USA TODAY US Edition

Uber enlists drivers to fight sex traffickin­g

‘If we can help just one child, it’s worth it,’ ride-hailing firm says of new initiative

- Marco della Cava

They’ll be coached on how to spot victims, best practices for reporting

SAN FRANCISCO – Uber wants its drivers to help stop sex traffickin­g, an enduring problem that has prompted activists to press workers on the front lines of the travel industry to alert authoritie­s if they see it happening.

Over the past few years, Uber has enlisted its drivers in local and regional efforts to help fight human traffickin­g of adults and minors. But the new initiative, which begins Monday, at the end of Human Traffickin­g Awareness Month, targets all 750,000 active U.S. drivers and eventually will expand to other countries.

“This is a global problem that affects all our cities and communitie­s, and we realized our drivers are uniquely positioned to make an impact,” Tracey Breeden, a former police officer who spearheade­d the program as Uber’s Global Safety Communicat­ions lead, tells USA TODAY.

Breeden says the expansion of the program to foreign markets will take time because “we have to make it fit each country, with its own unique hotlines and support organizati­ons, but that’s definitely our goal.”

Among Uber’s partners in the U.S. initiative are The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, antitraffi­cking tech company Thorn, and The McCain Institute for Internatio­nal Leadership, whose efforts to battle human traffickin­g are led by Cindy McCain, the wife of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

The new Uber program comes at a time when the ride-hailing company is trying to burnish its image after a year of reports on its toxic corporate culture and ethical lapses. An area of particular focus for new CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi is drivers, who previously had a sour relationsh­ip with former CEO Travis Kalanick.

Unlike New York City taxi and limo drivers, who by law must watch a video on traffickin­g before being approved for service, nothing about the new Uber human-traffickin­g awareness push is mandatory.

When Uber drivers log on to the app, they will be presented with informatio­n that includes how to spot victims of traffickin­g and best practices for reporting tips to the police and anti-traffickin­g support groups such as Uber partner Polaris.

Those tips include spotting clothing or behavior that seems inappropri­ate for the age; a younger rider displaying fearful emotions in the company of a fellow adult rider; tattoos that appear more like ownership branding than art; and ride requests that stop at multiple hotels for short durations.

Human-traffickin­g experts say technology has made it easier for criminals to exploit victims by providing a global communicat­ions network and online payment options. But new digital-age convenienc­es such as Uber, which pimps may use to transport sex workers without themselves being seen, can be part of the solution.

“Drivers are the ones who will be able to get a sense of whether there is threatenin­g behavior, so it’s important they know what to do,” says Bradley Miles, CEO of Polaris, who adds that reporting by Uber drivers can help the organizati­on add critical informatio­n to its database of 40,000 cases.

There is evidence that a growing participat­ion in this effort by a range of hospitalit­y-oriented companies is helping make a dent in human traffickin­g, which affects some 21 million people worldwide, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on.

Between 2012 and 2016, the number of human-traffickin­g cases logged and reporting calls made has roughly doubled to 7,600 and 26,700, respective­ly, according to the National Human Traffickin­g Hotline.

“It’s not that we’re having a moment, it’s more that this is a movement,” says Michelle Guelbart, director of private sector engagement at

ECPAT-USA (which stands for End Child Prostituti­on and Traffickin­g). “Over the past five years or so, we’ve developed an industry standard on training, and gotten more and more companies to take interest.”

Guelbart says that so far, 45 companies, including Uber, have collaborat­ed with ECPAT to raise awareness. In the last year alone, roughly 86,000 travel company employees — working for the likes of Carlson Wagonlit, Delta Air Lines and Hilton — were trained to spot human traffickin­g.

ECPAT’s airline industry partners have trained 140,000 front line employees so far. American Airlines says it has run 60,000 of its employees through an online course. While declining to share statistics, American Airlines spokesman Matt Miller says “there have been many instances where our staff has seen something and alerted authoritie­s.”

In fact, Uber drivers have done the same in Pennsylvan­ia, Arizona and California. In Uber’s online communicat­ion about its program, the company highlights the story of Keith Avila, a driver in Sacramento who in late 2016 gave a ride to three women. Two older women started talking to the younger one about what sounded like an impending sex-for-money encounter. Avila dropped them off, but quickly called 911. Police officers arrived and made arrests. The girl, a runaway, was placed in alternativ­e housing.

Says Uber’s Breeden: “We have a lot of eyes and ears on the road, and if we can help just one child, it’s worth it.”

 ??  ?? Uber has set up an app where drivers can get tips on how to spot victims of human traffickin­g. UBER
Uber has set up an app where drivers can get tips on how to spot victims of human traffickin­g. UBER
 ??  ?? Human-traffickin­g experts say technology has made it easier for criminals to exploit victims. GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O
Human-traffickin­g experts say technology has made it easier for criminals to exploit victims. GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O
 ??  ?? Some Uber drivers have already reported suspicious behavior to police. SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES
Some Uber drivers have already reported suspicious behavior to police. SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES

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