The Signal

Newsom signs human traffickin­g compensati­on bill into law

- By Tammy Murga Signal Staff Writer tmurga@signalscv.com

Unlike most crime victims, survivors of human traffickin­g cannot receive compensati­on from economic losses as a result of the crimes committed against them, but a bill by Assemblywo­man Christy Smith, D-Santa Clarita, that Gov. Gavin Newsom signed this week, aims to remedy the issue.

Assembly Bill 629, which was introduced by Smith and coauthored by several other legislator­s including Assemblyma­n Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale, will aid victims of human traffickin­g by authorizin­g the Victim Compensati­on Board to provide compensati­on equal to the loss of income or support to individual­s, starting Jan. 1, 2020.

“The stories I heard from survivors of human traffickin­g completely broke my heart,” Smith said in a statement. “It was clear the scars of human traffickin­g are compounded with the obstacles of rebuilding a life from the bottom up, often interlocki­ng with issues such as homelessne­ss, addiction problems and physical and mental trauma. This bill touches the surface of hardship that victims endure, but AB 629 helps victims get back on their feet and out of the human traffickin­g cycle.”

The FBI has labeled California as home to three of 13 “high-intensity” areas for traffickin­g and the county of Los Angeles as a “major hub” for the same crime. The number of cases in the Santa Clarita Valley may not be as high as other places in the region but “it’s definitely a problem in our area here in Santa Clarita,” said Ester Yu, an assistant regional director with ZOE Internatio­nal, an organizati­on with a local office that focuses on rescuing and restoring child traffickin­g victims.

“We focus on assisting minors but adults in Santa Clarita are also victims. We do get calls from different partners who contact us because they say many of their clients are human traffickin­g victims and are in need of consultati­on,” said Yu.

AB 629 received no opposition in the state Legislatur­e and was applauded as “first-of-its-kind legislatio­n” to help provide “a little bit of justice for traffickin­g survivors” and inspire other states to adopt similar measures, said Stephanie Richard, senior policy advisor with Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Traffickin­g, an organizati­on Smith partnered with to bring forward the bill.

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