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Seattle Council proclaims January 2025 Human Trafficking Prevention Month; survivor groups accept proclamation

January 18, 2025 | Seattle, King County, Washington


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Seattle Council proclaims January 2025 Human Trafficking Prevention Month; survivor groups accept proclamation
The Seattle City Council proclaimed January 2025 Human Trafficking Prevention Month and suspended council rules so community partners could accept the proclamation and make brief remarks.

Council Member Teresa Moore (identified in the meeting as presenting the proclamation) thanked the mayor's office and the Human Services Department for their partnership and for advocates who “provided tireless efforts to support our Seattle neighbors in healing.” Moore called commercial sexual exploitation “abhorrent” and expressed gratitude to advocates helping survivors.

The council suspended its rules “to present the proclamation and allow our guests to accept it and provide remarks,” and several survivor‑serving organizations spoke. Yasmina Dorril, introduced as director of survivor services at REST (an organization named in the transcript), thanked the council “on behalf of REST and local organizations” and urged the city to continue “prioritizing, mobilizing and targeting efforts, of criminalizing traffickers and providing adequate services for our survivors.”

A representative identified in the transcript as Sarah — director of survivor services for the organization The More We Love and a survivor herself — said the organization has served 42 survivors since July and described the council acknowledgment as important. “The More We Love is a survivor ran, survivor led organization,” she said, and thanked the council for “listening to the voices of survivors and showing up daily for the most marginalized and vulnerable people.”

Ending: The proclamation is a ceremonial recognition and does not itself change policy or funding; council members said they expect continued partnership with survivor‑serving agencies and city departments on prevention and services.

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Scribe from Workplace AI
Scribe from Workplace AI