HOUSE OVERSIGHT 012378 DOJ also opposes subsection (b). Since the passage of the TVPA, DOS has been one of the principal agencies conducting trainings for a multitude of audiences, including task forces and Federal, state, and local law enforcement, on the issue of trafficking in persons. The Department also has experience in conducting training on juvenile victims through the Innocence Lost National Initiative. Effective efforts to combat trafficking must mobilize the expertise of HHS, DHS, and DOJ. DOJ also notes a misspelling in the new subsection (F)(ii)— "edibility" instead of "eligibility". 16. Section 214 Section 214 of the bill authorizes the Attorney General to make grants to assist victims of severe forms of trafficking up to $2.5 million in 2008, increasing to $15 million in 2011. The Department of Justice already has authority to make grants for the provision of services for crime victims and does so at a level in excess of $250 million a year. Also, the authorization of yet another grant program runs counter to the Administration's proposal in the 2008 Budget to consolidate DOJ's more than 70 grant programs. Moreover, any provision purporting to expand or alter definitions of individuals of qualifying for victim benefits must include the requirement that a Federal law enforcement agent must declare the individual to be a victim of a severe form of trafficking in persons, and that the victim agree to cooperate in the investigation and prosecution, or that the victim be under the age of 18. DOJ opposes the consultation requirement in subsection (a)(1) with the Secretary of State for establishing programs to serve domestic, U.S. citizen trafficking victims. Such domestic authority falls outside of the mission and expertise of the Department of State. DOJ also opposes the mandatory consultation with non-government organizations (NG0s) regarding the provision of services. This creates a conflict of interest since many of the NGOs wil