S-1049-119
Held at the desk.
Sponsored by Jon Ossoff (D-GA)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Justice's Office for Victims of Crime (OVC) and the Department of Health and Human Services' Office on Trafficking in Persons to continue implementing recommendations from a December 2023 Government Accountability Office report on child trafficking. Specifically, it would direct the two offices to collaborate using leading practices, develop strategies to prevent child trafficking and support survivors, and establish measurable performance goals for anti-trafficking programs. The OVC Director would be required to submit a progress report to the Senate and House Judiciary Committees within 180 days of enactment.
Who benefits
Child trafficking survivors who may receive better-coordinated support services. Children at risk of trafficking who may benefit from improved prevention programs. Nonprofit organizations and grantees that run anti-trafficking programs, who would receive clearer performance benchmarks. Researchers and policymakers who would gain access to better data through measurable program goals. Congressional oversight committees that would receive a formal progress report.
Who is hurt
Federal agency staff at OVC and the Office on Trafficking in Persons who would face new reporting and coordination requirements, potentially diverting time and resources from existing work. Taxpayers who may bear any administrative costs associated with compliance and reporting, though these costs are likely modest. Organizations whose current program metrics do not meet the bill's "objective, measurable, and quantifiable" standard may face pressure to restructure their reporting.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the GAO's December 2023 report identified concrete gaps in how federal agencies coordinate and measure their anti-trafficking efforts, and that this bill simply holds agencies accountable for implementing fixes the government's own watchdog already recommended. They contend that requiring measurable, data-driven performance goals is a proven management practice that ensures federal dollars reach survivors effectively, and that the 180-day reporting requirement gives Congress a concrete mechanism to verify progress rather than relying on voluntary agency action.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill is largely redundant because the GAO already made these recommendations directly to the agencies in 2023, and agencies are generally expected to respond to GAO findings without additional legislation. They contend that adding a statutory reporting mandate may create bureaucratic compliance work that consumes staff time and resources better spent on direct services to trafficking survivors, and that the bill does not authorize new funding to support the coordination and performance-measurement activities it requires.