Vegas prostitutes cool on efforts to legalize their niche
An excellent insight into why working girls (and the men who patronize them) aren’t particularly anxious for legalized prostitution in Las Vegas city limits. Read the whole blog entry at The LA Times…
Vegas prostitutes: Lukewarm on legalization
Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman kept the idea for a red-light district for downtown Vegas alive. At his news conference yesterday the mayor told reporters: “I’ve met with folks from that industry who make a very compelling argument that it could generate $200 million a year in tax dollars, and that would buy a lot of textbooks, pay for a lot of teachers.” Interestingly, the prostitutes legal and illegal do not seem very excited by the potential of plying their trade in Vegas, at least, within the sanction of the law.
You see, when the mayor refers to “that industry” he does not mean he met with hookers. He met with representatives of the brothel industry and not actual prostitutes. I reached a prostitute at the Chicken Ranch to get her opinion of legal prostitution in Vegas. She asked that her name not be used but e-mailed:
“Since many customers are critically concerned with discretion and prostitutes prefer their ‘freedom,’ I believe the idea may appear much more appealing than the reality of the situation and what is necessary to make it happen”
As for what is necessary, she adds:
“I suspect that many in favor of legalizing prostitution may not realize all the checks and balances necessary to do so. Legalizing prostitution in Las Vegas may benefit the city as long as we recognize that legal prostitutes must remain in a ‘quarantined’ brothel where condoms remain a requirement for all sexual services, the ladies are tested for AIDS and STDs.”
The first point is the one I want to focus on. At Southern Nevada brothels, sex workers are quarantined, which means (with only certain specific exceptions) that they are not allowed to leave the brothel property after getting tested for diseases. A week spent unable to leave the property is not unusual. Many workers, leaving children behind, stay for a month. When I lived at the Chicken Ranch for a story, I found being unable to ever leave the property one of the most oppressive aspects of life at a brothel.
- Las Vegas Mayor keeps prostitution legalization debate going
- Las Vegas Mayor suggests legalizing prostitution?
- Chicken Ranch Brothel sues Nye County, NV
- Northern Nevada mayors oppose proposal to legalize prostitution
- Pahrump Brothel Owner fights prostitution in Sin City
- More Chicken Ranch Litigation Aimed At Nye County




No comments yet.