of people worldwide, and that allowing existing federal programs to lapse would disrupt proven prevention, prosecution, and victim services infrastructure. They contend the new reintegration program fills a documented gap, as survivors often lack the resources and support needed to rebuild their lives after rescue. Supporters also argue that tightening the Tier 2 Watch List criteria holds foreign governments more accountable, preventing countries from remaining on a lenient watch list indefinitely without making meaningful progress. Embedding anti-trafficking requirements in foreign assistance, they say, leverages U.S. diplomatic and economic influence to drive real change abroad.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reauthorization without rigorous evaluation of program effectiveness amounts to continued spending on efforts that may not demonstrably reduce trafficking rates. They contend that tightening Tier 2 Watch List criteria could strain diplomatic relationships with partner countries whose cooperation is needed for broader foreign policy goals, potentially undermining the very anti-trafficking outcomes the bill seeks. Critics also raise concerns that expanding International Megan's Law travel notification requirements may face Fourth and Fifth Amendment challenges related to privacy and compelled disclosure. Some argue the new reintegration program duplicates existing state and nonprofit services, and that federal resources would be better directed toward targeted, evidence-based interventions.