ECPAT-USA

End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes

Utilizing Cloud Technology to Protect Children from Sex Tourism

Originally posted on PR Web. Stay tuned to learn more about innovations to the Code technology that will help companies implement steps to protect children in travel and tourism.

(PRWEB) May 14, 2013

Tourism promotes culture exchange and is used as a tool for economic development. Sadly, tourism infrastructure and services is also used by offenders for the exploitation of children, including child sex tourism. The Code is using an innovative approach to combat the problem by working with the tourism private sector.

To ease and assist member companies in implementing The Code’s six criteria efficiently, the organization has developed and just launched a number of ‘cloud-based’ tools for tourism professionals as a means to strengthen action against sexual exploitation of children in travel and tourism. The new online services include: a member portal with easy, step-by-step guidance on implementation and reporting; interactive e-learning modules for tourism professionals from different sub-sectors and positions within the industry; and a user-friendly website to provide transparency and awareness.

“Tourism professionals are crucial allies in protecting children from sexual exploitation,” says Andreas Astrup, General Manager of The Code. “These tools were specifically developed for them. Managers can track their progress of implementation and generate reports easier, while front-line staff has easy access to free e-learning modules in local languages.”

The Code of Conduct for the Protection of Children from Sexual Exploitation in Travel and Tourism [The Code] is a multi-stakeholder organization with the mission to provide awareness, tools and support to the tourism industry. The focus is to help tourism professionals prevent, identify and report any suspicious cases of sexual exploitation of children. Developed in 1996 by ECPAT Sweden, The Code has operated as an independent non-profit organization led by a multi-stakeholder board since 2004. Today, the network has nearly 1,300 signatories across 42 countries around the world. Some members of The Code are leading the way: Accor, Delta Airlines, Hotelplan Suisse, Kuoni Travel, Lotus Travel, Melia Hotels, Resfeber, Swiss Federation of Travel Agencies, Thomas Cook and TUI Travel.

The core instrument of The Code is the six criteria that any tourism business or company can implement and commit to: (1) establish an ethical policy, (2) train personnel, (3) introduce a related clause in contracts with suppliers, (4) provide information to travelers, (5) provide information to key persons at the destination, and (6) to report annually to The Code on the initiatives undertaken.

The Code initiative has received international media coverage including recent features on CNN and BBC.

For those interested in learning more about The Code’s work, interviews with staff are possible upon request.

US companies interested in joining the Code, click here.
International companies interested in joining the Code, click here.

Michelle Guelbart Presents at NYU Tisch Center on the Travel and Tourism’s Role in Ending Trafficking

A Special Presentation – ECPAT USA
On Thursday, April 4, Tisch Center students and faculty gathered for a special lecture about a very important issue. Representatives from ECPAT USA (End Child Prostitution and Trafficking), a children’s rights organization with a mission to end the commercial sexual exploitation of children, gave a presentation on the issue of human trafficking in the United States and its relationship to tourism and hospitality. Here is a summary of the discussion facilitated by Michelle Guelbart, MSW.

Human trafficking is one of the most atrocious human rights violations of the current generation. It generates as much as $32 billion, making it the second largest and fastest growing criminal industry after drug trafficking. The issue affects children especially because of their vulnerabilities, as evidenced by the fact that an estimated 1.2 million children are trafficked worldwide. While many in the United States perceive human trafficking to be a problem of developing countries, human trafficking in the U.S. is no less severe with 100,000 to 300,000 American youths running the risk of being trafficked each year, and 25% of child sex tourists comprising of North Americans.

Private Sector Project Coordinator, Michelle Guelbart with Dean Bjorn Hanson

Private Sector Project Coordinator, Michelle Guelbart with Dean Bjorn Hanson

Perpetrators of commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC) have used hotels as the location for their crime as traffickers believe that hotels lend anonymity. With the use of online classified advertisements, CSEC has moved from the streets to behind closed hotel room doors where children are sold repeatedly. Statistics have now shown that 44% of child victims in NYC were exploited in hotels. Increasing pressure is being placed on the tourism and hotel industry by legislators, investors, the current administration, and consumers. One example is a 2012 campaign by U.K.- and U.S.-based investors seeking human trafficking policy information from hospitality and hotel brands prior to the London Olympics.

