www.cbc.ca/news/politics/story/2012/01/19/pol-sex-workers-scoc.html
Sex-trade workers make their case in top court
By Meagan Fitzpatrick, CBC News
Posted: Jan 19, 2012 9:57 AM ET
Last Updated: Jan 19, 2012 12:04 PM ET
Lawyers for the federal government and a group of Vancouver sex-trade workers are in Canada's top court on Thursday to argue the validity of an attempted constitutional challenge to prostitution laws.
Members of the sex trade and their supporters will rally outside the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa around noon after the morning hearing gets underway.
The Downtown Eastside Sex Workers United Against Violence Society has been arguing since 2007 that prostitution-related laws violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The federal government challenged the case before it could get to court, and attempted to have it thrown out. The government argued sex-trade workers don't have grounds to launch a claim because it doesn't qualify for public interest standing.
Court to decide if case can proceed
The legal test for granting public interest standing before the court involves demonstrating that:
The issue is a serious one.
There is no other reasonable or effective way for the issue to come before the court.
Those behind the case are directly affected by it.
The British Columbia Supreme Court agreed with Ottawa, and denied public interest standing to the sex-trade workers group in 2008. But that decision was overturned when the group appealed it in 2010.
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The federal government, in turn, launched an appeal, and now it will be up to the Supreme Court to decide whether the case can proceed and the sex-trade workers can continue with their challenge.
The court is hearing arguments Thursday and will issue its decision in the coming months.
Workers argue laws are discriminatory
Former sex-trade worker Sheryl Kiselbach is also part of the case. The group is trying to challenge most of the Criminal Code provisions pertaining to adult prostitution, including those related to bawdy houses, living off the avails of prostitution, and communicating in a public place for the purpose of prostitution.
Prostitution itself is legal in Canada; most of the activities related to prostitution, however, are prohibited by the Criminal Code.
The sex-trade workers argue the laws prevent them from improving the health and safety of their work, they discriminate against them because of their line of work and they restrict their freedom of expression.
The workers also claim the prostitution laws prevent them from obtaining the protections and benefits that other workers get under labour and employment laws.