Preventing Sex Trafficking and Improving Opportunities for Youth in Foster Care Act


The Preventing Sex Trafficking and Improving Opportunities for Youth in Foster Care Act is a bill introduced in the 113th Congress. The bill would require states to take action to address the problem of sex trafficking of foster care children.

Major provisions

If enacted, the bill would Require states to identify and report child sex trafficking victims; Improve data collection; Require states to create standards to give foster parents more flexibility in raising foster children; Prohibit states from designating long-term foster care as the ultimate goal for children in foster care, instead attempting to place the children in permanent homes; Give foster children more input in their own case plans.
The bill also would require states to make sure that foster children over aged 14 have a Social Security card, birth certificate and medical records.

Legislative history

The bill was originally introduced by Republican Congressman Dave Reichert of Washington and Democratic Congressman Lloyd Doggett of Texas. Fifteen additional Members of Congress signed onto the bill as original cosponsors including Congressmen Vern Buchanan, Tim Griffin and Jim Renacci.
On October 23, 2013, the House Human Resources Subcommittee held a hearing on sex trafficking of youth in foster care. Witnesses who testified at the hearing included members of Congress, activists for the issue, and a victim of trafficking. On December 20, 2013, the subcommittee wrote and publicized a draft bill.
The American Bar Association, American Public Human Services Association, and National Indian Child Welfare Association responded to the subcommittee's request for public comments with suggestions to improve the bill.
Similar bills were introduced in Congress in 2013:
Some media coverage of the bill highlighted the link between sex trafficking victims and prostitution. For example, in its coverage of the bill, the Sky Valley Chronicle, an online newspaper covering East Snohomish County, Washington, said that sex trafficking has reached "epidemic levels" in certain areas of the world, and that anyone engaged in prostitution under age 18 in the U.S. is considered a victim of sex trafficking.
In a blog post, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer wrote, "The legislation is an implicit admission that a lot of the prostitution enforcement that Reichert used to do with the King County Sheriffs Office was misguided."
Seattle's local CBS TV station, KIRO, noted in an article on its website that Reichert was a detective during the murder spree of "Green River killer" Gary Ridgway, and that many of the victims were prostitutes and runaways.