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Queer Ontario deplores the US Supreme Court ruling overturning the historic 1973 Roe v Wade decision.

July 21st, 2022 Comments off

Queer Ontario deplores the US Supreme Court ruling overturning the historic 1973 Roe v Wade decision, which constitutionally protected those who sought medical abortions as part of comprehensive sexual health care and family planning. No doubt this ruling will embolden anti-choice groups in Canada. Queer Ontario supports the principles of full spectrum gender supportive healthcare, bodily autonomy, and the right to access comprehensive sexual health care and family planning, which includes free legal access to safe medical abortions on demand.

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QUEER ONTARIO on the PROVINCIAL ELECTION (2 June 2022)

May 24th, 2022 Comments off

The upcoming Provincial Election provides an important opportunity to consider an interlocking slate of issues aimed toward a transformative vision of social change that challenges a range of social and material inequalities without leaving marginalized communities behind.  

Queer Ontario invites all Ontarians, and especially 2SLGBTQ+ Ontarians, to consider these 12 areas and their attendant issues in the run up to the Ontario Provincial Election on June 2, 2022:

  1. Housing Precarity, Affordability, and Homelessness
  2. Food Security
  3. Income Security/ Funding for ODSP
  4. Public Education and 2SLGBTQ+ people, including moving to one public school system by ending funding for Catholic education and improving access to gender-affirming sexual education grounded in equity and evidence.
  5. Sex worker rights and repealing Bill 251
  6. Policing and Prisons; overhauling the carceral state (towards abolition)
  7. Programs addressing anti-Black, anti-Asian racism
  8. Basic income/elimination of poverty
  9. Decolonizing relations with Indigenous communities
  10. Healthcare reform, including enhancing access to gender-affirming care for Two-Spirit, Trans* and non-binary people
  11. Progressive and non-punitive drug use policies; decriminalization of all drugs
  12. Better community and social supports in the above areas (including support for Two-Spirit, Trans*, non-binary, BIPOC and other individuals and groups facing disproportionate discrimination in the areas of health, housing, and employment)

Ask yourself where each of the parties stand on these issues before heading to the polls in June! We have an opportunity to re-think our social order, re-examine the distribution and allotment of resources, and re-imagine a society that places deep equity at the core. In doing so, we challenge white supremacy, racism, anti-Indigeneity, colonial relations in all spheres of activity, heterosexism and cis-genderism among numerous other oppressions.

Long-standing intersecting oppressions have been exacerbated by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the neoliberal response of the Provincial Government to this ongoing crisis.  The health of the economy continues to be prioritized over that of the public through policing and the inflexible enforcement of uniform government regulations on 2SLGBTQ+ and other marginalized populations without a corresponding provision of community-responsive social, economic, and healthcare supports.

Overall Queer Ontario sets its vision beyond the electoral cycle and, given the interlocking and nested global crises represented by climate change, global pandemics, and deepening poverty (including global water, food, and housing crises) that all people work toward a new social contract that prioritizes deep equity, profound economic transformations, and anti-discrimination. This requires moving away from models of liberal inclusion that fail to question or disturb the structural forces of settler-colonialism, cis-heterosexual hegemony, etc. and to address head on the root causes of the many social, political, and economic forces that continue to foster dangerous inequities in communities across the province.

Queer Ontario is a provincial network of gender and sexually diverse individuals — and their allies — who are committed to questioning, challenging, and reforming the laws, institutional practices, and social norms that regulate queer people. Operating under liberationist and sex-positive principles, we fight for accessibility, recognition, and pluralism, using social media and other tactics to engage in political action, public education, and coalition-building.

