It's a great question.
From the perspective of all of our member groups, all of PCEPA is actually very dangerous. The regime itself actually hinges on the criminalization of clients. I think it's important for people to see that to understand how the law actually functions. Regardless of what its intention was when it was written, it actually hinges on the criminalization of clients. If the clients are considered violent and rapists at every single moment that a sex worker is seeing them, it's an extremely problematic notion. I don't think anybody would agree with that, including law enforcement.
The whole framework that clients are abusive at every given moment and that sex workers are exploited all the time is really problematic. The entire PCEPA is based on that foundation, so there's nothing in it that you could actually save.
That's not even speaking to the fact that it actually reproduces some of the laws that were struck down in the last constitutional challenge before the Supreme Court. Those were the communication of one's own sexual services in public places and the reproduction of pieces of it in some of the third party laws.
All of the regime itself is dangerous and actually just increases the risk of exploitation and violence in sex workers' lives.