Vermont 2025-2026 Regular Session

Vermont Senate Bill S0054 Compare Versions

Only one version of the bill is available at this time.
OldNewDifferences
11 BILL AS INTRODUCED S.54
22 2025 Page 1 of 4
33
44
55 VT LEG #379346 v.1
66 S.54 1
77 Introduced by Senators Vyhovsky, Gulick, Harrison, Hart and White 2
88 Referred to Committee on 3
99 Date: 4
1010 Subject: Crimes and criminal procedure; prostitution 5
1111 Statement of purpose of bill as introduced: This bill proposes to repeal the 6
1212 prostitution laws that currently prohibit “indiscriminate sexual intercourse” and 7
1313 consensual engagement in sex work for hire by adults while retaining 8
1414 prohibitions and felony criminal penalties for human trafficking of persons 9
1515 who are compelled through force, fraud, or coercion to engage in sex work. 10
1616 An act relating to voluntary engagement in sex work 11
1717 It is hereby enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Vermont: 12
1818 Sec. 1. LEGISLATIVE INTENT AND FINDINGS 13
1919 (a) The majority of Vermont’s laws on prostitution were adopted more than 14
2020 100 years ago and have remained largely unchanged since that time. 15
2121 (b) Under current Vermont law, the term “prostitution” includes “the 16
2222 offering or receiving of the body for sexual intercourse for hire and shall also 17
2323 be construed to include the offering or receiving of the body for indiscriminate 18
2424 sexual intercourse without hire.” 19 BILL AS INTRODUCED S.54
2525 2025 Page 2 of 4
2626
2727
2828 VT LEG #379346 v.1
2929 (c) These laws reflect the social mores of the early 1900s, criminalizing not 1
3030 only voluntary sex work but sexual activity outside marriage, and no longer 2
3131 reflect Vermont’s commitment to personal and bodily autonomy. 3
3232 (d) Data has consistently shown that the criminalization of voluntary sex 4
3333 work is associated with increased risk of sexual and physical violence from 5
3434 clients, domestic partners, or other parties; increased risk of HIV and other 6
3535 sexually transmitted infections; and a disruption of sex workers’ support 7
3636 networks, workplace safety, and risk reduction strategies, resulting in reduced 8
3737 physical and emotional health for sex workers. 9
3838 (e) A 2018 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health meta-10
3939 analysis reviewed over 130 studies conducted over 30 years, synthesizing 11
4040 evidence on the extent to which sex work laws and policing practices affect sex 12
4141 workers’ safety, health, and access to services, and the pathways through 13
4242 which these effects occur. The study concluded “the qualitative and 14
4343 quantitative evidence demonstrate the extensive harms associated with 15
4444 criminalization of sex work, including laws and enforcement targeting the sale 16
4545 and purchase of sex, and activities relating to sex work organization. There is 17
4646 an urgent need to reform sex-work-related laws and institutional practices so as 18
4747 to reduce harms and barriers to the realization of health.” 19
4848 (f) It is the intent of the General Assembly to repeal the laws prohibiting 20
4949 “indiscriminate” sex and voluntary sex work between consenting adults while 21 BILL AS INTRODUCED S.54
5050 2025 Page 3 of 4
5151
5252
5353 VT LEG #379346 v.1
5454 retaining strict prohibitions and criminal penalties for human trafficking of 1
5555 persons for sex work. 2
5656 (g)(1) Pursuant to 13 V.S.A. chapter 60, it is illegal to: 3
5757 (A) recruit, entice, harbor, transport, provide, or obtain by any means 4
5858 a person under 18 years of age for the purpose of having the person engage in a 5
5959 commercial sex act; 6
6060 (B) recruit, entice, harbor, transport, provide, or obtain any person 7
6161 through force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of having the person engage 8
6262 in a commercial sex act or compel any person through force, fraud, or coercion 9
6363 to engage in a commercial sex act; and 10
6464 (C) patronize a person under 18 years of age for a commercial sex act 11
6565 or patronize any person for a commercial sex act who is being compelled 12
6666 through force, fraud, or coercion to engage in a commercial sex act. 13
6767 (2) “Coercion” as it applies to compelling a person to engage in a 14
6868 commercial sex act means: 15
6969 (A) the threat of serious harm, including physical or financial harm to 16
7070 or physical restraint against any person; 17
7171 (B) any scheme, plan, or pattern intended to cause a person to believe 18
7272 that failure to perform an act would result in serious bodily or financial harm to 19
7373 or physical restraint of any person; 20 BILL AS INTRODUCED S.54
7474 2025 Page 4 of 4
7575
7676
7777 VT LEG #379346 v.1
7878 (C) the abuse or threatened abuse of law or the legal process; 1
7979 (D) withholding, destroying, or confiscating any actual or purported 2
8080 passport, immigration document, or any other government identification 3
8181 document of another person; 4
8282 (E) providing a drug, including alcohol, to another person with the 5
8383 intent to impair the person’s judgment or maintain a state of chemical 6
8484 dependence; 7
8585 (F) wrongfully taking, obtaining, or withholding any property of 8
8686 another person; 9
8787 (G) blackmail; 10
8888 (H) asserting control over the finances of another person; 11
8989 (I) debt bondage; or 12
9090 (J) withholding or threatening to withhold food or medication. 13
9191 (h) Penalties for offenses relating to human trafficking range from a 14
9292 maximum of five years imprisonment (facilitation of human trafficking) to a 15
9393 mandatory 20 years to life imprisonment (aggravated trafficking). 16
9494 Sec. 2. REPEAL 17
9595 13 V.S.A. chapter 59, subchapter 2 (prostitution) is repealed. 18
9696 Sec. 3. EFFECTIVE DATE 19
9797 This act shall take effect on passage. 20