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Queer Ontario Submission on PCEPA to House of Commons Justice Committee, 25 Feb 2022

February 25th, 2022 Comments off

Submission to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights: Review of the Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act (PCEPA)

Submitted to:

House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights

44th Parliament, 1st Session

Submission Date: February 25, 2022

Queer Ontario (QO) welcomes the opportunity to provide our perspective to the Standing Committee on Human Rights on the current regulatory framework for prostitution (sex work) in Canada. Queer Ontario, founded in 2009, is a provincial network of gender and sexually diverse individuals and their allies who are committed to questioning, challenging, and reforming the laws, institutional practices, and social norms that regulate queer people. Our predecessor organization, the Coalition for Lesbian and Gay Rights of Ontario (CLGRO), founded in 1975, has worked in coalition with sex workers and other groups calling for the decriminalization of laws regulating sex work since the 1980s (Warner 2010; Brock, 2009; Kinsman 1996). Queer Ontario released its first Policy Statement on Sex Work in 2011 to coincide with the International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers, founded in 2003 and commemorated on December 17 every year. Working with a loose coalition with sex worker organizations, including Maggie’s Toronto Sex Workers Action Project over the years, QO has supported the decriminalization of sex work as a core principle of our own vision of critical queer liberation. There are clear links between the criminalization and regulation of queer bodies, spaces and practices under the bawdy house laws and arrests for so-called “public” sex, for instance, and the criminalization and regulation of sex workers both historically and currently.

Queer Ontario, along with sex worker activists and their allies, welcomed the Supreme Court of Canada’s (SCC) decision of 20 December 2013 in Canada v. Bedford, which struck down as unconstitutional three major prostitution-related Criminal Code statutes: keeping, transporting, or being an inmate of a common bawdy house (§210 and 211); procuring or living on the avails of prostitution (§212); and communicating for the purposes of prostitution (§213). Indeed, the SCC found, in a rare unanimous decision, that these laws both negatively impacted the health and safety of sex workers, and contravened their rights to life, liberty and security of the person guaranteed by Section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This decision was clear that Canadian law, in criminalizing sex work, had seriously undermined sex workers’ right to safety and security, and was thus partly responsible for rendering sex workers vulnerable to violence. In light of the Robert Picton murders, the ongoing disappearance and murders of Indigenous women and girls in disproportionate numbers, the assaults and disappearances that sex workers face generally, including the recent murders of mostly Asian massage parlor workers in Atlanta, it is again clear that a new legal model – one that foregrounds decriminalization and removes barriers that impede the ability for sex workers to benefit from the safety, security, autonomy, rights and responsibilities of any other legitimate worker or small business enterprise – is needed.

Considering the goal just described, QO and sex worker organizations and their allies stand opposed to the new legal framework that was introduced by the previous Conservative Government after the Bedford decision and effectively rushed through Parliament. The resulting new law, Bill C-36, or the Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act (PCEPA), has done little to advance the explicit legal intent of the SCC decision in Bedford, to enhance the safety of sex workers and decriminalize key practices that put sex workers at risk of arrest.  Instead, many provisions under PCEPA – despite rendering sex work legal – directly re-criminalize many activities that sex workers employ in the course of their work, and most concerning, it makes the purchasing of sexual services a crime, thus placing the clients of sexual services in legal jeopardy (HIV Legal Network, 2014; CASWLR, 2019).

PCEPA is a retrogressive legal framework that effectively criminalizes the consumers or clients of sex workers. Criminalizing the purchase of sexual services by adults violates sex workers’ right to safety by making both working and living conditions more dangerous. The harms caused by the laws struck down in Bedford are in large part reproduced in the PCEPA and this is unconstitutional. If it is legal for sex workers to pursue their trade as a legitimate business, then the criminalization of their clients – which amounts to interfering with their livelihood – stands to violate labour laws as well as their individual rights to health, safety, and the right to a legal livelihood.

PCEPA has failed both the letter and spirit of the Bedford decision by neglecting to remove Criminal Code and other legal impediments to the rights, safety, and security of those who work in the sex trade. Queer Ontario encourages the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights to foreground the perspectives and active participation of sex workers, sex worker organizations, such as Maggie’s and Butterfly, and their allies as the leading voices of authority in the present review of the PCEPA. Along with the disability activist movement, which adopted the slogan Nothing About Us Without Us, sex workers need to be substantively included in decisions that affect their lives and livelihood.   

