2026-2027 Services delivered: Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment
Component: Anti-Human Trafficking Community Supports
Service Delivered:: Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment
Service description
The purpose of the Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment program is to provide specialized supportive, trauma-informed, and culturally responsive education, skills development, and job training to survivors of human trafficking. The program is intended to create critical pathways that support financial stability and independence, socio-economic reintegration and advancement into leadership roles.
The Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment program:
- addresses the psychological and emotional barriers survivors face; and,
- creates inclusive environments that foster healing and socio-economic advancement.
People served
The Program serves survivors of Human Trafficking
Service features
Services will be:
- trauma informed
- responsive to the unique needs of survivors of human trafficking
- support a holistic approach to recovery, focusing on resilience and skills-building.
- employ a survivor-centered approach.
Specific service provided
Projects that provide specialized supportive, trauma-informed, and culturally responsive education, skills development, and job training, tailored to victims and survivors of human trafficking to create critical pathways that support financial stability and independence, socio-economic reintegration and advancement into leadership roles.
Service goals
Survivors of human trafficking are empowered through the provision of trauma-informed pathways to education and employment, to help them heal, rebuild their lives, and advance into leadership roles.
Ministry expectations
Service delivery
- services and supports will respect the cultural and diverse needs of all survivors including Francophone, Indigenous, 2SLGBTQQIA+, rural/remote, newcomers, survivors with disabilities, and children and youth who have been sexually exploited through sex trafficking.
- service providers are required to have staff that possess appropriate and relevant experience, which is inclusive of the lived experience of survivors.
- staff will be suitably trained and qualified to provide services to survivors who have experienced exploitation. Staff providing clinical counselling are required to comply with all applicable legislation.
- service providers will have mechanisms in place to provide counselling services or referrals to link survivors with appropriate services.
- service providers delivering services in French designated areas or delivering services to someone from a designated area shall provide an “active offer of services” in the French language.
- service providers will develop appropriate referral criteria and mechanisms with all local anti-human trafficking service providers, the Children’s Aid Society (CAS) as appropriate and suitable children, youth and adult services in order to maximize the effectiveness of services for survivors or those at risk.
- service providers will have a written service complaint and problem resolution process that will be made available to survivors or those at risk who use services upon request.
- all service providers will have in-place processes for providing culturally responsive services to Indigenous survivors or those at risk. They will also have in place processes for referring Indigenous survivors or those at risk to appropriate Indigenous supports.
- service providers will be active members in ministry-funded service system planning. Where applicable, service providers may participate in anti-human trafficking coalition tables, to build and strengthen service delivery networks, implement prevention and awareness initiatives and share best practices in service delivery mechanisms.
- The Canadian Centre to End Human Trafficking (CCEHT) provides a hotline for callers with questions about human trafficking supports in Canada. The hotline acts as a central response and referral mechanism, along with a central data collection mechanism. CCEHT offers 24/7, multilingual access to a safe and confidential space to ask for help, connect to services, and report tips
- all agencies will market CCEHT whenever possible, including in print materials, websites, training sessions, and promotional materials, etc.
- in order to ensure that people are referred to the most appropriate services, it is important that service providers share information about changes to their organizations’ programs and services with the CCEHT for their database, such as new programs added, changes to program locations or hours, cancellation of programs or services, or changes to key contacts. Service providers will ensure that changes are communicated to the CCEHT within 2 weeks of the change, by contacting their office.
Safety Planning
- service providers will have in place the necessary physical security measures to maintain the physical safety, within the service provider service location, of survivors receiving services and service provider employees.
- services include the development of safety strategies or plans for survivors and those at risk of human trafficking that reflect the survivor’s immediate personal circumstances, needs and choices.
- safety strategies can include and are not limited to:
- development of safety plan for survivors who are exiting human trafficking
- partnerships with community services
- providing a backpack with a change of clothes, cellphone and essentials
- providing safe transportation to access services
- providing resources for mental health supports and harm reduction kits
Reporting requirements
Please complete the table below for all Service Outputs your program is tracking. Ensure alignment with the Transfer Payment Performance Measurement Framework.
| Service Data Name | Definition |
|---|---|
| Ministry-funded expenditures: Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment | Total ministry-funded expenses for the Transfer Payment Recipient to administer and/or deliver this program in the reporting year (cumulative). |
| Number of individuals served (total): Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment | Total number of unique individuals served. |
| Number of Indigenous individuals served (total): Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment | Total number of unique Indigenous individuals served. |
| # of individuals served 16-17: Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment | A person who is between the ages of 16 to 17 who requested and received services. Unique, or unduplicated, count of all individuals by their age category who received direct services in the funded project in the reporting year. This count represents an active client roster for the year. If the client carries into the next fiscal year, the client is reported once in the new reporting period. |
| # of individuals served 18-24: Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment | A person who is between the ages of 18 to 24 who requested and received services. Unique, or unduplicated, count of all individuals by their age category who received direct services in the funded project in the reporting year. This count represents an active client roster for the year. If the client carries into the next fiscal year, the client is reported once in the new reporting period. |
| # of individuals served 25 and over: Anti-Human Trafficking Pathways to Education and Employment | A person who is between the ages of 25 and over who requested and received services. Unique, or unduplicated, count of all individuals by their age category who received direct services in the funded project in the reporting year. This count represents an active client roster for the year. If the client carries into the next fiscal year, the client is reported once in the new reporting period. |
| Narrative: If some participants did not complete the program, please provide the number of participants and the reason(s) why they did not complete. | Data entry may be omitted if deemed nonessential by Ministry Program Representative. |
| Data entry may be omitted if deemed nonessential by Ministry Program Representative. | Briefly describe how the program is delivered by your agency. Include any distinguishing community characteristics, profile of children/families served. |
| Narrative: Successes | Briefly describe what is working well, any particular success achieved, partnerships established, etc. |
| Narrative: Challenges | Briefly describe any challenges/nuances encountered in your program and its delivery. |