Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

$20-Million Fund To Help Sex Workers Get Out Of The Industry Is 'Over-Subscribed'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 May, 2015 07:13 PM
    ESQUIMALT, B.C. — There are more groups than money available for the government's proposed $20 million plan to get sex workers out of the industry, Justice Minister Peter MacKay said Friday.
     
    MacKay said the government will soon announce who receives funds to participate in the program that aims to help sex workers transition from the trade, but he didn't provide a time frame.
     
    The plan is an off-shoot of the government's Protection of Communities and Exploited Persons Act, which became law last year and makes it an offence to buy sexual services or communicate for that purpose.
     
    It was created after the Supreme Court of Canada struck down the country's prostitution laws.
     
    Sex workers said the law puts them in harm's way by preventing them from speaking with and screening clients, while sex-worker advocates, aboriginal leaders and law enforcement officials said $20 million is not enough money to help people leave the sex trade.
     
    "Our challenge is, of course, to have a criteria that will determine how that funding is delivered, but it is certainly our hope to start making these specific contributions to various programs in the very near future," said MacKay, who was in the Victoria-area community of Esquimalt for a separate announcement.
     
     
    "We were, I don't want to say overwhelmed, but certainly over-subscribed for that amount of money," he said.
     
    MacKay did acknowledge concerns have been raised about the size of the fund, but said it's the first time a federal government has attempted this type of program.
     
    "Some may say $20 million for a problem this large, a country this large, a population our size, but it's important to note this is the first money, this is the first federal investment specific to the effort to help, predominantly women, but vulnerable Canadians leave prostitution," he said.
     
    At federal justice committee hearings last year aboriginal women, police officials and former prostitutes denounced the five-year $20-million pledge as insufficient.
     
    Former Calgary police chief Rick Hanson called the money "woefully inadequate," and Michele Audette, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada, said "$20 million is peanuts."
     
    But MacKay said the "exit strategy" will support existing programs and partner with other groups working to help people leave the sex trade.
     
    MacKay made the comments at a Boys and Girls Club Services of Greater Victoria youth centre when he announced funding of $300,000 over the next three years to support a program for young offenders' returning to society through meaningful work and life experience.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Retired U.S. Soldier Criticizes Canada's Release Of Omar Khadr On Bail

    Retired U.S. Soldier Criticizes Canada's Release Of Omar Khadr On Bail
    SALT LAKE CITY — A retired American soldier has criticized a Canadian judge's decision to allow the release a former Guantanamo Bay inmate on bail, saying he's a dangerous terrorist who poses a threat to the West's safety.

    Retired U.S. Soldier Criticizes Canada's Release Of Omar Khadr On Bail

    Inquest Into Taxi Drop-off Death Hears Hospital Saw Woman As 'Inconvenience'

    WINNIPEG — A woman whose mother died hours after being sent home in a cab from a hospital has told an inquest that her mother was seen as a nuisance by medical staff who just wanted to "get rid of her."

    Inquest Into Taxi Drop-off Death Hears Hospital Saw Woman As 'Inconvenience'

    Rob Ford Undergoes Surgery To Remove Cancerous Tumour

    Rob Ford Undergoes Surgery To Remove Cancerous Tumour
    TORONTO — Rob Ford, the controversial former mayor of Toronto, began intensive surgery to remove a cancerous tumour from his abdomen Monday, with the operation expected to last more than 10 hours.

    Rob Ford Undergoes Surgery To Remove Cancerous Tumour

    Lowe's Builds Canadian Reach By Adding 13 Target Stores, Distribution Centre

    Lowe's Builds Canadian Reach By Adding 13 Target Stores, Distribution Centre
    Lowe's announced Monday that it is building its presence in Ontario and six Western Canadian cities after reaching a deal to buy 13 Target Canada leases and a distribution centre west of Toronto for about $151 million.

    Lowe's Builds Canadian Reach By Adding 13 Target Stores, Distribution Centre

    Green Party Leader May Very Apologetic About Omar Khadr Remarks

    OTTAWA — Green party Leader Elizabeth May says she is "very apologetic" about remarks she made on the weekend that included profanity and insulted the federal cabinet about how it has treated Omar Khadr.

    Green Party Leader May Very Apologetic About Omar Khadr Remarks

    Too Early To Decide On Public Inquest Into Chilliwack Family Deaths: Coroners Service

    VANCOUVER — A spokeswoman for British Columbia's Coroners Service says it's too early to say whether a public inquest will be held into the death of a father who appears to have confessed on Facebook to killing his daughter, wife and sister.

    Too Early To Decide On Public Inquest Into Chilliwack Family Deaths: Coroners Service