:
Welcome to meeting number four of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights. Pursuant to a motion adopted on Tuesday, February 8, the committee is meeting to review the Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format pursuant to the House order of November 25, 2021. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
The proceedings will be made available via the House of Commons website.
With regard to the speaking list, the committee clerk and I will do our best to maintain a consolidated order of speaking for all members, whether they are participating virtually or in person.
I'd like to now welcome our first round of witnesses, who I believe are from the YMCA in Halifax: Ms. Abiagom, Ms. Gagnon and Ms. Suokonautio. We also have Ms. Joy Smith, founder and president of the Joy Smith Foundation.
We'll give five minutes to each panellist. The YMCA from Halifax can go first, then we'll have Ms. Smith right after. Then you'll have a question and answer period of rounds with every party.
It's over to the YMCA.
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They didn't get the memo. They're all off having their supper already.
Thank you so much, everybody, for having us. It's really a tremendous pleasure to be here. I'm Miia Suokonautio. I'm the executive director of YWCA Halifax. Temi Abiagom and Charlene Gagnon are with me. We come to you as a team.
I want to start by saying that we're very much carrying the stories and experiences of survivors and victims, thrivers and victors. We were talking quite humbly about what a great responsibility this is.
I will do our five minutes here, but any one of us can answer questions. Temi manages our youth exploitation team, which provides direct services. Charlene is the manager of our systems approach to exploitation, working with our government and community partners.
I begin also by highlighting [Technical difficulty—Editor], but also something really remarkable that is happening in Nova Scotia. It's a movement. It's the Nova Scotia trafficking and exploitation services system—we call it TESS—partnership. It includes more than 70 partners across the province, including the YWCA. These partners have worked together for more than five years. Although this thoughtful and committed group has built consensus around practice and human rights as related to exploitation, there is no consensus among the group about the decriminalization or legalization of the industry.
We will focus our testimony or our comments on Bill itself, but will not be commenting on the broader question of decriminalizing or legalizing the sex trade, because we feel a real responsibility to our partners.
With that, in watching prior testimony from last week, we understand that there are in fact really two questions before you now. The first is this: Does Bill protect people who are being exploited? That's a very important question. Is it protecting people? The second is this: Does it cause harm to vulnerable Canadians?
On the first question, if Bill protects people who are being exploited, the short answer is no. Bill C-36 is not protecting people who are being exploited. Again, we know that you've heard expert testimony from our colleagues from across the country. In our experience, people continue to be exploited. Even when there is no pimp, they are still being assaulted when engaged in transactional sex. Even though we have special Crown prosecutors and special policing units and there are no licensed strip clubs in Nova Scotia, the issue of exploitation is rife in Nova Scotia. It permeates the child welfare system. It is a crisis among indigenous women and girls. School administrators and teachers are at odds over how to stem the tide.
In Nova Scotia's youth correctional facility, Waterville, as well as in the adult system, almost without exception girls in detention have been exploited. We are also seeing increasing cases among boys and trans women. Among the dubious distinctions of our Atlantic province is that we have the highest per capita rate of human trafficking in the country.
In short, we have no evidence that would support the claim that Bill has prevented or ended the exploitation of vulnerable Canadians in our province.
On the second question, on whether Bill is causing harm, again, our experience is very similar to what has been described in previous testimony presented to you, in that Bill C-36 has prevented people from coming forward if they've been assaulted by a john. The bill has also pushed the sex industry further underground, into increasingly unsafe conditions.
In fairness, I want to add that, at the same time, as we understand it, there have been some benefits of Bill in the courts. If there is a case in which exploitation by a third party does not meet the standard of a human trafficking charge as defined by the Criminal Code, Bill C-36 has been used instead to hold perpetrators accountable. The bill can subsequently be assistive to the Crown and police, but whether it harms or helps victims has not been proven. That a small proportion of cases makes it to the point of prosecution may in fact make this potential benefit less consequential. We must consider the balance of harms.
I know I'm going to run out of time, but maybe the YMCA comment will give me just a minute more. I have a couple of further considerations.
One is that we have to understand and be transparent about the fact that this discussion is deeply affected by our values about sex and commercial transactions for sex. Whether we care to admit it, our values are squarely in the middle of this discussion. We urge you to prevent morality from infringing upon the rights of Canadians, including sex workers. Although you may personally hold views about the impropriety of sex work, we must not allow the human rights of those involved in the sex industry to be denied because of it.
Secondly, we remind you that there are already a host of prohibitions and laws on a variety of related matters, including sexual exploitation of youth, assault, sexual assault and human trafficking. Revisiting does not mean these laws are no longer in force.
Lastly, exploitation is in fact a very difficult thing to pin down. For example, young people are being exploited in many ways in our community for simple things like housing, food or access to substances. While this act of trading is technically covered by Bill , it is very rarely applied in these cases and does not address the underlying needs of youth that precipitated their vulnerability.
Finally, what do we recommend? According to one of our local colleagues, there is no way we can arrest our way out of this problem. There is no silver bullet for addressing exploitation. There is no quick fix. Pretending that we can bring an end to the sex industry is a chimera.