Activities that hospitality and hotel companies are being asked to undertake cover three major areas. First, brands are asked to draft policies against human trafficking and CSEC in their properties. Second, companies are urged to train workers to identify and respond to signs of exploitation. Last, they are encouraged to inform suppliers and contractors about anti-human trafficking and anti-CSEC policies put in place. One initiative that has emerged to support the industry in addressing the issue is the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct or “The Code.” The Code (www.thecode.org) is an industry-driven initiative with a mission to provide awareness, tools, and support to industry members to combat and prevent the sexual exploitation of children. To-date, several major brands have become The Code signatories. These brands include Wyndham Worldwide, Carlson Companies, Hilton Worldwide, Delta Airlines, Real Hospitality Group, and Sabre Holdings.

There are a number of benefits of taking action to prevent and mitigate human trafficking including practical and risk management. By addressing the topic, brands can guard against legal, reputational, and operational risks.

In the same way that it is both ethical and beneficial for hospitality and hotel companies to answer the call to action, hospitality and tourism education programs are in a most advantageous position to raise awareness of future industry professionals regarding human trafficking and CSEC. Ensuring that there is more issue discussion and incorporating the topic in the curriculum are some of the ways to do so. Students can also advocate for innovative ways to equip their peers to tackle this human rights violation as agents of change in the industry.

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Michelle Guelbart, MSW, Private Sector Project Coordinator, ECPAT-USA, manages relationships with corporations, NGOs, and responsible investors to encourage and provide technical assistance on corporate social responsibility initiatives to protect children. Michelle has also published papers on mitigating the risk of trafficking in the travel industry. She holds a Master’s Degree from Columbia University’s School of Social Work and a Bachelor’s Degree from the University at Albany. For more information visit www.ecpatusa.org or contact the presenter, ECPAT-USA’s Private Sector Project Coordinator Michelle Guelbart: michelle@ecpatusa.org.

View the post here.

IGLTA Joins ECPAT’s Fight Against Child Trafficking

LGBT Association Signs Code of Conduct at 30th Annual Global Convention

CHICAGO (May 01, 2013)—The International Gay & Lesbian Travel Association will officially join ECPAT’s efforts to end child prostitution and trafficking at the May 2 opening session of its Annual Global Convention. IGLTA is the third association to sign the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct. The Code is an internationally accepted set of voluntary guidelines that travel companies can implement to prevent child exploitation. The Code has been signed by over 1,200 companies internationally in 42 different countries.

Tanya Churchmuch, Chair of IGLTA Board Announces Code Signing. Photo courtesy of @ECPAT_michelle

Tanya Churchmuch, Chair of IGLTA Board Announces Code Signing. Photo courtesy of @ECPAT_michelle

As a signatory of the Code, IGLTA will use its channels of communication to inform members about this critical issue and encourage their support for ECPAT’s work. According to the United Nations, an estimated 1.2 million children are trafficked worldwide each year.

IGLTA Board Member Rika Jean-Francois, Commissioner ITB Corporate Social Responsibility, was instrumental in creating this partnership. ITB Berlin, one of the world’s leading travel trade events, signed the Code in 2011.

“IGLTA signing the Child-Protection Code sends a strong signal to its members and the tourism industry as a whole,” says Jean-Francois. “I believe that it is part of our social responsibility to speak out against sexual exploitation of children and to stand up for human rights in tourism.”

As the local Code representative in the United States, the ECPAT-USA will serve as a resource for the association and participate in the signing at the 30th anniversary convention next month. ECPAT-USA is the regional member of the ECPAT network, which works internationally to protect children from exploitation and trafficking. Private Sector Project Coordinator, Michelle Guelbart, will represent ECPAT-USA at the Code signing on May 2nd.

