My Peers When I first started doing outreach work, I was nervous. Enthusiastic, but scared. In 2018, I''d applied for a peer outreach worker position at Maggie''s, Canada''s longest-running sex worker advocacy organization, because I had a deep yearning to be more involved in our community. I''d been an agency escort and was now a stripper, but I''d never worked the street or known anyone who had engaged in outdoor sex work. I felt sheltered. At most, street-based outdoor sex work accounts for 20 per cent of the overall trade. While those who work outdoors are a minority in the sex industry, they are, by far, the most vulnerable to violence--both from clientele and from law enforcement. Disproportionately represented in street work are Black, Indigenous, and other people of colour; lgbtq+ folks, especially trans women; the precariously housed or homeless; drug users; the disabled and neurodivergent; and those who are in and out of the justice system.
As far as the whorearchy is concerned--that is, the class hierarchy within sex work--you''ve got your (white) high-class independent escorts at the top, and (BIPOC) street-based sex workers on the bottom. In Canada, the federal law against "public communication for the purposes of engaging in prostitution" accounts for 90 per cent of all sex work-related charges--and excessively targets outdoor sex workers. That''s why sex workers like me--white cis gendered women who work indoors and cater to a well-heeled clientele--can comfortably trust that the cops will turn a "blind eye" to our work. Because they do. * When I started my training at Maggie''s in 2018, I was so naive. As my new peers and I discussed the police, I wondered aloud if it were possible to create some sort of coalition with law enforcement, to reach out and get them to understand the sex worker''s perspective. My peers laughed at me. "Ha, working with the cops--that''s rich.
" "The police would rather get freebies than help us!" "They''ll threaten you with jail time just to get a free blow job." " That happens? " I asked, an innocent, ignorant, privileged little child. "Of course it does!" "Journalists should be covering this!" I said, indignant. "Oh, no one cares about us," came the response. "No one believes us." * Sex worker street outreach isn''t a daytime gig. I worked the trans stroll at 2 a.m.
after my Saturday night stripping shift, a convenient two-minute taxi or bike ride away from the club. My outreach partner was Miss M, a sixty-something streetwise wonder known and beloved by all, who suggested I keep my earnings hidden in a money belt during our shift. Luckily for me, I''d found an old, discarded stripper ankle wallet in the locker room donation bin, perfect for securing cash to my person on these outreach nights. The locker room donation bin, it must be said, was a wonder of collective stripper-ware re-distribution. Lightly worn shoes, outfits, and bandanas were tossed in the bin to be accessed by all. On my first week, eager to replace my high-heeled vinyl shoes for a pair of Pleasers, I snatched a black pair from the bin in my size. All they needed was a trip to the cobbler to replace the broken ankle clasps, and $15 later, I had my perfect shoes. They lasted me my entire career.
When I became an outreach worker, I had to figure out how to do outreach with my strip club peers. Since the donation bin was a well-established self-regulating sharing scheme, I placed a small, inconspicuous bin on the edge of a mirrored counter where the girls did their makeup. When no one was looking, I filled the bin with tampons, condoms, and lube, all supplied by Maggie''s. Not only were dancers taking from the bin, but I was happily surprised to discover they were leaving goodies as well. Unopened lipsticks, half-used perfumes, more condoms. I rejoiced: the system was working. One day, alas, the bin disappeared. I assume it was discarded by the owner who probably felt it was more appropriate for the dancers to pay for their tampons at the front desk than access them for free.
Why should dancers have to pay to not bleed on our clients? The first time Mona and I went out together, I arrived at the corner fifteen minutes early, surprised to discover how close the club really was to the stroll. At five minutes to two, Miss M called to say she''d gotten on the wrong bus. Would I mind waiting another twenty minutes? For Miss M, anything. I sat across the street on the grass of Allan Gardens, slurping down a Don Wan meal with chopsticks. The park wasn''t as sketchy as I''d imagined it to be at that hour, and the street was mostly vacant. The stroll, however, was bumping, and I was eager to get started. Miss M arrived, gasping, apologizing profusely. "Oh," she said, "let''s get to work!" We charged up the stroll with our names on lanyards and kitbags in tow.
