Okay, thank you.
As an alternative, we really recommend the New Zealand model, in which sex workers have an entrenched right to say no to clients, even if the client has paid, with recourse if they're being abused in the workplace. Really, the “workplaces” that Casandra had outlined are protected under the Prostitution Reform Act of sex workers. We think that giving sex workers labour and occupational rights—including the right to say no, including access to police protection, and including the decision not to work as a sex worker, with entitlements to unemployment insurance—are very important changes that would benefit sex workers' rights.
As a final statement, I'll say that laws criminalizing the sex trade are a matter of life and death for sex workers.