IGLTA welcomed members who are also signatories of the Code including representatives from Delta Air Lines, ITB Berlin, Accor Hotels, Hilton Worldwide, and Argentina. Photographed with Michelle Guelbart and John Tanzella who signed the Code.

IGLTA invited member signatories of the Code: Representatives from Delta Air Lines, ITB Berlin, Accor Hotels, Hilton Worldwide, and Argentina. Photographed with Michelle Guelbart and John Tanzella who signed the Code.

“ECPAT-USA is thrilled to partner with IGLTA in raising awareness about the unique role travel companies have in identifying and protecting victims of trafficking, said Carol Smolenski, Executive Director of ECPAT-USA. “The international reach of IGLTA and its members is crucial to fight trafficking in all regions of the world.”

ABOUT IGLTA: IGLTA is the leading member-based global organization dedicated to LGBT tourism. The association represents LGBT and LGBT-friendly accommodations, destinations, service providers, travel agents, tour operators, and events, as well as the LGBT travel consumers they wish to serve. For more information, visit www.iglta.org and follow us at www.facebook.com/IGLTA.

Media Contact: LoAnn Halden
Loann.halden@iglta.org
+1.954.253.4095

To learn more about joining the Code in the United States, click here.

Travel Industry Taking on Trafficking: ACTE signs the Code

Contributed by: Michelle Guelbart, MSW

Tuesday, April 24th, ECPAT-USA proudly welcomed the Association of Corporate Travel Executives (ACTE) as a member of the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct. The company joins ECPAT-USA in their work to protect children from sexual exploitation in travel and tourism. ACTE became the second American association to sign the Code. The Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct is an internationally accepted set of guidelines travel companies can use to implement comprehensive policies and programming to effectively prevent and mitigate child trafficking.

Carol Smolenski signs the Code with ACTE. Photo by @EndTraffick

Carol Smolenski signs the Code with ACTE. Photo by @EndTraffick

As a signatory of the Code, ACTE will create a policy against the sexual exploitation of children, raise awareness with their members, and report annually. As an association, ACTE will use their voice to inform members about the important role they play in protecting children from exploitation.

ACTE signed the Code at their Global Education Conference where they celebrated their 25th Anniversary. The Code was signed during their Closing Session. Speakers included Sam Gilliland, Chairman and CEO of Sabre Holdings and Amy O’Neill Richard from the U.S. Department of State who introduced the issue and the travel industry’s important role in combating trafficking. Afterwards, Suzanne Neufang, President of the ACTE Board, Greeley Koch, Chief Staff Officer for ACTE, and Carol Smolenski, Executive Director of ECPAT-USA were welcomed to the stage to sign the Code.

“We recognize the need for responsibility within our industry,” said ACTE President Suzanne Neufang in ACTE’s press release. “We are dedicated to ensuring that everyone in our global ACTE network has the education and awareness to identify and report signs of human trafficking while traveling for business. Together, industry leaders like ACTE can work toward ending this abhorrent practice.”

After the signing, Carol Smolenski, Michelle Guelbart, Private Sector Project Coordinator, and Jami Day, ECPAT-USA Board Member interacted with conference participants during a Sabre Holdings sponsored a Toast to Humanity Closing Reception. ECPAT-USA informed travel buyers and suppliers about their unique roles in addressing trafficking. Sabre Holdings signed the Code in 2013 during the launch of their Passport to Freedom Project.

“Having the private industry work with the public sector, along with associations like ACTE, will assist in making great strides toward creating awareness on this important issue,” said ACTE Executive Director Greeley Koch.

How Travel Buyers Can Help End Trafficking
Buyers of corporate travel are in a position to express their interest in working with suppliers that sign the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct. When suppliers send their Request for Proposals (RFPs) to travel suppliers they can add a line inquiring of the supplier is a member of the Code. For sample language to include in your RFP contact michelle@ecpatusa.org.

