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Please support funding to fight child labor
As your constituent, I am writing to thank you for your work and ask you to support critical funding for the Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) in the Department of Labor to continue work to end exploitative child labor. Please contact your House and Senate colleagues on the Labor, Health and Human Services Appropriations subcommittee and ask that ILAB grant programs are funded at at least $100 million. I heard about this issue from World Vision, an organization I support.
Currently, 152 million children around the world are in child labor, including 73 million in hazardous child labor. Since 1995, ILAB has worked through partners to provide education and livelihoods services to almost 2 million vulnerable children and their families in over 90 countries. Through holistic programs, ILAB works to increase awareness about the harmful impacts of child labor, improve access to education, and develop economic opportunities for parents, allowing families to improve their livelihoods without relying on child labor to meet basic needs. ILAB is a key part of the U.S. government's efforts to protect children from violence and exploitation. Through the Department of Labor, the United States has been a leader in reducing the number of children in hazardous child labor – the number of children exposed has declined by one-third over the last 15 years. Child labor jeopardizes children's health and safety and can keep them from receiving an education.
I thank you for your work and taking the time to reach out to help continue the United States' legacy of protecting children.
Please contact colleagues to protect children
As your constituent, I am writing to thank you for your work and ask you to support critical funding for the Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) in the Department of Labor to continue work to end exploitative child labor. Please contact your House and Senate colleagues on the Labor, Health and Human Services Appropriations subcommittee and ask that ILAB grant programs are funded at at least $100 million. I heard about this issue from World Vision, an organization I support.
Currently, 152 million children around the world are in child labor, including 73 million in hazardous child labor. Since 1995, ILAB has worked through partners to provide education and livelihoods services to almost 2 million vulnerable children and their families in over 90 countries. Through holistic programs, ILAB works to increase awareness about the harmful impacts of child labor, improve access to education, and develop economic opportunities for parents, allowing families to improve their livelihoods without relying on child labor to meet basic needs. ILAB is a key part of the U.S. government's efforts to protect children from violence and exploitation. Through the Department of Labor, the United States has been a leader in reducing the number of children in hazardous child labor – the number of children exposed has declined by one-third over the last 15 years. Child labor jeopardizes children's health and safety and can keep them from receiving an education.
I thank you for your work and taking the time to reach out to help continue the United States' legacy of protecting children.
Protecting children is a priority to me
As your constituent, I am writing to thank you for your work and ask you to support critical funding for the Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) in the Department of Labor to continue work to end exploitative child labor. Please contact your House and Senate colleagues on the Labor, Health and Human Services Appropriations subcommittee and ask that ILAB grant programs are funded at at least $100 million. I heard about this issue from World Vision, an organization I support.
Currently, 152 million children around the world are in child labor, including 73 million in hazardous child labor. Since 1995, ILAB has worked through partners to provide education and livelihoods services to almost 2 million vulnerable children and their families in over 90 countries. Through holistic programs, ILAB works to increase awareness about the harmful impacts of child labor, improve access to education, and develop economic opportunities for parents, allowing families to improve their livelihoods without relying on child labor to meet basic needs. ILAB is a key part of the U.S. government's efforts to protect children from violence and exploitation. Through the Department of Labor, the United States has been a leader in reducing the number of children in hazardous child labor – the number of children exposed has declined by one-third over the last 15 years. Child labor jeopardizes children's health and safety and can keep them from receiving an education.
I thank you for your work and taking the time to reach out to help continue the United States' legacy of protecting children.
Preserve ILAB to fight child labor
As your constituent, I am writing to thank you for your work and ask you to support critical funding for the Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) in the Department of Labor to continue work to end exploitative child labor. Please contact your House and Senate colleagues on the Labor, Health and Human Services Appropriations subcommittee and ask that ILAB grant programs are funded at at least $100 million. I heard about this issue from World Vision, an organization I support.
Currently, 152 million children around the world are in child labor, including 73 million in hazardous child labor. Since 1995, ILAB has worked through partners to provide education and livelihoods services to almost 2 million vulnerable children and their families in over 90 countries. Through holistic programs, ILAB works to increase awareness about the harmful impacts of child labor, improve access to education, and develop economic opportunities for parents, allowing families to improve their livelihoods without relying on child labor to meet basic needs. ILAB is a key part of the U.S. government's efforts to protect children from violence and exploitation. Through the Department of Labor, the United States has been a leader in reducing the number of children in hazardous child labor – the number of children exposed has declined by one-third over the last 15 years. Child labor jeopardizes children's health and safety and can keep them from receiving an education.
I thank you for your work and taking the time to reach out to help continue the United States' legacy of protecting children.
Don't support cuts to ILAB funding
As your constituent, I am writing to thank you for your work and ask you to support critical funding for the Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) in the Department of Labor to continue work to end exploitative child labor. Please contact your House and Senate colleagues on the Labor, Health and Human Services Appropriations subcommittee and ask that ILAB grant programs are funded at at least $100 million. I heard about this issue from World Vision, an organization I support.
Currently, 152 million children around the world are in child labor, including 73 million in hazardous child labor. Since 1995, ILAB has worked through partners to provide education and livelihoods services to almost 2 million vulnerable children and their families in over 90 countries. Through holistic programs, ILAB works to increase awareness about the harmful impacts of child labor, improve access to education, and develop economic opportunities for parents, allowing families to improve their livelihoods without relying on child labor to meet basic needs. ILAB is a key part of the U.S. government's efforts to protect children from violence and exploitation. Through the Department of Labor, the United States has been a leader in reducing the number of children in hazardous child labor – the number of children exposed has declined by one-third over the last 15 years. Child labor jeopardizes children's health and safety and can keep them from receiving an education.
I thank you for your work and taking the time to reach out to help continue the United States' legacy of protecting children.