HR-7181-117
Became Public Law No: 117-301.
Sponsored by Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY)
What it does
This law requires the contact information for the national human trafficking hotline to be posted in visible locations across federal buildings, transportation hubs, and ports of entry. Specifically, it mandates postings in restrooms of U.S. aircraft, airports, over-the-road buses, bus stations, passenger trains, and passenger railroad stations. It also requires postings at all ports of entry into the United States.
Who benefits
Potential victims of human trafficking who pass through federal buildings, transportation hubs, or ports of entry — particularly those who may have limited ability to seek help openly and may only have private access in restrooms. Law enforcement and anti-trafficking organizations that benefit from increased public awareness and tip reporting. Social service agencies that receive referrals through the hotline.
Who is hurt
Operators of aircraft, airports, bus lines, bus stations, passenger rail services, and federal buildings who bear the administrative and material costs of producing, installing, and maintaining compliant postings. Small transportation operators may face a proportionally higher compliance burden relative to their size and resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that human trafficking victims are frequently moved through transportation corridors and federal facilities, making these locations strategic points of intervention. Because victims are often monitored by traffickers in public spaces, a restroom posting provides a rare moment of private access to life-saving contact information. The compliance cost is minimal — a posted notice — while the potential benefit is connecting a trafficking victim to immediate assistance. Supporters also contend that raising public awareness in high-traffic locations increases the volume and quality of tips to law enforcement, helping to identify and prosecute traffickers more effectively.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating specific postings across a vast and varied set of federal and commercial transportation facilities creates an unfunded compliance obligation, particularly for smaller operators who must track, install, and update notices across multiple locations. Critics also contend that the law's practical impact may be limited, as trafficking victims who are actively controlled by traffickers may have little realistic opportunity to act on posted information even in restrooms. Some argue that resources would be better directed toward training transportation workers to identify and report trafficking, rather than passive signage that may go unnoticed or be ignored over time.