Pubdate: Sat, 19 Nov 2005 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Peter McKnight, Vancouver Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) THE CITY'S ALREADY A PIMP, WHY ARE WE ARGUING ABOUT BROTHELS? The Higher-End Sex Trade Gets Civic Support in Return for Revenue; Surely the Poor Prostitutes Deserve the Same Degree of Protection The recent controversy over Coun. Tim Louis's support of a city-owned brothel reveals a lot, but not about Louis. It does, rather, tell us something about ourselves, perhaps more than we would like to know. Louis made this now infamous comment in a recent meeting with The Vancouver Sun editorial board: "Many people involved in survival sex are drug-addicted, and it is a crime that we don't have treatment on demand, so there would be many benefits of a brothel run on a break-even basis. Generally speaking, so long as it is, number one, break even, number two, medical services are available, and number three, drug treatment is available on demand, then yes, I support it." Naturally, the comments made national and international headlines, going at least as far as Italy. The Associated Press picked up the story, so it made its way through many American newspapers, often being relegated to sections that include snippets of offbeat, National Enquirer-style stories, like ones concerning two-headed frogs or Pamela Anderson's breast implants. Louis thus became a source of amusement around the world, but not in Vancouver, where his comments provoked a degree of outrage not seen since a renegade band of COPE councillors last year voted to allow escort services to operate in a new Yaletown live/work zone. NPA mayoral candidate Sam Sullivan, for whom I have a considerable amount of respect, dismissed Louis's suggestion, saying he doesn't want to get "into the business of being a pimp." Mayor Larry Campbell seconded Sullivan's comments, opining that we should work toward getting people off the street rather than facilitating the prostitution lifestyle. This is a bizarre proclamation coming from a man who a few weeks ago suggested we ought to at least discuss the possibility of designating a red light district in Vancouver. It's more bizarre still coming from a man who told The Vancouver Sun editorial board that his greatest accomplishment as mayor was opening the supervised injection facility for drug addicts. In the face of many objections from those who charged an injection site would merely facilitate addiction, Campbell responded that the site was simply a part of the harm reduction arm of the four pillars strategy. Believe it or not, His Worship's comments are still more bizarre, and I will explain why in a minute. First, though, we ought to consider the reaction of Louis's fellow COPE candidates, who tripped over each other in their haste to distance themselves from their embattled colleague. COPE's Ellen Woodsworth, one of the councillors who had previously voted in favour of allowing prostitutes to work in the Yaletown live/work zone, quickly noted that Louis's comments don't reflect COPE policy. COPE campaign spokesman Ivan Bulic seconded that notion, and for two days after The Sun story ran, Louis was uncharacteristically unavailable for comment, apparently sworn to silence by the COPE machine. COPE's David Cadman accused this newspaper of "baiting" Louis, and here at The Sun, rumours were flying that the editorial board must have somehow duped Louis into making the comments, since even a "loony leftist" like Louis couldn't have made such outrageous remarks without prompting. Despite Cadman's astonishing lack of confidence in his comrade's ability to handle the media, Louis, who is not only an experienced councillor, but a lawyer who likes a good debate and wins his fair share of them, isn't easily duped into anything unless it comes from the pages of the Communist Manifesto. Besides, no one on the editorial board even asked him about city-owned brothels, much less pressured him to make his comments. Here's what really happened. Louis arrived with other COPE candidates, including Cadman, who, for one reason or another, seemed to be running the show. Cadman introduced the candidates and did most of the talking, so we addressed our questions to him. Since The Sun's 2004 editorial series on prostitution law reform, we have made an effort to ask politicians -- including Sam Sullivan, Mayor Campbell, Premier Gordon Campbell, former B.C. attorney-general Geoff Plant, provincial NDP leader Carole James and federal Justice Minister Irwin Cotler -- about prostitution-related issues. So it was not unusual for us to ask COPE about the matter, and editorial page editor Fazil Mihlar asked Cadman if he supported the mayor's call for a discussion of red light districts. Cadman noted that the Living in Community program was set up to discuss safety issues faced by sex trade workers. He then said the discussion would take about a year, and, knowing that many more street workers could die within that time, I asked Cadman -- not Louis -- if he would support a city-owned brothel. Where did I get this