Instead, if we are serious about addressing exploitation, we must understand that commercial sexual exploitation preys on vulnerability, and fundamentally vulnerability is best addressed in the context of the social determinants of health, not the legal system. It involves adequate income, good housing, food security, support for families, education, self-determination and much more. These more than anything else will give us the best hope to address exploitation.
:
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and distinguished members of this committee.
I want to recognize and acknowledge that our offices are located on treaty territory, the original lands of the Anishinabe, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation.
I am a former member of Parliament. I worked hard during my time as an MP to bring the human trafficking issue to the public radar screen here in Canada. The Joy Smith Foundation was founded in 2011 to combat human trafficking. Since then, I volunteer every single day at my foundation to continue the work to bring awareness about human trafficking in Canada and to help survivors and their families restore their lives.
Last October, we launched the National Human Trafficking Education Centre, the first of its kind in Canada. The centre provides free education for parents, teachers, law enforcement, service providers and others. We have 64 instructor-led modules that are currently being put online so that Canadians can receive much-needed information about how traffickers operate and what they can do to protect themselves from these predators.
We have worked on over 6,000 files of victims and their families, to restore their lives and help the victims reintegrate into the communities and back into their families. Our prevention and intervention programs at the NHTEC will be online for easy access for Canadians as soon as we get the translations completed in French and English and into some indigenous languages.
A five-minute presentation at committee today does not give justice to the complex issue of trafficking in persons and how important Bill is to the safety of our youth. It was the catalyst that set the groundwork for so many victims of human trafficking to be able to speak out and bring their perpetrators to justice. It helped me, when I was a member of Parliament, to bring the survivors' voice to the public radar screen.
When I was in Parliament, I had two bills passed to combat human trafficking: Bill and Bill . They are embedded in the Criminal Code of Canada today. I had widespread support from all sides of the House at the time I was passing these bills, and I give credit to the survivors for telling their stories.
Members from all sides of the House supported these bills, and that was critical, because it opened a nationwide conversation about human trafficking and how its victims were suffering. More than that, Canadians, including the survivors themselves, started their own organizations to combat human trafficking.
Bill must remain, and parliamentarians must do more to protect their constituents from these predators, because the traffickers are in every constituency in our country. Victims of human trafficking are the recipients of horrid abuse and often lose their lives. To legalize prostitution would be a travesty of massive proportions against our most vulnerable populations, our LGBTQ, our immigrants and our youth.
I see it over and over again every single day: the suffering of young victims of human trafficking and what they endure at the hands of human traffickers, traffickers who seek to make copious amounts of money off their victims, as much as $260,000 to $280,000 per victim per year. That is why they do it. Most of the victims enter the sex trade at a very young age, as young as 12 to 14 years, and some even younger.
Before Bill came on the scene, there was nothing that effectively reduced the demand for the exploitation of underage girls and boys from traffickers, and in criminalizing the johns who create the demand for sexual services, Bill C-36 has helped curtail the human trafficking.
Human traffickers are the third parties who promote and capitalize on the demand for sex by facilitating this practice. They initially pose as benevolent helpers, providers or protectors to those innocent victims, who are lured into the modern-day slave trade. Bill addresses this issue as one of the objectives that has helped greatly in bringing these perpetrators to justice: It recognized trafficked victims as individuals who are lured and live through the horrid human trafficking experience with horrendous physical and mental traumas on their shoulders.
For the first time in Canadian criminal law, the purchase of sexual services is illegal. This helps in bringing traffickers to justice, because this offence makes prostitution itself an illegal practice, but this is a balanced law, because these adults who choose to sell themselves for sex are protected by law and can do so with no ramifications.
Recently, in Winnipeg, we were able to lobby to shut down the licensing of massage parlours and strip clubs. This is where human traffickers often place their victims.
Thank you so very much for this time today, because I have to say loud and clear, Bill is very helpful and very successful in doing these kinds of things.
In conclusion, parliamentarians must strive to keep Bill and do so much more to ensure trafficking in persons is no longer a factor in Canada.
Meegwetch.
:
Thank you, Chair; and thank you to both the YWCA Halifax and the Joy Smith Foundation for being here this afternoon.
Ms. Smith, I have a fairly extensive background in crime prevention and crime reduction. I want to get into crime reduction a bit later, but for prevention, especially, we're talking with youth, 12 to 14 years old, and I know how difficult it is to get into prevention. It takes 20 years, in some cases, for a cycle to go through to actually have an impact, and I think a lot of people just get to the point where they give up. It's so important for us to really look at focusing on the prevention; in other words, deterring the 12- to 14-year-old girls and boys now from getting into that particular predicament.
Reading through your review, it looks like you really are trying to do that. Can you help us in the panel here to understand what your plans would be and how you could start working on the prevention? That, to me, is the Holy Grail.
:
I can take that question, as I'm doing a lot of work around the systemic responses to human trafficking and sexual exploitation in Nova Scotia.
We are definitely implementing an interdisciplinary approach to dealing with this issue. In addition to our wonderful partners within law enforcement, the public prosecution service and victims services in Nova Scotia, we have brought education and health to the table. In the last year, we've been able to embed a core learning component around human trafficking and sexual exploitation in the grade 7 curriculum across the province of Nova Scotia. We also, of course, work with our numerous grassroots on-the-ground service providers, which are working with and providing supports to survivors, victims and those who identify as sex workers. It's important to note that not everybody uses the same language as we do in terms of how we talk about and label this issue, so we try to be inclusive of all experiences of people who are sex trade-engaged, whether they identify their experiences to be exploitative or trafficking or not.