"Maggie''s outreach!" Miss M called cheerfully to every worker. "Ya need any supplies? Condoms, pipes?" We had safer sex kits, crack kits, meth kits, needle kits. Sometimes they''d take a kit, but mostly they asked: "Do you have any water?" "What about food?" "Maybe a pair of winter gloves?" Doing outreach gave us an opportunity to find out exactly what street sex workers needed, directly from the sex workers themselves. Harm reduction is essential, but it''s nice to have water and granola bars on hand, too. Gloves, scarves, and hats for those long winter nights is even nicer! Sometimes, when I couldn''t get a hold of Miss M, I worked the stroll with Saharla, a beautiful Black trans woman the same age as me. If I wanted to get out of the club a little early, we''d meet before outreach at Fran''s, the local 24-hour diner, and share a meal before our shift. If I wanted to meet a little later because I was on a roll at the club, that was all right, too. She lived nearby and was easygoing.
Besides, it''s sex worker code to never get in the way of a peer''s money. Saharla knew people on the stroll. One evening, I stepped out of the cab to find her chatting on the corner with two working women, old friends. Both were sitting pretty on a wooden rail and smoking cigarettes, one eye always on the street and the passing cars that slowed to give us a look. Saharla could point out which cars were driven by regulars, which were driven by undercover cops--and which undercover cops were regulars. One of the chatting women was a dead ringer for Paris Hilton, blonde and blinged out. As a car approached, without hesitation and with only a few words, she jumped into the vehicle''s passenger seat, and off they went. "Lucky bitch," her friend said jokingly.
"I don''t feel like working tonight. I''m just gonna sit here and play it cool. If they want me, they''ll come to me. I''m not doing shit." I laughed and shook my head. "I literally just got outta my shift down at Tomcat''s," I told her, struck by the similarity in our on-the-job laments, "and said the exact same thing to myself tonight." Whether it''s on the street or in the club, the hotel room or the parlour, the incall or the dungeon: the setting may be different, but the hustle is the same. The whorearchy divides us, but we are all equals.
Doesn''t matter if you''re making bank at the top or working to survive on the bottom: a whore is a whore . It struck me, too, how unlike the stereotype many of the street workers looked: some dressed like high-class escorts; others, like homeroom teachers. Were they on the street waiting for a cab, or were they scoping out clients? One evening, Miss M and I approached a woman standing in the recessed doorway of an empty storefront on the corner. "Hi," I said. "We''re with Maggie''s outreach." "Oh, I''m fine," the beautifully made-up woman quickly replied. "I''m a dental hygienist. I do this for fun.
" "Awesome!" I said, merrily taken aback. "Good luck and have a great night." "Let us know if you need anything," Miss M said as we walked away. "We''re here every Saturday!" "God bless you!" the woman called back to us with a wave. * The sad reality of peer outreach work is that death, too, becomes a peer. With uncanny regularity, we experience the sudden loss of people we saw just last week, people we worked with, people with whom we shared stories and hearty laughs. I started outreach work feeling like a privileged outsider, but quickly found common ground with my sex-working sisters. I had just published the first edition of Modern Whore , and I was happily surprised, honoured, and a little embarrassed when our program manager announced that she would be buying copies of the book for every single peer and for Maggie''s to have on hand for our service users.
The peers were excited, and each one, over the next few weeks, shared how much they loved the book. After one of our weekly peer meetings, Amanda, a sweet woman with street-based experience, pulled the book out of her bag and said, "It makes me feel like I don''t have to be ashamed of myself." My eyes welled up and so did hers. Within a few months, she was gone. Everyone knew Miss M, and to know Miss M was to love Miss M. She was kind, funny, and a talented teller of tales. Once we finished the first round of our route, I''d pass her a container of Don Wan''s food and we''d sit and chat. Miss M was the same age as my mother, born in ''53.
She asked about my mom, asked if she was good. I told her my mother was very good. "You''re lucky," she said. "My mother made it clear she didn''t want me around. That I was unwanted. A mistake." I winced at every word.