Let’s Get Our Priorities Straight |
Why You Should Vote No on SF’s Proposition K Prop K was put on your November 2008 SF ballot by groups that claim to be in favor of protecting “sex workers” Masquerading as a progressive initiative Prop K this legislation will harm women, children, and the San Francisco community as a whole. The measure directs San Francisco Police Department and the District Attorney’s office to refuse to enforce the State of California’s prostitution laws. These sections include the laws used to investigate and prosecute traffickers and those involved in exploiting children. Non-enforcement of these laws would put all of us at risk, and send an invitation out to pimps, traffickers, and johns. This dangerous legislation is a ploy to shift attention away from those who profit from sexually exploiting women, children, men, and transgenders in the sex industry. It is a ploy to take the focus away from pimps and johns. If enacted, the measure will empower pimps and offer no new protection for prostitutes. In fact, it jeopardizes the very existence of the few exit services and harm reduction programs that are currently available. What would ending “enforcement of California’s prostitution laws” really mean? It would mean turning a blind eye to young people, immigrants, and others who are the most vulnerable to prostitution and trafficking – those who are marginalized because of their poverty or their race or ethnicity. The average age of entry into prostitution is 12 to 14 years. One of the provisions of this misguided proposal would de-fund services to victims of trafficking. This initiative prohibits the City and County of San Francisco from applying for and receiving State and Federal grants to fight Human Trafficking. The cynical allegation is made that service provision to trafficking victims is “racial profiling.” In fact many victims of trafficking to San Francisco are from Asia and Latin America. In order to reach out to these victims, services must be offered in their languages. Far from racial profiling, it is absolutely necessary to offer culturally relevant services to people who are likely trafficking victims. Ending enforcement California’s prostitution laws is to tell people who are exploited in the sex industry and prostitution that their safety is not our priority. Millions are trafficked into the global sex industry This flawed petition calls for law enforcement to ignore the extremely dangerous and harmful activities happening in San Francisco. San Francisco is both source and destination for sex trafficking. Women, men, transgendered people, and children are trafficked in the U.S. into the sex industry. In 2005 Operation “Gilded Cage” rescued over 100 Korean women who had been trafficked into Bay Area massage parlors. Many of the trafficked young women were vulnerable because of limited access to language, systematic abuse by clients and pimps, threats against their families back home, and debts that they were continually tied into by their traffickers. Victims of trafficking have received support and services from organizations like the Asian Women’s Shelter, Cameron House, La Casa de las Madres, Riley House, Safe House, and SAGE Project - all organizations that the ballot measure seeks to de-fund. This proposal fails to recognize that prostitution is harmful to those in it Prostitution can never be a safe industry the way most people think of safety: a safe place to live, freedom from sexual violence and harassment, and the right not be treated with verbal abuse and contempt. As a john explained, prostitution is “renting an organ for 10 minutes.” Decriminalization of johns will make no difference to the physical and the emotional safety of women in prostitution. Regardless of its legal status, prostitution is extremely harmful to those in it. There is little difference for the prostitute between legal and decriminalized prostitution. Sexual abuse, assault, and rape of people who “work” in the sex industry is normalized in prostitution. Whether it is in a john’s house, car, a hotel, massage parlor, private dance room, strip club, legal brothel, or the street prostitution is incredibly dangerous. Researchers, service agencies, homeless shelters, and battered women’s shelters all tell us that more than 90% of those in prostitution want to escape it. In a 2008 study after l0 years of operation, San Francisco’s SafeHouse for Women Leaving Prostitution clients’ surveys report: • 75% had extended periods of homelessness • 90% had major mental health diagnoses • 90% suffered severe child abuse and/or incest before age 18 • 90% had long-term drug addiction • 57% never completed high school • 75% are mothers with children in the system • They averaged 19 years in prostitution beginning as young as 12 Prop K cuts funds to help prostituted women change their lives Don’t abandon them Vote NO on K
11.04.08
|
Opponents of Prop K
Groups Voting NO on Prop K
African American Democratic Club
Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club
Asian Pacific Democratic Club
Asian Week
Bay Area Reporter
Black Women Organized for Political Action
Chinese American Democratic Club
City Democratic Club
Coalition Against Trafficking in Women
Coalition for SF Neighborhoods
Community Leadership Alliance
Democratic Women's Forum
District 11 Democratic Club
ECPAT-USA
Irish American Democratic Club
Not for Sale
Raoul Wallenberg Democratic Club
The San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco Examiner
San Francisco Labor Council
San Francisco Women’s Political Caucus
The Senior Action Network
SPUR (San Francisco Planning & Urban Research)
Soroptimist International of El Cerrito
Students & Artists Fighting to End Human Slavery
Tenant Associations Coalition PAC
The following individuals oppose San Francisco Proposition K
San Francisco Elected Officials
District Attorney Kamala Harris
Mayor Gavin Newsom
Supervisor Michela Alioto-Pier, District 2
Supervisor Carmen Chu, District 4
Supervisor Sean Elsbernd, District 7
Supervisor Bevan Dufty, District 8
Supervisor Sophie Maxwell, District 10
Dr. Natalie Berg, Trustee SF Community College Board
Bay Area Elected Officials
Assemblywoman Loni Hancock, District 14
Berkeley City Councilmember Linda Maio, District 1
Berkeley City Councilmember Darryl Moore, District 2
Candidates Endorse No on K
Barry Hermanson
Candidate for US Congress, District 8
Dana Walsh
Candidate for US Congress, District 8
Conchita Applegate
CA Assembly Candidate, District 12
Harmeet Dhillion
CA Assembly Candidate, District 13
Nancy Skinner
CA Assembly Candidate District 14
Sue Lee
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 1
Alicia Wang
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 1
Joe Alioto, Jr.