How Travel Suppliers Can Help End Trafficking
ECPAT-USA can work with your company to put in place programming to educate your staff about trafficking and how to address suspicious incidences. You can:
(1) Create a policy against the commercial sexual exploitation of children
Official policies send a zero-tolerance message to staff letting them know that they should not look away when they suspect trafficking. Staff will feel more empowered to react to their suspicions. The policy will also build a sense of pride in their company for being responsible. Sample policy is available.
(2) Engage in ECPAT-USA’s Training
Train staff about commercial sexual exploitation of children, the signs of trafficking, and your protocol for reacting. Companies can receive training certificate and acknowledgement as partners.
(3)Sign the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct
The Code is an internationally accepted voluntary set of guidelines travel and tourism companies can implement to prevent child sex tourism and trafficking of children. Signatories of the Code are supported by ECPAT-USA to comprehensively and sustainably address trafficking.
To learn more about joining the Code click here.

Worldwide Travel Group, LLC Signs the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct

Mombasa, Kenya, April 18, 2013 –(PR.com)– During a small ceremony on Saturday morning Aurélie Sivadier, Executive Director of Worldwide Travel Group, LLC became the 3rd tour operator and 14th American company to sign the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct (the Code) and have committed to implementing the six guidelines against the commercial sexual exploitation of children.

The group launched E-Trip Africa in 2012, which organizes safaris and treks in Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya, and Tanzania. “We believe that the only way to do business is by following a strong set of principles and ethics. East Africa is not very transparent and ethics are often set aside in favor of better returns. But in today’s global society, consumers don’t want to have any part in this. By providing an ethical and transparent option, we believe this will push the entire tourism sector in a more positive and sustainable direction,” explains Mathieu Lahalle, one of the groups directors.etripimage

The sexual exploitation of children is a rampant problem in many of the most popular tourist areas in Africa. Along the Kenyan coast it has been estimated that over 30% of children (boys and girls) between the ages of 12 and 18 are actively engaged in prostitution. This number nearly doubles for those that have sold their bodies at least one time before they were 18.

“We quickly recognized that among all of the negative impacts of tourism, Child Sexual Exploitation is clearly the most harmful, having such a direct impact on our children. We are proud to lead the way towards stomping out this unacceptable behavior,” said Aurélie just before signing the Code.

As a signatory of the Code, E-Trip Africa has created a policy against the sexual exploitation of children, will train staff on the issue, and educate customers.

“We are pressing the more than 250 hotels that we do business with to implement the code,” said Ben Jennings, the General Manager of E-Trip Africa. “So far there has been a positive response and the hotels and camps seem enthusiastic to clean up the image of the area.”

To fully implement the Code, E-Trip Africa will work in collaboration with ECPAT-USA, the leading policy organization in the United States which seeks to end the commercial sexual exploitation of children through awareness, advocacy, policy, and legislation.

To learn more about the Code visit: http://ecpatusa.org/what-we-do/the-code/

For more information visit: http://www.etripafrica.com/

Cadwalader’s VS Confronts Publishes Article By Michelle Guelbart

VS. Confronting Modern Slavery in America is dedicated to heightening public awareness of human trafficking in America and providing a platform for anti-trafficking organizations and agencies to work collaboratively and innovatively together, outside their organizational silos, toward common goals. VS. is an innovative pro bono project conceived and executed by the Women’s Leadership Initiative of Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP.

The website published an article entitled Mitigating the Risk of Sex Trafficking in Travel and Tourism Companies by ECPAT-USA’s Private Sector Project Coordinator, Michelle Guelbart, MSW. The paper looked at the significant role that attorneys in the hospitality industry can play in addressing the risks of human trafficking associated with the operation of hotels, airlines, and travel and tourism providers. Attorneys can help companies evaluate the legal, reputational, and operational risks associated with human trafficking concerns. They can also advise clients seeking to incorporate industry best practices, including through the development of internal guidelines for identifying and responding to scenarios in which indicators of trafficking are identified. The article was adapted from a version written for Michelle’s presentation at the 2012 Hospitality Law Conference.

