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Department of Public Health looses barrage of violation notices on massage therapists; city laws aimed at curbing trafficking leave many small businesses in limbo
Kim Pierce, a local massage therapist, was heading into 2019 in a good place: She had affordable rent at ActivSpace, a building on 18th and Treat, and more clients than she could handle.
That lasted until January, when 52 of her fellow massage therapists received notices from the Department of Public Health warning that they were not legally permitted to work in that building. Although Pierce did not receive a notice โ her business was not listed on Yelp โ she didnโt want to risk it.
She ultimately left in April.
โIโm still looking for a space to work,โ she said in a recent interview.
Thatโs because a 2015 law, authored by then-Supervisor Katy Tang, requires massage therapists to seek conditional use authorization from the city to set up shop anywhere in the city. They must also register with the Health Department โ a costly process. Whatโs more, massage therapists say the law has had a major unintended consequence: It has purportedly encouraged more therapists to not register with the city and, instead, fly by night.
The situation will not become easier anytime soon for Pierce, or her fellow massage therapists.
Last week, the Department of Public Health reportedly served hundreds of massage therapists violation notices requiring them to come into compliance with the ordinance in 30 days, or be fined $1,000 a day.
Marianne Smith, who was served with a notice on Friday, says she was told by a Department of Public Health official that upwards of 226 massage therapists were served with notices. The DPH has not returned repeated inquiries regarding last weekโs enforcement action.
โItโs horrible,โ Smith told Mission Local on Monday. โItโs so frustrating that we โ legitimate businesses โ are always being lumped in with illegal syndicates.โ
Massage therapists say that the 2015 law, an effort to weed out human trafficking rings associated with massage parlors, has instead subjected San Franciscoโs entire massage industry to a bureaucratic full-court press: Initial inspections by three different city departments, licensing fees, and random visits by the Health Department โ processes individual massage therapists say they cannot afford.
Adrienne Lalanne was also served with a notice Friday, as she was not registered with the Health Department. She fears sheโll no longer be able to afford her spot in a chiropractorโs office that sheโs worked out of for 13 years, given the costs of registering with the city.
โI just saw the fees last night,โ she said. โThatโs astronomically high.โ
Initially setting up a massage establishment costs $6,327, which includes a panoply of registrations and inspection fees. Annually, establishments must pay $2,822. For a sole practitioner, especially, this is a lot. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates massage therapistsโ median income is $41,421 a year.
But the real cost burden lies in the conditional use process. Obtaining conditional use can take up to 11 months, according to the March 2019 Budget and Legislative Analyst report. Any business seeking conditional use โ including massage therapists โ must have a space selected at the very beginning of the process. That means a massage therapist must have months of rent saved up before beginning the process.
No other alternative health service โ such as acupuncture or chiropractic โ is subjected to the same rules and costs.
โHere we are in 2019 and we are seeing the effects of the law,โ said Candice Combs, president of the San Francisco Massage Council and owner of the InSymmetry Spa in the Mission. โItโs forcing everyone to go underground or leave the city. At some point, weโre not going to have services in San Franciscoโ
โYou donโt kill an entire industry because some people are doing it wrong,โ she added.
In January, more than 100 massage therapists, acupuncturists, hair stylists and others caught up crackdown at ActivSpace, a sprawling Mission building zoned for โproduction, distribution, and repairโ (PDR) โ but housing many businesses that did not fit this description.
While the Board of Supervisors in July passed legislation that granted amnesty to many of the scores of acupuncturists, tattoo artists, and hairstylists doing business there illegally, many massage therapists had jumped ship before the legislation passed.
The Office of Small Business, furthermore, reports that only around half a dozen massage therapists have officially sought to stay following the January crackdown. Because of the cityโs rules, itโs likely been difficult for them to find another place to set up shop.
At least legally.
Human Trafficking
The prevalence of so-called โsex massageโ establishments is unclear.
A Health Department spokesperson said the department โsuspectsโ that, as of 2019, roughly 30 percent of the 188 licensed massage businesses in the city are offering sexual services for money โ though that โsuspicionโ is based only on indicators like using beds instead of massage tables or how the masseurs are dressed.
A 2019 report by Department of the Status of Women stated that โstrongโ evidence exists that such an industry thrives in San Francisco. Regardless, the Health Department found only two cases of โillicit massage establishmentsโ in 2017. It found no such cases in 2016. (The report did not provide data for 2018.)
