Impact of the Policing and Crime Bill
on the health and safety of sex workers.

 

As individuals and organisations concerned with health and safety, we believe that legislation on prostitution should be judged first of all by whether it helps sex workers, especially women and their families.  We don’t think the Policing and Crime Bill now before parliament does that.

 

The harsher definition of persistent soliciting (twice over a period of three month), the forced “rehabilitation” of those arrested, and the targeting of brothels for raids and closure, will drive prostitution further underground, increasing the vulnerability of those involved.  Fear of arrest deters women from reporting violence or to access health or other services.  Mothers, the majority of sex workers, worry about protecting their children from the stigma attached to criminalisation, and from the separation that may result from a prison sentence.  A criminal record also prevents those who may want to leave prostitution from getting other jobs, even when they are qualified for them.

 

It is well established that working from premises is much safer than working on the street, as women can work collectively and support each other.  Whatever our views on prostitution, we believe that the policing of rape and other violence should be prioritised over the policing of consenting sex.

 

The government agrees that most women involved in prostitution do so because of economic need, debt, homelessness, domestic violence … Why then during a profound economic recession bring in legislation that will further criminalise women?

 

In May 2009 Royal College of Nursing Congress voted 93% in favour for up to four sex workers to be allowed to work together legally. Delegates voted through the measure believing that decriminalisation will remove the stigma of prostitution, enabling sex workers to access the health services that they need.

 

New Zealand successfully introduced decriminalisation six years ago on the basis that the health and safety of sex workers was paramount, and that to achieve it sex workers and their organisations had to be involved in the legislative process.

 

We urge the government to drop the new measures and look at New Zealand as the best way forward.                                                                                                        15 July 2009

 

Signed by:

 

Andrea Spyropoulos

Royal College of Nursing

Revd Andrew Dotchin

Whitton Rectory, Ipswich

Anthea Martin*

Middlesex University

April Wareham

National Users Network

Dr Belinda Brooks-Gordon

Reader in Psychology & Social Policy, Birkbeck College, UoL

Cari Mitchell

English Collective of Prostitutes

Catherine Stephens

International Union of Sex Workers

Charlotte Gage*

Women’s Resource Centre

Chris Coverdale

Make Wars History

Clayton Littlewood

Soho author and playwright

Colin Francome

Professor of Sociology of Health, Middlesex University

Bridget Anderson

Centre on Migration Policy & Society. Univ of Oxford

Dan Lepard

Guardian food writer & author

Dave Renton, barrister

Garden Court Chambers

Revd David Gilmore

Rector, Parish of St Anne with St Thomas & St Peter, Soho

Felicity de Zulueta

Consultant Psychotherapist & Honorary Senior Lecturer, KCL

Frances Ackroyd

Minister, United Reformed Church

Frances Harper

Documentary film-maker

Georgina Perry

Open Doors Service Manager, CHPCT

Geraldine Black*

Community Links

Gemma Amran*

Public Concern at Work

Ginnie Langdon

Enfield Women’s Centre

Gordon Morse

Fellow, Royal College of General Practitioners

Graham Dobkin

Manchester Action on Street Health (MASH)

Gregory King

Working Men Project, St Mary’s Hospital

A.C. Higgins

Health promotion specialist, CLASH

Ian Macdonald QC

Garden Court Chambers, 57-60 Lincoln’s Inn Fields

James Mannion

Sex work advisor, Soho Boyz

Jane Pitcher

Post graduate student, Loughborough University

Jane Ayres

Praed Street Project, St Mary’s Hospital

Jean Johnson

Women’s Institute, Hampshire Federation

Jenepher Parry*

South Solent University, School of Law

Jennifer Peacy*

Durham University

Joan Shenton

Immunity Resource Foundation

John Davies FRSA

Visiting Research Fellow at WitsWaterand University,

Julia O’Connell Davidson

Prof. of Sociology & Social Policy, Uni of Nottingham

Hon. Juliet Peston

Soho Society member Executive Committee

Justin Gaffney

SohoBoyz

Kay Adshead

Poet, playwright and director, author of Thatcher’s Women

Laura Schwartz

Feminist Fightback

Lee Brooker

SW5 Project & Terrence Higgins Trust

Lisa Longstaff

Women Against Rape

Dr Maggie O’Neill

Dept. Social Sciences, Loughborough University

R Mannah

Structures Treatment Practitioner, Westminster Drugs Project

Matt Southwell

Respect Drug User Network

Michael Kalmonovitz

Payday Men’s Network

Michelle Farley

Sexual Health on Call

Milly Plater

CPN / Specialist nurse in substance misuse

Niamh Eastwood

Release, Head of Legal Services and Deputy Director

Dr Nicola Smith

Senior Lecturer, University of Birmingham

Dr Nick Mai

Senior Research Officer, London Metropolitan University

Niki Adams

Legal Action for Women

Nina Lopez

Global Women’s Strike

Rev Paul Nicolson

Zacchaeus 2000 Trust

Paul Ridge

Associate, Bindmans LLP

Robert Lambert

Branch Secretary, Colchester Unite Central Branch 1861.

Rosie Campbell

UK Network of Sex Work Projects

Sabrina Miller*

Tower Hamlets Drug Project

Sandra Gibson

Inner South Community Health Service RhED Program

Sebastian Horsley

Soho resident, artist, writer

Siobhan Kilkenny 

Working with sex workers and drugs users, Huddersfield

Stella Whitehouse

S.A.V.E. Sandwell self-help user group

Sue Conlan

Tyndallwoods solicitors

Struan Rodger

Actor

Sue Johnson

Prostitute Outreach Workers, Nottingham

Susan Mayer

Secular Feminists

Steve Freer

Respect National Users Network

Tara Quadlet

Turning Point, Birmingham, User volunteer

Teresa Mackay

Ipswich Trades Council

Tracey Chaniler

Hammersmith & Fulham DATT Team

Tricia Clarke

Communication Workers Union Women’s Advisory Cttee

Valerie J Evans

Former Chair Women’s National Commission

Wendy Mitchell*

Sefton Drugs Action Team

Will Stone*

Avon and Bristol Law Centre

 

* Signed in a personal capacity

 

 

Contact: Safety First Coalition, 230A Kentish Town Road, London NW5 2AB ecp@allwomencount.net   020 7482 2496