Queer Ontario endorses and supports the progressive legal framework advanced by a coalition of sex workers and their allies, The Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform (CASWLR), and the extensive working documents they have produced (CASWLR, 2017). Additionally, the vexing arena of Human Trafficking needs more critical attention. Queer Ontario insists on a separation between consensual sex work, and coerced forms of work. Sex work has often been conflated into the topic of human trafficking or sex trafficking, which does not address the real needs of migrant sex workers and those working and living under precarious status. We support the work and perspectives of Butterfly: Asian and Migrant Sex Workers Support Network and encourage legislators and the public to seek out their extensive public education on this topic (Butterfly, 2021). A highly regarded researcher of human trafficking is York University professor Kamala Kempadoo. Her academic research and published books on human trafficking form an extensive body of critical research; an important conference held at York University on human trafficking has also made their proceedings available online (Kempadoo and Davydova, 2012) and would provide this Committee with a range of valuable information on these issues.

Queer Ontario advocates for the decriminalization of sex work and for the right of sex workers to organize and conduct their business in possession of the full range of legal rights extended to any other legitimate business enterprise. Sexual labour and sexual business enterprises should be free from coercion and violence; sex workers should be allowed to work as autonomous businesses and to implement health and safety provisions for their work. Moreover, existing labour and employment laws should be applied, or new ones developed with input from sex workers themselves, to ensure that sex workers are working under safe conditions, have access to employment services and benefits, can pay taxes, and can organize effectively by joining professional associations or labour unions. Sex workers must enjoy the rights and obligations of any other worker or legitimate business in Canada. All local or provincial regulations should respect and protect sex workers’ human and labour rights.

Queer Ontario recognizes that the decriminalization of sex work is one necessary step in the process of sex work becoming a fully integrated and destigmatized activity in local community and urban civic life. In addition to Criminal Code reform, municipal regulations, such as nuisance or zoning bylaws, long used by residents’ and business associations to curb sex work activity from urban areas, would require revision. These bylaws and other municipal regulations that affect sex workers would require undergoing a process of revision with the active and meaningful participation of sex workers and sex work organizations having a seat at the table. Sex workers have always been part of our communities and their voices and participation in our neighbourhoods and in civic matters that affect their lives should be heard and respected. 

In addition, Queer Ontario supports publicly funded services for sex workers whose marginalization may be compounded by violence, poverty, and addiction. Sex workers who are vulnerable often face multiple and compounding forms of oppression involving racism and racialization, trans* feminine or queer, history of trauma, housing, or food insecurity, and/or homelessness, substance use, persistent criminalization, pathologization including psychiatrization, systemic mental health neglect or emotional overwhelm, undocumented or insecure status, Indigenous sex workers, all need specific wrap-around programs, preferably staffed by sex workers themselves. These services should, ideally, operate under a philosophy of care that places the needs, voices, and experiences of sex workers first and which encourages them to take control of their own lives in a supportive environment.

The decriminalization of sex work is of primary importance for advancing the well-being of individuals with disabilities, who may require assistance in self-pleasuring or to engage in consensual sexual relations with chosen others. A coalition of individuals with disabilities together with sex workers have formed a group, Equitable and Accessible Sexual Expression (EASE), to raise awareness about the need for expanding assistive care to include erotic pleasure and have engaged in training sex workers to work with people with disabilities.

Queer Ontario stands with sex worker organizations in their call to see a “made-in-Canada New Zealand model” approach to prostitution that prioritizes sex workers’ input to the law reform process. New Zealand’s decriminalization model legitimizes sex work as labour with all the attending rights and obligations as for any other worker under the law, as well as offering protections through occupational health and safety standards. Any new laws must ensure that sex workers’ human and labour rights are protected.

Finally, we feel that it is notable that lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer, plus (LGBTQ+) communities, especially gay, bi or men who have sex with men (MSM) individuals have an important relationship to erotic sociality (bathhouses, sex parties, etc.) and especially the products of commercial sexual labour in the form of lesbian, trans, or gay male pornography that they can enjoy privately. Studies have shown that the use of erotic entertainment (such as legally available porn) among non-heterosexual individuals forms a crucial part of identity formation, offering one of the very few spaces in the culture where queer individuals can see their desires and forms of sexual behaviour enacted without shame (Burger 1995; Waugh & Arroyo, 2019). Male-identified individuals who have sex with men for commercial reasons are also widely accepted within the LGBTQ+ community, and many have a passing familiarity with sex work, may know individuals involved in commercial sex in its many aspects, or are themselves the legal consumers of entertainment or products that employ sexual labour (erotic dancing, stripping, porn, webcam modeling, etc.). To this point, we feel it is notable that among Queer Ontario’s currently elected Steering Committee, composed of seven elected members, two of us have been involved in sex work historically either as a primary or supplemental source of income.

