Analyze the Problem
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Jane Pride

Upper Scott Avenue Business Partner

Return to Business Owner Interviews

This method cost 2%.

“I think the rapid development of the upper end of Scott Avenue has attracted a new, younger crowd into the area. The local clubs cater to this crowd, offering special events and drink specials. Most of the club goers are attending the area college or are in that age group. After the bars close, the patrons may venture down Scott Avenue looking for a good time. This increase in potential customers also leads to an increase in prostitutes and related crime.”

Response Revealed

Enforce laws prohibiting soliciting, patronizing and loitering for the purposes of prostitution.

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The main strategy police use to control street prostitution is enforcing laws prohibiting soliciting, patronizing, and loitering for the purposes of prostitution. Street prostitutes can be valuable informants to police about other crimes, and the threat of enforcement gives the police leverage for information. In some jurisdictions, controlling street prostitution is left to the vice squad. Limiting patrol officers' involvement is intended to reduce corruption, but it can give the public the impression that only corrupt officers would ignore the problem. Historically, the police have arrested far more prostitutes than clients, although some police agencies have shifted toward a more balanced enforcement strategy, targeting clients as well as prostitutes. To promote a consistent response and improve the chances for successful prosecutions, police agencies should prepare written guidelines to govern how and under what circumstances they will enforce prostitution laws.

Enforcement strategies are expensive; each arrest costs thousands of dollars to process. By themselves, they are ineffective at either controlling street prostitution or protecting prostitutes from harm. Increased police enforcement temporarily reduces the number of prostitutes on the street, but they usually reappear in new areas. This may actually increase street prostitution in the long term by creating new opportunities for prostitutes and potential clients to meet. While the severity of the penalties against prostitutes does appear to affect the volume of prostitution, modest fines against prostitutes may actually force them to commit more prostitution to pay the fines. Prostitutes who are prosecuted are usually convicted, but many of them fail to show up for court hearings. Most prostitutes consider the costs of being arrested a business expense and an inconvenience, but not a significant deterrent.