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MAKE NOISE

 

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FOR MISSING AND EXPLOITED CHILDREN

Join us in raising your voice to bring home missing children
and prevent other children from harm

1. TALK to your kids about safety.
  • The radKIDS® Personal Empowerment Safety Education Program teaches kids:
  • No one has the right to hurt me because I am special!
  • I don't have the right to hurt anyone else unless they hurt me and then I stop them!
  • If anyone tries to hurt me, trick me, or make me feel bad inside, it's not my fault - so I can tell!
  • The Polly Klaas® Foundation's Child Safety Kit is a booklet that tells parents how to build their children's confidence by teaching them how to recognize and respond to dangerous situations.
  • The Canadian Centre for Child Protection's Kids in the Know program is an interactive safety education program for increasing the personal safety of children and reducing their risk of sexual exploitation.
  • Child Find Alberta offers free educational safety presentations to children, parents, and communities.
  • The Take25 program provides conversation starters for parents and educators to discuss safety in a positive way.

2a. If you have been abused, exploited, or hurt in some way, TELL someone you trust. You may also want to find a local domestic violence group, contact child or adult protective services, or call your local police. Do not stop "making noise" until you find someone that will help you. You have the right to be safe.

2b. If you see or hear something suspicious or something that doesn't seem right, TELL someone. Missing children are often found because somebody decided to speak up.

3. SHARE messages about missing children to get everyone in your network involved in the issue.
  • To see how parents of missing children are affected and to learn how the Missing Children's Network supports these families, watch the short documentary, "The Living Victims".

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NOTE: This website is funded through a grant from Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. Neither the U.S. Department of Justice nor any of its components operate, control, are responsible for, or necessarily endorse, this website (including, without limitation, its content, technical infrastructure, and policies, and any services or tools provided.