Adult
Entertainment Performers Speak Out Against Government Sanctions
on Porn Production
Source: Press Release
Van Nuys, CA ---
Adult performers want to make sure the world hears their side
after a subcommittee of the California Division of Occupational
Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA) met June 7 to discuss control
measures for adult entertainment productions. According to
AVN.com, topics for discussion included “a rule requiring ‘a
condom or other physical block that prevents the passage of
blood and OPIM-STI to another person’ during ‘occupational
exposure’ on the set of an adult producer.” This would require
barriers during all sexual acts and eliminate the mandatory STI
testing the industry currently adheres by. While Cal/OSHA
states it has the wellbeing of the performers in mind, Penthouse
Pet and adult star Ryan Keely wants to make it clear many
performers don’t agree. Keely says, “Keep your laws off my
body. It’s really important to me to make sure our side is
heard, which is why I’ve been actively collecting quotes from
performers around the industry regarding their anger towards the
proposed laws. It’s not a black and white case of using
condoms. It’s more complicated, and it will ultimately make the
industry less safe.”
To read AVN’s recap of the Cal/OSHA Subcommittee
on Control Measures’ proposed laws, visit http://business.avn.com/articles/video/Cal-OSHA-Moving-Closer-To-New-Mandatory-Condom-Rules-437156.html.
To read AVN’s coverage on the June 7 meeting,
visit http://business.avn.com/articles/legal/Industry-Expresses-Its-Feelings-Loudly-at-Cal-OSHA-Meeting-438135.html.
In order to help give voice to the concerns
regarding Cal/OSHA’s proposed adult production laws, Ryan Keely
urged some of the industry’s leading performers to provide
quotes on the issue. Their words are representative of a
unified adult industry.
Ela Darling says, “As an adult performer in the
porn industry, the proposed changes to Cal/OSHA frighten and
infuriate me. If these changes go through, performers will be
considered employees of a production company rather than
independent contractors, which is what we have been operating
and paying taxes as for years. If that is the case, then the
self-imposed STD testing procedures that have made me feel safe
and secure in my career will be considered workplace
discrimination, and I will be disallowed from verifying that my
costars are free of infection. As an individual and as a
performer, I would rather have unprotected sex with someone whom
I know for sure has been tested for HIV, Gonorrhea and Chlamydia
in the past thirty days, than have barrier-protected sex with
someone whose STD status is either unknown or positive.”
Lily Cade adds, “These proposed regulations are
so absurd that, if actually enforced, they would drive the porn
industry out of California. Taking my job away doesn't make me
safer - it makes me unemployed. I absolutely, unequivocally,
love what I do, and I do not want that taken away from me
because of misguided concerns about my safety. We are not a
hazmat team. We are not radioactive. We are fucking, something
almost everyone does, and almost no one encases themselves in
plastic wrap to do. I am not opposed to safety, but our testing
protocol kept us safe. Regulations requiring condoms, dams,
gloves, eye protection, the prevention of any and all body fluid
contact with skin, and treating everyone as if they are infected
are unnecessary and divorced from the reality of what porn
performers need and want.”
Justine Joli states, “Once again the government
is trying to force me to have sex in a way that I do not enjoy.
The proposed regulations would make girl on girl sex scenes
un-sexy and un-marketable. As a girl on girl performer, I
strongly oppose these new regulations. I feel girl on girl sex
films would never be shot, and I would be forced to perform with
men if I wanted to keep making a living in the industry I have
worked in for years. Girl on girl sex is the only form of
intercourse with another person where the transmission of STIs
is less than 30%. Being required to use dental dams, plastic
over labia, gloves and goggles instead of testing wont make me
safer. It will only take my job away.
The Cal/OSHA
meeting took place at the California Department of
Transportation building, 100 S. Main St., Room 1.040 in downtown
Los Angeles on June 7 from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. For more
information about Cal/OSHA, visit
http://www.dir.ca.gov/dosh/.