Even if they manage to stay afloat under the new regime, setting up so many hoops all but ensures that city authorities can find some code violation if they go looking for one-while giving them a new mandate to go looking all they want. While the new ordinance could target some ambiguous area "spas" by counting them as bathhouses, the regulations would mainly apply to the combination sauna, gym, and social clubs that are a fixture of Tampa's gay scene.Ĭomplying with all the new rules would be a huge burden on these small businesses. Tampa has entirely separate regulations regarding massage therapists and parlors. It's a website where users can share feedback on massage parlors that offer sex."Īgain, it's unclear how the evidence presented-reviews of erotic massage parlors-relates to bathhouses in Tampa, other than that Polaris is trying to make that link. "Members of Polaris also brought the website 'Rub-maps' to the attention of Tampa council members. "Rochelle Kahoon with Polaris…says this updated ordinance will no doubt run these parlors off," 10 News continued. "They've also been flying in from Washington for the past eight months to attend each city council meeting on cracking down on these parlors." "Polaris has been working with the City of Tampa on this draft ordinance to figure out what needs to be updated," reported 10 News Tampa. And they had ample help from the D.C.-based Polaris Project, which receives massive amounts of federal funding to undertake questionably beneficial trafficking projects. In this case, the city is using the specter of sex trafficking to collect new fees, take more control over local entrepreneurs, and make it much easier to shut down businesses they don't like. But "sex trafficking" has become such a magic invocation that politicians can use it to pass just about anything, no matter how unrelated to the law's professed purposes. In saner times, people might point out that this testimony amounts to an emotional ploy to conflate these establishments with horrific violence. Indeed, local lawmakers failed to offer any evidence at all that sex trafficking is an issue at Tampa's bathhouses.
Problem: None of the victims who testified said they'd been exploited at a bathhouse. The purpose of the testimony was to get support for a new city ordinance on bathhouses-a mammoth package of new occupational licensing requirements, record-keeping mandates, limits on hours of operation, and other rules. Three sex-trafficking victims told their stories in a dramatic Tampa City Council meeting yesterday.