Working girls fear
benefit cuts
28.06.2003
By ALAN PERROTT
Auckland
beneficiaries who use sex work to supplement their incomes are worried that the
industry's new legal status means they will have to be registered.
Experienced
prostitutes have told the Herald that such a requirement would drive women
further underground to protect their benefits, possibly putting them at greater
risk.
"Most
are that out of it, they don't care," said a woman who called herself
Wanda. "But some girls are worried about what's going to happen, like will
we have to register?
"That
would be a bummer if we have to register like dogs, especially for people on
benefits. Most of us are on something and we'd lose that money. We could end up
worse off."
Some
sex workers in the Hopetoun Bridge area on Thursday night resented the focus on
their trade and felt the Government should mind its own business and leave them
alone.
"Must
of us see it as just another way for the Government to get more money. They are
after some more tax; they couldn't care a hoot about us," said Wanda, who
appeared to be in her 40s.
She
said some sex workers feared that decriminalisation would bring more women onto
the streets, provoking violence as established prostitutes hired muscle to
protect their patch.
"Some
young girls may think it's glamorous or easy," she said, "but I wish
I had never started.
"It's
not a good life. You get good money and that, but it's better that you don't do
it.
"You
work for long enough and then you don't want any kind of relationship with men.
That's what spoils it for me."
Gillian
has been working her patch for seven years and thinks the changed law will mean
more money.
"Hopefully
the guys won't be so scared to approach us now, so work might pick up.
"Most
guys keep asking, 'Are you going to a safe place? Are we going to be caught?'
Like [as though] I want to be arrested."
But
she is worried introducing workplace standards for massage parlours will push
their costs up. That would lead to higher prices and owners taking a bigger
chunk of workers' earnings and could force more women onto the street in search
of easier money.
"If
that happens we'll have to get rid of them," said Gillian, who has a
husband and children.
"Out
here, there aren't many clean, straight, white women, so we're different and
we're not in a parlour competing with a lot more slimmer women and everything.
"Right
now we've got it OK. The police don't hassle us because we don't do drugs and
we don't have to hop in with any Tom, Dick or Harry."
More
competition could mean Gillian will have to spend more time on the street,
something she dreads.
"Why
work 40 hours when you only have to work four? I want a life.
"The
kids are all in bed. This is a couple of hours twice a week, and that's it. I'm
always home by 11.30 because I have to be up at 6.30 to get the kids ready for
school.
"My
husband doesn't mind what I do. He knows I'm a professional. I just see dollar
signs in their eyes."