Pubdate: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: John McKay Note: John McKay, a Vancouver police Insp., Special to The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) DON'T CHANGE THE SEX-TRADE LAW, JUST MAKE IT WORK BETTER FOR THE WOMEN After 30 years policing, the last three as the inspector in charge of the Downtown Eastside, I have concluded that the tragic circumstances of street prostitutes can only be improved if we use existing laws more effectively. The hallmark of sex trade work is isolation: Prostitutes are isolated from mainstream society by social stigma, addiction, poverty, pimps and organized crime. Although prostitution is not illegal, the Criminal Code prohibits communication for the purposes of prostitution. This law gives police reason to identify, investigate and ultimately protect sex workers. If prostitution is completely legalized, the unintended consequence will be the elimination of police intervention in the lives of these marginalized citizens, who truly need protection. Street-level sex workers often become victims of drug addiction and violence. Their activities have a negative impact on communities where noise, discarded condoms and needles, increased traffic and verbal harassment of residents create street disorder. Legalization or decriminalization will not solve these problems for neighbourhoods, nor will it make the lives of sex trade workers safer. If the current situation of sex trade workers' lives and their impact on communities is unacceptable and the proposals to decriminalize or legalize prostitution will have unintended negative outcomes, what is the answer? I believe that our society has only one morally and legally defensible option: Get street workers out of the sex trade. We must use our legal system to accomplish this, basing the solution on the B.C. Mental Health Act, which allows the police to take a mentally ill person into custody and deliver him to a medical facility. The spirit of this law is not punitive; its intent is to get an individual into secure treatment to protect both himself and society. If this attitude were applied to the prostitution sections of the Criminal Code, courts could sentence an addicted sex worker to drug treatment, counselling and job training. If the law was used in this way, sex workers could be extricated from dangerous streets and given the stability, education and job skills needed to function in society. I believe existing advocacy groups would be a natural ally of the legal system, providing support for sex workers as ordered by the courts. The police would maintain their enforcement role but would serve as gatekeepers, directing sex workers out of their marginalized existence on the street. Judges would then be able to order these women into rehabilitation options managed by advocacy groups. Society shouldn't change or eradicate existing laws on prostitution, but use them to offer sex workers the services needed to get off the street and on with their lives. Rather than removing all legal sanctions against the sex trade, we need to see the possibilities for positive change inherent in our existing laws. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D