To read the article, click here.
To learn more about ECPAT-USA’s work on corporate social responsibility, click here.
To learn more about the Code, click here.

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Times Ledger Reports: ECPAT-USA Presents at St. Johns University Event

Rich Bockmann, reporter for Times Ledger attended at St. John’s University. The expert panel included ECPAT-USA’s Private Sector Project Coordinator, Michelle Guelbart. During the event, participants broke out into round table discussions and returned to the group with recommendations for action. One round table, moderated by Ms. Guelbart was dedicated to engaging the travel industry. The group returned to recommend that more airlines get involved with the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct.

Nearly 200 people turned out Saturday to hear a panel of experts at St. John’s University discuss human trafficking and the ways the travel industry can end the modern-day slave trade.

“People assume that it’s someone else’s problem or that it happens somewhere else,” keynote speaker Sandi Mitchell said. “They don’t realize there are things they can do.”

Queens neighborhoods such as Jackson Heights, Corona and Flushing are some of the biggest destinations in the borough for traffickers who take advantage of men and women from as near as Brooklyn and as far away as Latin America, often using John. F. Kennedy International and LaGuardia airports to transport their human chattel.

Mitchell said the travel industry is in a unique position to keep on the lookout for suspicious activity — such as men who frequently travel one way with children but return alone — but said it is difficult to get some of the biggest companies to get on board with such a hot-button issue.

“Most companies want to participate in something positive,” she lamented.

While working for Sabre Holdings, a global travel-technology company that owns the Travelocity website, Mitchell helped the company develop its Passport to Freedom initiative, which raises awareness among employees, travelers and industry partners.

Some of the key signs to look for, Mitchell said, include travelers who do not have control over their own travel documents or numerous inconsistencies in their stories.

Sabre is also one of the companies to sign an industry-wide pledge, known as The Code, designed to protect children from sex tourism. Delta Airlines is the only major U.S. airline to sign the pledge.

Photo by Rich Bockmann  Panelists Michelle Guelbart, Roberta Villalon, Judith Ryder, Kathleen Collins and Odessa Simms wrap up St. John's University's forum on human trafficking.

Photo by Rich Bockmann
Panelists Michelle Guelbart, Roberta Villalon, Judith Ryder, Kathleen Collins and Odessa Simms wrap up St. John’s University’s forum on human trafficking.

Panelist Joan Dawber spoke about the work her organization, LifeWay Network, has done to help victims of trafficking get their lives back.

In the past year the group has provided safe housing and rehabilitative services for six women, but Dawber said there is still a “critical need” for long-term housing in the New York area.

“It’s so difficult to have them believe in themselves and have them believe they can do things other than what they’ve been doing,” she said.

Kathleen Collins, an assistant district attorney in Brooklyn’s Human Trafficking Unit, said there are many challenges when it comes to prosecuting these cases, such as raising sex trafficking to a violent felony charge.

“Sex trafficking is one of the most violent crimes I’ve seen during my time working in the district attorney’s office,” she said.

View the entire article here.

FBI Honors ECPAT-USA Advisory Committee Member Kimberly Ritter

The St. Louis Division is pleased to honor Kimberly Ritter, an advocate for victims of sex trafficking, as a recipient of the 2012 Director’s Community Leadership Award.

Ms. Ritter became aware of child sex trafficking while working as a senior account manager for Nix Conference and Meeting Management, based in St. Louis. In 2008, Ms. Ritter was planning a conference for the U.S. Federation of the Sisters of Joseph when the group said it would only book a hotel with an anti-human trafficking policy. Ms. Ritter and her employer have since used their access to hotel general managers to raise awareness about sex trafficking and to encourage hotels to sign a code of conduct. By signing the code, hotels commit to training their staff to identify and report possible trafficking in their facilities and to annually report incidents to ECPAT (End Child Prostitution and Trafficking), a human rights organization. As a result, in 2011, Millennium Hotel became the first hotel in St. Louis to sign the code.St-Louis

In 2012, Nix Conference and Meeting Management initiated and signed the first meeting planners code of conduct. The company hopes to encourage the meeting planning industry nationwide to address the issue at every hotel where they do business. Ms. Ritter also became vice president of the board for the Healing Action Network. The nonprofit was founded by a survivor of sex trafficking and provides outreach to victims.

Click here for the full article: http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/partnerships_and_outreach/community_outreach/dcla/2012/st-louis
Learn how to get your company involved in the Code at: www.ecpatusa.org/thecode

Justmeans Reports: Largest U.S. Hotel Companies Work to Prevent Human Trafficking

Justmeans freelance reporter, Harry Stevens, profiled the work of American hotel companies in their efforts to end human trafficking. He did a great job of highlighting some of the work United States-based Code of Conduct signatories have been doing in order to train staff to react in case instances of sex trafficking occur on their hotel properties.
Harry Stevens is a freelance reporter covering climate change, corporate social responsibility, social enterprise, and sustainable finance. Harry has contributed to several media outlets, including Justmeans, GreenBiz, SocialEarth, and Sustainablog. You can follow Harry on Twitter: @Harry_Stevens

To learn more about our work with the hotel industry, click here.

Last month, Congress passed the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, a law that had expired in 2011 which seeks to prevent human trafficking in the United States. The day before the House vote, Governor Matt Mead signed the first anti-trafficking law in Wyoming, making his state the 50th and final U.S. state to illegalize the trafficking of individuals for commercial sex or forced labor.

Americans tend to link human trafficking with other “third world problems” like genocide and famine, but in 2011 there were 4,239 convictions in human trafficking cases across the country. Each year, between 15,000 and 60,000 individuals are brought into the United States and held against their will as victims of human trafficking.

Typical of these cases is the story of Maria, a Filipino woman who paid a large recruitment fee to come to the United States under a guest worker program. Promised housing, transportation and a lucrative job in the hospitality industry, Maria arrived to find no work and squalid living accommodations.

Maria’s passport was seized and she was prevented from leaving the house. The recruiters, who were eventually indicted by a grand jury for conspiracy to hold workers in a condition of forced labor, fed Maria and the other captives chicken innards and responded to their complaints with threats of deportation.

Legislative efforts like the ones passed in Wyoming and at the federal level last month have helped curtail the worst of these abuses, but equally important has been the work of hotel companies that are working to prevent trafficking-related crimes on their properties. The United States hospitality industry has coalesced around an effort by ECPAT USA, short for End Child Prostitution and Trafficking, a nonprofit that introduced the Tourism Child-Protection Code of Conduct in 2004.

Image credit: Michael Gray, Flickr]

Image credit: Michael Gray, Flickr]

Carlson, owner of Radisson Hotels and other chains, was the first U.S. travel and hospitality company to sign “the Code,” and has since been joined by the Wyndham Worldwide Corporation, the Real Hospitality Group and Hilton Worldwide, among several other U.S. companies.

“Some girls are tattooed with things like ‘Daddy’s girl,’” a sign that she may have been branded by her captor, said Brenda Schultz, who oversees Carlson’s hotel training program, in an interview with the New York Times. Schultz added that housekeeping staff at Carlson-owned hotels is trained to identify signs of prostitution, like an unusually large number of electronic devices in guest rooms or several condoms in the wastebasket.

Hilton Worldwide, which already supported several ECPAT principles before actually signed the Code in 2011, has training programs at both the leadership and department levels to teach hotel employees to identify and recognize illicit activities and better understand the issues surrounding child trafficking.

The company has also taken it a step further, working with several nonprofit organizations, including the Somaly Man Foundation, Vital Voices and Room to Read, in order “to bring more resources and opportunities to survivors as well as strengthen organizations that are on the frontlines of fighting child sex trafficking,” according to Jennifer Silberman, the company’s Vice President of Corporate Responsibility.