Yes, we are very much of that opinion and are creating a community of practice here in Nova Scotia that is interdisciplinary. It is bringing a number of different stakeholders, systems and partners to the table for us to really take a holistic approach to this issue and not just focus on it as being a problem with pimps and perpetrators. The underlying root causes of human trafficking and exploitation are key to prevention, in our view.
Thank you to the witnesses for joining us and sharing their expertise.
I'm trying to educate myself more on this far from straightforward issue. I've started reading an essay on the subject by a Quebec author. I haven't gotten that far yet, but I did read that even feminists are split into two camps: those who want to abolish prostitution and those who support sex workers. All that to say, finding solutions isn't easy.
Ms. Gagnon, you said that you weren't necessarily going to take a position on the matter, and I understand, but you said that we, as committee members, needed to consider two questions. One, does the bill adequately protect people who are being sexually exploited? Two, does the bill cause them harm?
You answered both of those questions. Your recommendation to address sexual exploitation is to work on a number of fronts at the same time, including social housing and education. It might not be possible to put an end to the sex industry, in your view.
I'd like you to talk about the other fronts we can work on to address this issue.
If legislation is one of the solutions, what can we, as parliamentarians, do to make a difference?
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Here in Nova Scotia, we are really trying to adopt a public health approach to dealing with and addressing this crisis that we have here in the province. A public health approach can look at this issue more holistically and centre the experiences, the victimization, the violence and the trauma that can happen within the context of the sex trade when it is coming about through exploitation and trafficking.
I really appreciate your position of trying to balance out the variety of opinions on the legal status of sex work in this country. As a partnership, we have reached consensus on how to approach the issue, what we need to do in terms of prevention and how we should be providing supports to individuals on the issue, but we have not been able to reach consensus on the legal status of sex work. We feel that we don't really have to. Sometimes that stalls the work that needs to be done to support people who are coming to us for services, programs and assistance, however that looks, so by implementing a public health approach to the issue [Technical difficulty—Editor] upstream again.
I totally agree with Joy Smith that prevention is key in order to have any kind of effect in stemming the tide of people who get involved in this. It helps us take a holistic approach, because here in Nova Scotia as well, we're dealing with an issue of what has been referred to as peer recruiting, which is where victims also hold the position of being what the criminal justice system would define as an offender. When you have youth who are influencing and encouraging other youth to participate in the sex trade and we take a justice-based approach, it can be really difficult to pull apart who's a victim and who's an offender.
By taking a public health approach, we can deal with all of the trauma and all of the issues that are presenting themselves to us and focus in on supporting youth and young adults who are engaged in the sex trade.
:
Thanks for these very thoughtful questions. What I would say is akin to what Charlene was saying.
I'll tell you that I was an emergency crisis social worker in the pediatric hospital here in Halifax, where I would see children and adolescents in all sort of crises. There was a small but very significant group of young women coming in who were doing blow jobs in trailers to get tickets to the midway. This type of exploitation happens in all sorts of contexts, and it's part of what we talked about in terms of legislation.
For me, it's a complicated question around what the true root causes of this are and why, although it's not a silver bullet, the public health approach that we're talking about is.... We really want to be able to support people where they are, and this goes back to what Temi was saying around child welfare and whether our children who are growing up in child welfare are adequately supported around these issues, because they're especially vulnerable.
There are a couple of things. We need peer outreach workers across the country. We have an amazing team who themselves had been exploited and who are now our staff. They are the number one resource that we have as a community. They are the ones to whom I would send my children if, God forbid, I were in a situation. They understand the harm.
To answer the question on our resources, we as a community have to understand the welfare of our young people broadly writ.
:
That was part of our presentation as well. In fairness, we also spoke with some of our local Crown prosecution here as we prepared this presentation.
First of all, where so few cases make it to the courts, it's an important.... It's this balance of harm. In some cases, Bill may be used, but we're balancing it against those who don't come forward.
We're also balancing it against the fact that other laws exist around exploitation. We've been talking about human trafficking here, but human trafficking is also its own criminal offence. That does not go unchanged if we talk about Bill . Child pornography laws.... These types of things can still exist separately, even if we revisit Bill C-36. They remain there.
What's really vital for us is the evidence base. What is the evidence base when we make claims? Did this bill truly limit the number of people coming forward? All we can tell you is what we're seeing. If we rely on court data, it's only those who went to that point.
This is where I'll do a two-second plug. YWCA Halifax, together with our test partners, is doing work. We've currently wrapped up the second round of a provincial survey of people with lived experience. It is extremely high quality. It's excellent. This is what we should be using to determine our policies, not our opinions.
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I appreciate that question, because Bill was the basis that I built my bills on. We have evidence every day of Bill C-36 being very effective.
The shutdown of licensing for body rub parlours and escort services, for instance, was very important in the city of Winnipeg. The last victim I pulled out of one of those body rub parlours was 13 years of age. Because of Bill , the emphasis now is on the perpetrator or on the john. They are the ones who get brought to justice. Before Bill C-36, it was the women who were arrested. Now that doesn't happen.
