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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250807T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250807T150000
DTSTAMP:20260422T135255
CREATED:20250709T190445Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250709T190445Z
UID:10584-1754575200-1754578800@surviveandthriveadvocacy.org
SUMMARY:BBCAHT Quarterly Meeting
DESCRIPTION:BIG BEND COALITION AGAINST HUMAN TRAFFICKING (BBCAHT) MEETING \nThursday\, August 7\, 2025\, at 2:00 PM \nLeon County Sheriff’s Office\, 2825 Municipal Way\, Tallahassee\, FL
URL:https://surviveandthriveadvocacy.org/events/bbcaht-quarterly-meeting-3/
CATEGORIES:Training and Awareness
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250812T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250812T170000
DTSTAMP:20260422T135255
CREATED:20250807T155513Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250807T155513Z
UID:10613-1755010800-1755018000@surviveandthriveadvocacy.org
SUMMARY:Leading Change: Preventing Trafficking of Boys & Men
DESCRIPTION:Boys and young men are often invisible in anti-trafficking efforts — even though the data show they’re at significant risk. It’s time to change that narrative. \nThis event kicks off the Leading Change Scholarship Fund — a new\, community-backed effort to support the development of lived experience leadership. As the first-ever recipient\, Nathan Earl\, Yale MPH Candidate\, will receive whatever we raise during this launch. Every dollar goes directly toward his scholarship — and toward changing the narrative. \n Register Now\n  \nEvent Details\nDate: August 12\, 2025 \nCost: Free RSVP | Suggested donation levels with additional value \nLocation: Zoom \nHost: The Genesis Project \nModerator: Kathy Bryan\, Founding CEO \nScholarship Recipient and Trainer: Nathan Earl\, Yale School of Public Health \nPart One: Training\nPreventing and Responding to Trafficking of Boys and Men\n3:00–4:00 PM ET\nCovered: risks + indicators\, trauma response\, substance misuse\, identification and engagement\, systemic barriers\, and policy recommendations\nFacilitator: Nathan Earl \n  \nPart Two: Fireside Chat\nLeading from the Messy Middle\n4:00–5:00 PM ET\nA raw conversation on burnout\, hard lessons won\, and resilience from survivor leaders navigating the “messy middle”\nSpeakers: Kathy Bryan (CEO\, The Genesis Project & Survivor Leader) and Nathan Earl (Lived Experience Leader) \n  \nWhat You’ll Learn: \n\nWhat the data actually tell us about who is being exploited\nUnique risk factors\, trajectories\, and outcomes for boys and young men\nHow sexual exploitation intersects with labor trafficking\, forced criminality\, substance use\, and the biology of trauma response\nWhy implementation (not awareness) remains our biggest failure — and how we fix that\nGritty\, lived-experience reflections on healing\, burnout\, and what it really looks like to lead change after trauma
URL:https://surviveandthriveadvocacy.org/events/leading-change-preventing-trafficking-of-boys-men/
CATEGORIES:Training and Awareness
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250813T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250813T133000
DTSTAMP:20260422T135255
CREATED:20250808T142818Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250808T142818Z
UID:10619-1755086400-1755091800@surviveandthriveadvocacy.org
SUMMARY:From Exploitation to Empowerment: Housing for Labor Trafficking Survivors
DESCRIPTION:Labor trafficking doesn’t always look the way we expect. It often hides behind language barriers\, family ties\, immigration struggles\, or a client’s hesitance to name what they’ve experienced. If you work in direct services\, chances are you’ve already supported a survivor of labor trafficking without even knowing it. \nJoin us next Wednesday\, August 13th\, for a powerful\, survivor-led session featuring Anthony Paco Bernaola and Denisse Amézquita—two Harriet Tubman Fellows\, labor trafficking survivors\, and nationally recognized advocates. \n Register Now\nThis session is ideal for service providers\, housing organizations\, anti-trafficking professionals\, social workers\, and advocates committed to supporting labor trafficking survivors with trauma-informed\, sustainable housing solutions. \nWhat You’ll Learn: \n\nThe critical role short-term housing plays in long-term recovery\nCommon barriers labor trafficking survivors face when securing stable housing\nCreative\, trauma-informed emergency shelter models\nBest practices for developing survivor-centered housing programs beyond crisis care\n\nWhy Attend?\nYou’ll walk away with actionable strategies\, program ideas\, and survivor-informed insights to help improve housing support for labor trafficking survivors in your community or organization. \nThe National Advocate Credentialing Program (NACP) has approved this session for a maximum of 1.5 hours toward NACP’s CE renewal requirement; valid through 8/13/2027!\nTo receive CE credit\, you must attend the live presentation. Viewing the recording alone will not qualify for CE hours.
