Providing more tools to help in cases involving missing and murdered Indigenous people is the aim of bipartisan legislation that passed the Washington State House this week.

Mosbrucker calls the bill the Bring them home bill

The sponsor of House Bill 1571 Rep. Gina Mosbrucker, R-Goldendale calls the measure the Bring them home bill. She says "it's the next step in our effort to collaborate, investigate, find, and bring home the many missing and murdered Indigenous persons in our state. This bill would make sure tribes are allowed to pray over the body of a deceased person -- a member of their tribe -- before the body is moved without compromising the scene before an autopsy is conducted. This was one of the main requests from heartbroken families we spoke with during statewide meetings with tribal members in 2018."

The bill estblishes two programs that will help survivors of human trafficking

Mosbrucker says the bill also requires two grant programs be established by the Department of Commerce's Office of Crime Victims Advocacy to help with services and resources for Indigenous survivors of human trafficking.
Mosbrucker says a third requirement under the bill would require jails that release a person in custody who is the subject of a missing person's report to notify the agency of original jurisdiction that issued the report.

Mosbrucker says lawmakers have worked over the last five years

"These people who are missing and taken from their tribes are someone's daughter, someone's wife or grandchild, their aunt, or even their son. Can you imagine being alone, scared and not knowing whether Washington state is or is not using every single resource to find you and bring you home? That's the importance of this bill and the legislation we have passed over the last five years," says Mosbrucker, the prime sponsor of MMIP legislation, House Bill 2951 in 2018, and House Bill 1713 in 2019.
The measure passed 98-0. It now goes to the Senate for further consideration.

LOOK: Here are the best lake towns to live in

Many of the included towns jump out at the casual observer as popular summer-rental spots--the Ozarks' Branson, Missouri, or Arizona's Lake Havasu--it might surprise you to dive deeper into some quality-of-life offerings beyond the beach and vacation homes. You'll likely pick up some knowledge from a wide range of Americana: one of the last remaining 1950s-style drive-ins in the Midwest; a Florida town that started as a Civil War veteran retirement area; an island boasting some of the country's top public schools and wealth-earners right in the middle of a lake between Seattle and Bellevue; and even a California town containing much more than Johnny Cash's prison blues.

LOOK: Here are the biggest HBCUs in America

More than 100 historically Black colleges and universities are designated by the U.S. Department of Education, meeting the definition of a school "established prior to 1964, whose principal mission was, and is, the education of black Americans."

StudySoup compiled the 20 largest historically Black colleges and universities in the nation, based on 2021 data from the U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education Statistics. Each HBCU on this list is a four-year institution, and the schools are ranked by the total student enrollment.

LOOK: Here are the best lake towns to live in

Many of the included towns jump out at the casual observer as popular summer-rental spots--the Ozarks' Branson, Missouri, or Arizona's Lake Havasu--it might surprise you to dive deeper into some quality-of-life offerings beyond the beach and vacation homes. You'll likely pick up some knowledge from a wide range of Americana: one of the last remaining 1950s-style drive-ins in the Midwest; a Florida town that started as a Civil War veteran retirement area; an island boasting some of the country's top public schools and wealth-earners right in the middle of a lake between Seattle and Bellevue; and even a California town containing much more than Johnny Cash's prison blues.

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