Missing California Teen Found Safe After Officials Issue State’s First Ebony Alert: 'A Real Difference'

  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

"This new emergency alert marks a significant step in dedicating resources towards a previously underserved community,” said the California Highway Patrol

California became the first state in the country to issue an Ebony alert
California became the first state in the country to issue an Ebony alert

California's Ebony Alert system, which went into effect on Jan. 1, has already led to the successful recovery of a missing teen.

“The CHP's first Ebony Alert safely located a missing teen in Los Angeles," officials announced in a Facebook post on Monday. "This new emergency alert, focused on missing Black youth and young women, marks a significant step in dedicating resources towards a previously underserved community.”

On Thursday, the Long Beach Police Department (LBPD) requested an alert for a 17-year-old girl who was last seen on Dec. 30 in Los Angeles, according to the Daily Breeze. An LBPD spokesman told the outlet that one of the department's detectives found the teen unharmed the day after the alert was sent out.

PEOPLE reached out to the CHP and LBPD Tuesday for additional information.

Related: Instagram Rolls Out New Amber Alert Feature on International Missing Children's Day

Signed into law on October 8 by Gov. Gavin Newson, the Ebony Alert — a first of its kind in the country — seeks to address racial disparities over missing person cases in the U.S., especially regarding young persons of color.

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

“I’m very relieved to know she is safe and unharmed. It’s clear the Ebony Alert will make a real difference," California State Sen. Steve Bradford, who wrote the legislation, said in a statement obtained by PEOPLE on Tuesday.

In an earlier statement, Bradford expressed his appreciation that law enforcement was already using the notification tool. “This alert can quickly get information out to the public through the utilization of highway signs, cell phone alerts and social media,” he said.

“Black children and young women go missing at disproportionately higher rates but do not receive the same level of attention as others who go missing. This is exactly the reason I authored this law,” Bradford continued. “This new law can reduce the anguish and pain that so many families experience when a loved one is missing. I’m proud that California has become the first state in the nation to prioritize the crisis of missing Black people through the passage of the Ebony Alert law.”

Related: Skeletal Remains Found in Woods Identified as Georgia Man Who Went Missing in 2016

According to the Black and Missing Foundation, a Maryland-based nonprofit organization, almost 40% of missing people in the U.S. are persons of color.

The same organization also said that of the 214,582 persons of color who were reported missing in 2022, 153,374 of them were under the age of 18. It noted that many missing minority children are initially classified as “runaways,” and thus do not receive an Amber Alert or media attention.

Related: Woman Missing 31 Years and Declared Dead Is Found Alive at Care Home in Puerto Rico: 'Very Big Shock'

“This is all about reunification,” Bradford previously told PEOPLE, finding these individuals who are missing, who are abducted by no means of their own and bringing them home to their families safe,” he says, adding: “That's all we can hope for.”

In a statement shared with PEOPLE last year, the Black and Missing Foundation praised the legislation that established the alert. “California ranks in the top states where people of color are disappearing at an alarming rate,” the statement read. “Sadly, many of our cases are under the radar, like Arianna Fitts of San Francisco, who has been missing for seven years after her mom was found murdered. We must change this statistic.”

For more People news, make sure to sign up for our newsletter!

Read the original article on People.