In conclusion, Queer Ontario supports the repeal of PCEPA and calls for the full decriminalization of sex work in keeping with the SCC decision in Canada v. Bedford. QO supports the rights of sex workers to organize and conduct their business in possession of the full range of legal rights extended to any other legitimate business enterprise. But, most of all, Queer Ontario underscores the need for this Committee to ensure that the lived experience of sex workers and their perspectives on sex work are centered, integrated, and understood in the review of the PCEPA that you are presently undertaking.

About Queer Ontario:

Queer Ontario is a provincial network of gender and sexually diverse individuals — and their allies — who are committed to questioning, challenging, and reforming the laws, institutional practices, and social norms that regulate queer people. Operating under liberationist and sex-positive principles, we fight for accessibility, recognition, and democratic pluralism, using social media and other tactics to engage in political action, public education, and coalition-building. We also aim to build critical dialogue, political capacities, and liberationist perspectives within queer communities.

Submission prepared by:

Lead author and contact person:

Robert Teixeira, PhD (ABD)

Member-at-large, Queer Ontario

Sessional Instructor

Ontario College of Art & Design University

100 McCaul Street

Toronto, ON, M5T 1W1

Email: rteixeira@ocadu.ca

Nick Mulé, PhD

Member-at-large, Queer Ontario

Dwayne Shaw

Chair, Queer Ontario

Leonard Halladay, PhD (ABD)

Secretary, Queer Ontario

Instructor, Carleton University

Dept. of Political Science, B640 Loeb Bldg.

1125 Colonel By Drive

Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6

Richard Hudler

Secretary, Queer Ontario

References

Brock, D. 2009. Making Work, Making Trouble: The Social Regulation of Sexual Labour, 2nd Edition. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Burger, J.R. 1995. One-Handed Histories: The Eroto-Politics of Gay Male Video Pornography. New York: The Haworth Press Inc.

Butterfly, Asian and Migrant Sex Workers Support Network. 2021. Toronto. https://www.butterflysw.org

Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform (CASWLR). March 2017. Safety, Dignity, Equality: Recommendations for Sex Work Law Reform in Canada. Available: http://sexworklawreform.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/CASWLR-Final-Report-1.6MB.pdf

HIV Legal Network. (formerly, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network). 2014. (25 June) Reckless Endangerment: Q & A on Bill C-36. Available: https://www.hivlegalnetwork.ca/site/reckless-endangerment-qa-on-bill-c-36-protection-of-communities-and-exploited-persons-act/?lang=en

Kempadoo, K. and D. Davydova. 2012. From Bleeding Hearts to Critical Thinking: Exploring the Issue of Human Trafficking, Conference Proceedings, Centre for Feminist Research, York University, March 19-20, 2012. Available: https://cfrdev.info.yorku.ca/files/2014/11/Kempadoo-K.-Davydova-D.-2012-From-Bleeding-Hearts-to-Critical-Thinking.pdf

Kinsman, G. 1996. The Regulation of Desire, 2nd Edition. Montreal: Black Rose.  

Lebovitch, A. and S. Ferris. 2019. Sex Work Activism in Canada. Winnipeg: Arp books.

Queer Ontario. 16 December 2011. Policy Statement on Sex Work. Toronto: Queer Ontario. Available: https://queerontario.org/sex-work/

Queer Ontario. 16 June 2021. Queer Ontario Statement on Bill 251, Combatting Human Trafficking Act, 2021. Queer Ontario. Available: https://queerontario.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Queer-Ontario-Statement-on-Bill-251-1-1-1.pdf

Van der Meulen, E.M. Durisin, and V. Love. 2013. Selling Sex: Experience, Advocacy, and Research on Sex Work in Canada. Vancouver: UBC Press.

Warner, T. 2010. Losing Control: Canada’s Social Conservatives in the Age of Rights. Toronto: Between the Lines Press.

Waugh, T. & B. Arroyo. 2019. I Confess: Constructing the Sexual Self in the Internet Age. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queens University Press.

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