“We decided to sign the ECPAT Code because it was important for us to support the principles that prevent and mitigate child sex trafficking,” Silberman told Justmeans in an email. “We support ECPAT-USA’s important mission to protect children from sexual exploitation and to bring greater attention to the issues surrounding child trafficking.”

Jami Day directs the corporate responsibility efforts at the Real Hospitality Group, a hotel management company. Day recently emphasized the importance of ECPAT’s work in a panel discussion hosted as part of the 2013 United Nations Commission on the Status of Women.

“As a leader in the hospitality industry, Real Hospitality Group is proud to use our sphere of influence to do whatever we can to pragmatically impact the issue,” said Day, who is a member of the ECPAT Board of Directors. “We are proud to be an ECPAT Code of Conduct signatory, taking a position of protecting those most vulnerable in our communities.”

View the entire article here.

The Christian Science Monitor Reports: Kimberly Ritter stands up to child sex trafficking in US hotels

As you may recall, Nix Conference and Meeting Management worked with ECPAT-USA to sign the Tourism Child-Protection Code in January of 2012.
To learn more about the Code click here.

Kimberly Ritter stands up to child sex trafficking in US hotels

Kimberly Ritter discovered that some US hotels harbor a horrifying secret – child sex trafficking. Now she and her employer are urging the hospitality industry to confront the problem.

The first time someone mentioned human trafficking to Kimberly Ritter, she had only a vague idea of what it was. “Isn’t that something that happens in third-world countries?” she asked.

Kimberly Ritter of Nix Conference & Meeting Management will be honored by the FBI for her efforts to protect children from sex trafficking at hotels.

Kimberly Ritter of Nix Conference & Meeting Management will be honored by the FBI for her efforts to protect children from sex trafficking at hotels.

That was 2008. Today Ms. Ritter might be said to have two careers. On the one hand, she’s still a meeting planner, a 20-year veteran of the travel and hospitality industry. But she now expends almost as much energy fighting child sex trafficking.
It all started with Ritter’s largest client, the Federation of the Sisters of St. Joseph. In her work as a senior account manager at Nix Conference & Meeting Management in St. Louis, Ritter books meeting venues for this group of Roman Catholic nuns. The sisters devote themselves to causes like opposition to the death penalty and the fight to stamp out disposable plastic drinking bottles. Ritter has come to greatly admire their stands, she says.

But the sisters took her by surprise one day when they talked about an upcoming conference and said that they wanted to stay at a hotel that took a stand against child sex trafficking.

“I have learned so much from the sisters over the years,” she says. So she began educating herself on child sex trafficking. What she learned came as a shock.

Ritter discovered that, according to UNICEF, about 1.2 million children are exploited each year in the global child sex trade. The crime falls under the larger heading of human trafficking, one of the fastest-growing illegal businesses on the planet, estimated by the United Nations to have an annual value of $32 billion.
Child sex trafficking – which differs from child prostitution – is part of this and occurs when a minor is tricked into prostitution by force, fraud, or coercion.

But perhaps what was most horrifying to Ritter, as a longtime worker in the hospitality field, was to discover how often US hotels are the venues for such crimes.

“It happens everywhere,” Ritter says, and “that includes five-star hotels.”

What the Sisters of St. Joseph wanted Ritter to do was to find a hotel for their next conference that had signed on to the standards created by a group called ECPAT (End Child Prostitution and Trafficking) USA. The ECPAT standards ask hotels to take a stand on child sex trafficking by – among other actions – training their employees to look for signs of it and asking all their suppliers to do the same.

Spotting the telltale signs

At hotels, this crime often leaves telltale signs visible to employees. When a third party arranges for a room for a guest, or when a guest shows up without luggage and doesn’t spend the night, or when a young girl is dressed inappropriately or seems disoriented or confused – any of these could be signs of child sex trafficking.

But because hotel employees are not trained to recognize the problem or encouraged to report suspicious activity, it may go overlooked.

That’s where the training mandated by ECPAT could make a difference.