We've had many cases out of the 6,000.... The other day, I had my assistant bring some information to me in preparation for today. We've had 1,223 cases—I think; I don't have it in front of me—of victims who actually went to police because we were saying to them that this is the law.
The danger is that a lot of people don't know what the real laws are. If people belong to a certain group or to one organization, they all think the same way. We have to think outside the boxes.
That's what I did when I was in Parliament. I had friends on all sides of the House, including Liberal, Bloc Québécois, NDP and everybody who really wanted to end the horrendous torture that some of these young girls went through in human trafficking. No one talked about how a lot of these young people were targeted. They became boyfriends and girlfriends of the perpetrators unknowingly. They didn't realize that eventually they would be trafficked and their lives would be changed forever. The rehabilitation side takes a very long time. The reintegration into families takes a very long time. The girl who left home is not the girl who comes back, if she comes back.
I'm very positive that if we have that education out there and we work together on all sides of the House to support Bill , keep it there and build on it....
When we talk about root causes, since the beginning of time we've talked about housing and education and all of that. That's very valid. I found in our intervention program that providing a pathway to education after coming out of human trafficking and providing a pathway to housing so they can live in a safe place was a game-changer in Canada. It would be a travesty not to have it there, because we've had clear evidence all across Canada.
We are a registered, not-for-profit, national NGO. From all the provinces, and that includes Nova Scotia, we've had evidence of Bill being a really big asset to the victims of human trafficking. We have to be very careful when we put away a bill that was the basis for the voice of the victims of human trafficking. I think it has to be there and I think it has to be enhanced.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'm very pleased to have all the panellists with us today.
I represent Halifax West, so Miia, Charlene and Temi, it's nice to see you. I really appreciate all the work you are doing in my home province of Nova Scotia. I know that you're leading TESS, the trafficking and exploitation service system. In fact, having been an MLA back in 2020, I know you held a session for all provincial MLAs. For me that was a real eye-opening experience.
I know you have a partnership with over 70 agencies in the province, working to respond to the commercial sexual exploitation of children and youth. As a couple of my colleagues have referenced, you rightly went to the root of the question here: Does the bill protect people from being exploited, and does it actually cause harm?
You also mentioned that this needs to be evidence-based. Can you talk to me, in the few minutes you have left, about the need for it to be evidence-based? I know you've done extensive investigations, or you've worked with a lot of people who are in the sex trade industry. Can you tell me about who they are, who the victims are and who the other side is? Just give us a bit of a broader reflection of all of that and anything else you would like to add.
:
We've done a number of “first voice” consultations and engagements with individuals across the province of all ages and backgrounds who have been sex trade-engaged. We don't require anyone to identify their experiences as being a victim or a survivor or even a sex worker. We're fairly inclusive in terms of how we consult and who we consult with. While we never want to conflate sex work and trafficking, we also recognize that there are intersections between exploitation and trafficking and the sex trade generally.
Some of those projects have included our 2020 Hearing Them survey, which was the first kick at the can of talking to survivors. We talked to 95 survivors across Nova Scotia. About 70% of those were from urban communities and about 30% were from rural communities. From their responses, we actually made some changes to our policies and on how we move forward. We asked them well over 100 questions—basic demographic information, what was going on in their lives, how old they were when they first engaged in the sex trade, whether or not they were still engaged in the sex trade—and then really focused around services and supports.
One thing that really came out from that 2020 survey, which I think is important to note here, is that it is true that people often come into the sex trade as youth and as being influenced or being trafficked in that Criminal Code sense of the word. However, once they move on and they're entrenched in the sex trade, without having any additional resources or educational opportunities to make a career change, they stay engaged. Many of the people who identify as being adult sex workers in Nova Scotia are both adult independent sex workers and former victims of exploitation and trafficking. We hold that very closely. We try to make sure that we are survivor-informed in our practice and in the policies we put forward.
Really, what everyone tells us is that there are two basic things they want. They want non-judgmental services, which means we have to remove some of the values we might have about the buying and selling of sex to reduce the stigmatization of their experiences. They also really need harm reduction services. They have basic needs. They need housing, they need food, they need income and they need transportation, particularly if they're in rural communities. They need a whole host of things. Often that means that as service providers, we have to set aside the personal or individual values we have on the buying and selling of sex.
My question is for Ms. Smith.
Ms. Smith, as a former member of Parliament, you can appreciate the position we're in as we try to navigate all of this.
Thank you for the commitment you've shown and the foundation you created. You are doing important work to combat human trafficking through prevention, support and intervention.
Do you think we should be going further in this reform? I said “reform”, but what we're doing feels more like a review of the act, which we've often been told has not achieved its purpose.
What changes do you recommend? Do you think we should reform the act or change how things are done?
:
Bill is very valuable. I think we could strengthen it even more by putting the prevention piece in it.
Also, something that comes up over and over again, and what we've found at the foundation, is that once you work with survivors, they need a way out. They need education and they need a different path, because when they start out, they're innocent victims, really. Someone lures them into the sex trade. In Canada, 93% of our traffic victims are Canadian born. They need to have a pathway whereby they can get re-educated and find a job to support themselves. That's the reality. A lot of them stay in it because they have no way out.
