The Three-Pronged Approach to Prevention
Equip the adults. Empower the students. Resource the community.

Equip the Adults – Day One
We begin with a live training for teachers, staff, administrators, and parents to ensure every adult is equipped to prevent, identify, and respond to trafficking. This session covers:
Human Trafficking 101
Recognizing red flags and grooming tactics
Having safe, age-appropriate conversations with kids
Responding to an outcry with wisdom and care
This builds the foundation of trust and readiness before students ever hear the message.
Empower the Students – Day Two
On Day Two, we host a multimedia production created in collaboration with students—designed to speak their language and keep their attention.
This student-focused experience:
Uses storytelling and visuals to drive engagement
Introduces practical tools for recognizing and resisting exploitation
Focuses on hope, not fear
Leaves students with a strong, memorable call to action: You are seen. You have a voice. You have the power to act.
Resource the Community – Ongoing
We equip every participating school, church, or organization with a follow-up toolkit to reinforce the message and empower long-term impact:
Printable handouts & teacher-led discussion guides
Parent conversation starters
Social media post templates, posters, and flyers
Email templates and permission slips
Event promotion assets for schools and churches
The SAVE Project doesn’t come and go. It leaves a legacy of tools, language, and awareness your whole community can build on.

THE SOLUTION
THE SAVE PROJECT
SEE. ACT. VOICE. EMPOWER.
We believe prevention is the missing link. That’s why we’re developing The SAVE Project: a school and community-based, trauma-informed program created with students and educators in mind.
It’s bold. It’s engaging. It’s student-powered. And it’s designed to work in public schools, churches, and beyond.

THE PROBLEM
Human trafficking doesn’t always look like kidnapping. Sometimes it starts with a DM. A friend. A secret. And most of the time, it starts before they’re even 18. While many organizations focus on crisis response and aftercare, one question remains: What if we could stop exploitation before it ever begins?


