What I am posting here is quite long, but is extremely important for those who are not aware of what is taking place.
Below is a press release from Valerie Scott who has been fighting for years to make Sex Work safe, accepted and decriminalized.
Goodhandy's will be volunteering to fight along side her, in any way we can, to help with this important quest. They are being represented by an amazing lawer, Alan Young, who has also put himself on call if ever needed by Goodhandy's.
Sex work T-Girls in this city are extremely divided, but we MUST join together as one, and get behind this. It does not matter if you have chosen Prostitution as a career, or just need surgery money, or just paying some bills. This concerns any who have done, are doing, or will be doing this trade.
"Decriminalizing Sex Work Challenge"
TORONTO -- On Wednesday, March 21, 2007 at 10:30 a.m. a press
conference
will be held announce the launching of a constitutional challenge to
strike down three provisions of the Criminal Code which prevent sex
workers from working in a safe and secure environment. The press
conference will be held at St. Lawrence Community Recreation Centre,
230
The Esplanade, Toronto, Ontario.
Terri Jean Bedford (former Bondage Bungalow dominatrix), Valerie Scott
(former sex worker and current Executive Director of Sex Professionals
of
Canada - SPOC), and Amy Lebovitch (current sex worker and SPOC
spokesperson), will be initiating an application in the Ontario
Superior
Court of Justice seeking the constitutional invalidation of s.210
(bawdy
house), s.212(1)(
(living on the avails) and s.213(1)(c)
communicating
for the purpose of prostitution) of the Criminal Code.
The act of prostitution itself is legal in Canada yet the provisions
challenged in this application operate to deny sex workers safe legal
options for the conducting of legal business. The applicants will
argue in
court that the combined effect of these three provisions violates s.7
of
the Charter of Rights and Freedoms by depriving sex workers of their
right
to liberty and security in a manner that is not in accordance with the
principles of fundamental justice.
Though the on-going trial of Robert Pickton has brought worldwide
attention to the dangers sex workers are exposed to on the streets, the
trial will not in any way address the larger legal and political issue
of
how to prevent the continuing disappearance and murder of sex workers.
As
the Pickton trial unfolds, it must be remembered that this horrific
story
is not an isolated phenomena.
Project Kare in Edmonton is currently trying to solve the
disappearances
of over 80 women in “high-risk professions”, and every government
report
written on the sex profession in the past 20 years has acknowledged
that
street prostitution is a dangerous business. Yet even as the body count
continues to rise, nothing is done.
The applicants are represented on a pro bono basis by Professor Alan
Young
of Osgoode Hall Law School, Stacey Nichols of Neuberger Rose LLP, Ron
Marzel, Matthew Wilton and Paul Burstein, but the majority of the legal
work in preparing this application has been done by volunteer law
students. We invite you to attend the press conference to hear from the
applicants, members of the volunteer law student team (Ehsan Ghebrai
and
Katherine Rhodes), a representative of Maggie’s Toronto Prostitutes’
Community Service Project, and Professor Young in order to receive more
details of the upcoming challenge. News coverage of the Pickton trial
has
graphically exposed the issue and we hope you can attend to now report
that something is finally being done about the problem.
Thank you for reading,
Mandy
Below is a press release from Valerie Scott who has been fighting for years to make Sex Work safe, accepted and decriminalized.
Goodhandy's will be volunteering to fight along side her, in any way we can, to help with this important quest. They are being represented by an amazing lawer, Alan Young, who has also put himself on call if ever needed by Goodhandy's.
Sex work T-Girls in this city are extremely divided, but we MUST join together as one, and get behind this. It does not matter if you have chosen Prostitution as a career, or just need surgery money, or just paying some bills. This concerns any who have done, are doing, or will be doing this trade.
"Decriminalizing Sex Work Challenge"
TORONTO -- On Wednesday, March 21, 2007 at 10:30 a.m. a press
conference
will be held announce the launching of a constitutional challenge to
strike down three provisions of the Criminal Code which prevent sex
workers from working in a safe and secure environment. The press
conference will be held at St. Lawrence Community Recreation Centre,
230
The Esplanade, Toronto, Ontario.
Terri Jean Bedford (former Bondage Bungalow dominatrix), Valerie Scott
(former sex worker and current Executive Director of Sex Professionals
of
Canada - SPOC), and Amy Lebovitch (current sex worker and SPOC
spokesperson), will be initiating an application in the Ontario
Superior
Court of Justice seeking the constitutional invalidation of s.210
(bawdy
house), s.212(1)(

communicating
for the purpose of prostitution) of the Criminal Code.
The act of prostitution itself is legal in Canada yet the provisions
challenged in this application operate to deny sex workers safe legal
options for the conducting of legal business. The applicants will
argue in
court that the combined effect of these three provisions violates s.7
of
the Charter of Rights and Freedoms by depriving sex workers of their
right
to liberty and security in a manner that is not in accordance with the
principles of fundamental justice.
Though the on-going trial of Robert Pickton has brought worldwide
attention to the dangers sex workers are exposed to on the streets, the
trial will not in any way address the larger legal and political issue
of
how to prevent the continuing disappearance and murder of sex workers.
As
the Pickton trial unfolds, it must be remembered that this horrific
story
is not an isolated phenomena.
Project Kare in Edmonton is currently trying to solve the
disappearances
of over 80 women in “high-risk professions”, and every government
report
written on the sex profession in the past 20 years has acknowledged
that
street prostitution is a dangerous business. Yet even as the body count
continues to rise, nothing is done.
The applicants are represented on a pro bono basis by Professor Alan
Young
of Osgoode Hall Law School, Stacey Nichols of Neuberger Rose LLP, Ron
Marzel, Matthew Wilton and Paul Burstein, but the majority of the legal
work in preparing this application has been done by volunteer law
students. We invite you to attend the press conference to hear from the
applicants, members of the volunteer law student team (Ehsan Ghebrai
and
Katherine Rhodes), a representative of Maggie’s Toronto Prostitutes’
Community Service Project, and Professor Young in order to receive more
details of the upcoming challenge. News coverage of the Pickton trial
has
graphically exposed the issue and we hope you can attend to now report
that something is finally being done about the problem.
Thank you for reading,
Mandy
Comment