What Ritter discovered, however, when she began canvassing hotels, was that many were reluctant to take any kind of stand on child sex trafficking. They feared that signing an agreement such as the ECPAT standard was tantamount to acknowledging that such crimes might be taking place in their hotels. Given the extreme public revulsion to the topic, they simply wanted to keep a distance.

As a result, some employees remain remarkably ignorant. (When Ritter surveyed several hotels asking them for their policy on human trafficking, one hotel worker replied: “We maintain and point out the crosswalk in front.”)
But finally, Ritter scored a big success. The Millennium Hotel in St. Louis agreed to sign the ECPAT pledge. It did so during a special ceremony in July 2011, while the Sisters of St. Joseph were holding their conference there.
Ritter was initially delighted. But the day after the signing she realized, “That’s not enough.” In fact, it was just the beginning.

Online photos yield important clues

Ritter’s company, Nix, was founded in 1985 by Richard Nix Sr. But today its seven em-ployees are all women. Intrigued by Ritter’s campaign, the entire group – led by principals Molly Hackett and Jane Quinn – decided to throw its weight into the fight.
Today Nix continues to work to inform hotel staffs about child sex trafficking and to urge them to sign the agreement. They have also developed standards that meeting planners can sign on to as well. (A letter that individual guests can present to hotels, urging them to sign the ECPAT standards, can be found at http://ecpatusa.org/take-action/promote-the-code/).
One effective gambit for Ritter has been to find images of children available for sex online. (She says that these images are only too easy to locate.) Often these girls are photographed (faces blanked out) in hotel rooms. Ritter studies the photos and can sometimes recognize the hotel, thanks to clues like wallpaper patterns or the view from the window. She then takes the photo to the hotel’s managers.

The reaction, she says, is usually one of absolute horror.

Ritter has become an active member of the Human Action Network (of which Ritter is now a vice president and on the board of directors), which works with young women who have been able to flee the sex trade.

Getting to know these young women is an eye-opener, Ritter says. The notion that most children being trafficked are runaways or come from unstable homes is inaccurate. A fair number, she says, are suburban teens from middle-class families. They have been manipulated in some way by pimps, who are extremely savvy about using a mix of drugs, attention, praise, and threats to bend the girls to their will.

Facebook and the local mall are favorite recruiting grounds. Handsome teenage boys are sometimes hired to make the initial approach.

Once coerced into “the life,” it can be hard for a girl to get out, Ritter says. Pimps can be violent and will fight to protect their “assets.”

That is why an educated hotel staff is so important. Ritter tells a tale she heard from a young woman who has since freed herself from the trafficking business. She had been brought to a St. Louis hotel for yet another sexual encounter when she decided to break away.

She fled the hotel room, leaving her pimp and the client behind, and ran down the hotel hallway shouting for help. She encountered a maid who spoke no English; not understanding the situation, the maid helped to return the girl to the pimp who was chasing her.

‘You’ve got to keep doing this’

That’s exactly the kind of situation in which employee training could have been crucial, Ritter says. In fact, she says, when she told this young woman about the ECPAT agreement, her response was: “You’ve got to keep doing this. You’re going to get such a blessing.”

The blessing has come already, Ritter says.

“This has been life-changing for all of us,” she says of herself and her colleagues at Nix. “It has created a whole new world for us.”

It also has taken the work of the Sisters of St. Joseph to a whole new level.

“Kimberly realized that as a meeting planner she has a tremendous opportunity to influence hotels,” says Sister Patty Johnson, the group’s executive director. “She’s reaching groups that we could not.”

Public recognition is now following as well. In April Ritter will fly to Washington, D.C., to attend a national ceremony at which she will receive a community leadership award from FBI Director Robert Mueller to honor her work in the fight against child sex trafficking.

“Raising awareness goes a long way to preventing sex trafficking or any crime,” states Dean C. Bryant, special agent in charge of the FBI St. Louis division, in the press release announcing the event. “By challenging their industry peers to raise awareness, Ms. Ritter and Nix are creating a force multiplier that could eventually have a nationwide impact.”

• For more, visit http://ecpatusa.org.
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