5th-graders can enter Missing Child poster contest

COLUMBUS – The Ohio Attorney General’s Missing Persons Unit recently began accepting entries for the 2017 National Missing Children’s Day Poster Contest, won last year by a fifth-grader from Dayton.

Ohio Attorney General's Office
Ohio Attorney General’s Office

The contest is open to fifth grade students, Attorney General Mike DeWine said.

The deadline to submit posters to the Ohio Attorney General’s Office is Feb. 24, 2017.

Click here for an application and contest rules.

The 2016 winning Ohio poster (pictured) was from a student at St. Anthony Elementary School in Dayton.

The theme of this year’s contest, sponsored nationally by the United States Department of Justice, is “Bring Our Missing Children Home.”

The purpose of the contest is to help raise awareness about child safety, exhibit America’s efforts to bring missing children home safely, and highlight the importance of preemptive education programs.

Fifth graders across the state are eligible to submit a poster to the Attorney General’s Office that incorporates the theme of the contest into their artwork. The artwork will be judged on creativity, reflection of the contest theme, and design originality.

The top three posters will be selected by a panel of judges from the AMBER Alert Steering Committee and the Ohio Attorney General’s Office. The winners, their parents, and teachers will be invited to Columbus to meet with Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine and receive their awards.

Ohio’s first place winner will then be entered into the national contest, where one nationwide winner will travel to Washington, DC, to participate in the National Missing Children’s Day ceremony.