URL:https://surviveandthriveadvocacy.org/events/from-exploitation-to-empowerment-housing-for-labor-trafficking-survivors/
CATEGORIES:Training and Awareness
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250815T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250815T143000
DTSTAMP:20260422T135255
CREATED:20240530T195441Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T194425Z
UID:9587-1755262800-1755268200@surviveandthriveadvocacy.org
SUMMARY:Florida’s Expungement Laws: Helping Survivors of Human Trafficking
DESCRIPTION:This program will explain the law on human trafficking expungement\, describe the process for clearing a survivor’s criminal history\, detail the effects of expungement on a survivor’s life\, and dispel myths and misconceptions regarding expungement. \n \nWebinar Resources: \n\nWebinar PowerPoint Slides\n\nAbout the Presenters: \nBrent Woody \nBrent Woody\, Lead Attorney and Executive Director of the Justice Restoration Center \nBrent Woody is the lead attorney and executive director of the Justice Restoration Center\, a nonprofit organization providing trauma-informed restorative pro bono legal services and advocacy for survivors of human trafficking\, as well as advocating on trafficking-related legislation and policy matters. \nSince 2009\, Brent has made it a personal mission to provide free legal services to victims and survivors of human trafficking. Understanding that individuals subjected to exploitation in the forms of forced labor\, commercial sex\, and domestic servitude had no means to obtain desperately needed legal services\, Brent committed to never turning away a survivor with trafficking-related legal needs. \nBeginning in 2012\, Brent’s work for trafficking survivors and victims rose to a new level as he began advocating before the Florida legislature for the rights of human trafficking survivors to petition a court for the expungement of criminal history records and vacating of criminal convictions for arrests while under the coercion of a trafficker or within a scheme of human trafficking. Unjust criminal history records and convictions close many doors for trafficking survivors\, and this law was desperately needed by an untold number of victims. As a result\, Florida’s human trafficking victim expungement law was unanimously passed and signed into law in 2013. Brent now represents over 200 trafficking survivors from in and out of the state and from within the Florida inmate population. Legislatively\, Brent has initiated and successfully advocated for\, among other things\, the elimination of the statute of limitations for human trafficking offenses\, enhanced penalties for traffickers\, enhanced penalties for sex-buyers\, the non-criminalization of commercially sexually exploited minors\, and exemptions from the public records laws for the locations of safe houses. \nBrent’s pro bono work has expanded into the Florida prison system as his organization has discovered that countless inmates were trafficked before entering the corrections system and are destined to return to “the life” when they’re released\, simply because they don’t have any apparent options. The Justice Restoration Center\, in partnership with his wife Pamela’s nonprofit\, Advocates Against Human Trafficking\, is helping break that cycle by coordinating secure and therapeutic residential housing upon release and facilitating safe releases and transportation. \nBrent also handles coerced debt issues\, name changes\, obtaining public benefits\, and other civil matters for trafficking survivors and coordinates other pro bono counsel for matters outside his practice area and involving out-of-state matters. \nBrent graduated from USF-St. Petersburg and the Florida State University College of Law. He’s\nmarried to Pamela\, and they have three children. \n  \nDanielle Lennox \nDanielle Lennox\, Assistant State Attorney\, Human Trafficking Unit\, 17th Judicial Circuit\, Broward County\, FL \nDanielle Lennox graduated from the University of South Florida\, in Tampa\, Florida with her bachelor’s degree in criminology and political science. She then attended Nova Law School in Fort Lauderdale\, Florida\, where she earned her Juris Doctor. After graduating law school\, Danielle began working at the State Attorney’s Office for Broward County as an Assistant State Attorney and has been there for almost 10 years. She has dedicated her entire professional career towards getting justice for victims and she is currently the Head of the Human Trafficking Division for her office\, where she partners with law enforcement in the prosecution of human trafficking cases. As part of her role as the Head of the Human Trafficking Division\, she is solely responsible for overseeing the law enforcement investigation of all Broward County human trafficking cases\, speaking to the survivors of those crimes\, filing the appropriate criminal charges against the perpetrators of human trafficking\, seeing the case through in court until the case is either resolved via a negotiated plea or trial and to review/approve any and all human trafficking related expungements. Her dedication and hard work earned her the award of Prosecutor of the Year for 2023 by the Broward Victim’s Rights Coalition.  \n====================== \nSTAC needs your support to sustain these important webinars. Will you donate today? Each gift helps to bring this vital information to the many people who are empowering survivors and preventing human trafficking. The only way we can maintain these programs and this work is with YOUR help.\nSuggested donation: $20
URL:https://surviveandthriveadvocacy.org/events/floridas-expungement-laws-helping-survivors-of-human-trafficking-2/
CATEGORIES:Training and Awareness
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