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A00849 Summary:

BILL NOA00849
 
SAME ASSAME AS S03075
 
SPONSORGottfried
 
COSPNSRNiou, Kim, Quart, Cruz, O'Donnell, Dickens, De La Rosa, Gallagher, Gonzalez-Rojas, Mitaynes, Burgos, Mamdani, Forrest, Simon, Epstein, Reyes, Anderson, Burdick, Seawright, Jackson, Ramos, Glick
 
MLTSPNSRFernandez
 
Rpld §§230.02, 230.15, 230.20, 230.25 & 240.37, Pen L; rpld §§60.47 & 170.80, §170.30 sub 4, §720.15 sub 4, CP L; amd Various Laws, generally
 
Decriminalizes certain prostitution offenses; amends provisions relating to prosecution of such offenses and vacating judgments.
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A00849 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A849
 
SPONSOR: Gottfried
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the penal law, in relation to decriminalizing sex work; and to repeal certain provisions of such law relating to prostitution (Part A); to amend the criminal procedure law, the civil practice law and rules, the social services law, and the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to eliminating prior criminal records and making other related changes; and to repeal certain provisions of the criminal procedure law relating to the prosecution of prostitution offenses (Part B); and to amend the multiple dwelling law, the public health law, the real property actions and proceedings law, the real property law, the vehicle and traffic law, and the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to making conforming changes (Part C)   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: To repeal statutes that criminalize sex work between consenting adults, but keep laws relating to minors or trafficking, and to provide for criminal record relief for people convicted of crimes repealed under this bill.   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Part A repeals and amends parts of Penal Law Article 230 that make sex work between consenting adults illegal, and it repeals section 240.37, the prohibition on loitering for the purpose of engaging in a prostitu- tion offense. The amendments make clear that sex work involving minors, force, intimidation, coercion, and trafficking all remain illegal. Part B repeals and amends parts of the Criminal Procedure Law, Civil Practice Law and Rules, Social Services Law, and Administrative Code of the City of New York to provide for criminal record relief for individ- uals previously convicted of crimes that are repealed under this bill. Part C repeals and amends parts of the Multiple Dwelling Law, Public Health Law, Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law, Real Property Law, Vehicle and Traffic Law, and the Administrative Code of the City of New York to make conforming changes and clarifications.   JUSTIFICATION: New York state law contains over a dozen criminal and civil provisions that punish adults who consent to sell or buy sex, as well as those who help and depend on them, not to mention the numerous prohibitions and punishments for prostitution in a wide variety of laws. Trying to stop sex work between consenting adults should not be the business of our criminal justice system. Criminalizing sex work criminalizes a means of survival for marginalized people, and it makes LGBTQ people especially vulnerable to police harassment and arrest based on their gender expression and sexuality. Criminalization drives sex work into the shadows in an underground ille- gal environment where sex workers face increased violence, abuse, and exploitation, and are more vulnerable to trafficking. Though anti-sex work laws may have originally been conceived as a protection of socie- ty's morals and perhaps even women, these laws now criminalize women and LGBTQ people for acts of survival and resistance to the force of econom- ic insecurity. Decriminalizing sex work upholds the rights of those who trade sex, reduces violence and trafficking, and increases labor protections. Decriminalization of sex work is supported by the World Health Organiza- tion, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the Global Alliance Against Trafficking in Women, Lambda Legal, the ACLU, GMHC, the NYC Anti-Violence Project, Make The Road NY, the Association of Legal Aid Attorneys, the Urban Justice Center, Womankind, VOCAL-NY, Center for Constitutional Rights, Center for HIV Law and Policy, UNAIDS, Housing Works, and a growing list of other organizations. This bill does not alter the criminal and civil legal provisions under which individuals who engage in trafficking, coercion, sexual abuse, abuse of minors, or rape may be prosecuted. In fact, when the law differentiates between sex work between consenting adults and situations where a party does not consent or that involve minors, sex workers will have an increased ability to report abuse, rape, theft, and other crimes perpetrated against them that today go ignored and are exacerbated by law enforcement activity. The bill allows individuals who have been previously convicted of offenses repealed in this bill to vacate those judgments of conviction. This will enable them to access housing, health, and economic resources that are currently off-limits to them because of their criminal records. Record relief will also allow people to transition into other employment if they choose, without the stigma and harassment that often follows from having a criminal record with prostitution convictions. History shows us that criminalizing sex work between consenting adults does not end the demand for sex work, and it certainly does not improve the lives of people who participate in the sex trades by choice, circum- stance, or coercion, or people who are profiled as sex workers. Instead of treating all people in the sex trades as criminals, victims, or both, it is time to create a more nuanced legal approach to the sex trades. Sex workers want decriminalization so they can work in a legal environ- ment, work without fear of the police, report any violence they experi- ence, and report trafficking when it affects their peers. It is time to put people before antiquated moral judgments.   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 2019-2020: A8230 referred to Codes committee   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: None   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect thirty days after it becomes law.
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