Tuesday, May 24, 2011

National Missing Children Day


Can you imagine having one of your children missing? It is every parent's nightmare, yet every day, more children disappear without a trace.


May 25 is National Missing Children's Day


It's a reminder for all parents, guardians, teachers and other role models to make child safety a priority.


In honor of National Missing Children's Day, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children encourages you to take 25 minutes to help make children safer.



  


  25 ways to make kids safer
At Home

  1. Teach your children their full names, address, and home telephone number. Make sure they know your full name.
  2. Make sure your children know how to reach you at work or on your cell phone.
  3. Teach your children how and when to use 911 and make sure your children have a trusted adult to call if they're scared or have an emergency.
  4. Instruct children to keep the door locked and not to open the door to talk to anyone when they are home alone. Set rules with your children about having visitors over when you're not home and how to answer the telephone.
  5. Choose babysitters with care. Obtain references from family, friends, and neighbors. Once you have chosen the caregiver, drop in unexpectedly to see how your children are doing. Ask children how the experience with the caregiver was and listen carefully to their responses.
On the Net

  1. Learn about the Internet. The more you know about how the Web works, the better prepared you are to teach your children about potential risks. Visit www.NetSmartz.org for more information about Internet safety.
  2. Place the family computer in a common area, rather than a child's bedroom. Also, monitor their time spent online and the websites they've visited and establish rules for Internet use.
  3. Know what other access your child may have to the Internet at school, libraries, or friends' homes.
  4. Use privacy settings on social networking sites to limit contact with unknown users and make sure screen names don't reveal too much about your children.
  5. Encourage your children to tell you if anything they encounter online makes them feel sad, scared, or confused.
  6. Caution children not to post revealing information or inappropriate photos of themselves or their friends online.
At School

  1. Walk the route to and from school with your children, pointing out landmarks and safe places to go if they're being followed or need help. If your children ride a bus, visit the bus stop with them to make sure they know which bus to take.
  2. Remind kids to take a friend whenever they walk or bike to school. Remind them to stay with a group if they're waiting at the bus stop.
  3. Caution children never to accept a ride from anyone unless you have told them it is OK to do so in each instance.
Out and About

  1. Take your children on a walking tour of the neighborhood and tell them whose homes they may visit without you.
  2. Remind your children it's OK to say NO to anything that makes them feel scared, uncomfortable, or confused and teach your children to tell you if anything or anyone makes them feel this way.
  3. Teach your children to ask permission before leaving home.
  4. Remind your children not to walk or play alone outside.
  5. Teach your children to never approach a vehicle, occupied or not, unless they know the owner and are accompanied by a parent, guardian, or other trusted adult.
  6. Practice "what if" situations and ask your children how they would respond. "What if you fell off your bike and you needed help? Who would you ask?"
  7. Teach your children to check in with you if there is a change of plans.
  8. During family outings, establish a central, easy-to-locate spot to meet for check-ins or should you get separated.
  9. Teach your children how to locate help at theme parks, sports stadiums, shopping malls, and other public places. Also, identify those people who they can ask for help, such as uniformed law enforcement, security guards and store clerks with nametags.
  10. Help your children learn to recognize and avoid potential risks, so that they can deal with them if they happen.
  11. Teach your children that if anyone tries to grab them, they should make a scene and make every effort to get away by kicking, screaming, and resisting.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) is a private, non-profit organization established in 1984 by the United States Congress.



Primarily funded by the Justice Department, the NCMEC acts as an information clearinghouse and resource for parents, children, law enforcement agencies, schools, and communities to assist in locating missing children and to raise public awareness about ways to prevent child abduction, child sexual abuse and child pornography. John Walsh, Noreen Gosch, and others advocated establishing the center as a result of frustration stemming from a lack of resources and coordination between law enforcement and other government agencies.



The Center provides information to help locate children reported missing (by parental abduction, child abduction, or running away from home) and to assist physically and sexually abused children. In this resource capacity, the NCMEC distributes photographs of missing children and accepts tips and information from the public. It also coordinates these activities with numerous state and federal law enforcement agencies.



http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/216857.pdf Federal Resources on

Missing and Exploited Children - A Directory for Law Enforcement and Other Public and Private Agencies


 

1 comment:

  1. Having a child missing is a nightmare! It happened to me when my son was about 4. Every Friday night was movie and pizza night. We always picked up the pizza at dominoes..so they knew us there. One Friday we went to our church for a party, and I left to pick up the pizza, from pizza hut. My son didn't want to go, so I asked the group to keep an eye on him. The store was just down the street. When I got back, about 10 mins later, my son was gone. We searched everywhere, he was no where to be found. It was like everything was in slow motion. I called the police, then my parents. I told my father that my son was missing, he said...I know..he is at dominoes...your mother has gone to get him! I was so relieved! Apparently he had changed his mind about going with me, so started walking after me. When he got to the road he started crying, and the man across the street, who was also a church member asked him what was wrong, he told him I had gone to dominoes and left him there. The man took him to dominoes, and the people recognized him, he gave them our phone number and was found! My mother and I got there at the same time, and since she was yelling at him, and I was crying, he chose to go home with me..hahaha. The whole experience lasted less than 30 minutes, but seemed like a life time. But it did teach me to be more careful while watching him!
    These days they also have tracking systems and walkie talkies you can give to your child when you go out to parks or malls. I would also suggest not having your child's name visibly displayed on clothes, a stranger will call the child by their name and the child will think they are a friend.

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