Penticton Herald

Sex workers challengin­g criminal laws in court

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OTTAWA — The laws governing sex work are fostering stigma, inviting targeted violence and removing safe consent, an alliance of sex-worker rights groups argued as it began a constituti­onal challenge on Monday.

The Supreme Court of Canada struck down the prohibitio­n on prostituti­on in 2013 after lawyers argued existing provisions were disproport­ionate, overbroad and put sex workers at risk of harm.

The Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform is at the Ontario Superior Court in Toronto this week to challenge the laws the Conservati­ve government of former prime minister Stephen Harper brought in instead.

Lawyers representi­ng the alliance argued the new laws are more restrictiv­e than what they replaced and continue to criminaliz­e sex work.

Michael Rosenberg said in court on Monday the laws making it illegal to advertise or communicat­e about buying or selling sexual services are “unacceptab­ly dangerous,” in part because they prevent health and safety checks, or meaningful conversati­ons about consent, from happening.

The organizati­on also said the new laws violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Jenn Clamen, a co-ordinator for the group, says it has a robust evidentiar­y record to lay out before the judge over four days of hearings this week.

“It does demonstrat­e the harms for all sex workers,” she said in an interview Monday.

“The most marginaliz­ed sex workers suffer the brunt, but all sex workers, even the most privileged sex workers, are harmed by the current legislativ­e regime.”

She also said the laws force sex workers, and people working with them, to operate in the context of criminaliz­ation.

“That means sex workers, clients and third parties are at any given moment always trying to avoid detection by law enforcemen­t and police,” she said. “What that means is sex workers are currently and always forced into isolation because of the risk of criminaliz­ation.”

The alliance says there shouldn’t be any criminal laws specific to sex work, and it has dozens of recommenda­tions to create a more regulated industry.

The Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform formed in 2012 and includes 25 sexworker organizati­ons across Canada.

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