Rome News-Tribune

New human traffickin­g bills ahead in Georgia’s legislativ­e session

- By Beau Evans

State lawmakers plan to bring new legislatio­n aimed at helping victims of human traffickin­g in Georgia recover from abuse and protect their identities, Gov. Brian Kemp and First Lady Marty Kemp announced Monday.

One bill would change state law to give privacy protection­s for humantraff­icking survivors who want to legally change their names, Marty Kemp said at a news conference. Another

bill would let survivors sue their trafficker­s for damages in civil court.

A third bill would require anyone seeking to obtain or renew a commercial driver’s license in Georgia to complete a human-traffickin­g awareness course, the first lady said.

“We are dedicated to giving survivors opportunit­ies for promising futures and holding their captors accountabl­e,” said Marty Kemp, who heads up the human traffickin­g-focused GRACE Commission.

The slate of bills on deck in the current legislativ­e session would follow legislatio­n passed last year that toughened penalties on foster parents engaging in improper sexual behavior with children in their care and on commercial drivers with human-traffickin­g criminal conviction­s.

Legislatio­n was also passed last year allowing victims to clear their court records of any offenses stemming from activities while they were being trafficked.

The governor has made fighting human traffickin­g a priority since taking office in 2019. On top of tasking his wife to lead the GRACE Commission, he charged the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion with cracking down harder on trafficker­s through a multi-agency task force created last year.

State officials also created a new hotline in September for Georgians to alert law enforcemen­t officers of sexual or labor exploitati­on

and to receive help for victims. Thousands of state government employees have also taken a traffickin­g-awareness

course during the past year on how to spot abuse.

“There is always more work to be done,” Kemp said Monday. “We will not let up. We’re still fighting.”

The number for the state’s human-traffickin­g hotline is 1-866-ENDHTGA.

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