Then you have the enhanced addictions. You have all the trauma they go through when they can't provide their own children with the necessities of life.
We could go even further as parliamentarians, by adding to Bill to make that component a reality, bridging among all the levels of government—federal, provincial and municipal—because I think that is neglected in a lot of ways. All these levels of government are very important in the solutions we need for the victims of human trafficking.
:
I have spent my career in the social services, and this is exactly it.
As we said in our presentation, exploitation preys on vulnerability. All those things, like racism, histories of colonialism and all the marginalization, which heighten especially a young person's vulnerability also heighten their vulnerability to exploitation.
Again, we're not going to arrest our way out of vulnerability. It's really around addressing some of those more complex pieces.
One of our amazing colleagues here in Nova Scotia, Karen Bernard, who is the executive director of the Jane Paul Resource Centre for Mi'kmaw Women in Cape Breton, was in a meeting one time, and she said that colonialism is the perfect groomer, because there is no better way to tell you that you have no value.
For me, that has really echoed with the Nova Scotia Native Women's Association, with funding through WAGE, and we are serving on their advisory committee and working with them. They are currently conducting a provincial strategy and assessment on the situation for indigenous women. I think hearing their perspectives, along with what you have in your own missing and murdered indigenous women and girls report, is really significant. These things are very connected as well.
I feel very strongly that we need to keep in mind that what survivors are telling us will be the most effective tool. Also, does this committee have a lived experience advisory that is also going to be advising it? I would recommend that you do.
My name is Elene Lam. I am the executive director of Butterfly (Asian and Migrant Sex Workers Support Network). I have a master's in law and social work and have worked on human rights and gender-based violence for over 20 years, nationally and internationally.
Butterfly is a community-based organization that organizes and provides support to over 5,000 Asian workers who work in massage parlours and the sex industry across Canada. It includes permanent residents, refugees and non-status women.
As a sex worker rights organization, we are a defender of human rights and sex workers' safety. Today we will share the voices of Asian migrant sex workers with you, because we would like to tell you that this law does not prevent exploitation and does not protect women. It does the opposite and harms sex workers. It is a lie to say that sex workers can continue to work under this law. I can give you more evidence. We have done a lot of research and collected a lot of stories from sex workers about that.
Racialized and migrant women face violence, bad working conditions and exploitation every day in all industries, including caregiving and factory work. As a response, we do not see calls for criminalization of these industries; rather, we call for migrant and labour protections. Sex work is the way to resist oppression, access income, gain social resources and escape abusive relationships for many Asian and migrant women.
Most migrants dream that they can be free and safe when they move to Canada; however, reality is different. Criminalization of sex work and lobbying to eliminate the sex industry promote violence, racial profiling, discrimination and hate against sex workers. Hotel staff, landlords and even NGOs are asked to monitor sex workers. Cities shut down Asian massage parlours.
In the Atlanta shooting, six Asian women were killed. This is not unique in the U.S.; it has also happened in Canada. Seven Asian workers have been murdered. It's because of the hate of sex work. It's because of the criminalization of sex work. When you label sex work as violence, you don't recognize the real violence against the sex worker.
Criminalization means sex workers are often arrested and deported when they report violence. One sex worker who was seriously injured in a robbery said that she would rather suffer the violence than be arrested. When our Butterfly helpline rings at midnight, my heart pounds because I don't know if our member is being robbed, arrested or even murdered.
Essential systems for migrant sex workers, including friends, third parties and clients, are being framed as traffickers. They are arrested when they help each other. Almost 200 women were charged for procuring and advertising in the last few years. One of the sex workers was arrested just because she helped other workers to advertise, communicate and screen clients.
Instead of protection, law enforcement is the major source of violence. Thirty percent of sex workers report that they have been harassed, sexually assaulted and abused by law enforcement.
Due to the conflation of sex work and trafficking, law enforcement keeps targeting sex workers. The police broke the door with a warrant when a worker was sleeping. She was handcuffed and not allowed to get dressed before answering questions. Her ID was taken; her money and phone were taken away, and she was asked if she was safe. She told the police that she was safe before they came. She was terrified because she didn't know whether she would be deported, charged or outed.
The stereotype about Asian and migrant sex workers is that they are passive, ignorant trafficking victims, yet migrant sex workers have been vocal about the need to decriminalize sex work and remove the criminal law, immigration law and bylaws that invite the police into our lives. This law creates vulnerability. We are not victims. We are workers. We know best about our lives. We know how the law harms us.
In the words of migrant sex workers, you should not criminalize and take away our work. You should not control our bodies. If you really care about the rights and safety of the workers, you should respect our agency and listen to us. You should not put more harm and danger into our lives.
It is not only Butterfly that has witnessed this harm. Many organizations of violence against women and human rights organizations, like the Ontario Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres and the Global Business Coalition Against Human Trafficking, all bear witness and have shown opposition to the criminal law against sex workers.
We urge the government to listen to the community and repeal Bill , which harms and kills sex workers.
Thank you.
:
Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for this opportunity to speak to you.
I am Lynne Kent, chair of the Vancouver Collective Against Sexual Exploitation. We are a collective of organizations and individuals with many years of work and experience in this field.