crazy idea? Why, from none other than Larry-I-oppose-a-brothel-because-it-might-facilitate-prostitution-Ca mpbell. After an extensive discussion of prostitution at an editorial board meeting last year, Campbell mused that maybe it's time the city take over an abandoned building and set up a brothel for street prostitutes. So it was Larry, not Louis, who first advanced the proposal. But Cadman was having none of it, saying it's not appropriate for the city to live off the avails of prostitution, though I reminded Cadman that we already do so, since body rub parlours are licensed by the city. (Sorry, Sam, but you're already a pimp.) Cadman responded that the fees merely cover licensing costs, which is hard to believe since the fees, at nearly $8,000 annually, are far higher than those of other businesses. In any case, Mihlar then asked Cadman if he would support a not-for-profit brothel. Cadman wasn't too keen on that either -- perhaps aware of how it would play out in the news the next day -- but Louis piped up and offered his support for the proposal. So Louis was never pressured into anything. And when you think about it, what's so outrageous about considering the idea? After all, it's not just hypocritical to go about happily licensing escort agencies and massage parlours while ridiculing anyone who dares to discuss a city-run brothel. Indeed, it's downright illogical, since the twin motivations for supporting a municipal brothel -- to protect vulnerable people engaged in dangerous behaviours and to shield the community from witnessing those behaviours -- are precisely the same motivations for permitting body rub parlours and supervised injection sites. Here's what we know: About 80 per cent of prostitution occurs indoors - -- in massage parlours, escort agencies, hotels, motels and private homes. Only 20 per cent of prostitutes work the street, yet nearly every one of the more than 100 prostitutes murdered in B.C. in the past two decades -- and the vast majority who have been assaulted -- have been street workers. It's clear, then, that one of the best ways to protect prostitutes is to get them off the street. The police learned this the hard way: After two high-profile massage parlour murders in Vancouver and Toronto in the 1970s, police began shutting down the parlours by enforcing bawdy house laws. Inevitably, prostitutes flooded the streets, raising the ire of the community and placing prostitutes in greater danger. So the police largely ceased enforcing the law against massage parlours, and municipalities began quietly licensing them, thereby solving both problems at once. However, the most disadvantaged prostitutes -- those with addictions and/or mental illness -- were unable to gain employment in massage parlours (or anywhere else), so they remained on the street, and in danger. And it is these very people who could benefit from a city-owned brothel, which makes the hypocrisy of brothel opponents who license escort agencies particularly galling: They seem to have no problem supporting the work of relatively high-functioning escorts, but immediately ridicule the idea of offering identical support to low-functioning street prostitutes, the people who need it the most. People who spend about five seconds a year thinking about prostitution always tell me that we need exit strategies for such desperate people, that we need to get them out of prostitution, not keep them in it. But I have spent a lot of time on the street, and I can tell you that addicted or mentally ill prostitutes will not -- cannot -- leave the street tomorrow, regardless of what supports are available. And the longer they remain on the street, the greater the dangers they face, and the harder it is for them to get off the street. A city-owned brothel could provide some protection for such people, and one with adequate treatment and counselling facilities could represent a viable exit strategy, a point of first contact with social services and the first step toward getting off the street. Or perhaps there's a better way. Perhaps someone knows of a way to protect prostitutes on the street right now, not six months or a year from now. I haven't heard anyone offer the solution, but I'm certainly ready to listen to all suggestions. And that's really what it's all about, isn't it? Before he decided to play politics, Larry Campbell even said as much, insisting that the Living in Community program must consider all suggestions, that everything must be on the table. Yet the mere mention of a city-owned brothel sends everyone scurrying for cover. As long as we're afraid of even discussing novel solutions to an ancient problem, as long as we censor our thoughts out of fear that they may be deemed outrageous, we will inevitably lapse into proposing "solutions" that have already failed, which is precisely what we've been doing for decades. L'affaire Louis therefore reveals that we are a part of the problem, that as we continue to fear ideas, people will continue to die on the street. And that is the real outrage. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake