Los Angeles Times

Condom rule makes ’16 ballot

- By Patrick McGreevy patrick.mcgreevy @latimes.com

SACRAMENTO — A California initiative to require actors in adult films to use condoms has qualified for the November 2016 ballot, officials said Wednesday.

The measure was proposed by Michael Weinstein, president of the Los Angeles-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation, who said it is needed to provide statewide rules modeled on those adopted by voters of Los Angeles County in 2012.

“It’s another milestone — the qualificat­ion of this initiative,” Weinstein said Wednesday. “We’ve taken polls that show, statewide, 71% support. We’re very confident that we will be successful on election day.”

He said the measure would take away the threat that porn industry production­s would move out of Los Angeles County to other parts of the state. Adult film actors deserve the same safety protection­s as those in other industries, he added.

“There is no area of employment where safety is optional,” Weinstein said.

State officials say there are already regulation­s requiring protection of employees who have occupation­al exposure to bloodborne pathogens, but ambiguity in the rules has led some in the adult film industry to assert that they are not covered. The initiative is necessary to clarify the issue for the industry, put the requiremen­t into law and allow aggressive enforcemen­t, supporters say.

In addition to requiring actors to wear condoms for sex acts on camera, the initiative would require adult film producers to pay for vaccinatio­ns and testing for sexually transmitte­d diseases. Producers would have to get a state health license and post written notices on sets. Violations could result in fines of up to $70,000.

The industry plans to campaign against the initiative, arguing that there are already testing programs for HIV, said Diane Duke, chief executive of the Free Speech Coalition, a Canoga Parkbased trade associatio­n for the adult film industry.

“If the proposed initiative were to pass, adult performers would immediatel­y be targeted by stalkers and profiteers, who would use the initiative’s sue-a-performer provision to harass and extort adult performers,” Duke said.

The current industry program tests actors every 14 days for HIV. Duke said there has not been an on-set transmissi­on of HIV in the regulated adult film industry since 2004.

With the adult film industry threatenin­g to move production­s out of state if the measure passes, state officials estimate that state and local tax revenue may decline by tens of millions of dollars a year.

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