Bill , in my understanding, is now a law called the Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act. It is socially, legally and relationally transformative in its approach to addressing the objectification and commodification of women and girls. It is a leading-edge instrument, recognized globally, and it is focused on protecting the right to life, liberty and the security of persons, which the sex trade violates every day.
Our government has been a global champion of comprehensive health rights and gender equality, and PCEPA provides you with all the opportunities to achieve this. It addresses the most significant factor in the disempowerment of women: the commercialization of women's bodies, which comes from supporting male demand and a sense of entitlement to sex whenever, wherever and with whomever they want. PCEPA says no and, in a recent poll, five times as many Canadians agreed.
Safety for women is what we are all advocating for. Preventing exploitation within the sex trade has proven to be impossible. The harm done to the women and girls being exploited is well documented, and repealing the law will do nothing to change that. In fact, it will increase both the harm and danger to those in prostitution, all women and children, and communities.
It is a cruel lie to suggest that changing this law will make it safer for anyone in the sex trade. The evidence is everywhere. The lobby to repeal this law is more about safety for the exploiters. Don't be fooled; the pimps, johns and traffickers are the only ones to benefit here.
Yes, listen to those in the sex trade, but which ones? Do you listen to the privileged few who claim to be there by choice, or the vast majority, who are there because of lack of choice, who have been lured, seduced and coerced, want out, can't get out, are trapped and have no voice? You won't hear from them. They won't be at this table, because they are not free to speak up.
The closest you can get to the truth is from the survivors, those who manage to get out and care enough about others to endanger themselves—make no mistake—and tell the full story. Those who truly care about the safety and well-being of everyone in the sex trade know there is no meaningful harm reduction. Laws can't be made to serve a few. This law must focus on the protection and safety of the majority.
New Zealand prostitutes protested, campaigned and lobbied for full decriminalization, only to find out that their own agency was reduced and all the benefit, control and power went to the brothel owners, pimps, johns and exploiters. If you repeal, you will increase the harm and danger to all women and children, specifically those who are indigenous, immigrant, poor and racialized, as well as every single child from age 10 to 18.
Do you want that to be your legacy? Do you want that on your conscience? We will be here to hold you accountable, to point the finger and lay the blame where the fault belongs. It is your responsibility to protect exploited communities and persons, not to facilitate the sex trade and the inherent severe harm you have been told about again and again.
We have submitted a brief that identifies what is valuable about PCEPA. However, this gold-standard law will achieve its potential only if it is implemented. We need consistent enforcement across the country. We need training of the police, a public education campaign and robust support for those exiting.
Where will you align yourself, on the side of Canadian citizens and communities or on the side of organized crime? It's not the law that causes the harm. It is the men who buy sex. Until we address the demand, nothing will change.
Thank you so much, Ms. Lam and Ms. Kent, for attending today and providing us with some valuable testimony as we study this piece of legislation. It's a legislative review of the PCEPA. I want to thank you for your advocacy.
I'm going to start with you, Ms. Kent. I took an opportunity, in preparing for this hearing, to look at your website. You touched upon it in your opening remarks. We've heard so far—and I'm sure we're going to hear more on later occasions and at later dates—witnesses who are proponents of decriminalization. We've heard supporters, such as you, strongly advocating for continuing on with the benefits of Bill .
Can you expand for us a little on some of the disastrous effects of decriminalization in New Zealand?
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Well, it's very interesting, because just a couple of years after their new law was brought in, they appeared for the first time on the TIP, trafficking in persons, report. They have been alerted in every report since that they have a problem with trafficking.
Here's what's really interesting. They claim they don't have a trafficking problem. In fact, I've seen from the sex workers organization that they're actually insulted at being told they have a trafficking problem. They reframe trafficking as a sex-work holiday, a wonderful opportunity for individuals to come to a beautiful location to work.
In fact, we have testimonies from sex workers in New Zealand who really feel betrayed. After all they put into it, they found themselves, as I said, lacking any agency. Really, the exploitation continued, but they had no recourse and no result because this was a legitimate business. Who was even looking for them? They certainly did not feel as though they could go and report to police.
Again, this comes back to why we can't even say our law creates harm, because it hasn't been implemented consistently in the country. There's a lack of training of police, a lack of public education. There has been no understanding of what's needed there. You can't claim harm from the law.
I do want to say that all of those harms exist, but we are laying all of those harms at the foot of this law when they more appropriately belong to many of our social services systems, definitely including child welfare. It throws children out on the street at age 19, and—guess what?—they end up in the sex trade. We know there are a lot of foster kids in the sex trade.
With regard to our health care system, indigenous people, LGBTQ people, and women in general complain that they are not treated well. They are discriminated against in medical treatments and in health care. For financial services, it's the same thing. We can't say that this law is causing harm—this harm and those harms—to sex workers.
I'd like to thank our witnesses for coming in today.
Ms. Lam, you mentioned something that really struck me. When I was practising criminal law, it would be the same sentiment I'd get sometimes from my clients. You spoke about how your heart pounds when you hear the phone ringing at night.
Can you please tell us a little more about what you mean by that? What kinds of situations arise to make you feel this way? How do you yourself cope with it? We can experience vicarious trauma, and from the way you have spoken and testified today, I can sense it from you.
