An evening for Alabama's women, parents, and daughters — joining the First Lady's national call to protect what matters most.
We are bringing together the people who understand what is happening to our daughters online — and what we can do about it, together.
Across Alabama, parents are asking the same questions. How do we protect our girls when the threats they face did not exist a year ago? What do we say to a daughter whose image has been used without her permission? Who is standing up for her in Montgomery, in Washington, and in the halls of the platforms where this harm is spreading?
This is the first conference of its kind in Alabama. It is free. It is open. And it is built for the mothers, fathers, pastors, teachers, and young women themselves who want to be part of the response — not just the audience for the problem.
First Lady Melania Trump has made protecting children online a national priority. The Christian Coalition of Alabama is bringing that work home — connecting Alabama families directly to the tools, the laws, and the leaders now making it possible to stand up for girls and young women in our state.
A licensed social worker with two decades of clinical practice, Kristi has educated more than 200,000 parents, teens, and professionals on social media safety. Her work focuses on equipping families with the tools to navigate the online world safely.
Dr. Allen LongState Board of Education
Ms. Debra HaysConcertIDC
Rep. Reed IngramAlabama House
Sheriff Derrick CunninghamMontgomery County
Chairman Doug SingletonCounty Commission
Sally PittsWSFA-TV
Gerald WilliamsMontgomery Academy
Sean WilliamsAlabama Boys Foundation
Principal Louise PittsChilton County High School
Clear, age-appropriate ways to talk with your daughter, your son, or your students about what they are seeing — and what to do when they see something wrong.
How to report harmful imagery and get it removed — including the platforms, processes, and federal resources now available through the Take It Down initiative.
What the Anti-AI Pornography Protection Act does, where it is in the legislative process, and what it means for families and schools in our state.
Lawmakers, sheriffs, educators, and parents in one place — and the simple fact that you are not alone in caring about this.
Please respond by Monday, April 20. Dinner is included — we ask that you RSVP so we can plan accordingly.