Crossroads has been a staple in our Germantown community for nearly two decades, known to provide expansive services to low-income women, especially women of color. The scope of your services … Continue reading
Philadelphia: Box 11795 Phila PA 19101 215-848-1120 San Francisco: Box 14512 SF, CA 94114 415-626-4114 womencount@womenindialogue.us
In Defense of Prostitute Women’s Safety Project has been a community resource since 1998. Our work includes:
Women working the streets, women of color, immigrant and trans women are often particularly targeted and denied justice and protection from police and courts. Attackers are emboldened as long as police crack-downs continue. Fear of arrest means that women are less likely to come forward and report violence
Over 200 Black women – some but not all of whom were sex workers – have been killed or are missing in Los Angeles. Many are victims of serial murderers. The police did little to stop the murders, labeling them as No Human Involved. We support the work of the Black Coalition Fighting Back Serial Murders which has campaigning for police accountability and justice for the victims and their families for decades.
Despite much discussion about trafficking, in practice victims are frequently denied support and protection. Anti-trafficking laws, like the FOSTA/SESTA laws which criminalized online advertising, claim to protect women and children. But sex workers particularly immigrants, are pushed further underground which makes them more
vulnerable to arrest and deportation.
About 70% of sex workers are mothers, mostly single mothers. Sex workers are immigrants working to support families back home, young people escaping violence in the home or institutions, students funding their studies. Low wages, debt, rising unemployment, rents and homelessness, and punitive policies which have cut people off welfare, have left many of us with few alternatives to prostitution and other underground ways of surviving. If sex workers get a criminal record for prostitution, they are blocked from getting other jobs. Their children can be taken from them and put into foster care. Many sex workers are formerlyincarcerated people – those withfelony convictions are denied the right to welfare and subsidized housing, leaving many destitute.
Sex workers, like others, need affordable housing, living wages, including for mothers and other caregivers, and support to leave prostitution if they choose.
More women have been able to move off the street and work with others indoors. Criminal records have been expunged making it easier for women to leave prostitution and get other jobs. Crucially, women who report rape and other violence know they can now insist on being treated like any other victim of crime, and not ignored or dismissed because they are sex workers.
SOME OF OUR SUCCESSES INCLUDE:
Our California-wide campaigns have garnered support from many different groups with most people agreeing that safety of sex workers must be the priority. But more work is needed to bring to light the daily violence, discrimination, stigma and inequalities which sex workers face.
JUSTICE IS A VITAL HEALER!
In Defense of Prostitute Women’s Safety Project:
WHAT CAN SUPPORTERS DO?
In Defense of Prostitute Women’s Safety Project is a collaboration between the US PROStitutes Collective, Legal Action for Women, and Women in Dialogue. We are partially funded by the San Francisco Department on the Status of Women
For more information, contact us at 415-626,4114 or PO Box 14512, San Francisco, CA 94114.