U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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Beyond Resolutions: What January Means for Trafficking Survivors

January 16, 2026

By Lindsey Draper, Regional Coordinator, Anti-Trafficking Services 

 

January, for many, is a time for post-holiday recovery. We’ve spent time with our families, eaten good food, and celebrated the passing of another year. January marks a period of new beginnings and new opportunities. But for foreign national survivors of human trafficking in the United States, January may look a bit different. December might not have brought them time with their families, who may be separated by country borders or too afraid to travel due to heightened immigration enforcement. December might not have meant good food, or much food at all, as Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) eligibility for trafficking survivors was cut due to the passing of H.R. 1, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. January, for foreign national survivors of human trafficking, is often another month of uncertainty and fear. 

As a Regional Coordinator in the Anti-Human Trafficking department at the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI), January, to me, means renewed efforts to meet the needs of survivors — a commitment to providing services, despite the ever-decreasing availability of resources. Walking into work on any given day necessitates, above all, flexibility. Despite my best efforts to schedule my day, working in anti-trafficking means scrapping plans and handling emergencies as they come. One minute, I may be working on finding low-cost medical services for an uninsured survivor in South Dakota, and the next, I may be looped in on a potential active trafficking case in Colorado. A typical day could include handling incoming referrals, coordinating with various stakeholders to address active trafficking situations, providing guidance to case managers looking to enroll survivors in public benefits, identifying resources to tackle complex needs, and advocating for survivors throughout. Juggling these responsibilities and more while prioritizing tasks is the only constant in my job.  

On a typical January day, as I sit and listen to a case manager working with minors experiencing labor trafficking, I hear her worries about securing food resources at a time when food insecurity is rising and declining funding for nutrition programs. She describes her apprehensions about connecting children to mental health services while they wait months to be approved for insurance. I hear about the fears these minors have about pursuing legal status when federal immigration authorities have been reported to linger outside of courthouses, waiting to apprehend those leaving immigration court hearings. Most of all, though, I hear someone who cares. Someone who, like me, may be having a typical January coming off the high of the holidays, but who knows that this isn’t the reality for so many others. Someone who knows that January, for survivors of trafficking, is yet another month in the long path forward toward the ultimate goal of safety and stability.  

You, like many, may be having a January of new resolutions. In light of January being National Human Trafficking Prevention Month, I ask that you keep the experiences of trafficking survivors in your mind. Perhaps, in this new year, you resolve to give your time to those in need by volunteering at local food banks. Perhaps you resolve to donate extra funds to one of the many organizations struggling to provide services after government funding cuts. Even if you find you may not have spare time or extra funds, there’s one resolution you can make: a pledge of advocacy. Proclaim your support for survivors of trafficking, for the continued availability of vital services, and assert that January should be a time of celebration and hope for the future for everyone. 

 

Lindsey works in Denver, Colorado as Regional Coordinator, where she oversees ten states in the Mountain and Midwest regions for USCRI’s TVAP and Aspire programs. She’s been with USCRI since 2023 and has been working to support refugee and immigrant populations since 2021.  

 

Learn more about USCRI’s Anti-Trafficking work and make a donation at:

Human Trafficking | Immigration Relief for Victims by USCRI 


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