Action Hub
Supporters can participate in our efforts in the fight for child protection both in-state and federal. Take action today to ensure child protection tomorrow.
Illinois - Stop Educator Sexual Abuse in Our Schools
Over the years, we have seen the failure of CPS to protect its students from educator sexual abuse. HB 4241 (previously HB3290) criminalizes educators who commit a sexual act against students between the ages of 18-22. We urge Illinois parents to take action with us to prevent educator sexual abuse even after the legal age of consent. Learn more and sign our petition below to stop educator sexual abuse today.
Federal - The Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA)
KIDS TOO, along with a handful of non-profit allies, are pushing for the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA S. 1409) to move to the Senate floor for a vote.
The Kids Online Safety Act is championed by U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) and U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and is supported by an additional 47 bipartisan Senators. The Kids Online Safety Act will hold social media companies accountable after their repeated failures to protect children & adolescents from the practices that make their platforms more harmful.
Federal - Hold Big Tech Accountable
In partnership with the National Center on Sexual Exploitation (N.C.O.S.E.), KIDS TOO is involved with legislation that supports keeping children safe when using platforms on devices and online. The EARN IT Act is a step toward a legal ecosystem that makes more sense for our modern context and a means for holding Big Tech accountable for harms they facilitate.
Federal - Kids Off Social Media Act (previously Protect Kids on Social Media Act)
We are pushing to help protect kids on social media. This bill provides parents and children an added layer of protection support akin to other bills that protect kids from dangers and harm.
Federal - Sammy’s Law
The draft of this new legislation, Sammy’s Law, comes after years of activism from a community of parents whose children have died from fentanyl overdoses that followed drug deals facilitated on social media platforms, like Snapchat. This new legislation would work to reduce social media’s impact on kids and hold social media companies responsible for crimes related to their platforms.