Texas 2019 86th Regular

Texas House Bill HCR35 Comm Sub / Bill

Filed 05/14/2019

                    By: Miller (Senate Sponsor - Huffman) H.C.R. No. 35
 (In the Senate - Received from the House April 29, 2019;
 April 30, 2019, read first time and referred to Committee on State
 Affairs; May 14, 2019, reported favorably by the following vote:
 Yeas 9, Nays 0; May 14, 2019, sent to printer.)
Click here to see the committee vote


 HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 WHEREAS, Human trafficking is a serious and escalating public
 health issue in the United States, particularly in Texas; and
 WHEREAS, It is estimated that there are more than 300,000
 victims of human trafficking in the State of Texas, and nearly
 80,000 of those are identified as minors; and
 WHEREAS, The number of cases reported rose 82 percent from
 2015 to 2017, giving Texas the second-highest number of human
 trafficking reports in the country, with explosive growth occurring
 across all segments of our society in every ethnicity, gender, and
 age, regardless of immigration, socioeconomic, or family status;
 and
 WHEREAS, Victims of human trafficking experience a severe and
 complex trauma that is recognized by the medical community as one of
 the most challenging to effectively treat; it requires long-term
 counseling, therapy, and often inpatient treatment, which is
 complicated by the fact that relatively few facilities in Texas are
 trained in trauma-informed care; and
 WHEREAS, The health problems engendered by human trafficking
 are a crisis that impacts a substantial number of Texans in
 communities across the state; sexual exploitation of women and
 children account for 84 percent of cases and cost the state an
 estimated $6.6 billion in additional physical and mental health
 care and social services; this also creates additional strain on
 our health care and law enforcement systems; and
 WHEREAS, Gangs and cartels have combined drug and human
 trafficking operations to become a primary controlling influence in
 both, with the traffickers involved proving to be some of the most
 dangerous and violent criminals to whom thousands more innocent
 victims fall prey each year; and
 WHEREAS, All forms of human trafficking are criminal acts,
 and it is imperative that this issue be appropriately addressed so
 that we may bring an end to this atrocious crime and help survivors
 to move forward with their lives; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the 86th Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby recognize human trafficking as a public health issue.
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