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 3
Claudine Cheng
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 3
David Chiu
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 3
Mike De Nunzio
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 3
Lynn Jefferson
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 3
Ron Dudum
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 4
Owen O'Donnell
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 5
Eva Royale
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 9
John Avalos
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 11
Ahsha Safaí
SF Supervisorial Candidate, District 11
Steve Ngo
Candidate for SF Community College Board
Marigrace Cohen
Candidate for SF Board of Education
Janyry Mak
Candidate for SF Board of Education
Rachel Norton
Candidate for SF Board of Education
Community Leaders (Partial List)
Michael Antonini
Citizens for a Better San Francisco
Andrea Bass
Elizabeth F. Boardman
Writer & Peace Activist
Alicia Boccellari, Ph.D.
Trauma Recovery Center, UCSF
Christopher L. Bowman
VC - Precinct Operations
Francine Braae, Co-Interim Executive Director
SAGE Project
Janet Campbell
VC-Special Events
Frank Cannata, VP
MPNA
Marybeth Carter
former Executive Director, California Coalition Against Sexual Assault (CALCASA) and Past President, National Alliance to End Sexual Violence (NAESV)
Wendy Collins,
Mission Merchants Association
Sharon W. Cooper, MD FAAP
Consultant, National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill School of Medicine
Ms. Libby Denebeim
Former President of San Francisco School Board
Doreen Der-McLeod
Cameron House
Jennifer Dinh
Carol Dippel, President
Soroptimist International of El Cerrito
Tania Docarmo, U.S. Office Coordinator
Chab Dai Coalition
Catherine Dodd, Ph.D., RN
Former director of NOW
Judith L. Doherty
Retired Executive
Matthew R. Dorozenski, Advisory Board Member
The Barnaba Institute and Founding Member, End Internet Trafficking Coalition
Rachel Durchslag, Director
Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation
Barbara B. Elliott, BSN, RN
Nursing Educator
Howard Epstein, Chairman
Walter Armer, VC Political Affairs
Melissa Farley, Ph.D. & Director
Prostitution Research & Education, San Francisco
Laurie Fields, Ph.D.
Dept. of Psychiatry UCSF
Theresa L. Flores, LSW, MSW
American Survivor of Human Trafficking, Author & Speaker
Norman Fong
Chinatown Community Development Corporation
Kenneth Franzblau, Trafficking Campaign Director
Equality Now
Annie Fukushima, Ph.D. Candidate
Ethnic Studies & Designated Emphasis in Women, Gender & Sexuality UC Berkeley
Roma Guy, MSW
Former Health Commissioner City County SF
Barry Hermanson
Green for Congress
Aileen Hernandez
Chair Emerita, California Women's Agenda
Reverend Glenda Hope, Executive Director
San Francisco Network Ministries
Norma Hotaling, Executive Director
SAGE Project
Donna M. Hughes, Ph.D
Professor & Carlson Endowed Chair Women's Studies Program, University of Rhode Island
Eriko Ikehara
B. Julie Johnson, Ph.D., MPH
Prostitution Survivor, Independent Scholar
Yasmin Kaderali
Students & Artists Fighting to End Human Slavery
Peter Keane
Dean Emeritus and Professor of Law Golden Gate University School of Law
Amelia W. Korangy, Development and Outreach Officer
FAIR Fund, Inc
Leo Lacayo
Alexis Taylor Litos, Executive Director
The Barnaba Institute
Kathy Lipscomb
Retired, SEIU UHCW-W
Pamela D. LoPinto
San Franciscans United for Safety for Women, Safety for Neighborhoods
Heidi Machen, Attorney
Fmr. SF Dept Head
Kathy Maskell, U.S. Advocacy Director
Love146
Catharine A. MacKinnon, J.D., Ph.D.
Robin Morgan
Rosario Navarrette, Associate Director,
30th Street Senior Center
Maritza Penagos, MSW MSPH
HIV Services Activist
Edward Poole
Citizens for a Better San Francisco
Greg Rohrbough, Executive Director
Justice Like Lightning
Diana E. H. Russell, Ph.D.
Emerita Professor of Sociology at Mills College, Co-founder of Women Against Sexual Slavery, Berkeley
Donna Sabella, M.Ed., MSN, Ph.D. , RN
Program Director, Dawn's Place, Philadelphia, PA and Director, Project Phoenix, West Chester, PA
Marie De Santis, Executive Director Women’s Justice Center
Santa Rosa, CA
Aida F. Santos
women's development, education, productivity & research organization (wedpro), inc, Philippines
Jen Sheehan, Outreach Director
The Barnaba Institute
Mimi Silbert, Ph.D., President and CEO
Delancey Street Foundation
Ann Singer
Jewish Coalition to End Human Trafficking
Gloria Steinem
Karen Stauss, Managing Attorney and Policy Counsel
Polaris Project
Jordanna Thigpen, Executive Director
San Francisco Taxi Commission
Dawn Trennert
President, Middle Polk Neighborhood Assoc.
Allen Wilson
American Civil Liberties Union
Ann Winslow, Assoc Director
SF Network Ministries
Susie Wong, Former Pres.,
Wu Yee Children's Service
Titles listed for identification purposes only.
10/30/08