Could you please answer these three questions? If you want me to repeat them for you, I will surely do so.
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Thank you so much, and I think you asked a very important question. This is what we witness in the community every day, how sex workers are being harmed by the law. Why are they being targeted by the perpetrator? It's because they know the law does not protect them. They know the law is targeting them.
I have to very sadly say that [Technical difficulty—Editor] attend a Parliament meeting. One other thing I organize most is funerals. Every time I see the dead body of a sex worker, I ask why. Why do we still have this law? We know this law keeps killing people. We know the law makes it so the sex worker cannot work safely. When sex workers protect each other.... For example, some sex workers cannot speak English. The other sex worker helps them to communicate with clients. That sex worker is then put in jail, and the original sex worker has to work in a very vulnerable situation.
Why do we still do it? I really don't understand why so many people say.... Particularly, I see lots of people say it's not sex workers, it's not racialized, and it's not migrants. They keep saying that they know better than the community. If you really, really care about the exploitation and the safety of the worker, the answer is very simple. Repeal this law.
I have been working with a lot of sex workers in New Zealand. I have worked with a lot of support [Technical difficulty—Editor] country they have criminalized sex workers less. They are less vulnerable. They are able to seek help. The whole conflation of sex work and trafficking has increased policing and increased the vulnerability of the worker.
I really hope that, after this meeting, we will have a report that really reflects the reality of how this law harms sex workers and cannot protect them from exploitation, because many organizations—not only sex worker organizations but human rights organizations and violence against women organizations—keep telling you. We really hope the law can be changed, that no sex worker will die because of the hate of sex work, because this view provokes hate of sex workers. We remember the six Asian women murdered in Atlanta because the murderer said they wanted to eradicate sex workers.
When I hear so many people here say they want to eliminate sex workers, for me, this is no different. They die because of your hate of sex workers, but these are the bodies of sex workers. Whether you like it or not is your decision, but you do not have the power to exercise your power over other women. When you say that men should not use the bodies of women, I have to tell you: stop using the bodies of sex workers to benefit your career and to get more funding.
Sex workers keep telling you this law kills us. Sex workers say this law does not protect us. This is a very important message. I want you to hear this, and I also want all the people who advocate for the end-demand model of criminalizing sex work to hear this. You need to really think about what you are doing. We really don't want to see more sex workers killed.
Thank you.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here.
As I told the previous panel, I'm trying to navigate my way through all of this. The discussion is an extremely important, but unique, one. Usually, when the committee hears from witnesses, everyone more or less agrees on the solutions, and a consensus emerges to some extent. In this case, however, opinions are divided. This is seen as a black and white issue, and we have heard good arguments from both sides. On one hand, we're being told that the way to protect victims of sexual exploitation is to repeal the act. On the other hand, we are being told that we should strengthen the act in order to protect them.
I'll start with you, Ms. Kent.
You said repealing the act would not make victims of sexual exploitation any safer. You said we need to focus on the demand.
How can we do that?
I know you touched on it, but I'd like you to elaborate, if you could.
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Well, the law actually does that. The law is focused on the demand.
I absolutely hear Ms. Lam's testimony. I want to say that I've heard this from survivors as well. I've heard the same things. They are saying that they're tired of burying their friends, but they recognize that it is not the law that has buried their friends. It is the buyers and the exploiters who have caused the harm that has buried their friends. Sometimes it's suicide, because of the work.
As an organization, we have no funding. We are all volunteers. We include sex workers, past brothel owners, survivors and multiple people who are working with sex workers. That's what we're hearing from them.
The law is not about criminalizing sex work. When I say it's not being implemented, that's the problem. It's very fulsome. It gives us all the tools to do exactly what Ms. Lam is asking for. Within this law are tools to protect sex workers. It comes back to this: Why are people being harmed? Why are people afraid of the police? We are not educating and training the police to implement this law the way it was intended.
We also know that the exploiters are educating the sex workers—the individuals—to be afraid of the law, to be afraid of the police and to not go to the police because it puts them in danger. They don't want it out there that they have harmed them in some way or that they've been assaulted.
We're laying a lot of blame on the law that doesn't belong on the law. As a result, as long as we do that, we really are ignoring the underlying issues that are leading to harm within sex work and violence against women, period.
I just want to say to you, Ms. Michaud, that I have listened to the testimonies and your questions. I really appreciate the extent to which you are seeking information and looking at all sides of this issue in trying to deal with a very complex issue in a kind and supportive way. I certainly appreciate how difficult it is for legislators to wend their way through this issue to really address what the law is trying to address.
You said that police need more training or that their training should cover additional components. I agree with you on that. I'm on the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security, and we are forever coming across new areas where police training is needed. It's an ongoing effort. It's clear that their training could be more extensive.
I can understand why victims have not had positive experiences with police and are afraid. The act puts them in an awkward position because they are afraid to speak out. They operate in an illegal world, but they are still trying to work, to do their job. Marylène Levesque, a young woman in Quebec City, was killed last year by a repeat offender. She was probably afraid to go to police.
Even if police do receive more training, how do we deal with those other factors?
I didn't leave you much time to answer. My apologies.
