jyoung@post-journal.com
Photo by Jay Young
Crown Street Roasting Company in Jamestown displayed visuals on its storefront in order to help raise awareness during January, which is National Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention Month.
This January organizations and individuals in Western New York and beyond gathered behind a common cause as part of National Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention Month.
The Child Advocacy Program has led the charge forward in Jamestown, increasing its work around the county to offer training and expand the public discussion about abuse and trafficking.
“It is just an opportunity to bring awareness to this issue,” said Kayleah Feser, coordinator of the CAP Safe Harbour Program. “It is a great opportunity, specifically for us here in a rural community like ours, because typically Chautauqua County residents probably don’t think of trafficking as something that happens here in our community. This just gives us more of a special time to h
jyoung@post-journal.com
Crown Street Roasting Company in Jamestown displayed visuals on its storefront in order to help raise awareness during January, which is National Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention Month.
P-J photo by Jay Young
This January organizations and individuals in Western New York and beyond gathered behind a common cause as part of National Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention Month.
The Child Advocacy Program has led the charge forward in Jamestown, increasing its work around the county to offer training and expand the public discussion about abuse and trafficking.
“It is just an opportunity to bring awareness to this issue,” said Kayleah Feser, coordinator of the CAP Safe Harbour Program. “It is a great opportunity, specifically for us here in a rural community like ours, because typically Chautauqua County residents probably don’t think of trafficking as something that happens here in our community. This just gives us more of a special time
WATERTOWN — Nearly six years after Haley J. Recor was first targeted, her mother anguishes over the certainty that her daughter is still caught up in the world of human
Children s Advertising Review Unit Determines that Visual Supply Company App Is Not Directed Primarily or Secondarily to Children
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NEW YORK, Jan. 21, 2021 /PRNewswire/ The Children s Advertising Review Unit (CARU), a division of BBB National Programs, determined that Visual Supply Company (VSCO) is not an online service directed primarily or secondarily to children under age 13 as defined by the Children s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) and CARU s own Guidelines for Online Privacy Protection.
Identified during CARU s routine monitoring program of child-directed content, VSCO markets a social media and photo editor app that has become well known to teens and tweens for the VSCO girl trend across several social media platforms.
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