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I would say it is a mistake or an illusion to say that this law allows sex workers to continue to work. Particularly for Asian and migrant sex workers, even some who are permanent residents, because of the language barrier and also because they do not have enough income, a third party or the client is often their very important support system. For example, they may need someone to help them advertise or communicate with clients, but everything has become illegal.
I think there is an extra layer because the anti-trafficking investigation always involves the CBSA. We see many anti-sex work investigations turn into anti-migrant. With the immigration policy now, even people with temporary work permits are not allowed to work in the sex industry.
That's why for us it's very important to have the law protect the sex workers' safety, but at the same time, we keep saying this is also about their work and their livelihood. It's also about the agency of the worker. They should have the right to make decisions about their life and about their work. When we hear other speakers say how they are so happy to shut down a massage parlour, we have so many workers crying and so many workers feeling so helpless and frustrated when they've lost their income.
This whole criminalization has put the sex worker in a position from which they cannot seek any help. Very importantly, help is not only from the police. A lot of mutual support systems are being criminalized, and they cannot protect them.
We also need to recognize whether people really, truly want to end violence against sex workers or whether they want to end sex work. Ending sex work will not bring safety to the sex worker. Removing the criminal law can help the sex worker work more safely. This is the law that makes people feel afraid to move forward, because we have seen so many workers arrested and investigated when they contact the police.
One of the workers has been assaulted four times, and she does not even want to scream, because she is so worried that the police will come. The police just arrested her friend, and her friend got deported.
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It's even bigger than that. Certainly, we have seen cases in which the exploiter has engaged that youth in other crimes, such as smuggling guns or drugs, and in one case even murder, where they were being considered as an accessory to murder. This is then held over their head. Even simple theft is held over their head: “You don't want to go to the police. You'll go to jail because of what you did.”
It's intentional. It's very intentional. They don't want those sex workers going to the police. They don't want to be exposed for the harm.
You know, I absolutely agree with Ms. Lam on so many points. I have seen and heard testimony directly from individuals on what is happening to them, but I just want to go back and say that it isn't the law that is creating a fear of police. It is being told that you can't trust the police and that you can't go to the police.
I'm not totally defending the police. We also know that the police have been complicit. When we look at the profile of the buyers, we see lawyers, doctors, teachers, professionals, police officers—people with influence and power. They are a big part of the demand and the exploitation. So it's understandable that people are afraid of them.
What I come back to is that all of us need to look at what the intent is of the law and make sure it is addressing and meeting its intent. Its intent is very wonderful. Addressing the demand is important. When you decriminalize, when you grant impunity to the buyers and the exploiters, they become more violent. We see it. We have evidence of that all over the world. I can say we have evidence of that in Vancouver. It's really political will that has held our police back. They recognize, they value, and I think they have guidelines that are very compassionate. They understand how to address the issues of exploitation in the most careful and supportive way, but there's no political will to support them, fund them and provide the resources to make sure that our police, all our enforcement services, are addressing the intent of the law.
There are the provisions and then there is the operation. We need to marry those.
I want to start by clarifying something.
I'm already getting tweets from people telling me that more police training is never the answer. I'm not saying it's the best or only solution, but it is one of the solutions.
My last question is for Ms. Lam.
Ms. Lam, I'm not sure whether you're aware that New Zealand decriminalized prostitution. The question now is whether that did much to help the situation. According to studies, the change hasn't put an end to abuse, child prostitution, drug use or violence.
Do you think we should consider a model like New Zealand's, even though it may not have had all the desired effects?
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Well, we all acknowledge, and we've heard from many here, that we have significant exploitation happening. In fact, the multiple studies tell us that those with agency in this business are between 2% and 10%. The rest have no agency. Then is the answer to that to throw out the law and have no law at all? What would happen if we were to do that?
We don't have to look very far to see what would happen. Overnight, Canada would become the brothel of North America—there is no question about that—and we would be the best sex tourism destination for the world. We know right now that Kelowna, in our province, is very much seen as a great sex tourism destination.
Yes, there are pros and cons about Sweden, but if we compare Sweden, which brought in the Nordic model at the same time that Germany decriminalized, wow, there's no comparison in the exploitation of women. Germany now has more than 400,000 women being prostituted, and the harms are out of sight. The stories are unimaginable in terms of the ways in which these women are treated.
Sweden hasn't eliminated sex work, and that's really not the intent. The intent is to make it safe. When you decriminalize the exploiters, how do you really think that will make it safe or safer?
This is—
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I think decriminalization, one, is very helpful to not make people think sex workers are something wrong or to not think they are evil. This is very helpful to eliminate the hate against sex workers and to promote respect for the sex worker.
The other piece, as we keep saying, is that the criminal law itself is creating the vulnerability of sex workers, which makes them become the target of violence. Particularly we see how anti-Asian hate can intersect with anti-sex work hate and make so many sex workers the targets of assault or murder.
By decriminalization, by taking away this criminal law so the sex worker can use all of this—and even now the legal system is not perfect—they can access those legal systems or support as other people can. As recommended by many sex worker organizations and by some legal and human rights organizations, providing social support is very important to reduce the vulnerability, exploitation and violence towards the sex worker.
Taking away this criminal law, the sex worker does not have to fear when they need to access those systems. It also plays an important role in removing the stigma, and that is a very important step.