And yet, Polaris, a Washington, D.C. nonprofit that tracks human trafficking in the United States, argued in a 2018 report that San Francisco is one of three major nexuses of human trafficking, next to New York and Los Angeles โ based on an analysis of Mandarin Chinese-language website ads.
โ42 percent of the ads in California [San Francisco and Los Angeles] show one or more flags of trafficking (most commonly promises of more than $4,000 income a month, housing and transportation provided, visas handled, or parameters around an applicantโs appearance or age),โ the report says.
This situation appeared to amplify in San Francisco with the 2008 passage of California Assembly Bill 731, which made it possible for any massage establishment to bypass municipal control by obtaining a state massage license.
โSince the passage of AB 731 there have been two essential loopholes that have allowed for the proliferation of illicit operations to exist under the guise of legitimate massage establishments,โ wrote Regina Dick-Endrizzi, the director of the Office of Small Business, in a 2015 letter supporting Tangโs law.
This is where you go for all your neon-sign massage and family dental care needs. Photo by Mateo Hoke
Dick-Endrizzi explained that the law did not establish an agency that regulated recipients of the permits, and that it only required 200 hours of training to be considered an โadvanced practitioner.โ
A 2013 Health Department report asserted that the law created a high density of massage establishments, mostly located downtown. Out of the 154 establishments, โApproximately 50 percent of the massage establishments have not received a violation,โ the report states. โThe top 25 percent of violators are responsible for nearly 75% of active massage parlor violations.โ
San Francisco Police Department records show that 120 incident reports regarding โmassage establishment permit violationsโ were filed from 2013 to 2018. But of those, only six resulted in an arrest.
Regardless of whether illicit massage parlors are โ or were โ conduits for human trafficking, massage therapists argue, Tangโs legislation has been largely ineffective in stopping it. Currently, there are three health inspectors in charge of inspecting 188 massage establishments, according to a Health Department spokesperson.
But those inspectors are only inspecting the businesses that have bothered to jump through the hoops required of legitimate massage purveyors. City inspectors are not tasked with overseeing the many underground massage operations in this city.
And the number of underground operations may dwarf the legitimate ones. The 188 registered massage business appears to be only a fraction of those operating in the city. A basic San Francisco Yellow Pages search for the word โmassageโ turns up 563 results. (A basic Yelp search brings up 1,997 results.)
The businesses following the rules, meanwhile, are the ones being punished, Combs said. As a result, โeveryone is going underground.โ
Solutions
Combs and the seven-member San Francisco Massage Council, which was created in 2017 to advocate for massage therapists in the wake of the 2015 legislation, are in the process of urging the city to change the law. Itโs an โI told you soโ moment for Combs, who vehemently opposed the earlier legislation.
More than anything, Combs and others in the industry want to change the perception that massage is inextricably linked to sexual services and human trafficking. โWe are about health and wellness,โ she said. โThe end.โ
Combs said sheโs currently working with the Office of Small Business to identify areas for policy change and then will shop them around to the Board of Supervisors. Right now, specifics on any potential legislation are unclear.
โI believe once the supervisors see the facts, theyโre going to understand that this legislation destroyed an industry thatโs mostly female,โ she said. โWhen they see that theyโre going to pass common-sense legislation.โ
A body massage sign outside of 3914 24th St. Photo by Abraham Rodriguez.
Meanwhile, Pierce is still searching for a legal location. After leaving ActivSpace in April, she could not even find a place in so-called โwellness centersโ that offer a slew of alternative health services like acupuncture, midwifery, and yoga โ which are not subjected to the same standard as massage practitioners.
โThey said, โwe donโt want these kinds of inspections in our space, but youโre more than welcome to work here illegally,โโ she said.
Pierce rejected that offer, and remains on the hunt. โItโs been really hard,โ she said.
Kim Pierce, a local massage therapist, was heading into 2019 in a good place: She had affordable rent at ActivSpace, a building on 18th and Treat, and more clients than she could handle.
That lasted until January, when 52 of her fellow massage therapists received notices from the Department of Public Health warning that they were not legally permitted to work in that building. Although Pierce did not receive a notice โ her business was not listed on Yelp โ she didnโt want to risk it.
She ultimately left in April.
โIโm still looking for a space to work,โ she said in a recent interview.
Thatโs because a 2015 law, authored by then-Supervisor Katy Tang, requires massage therapists to seek conditional use authorization from the city to set up shop anywhere in the city. They must also register with the Health Department โ a costly process. Whatโs more, massage therapists say the law has had a major unintended consequence: It has purportedly encouraged more therapists to not register with the city and, instead, fly by night.
The situation will not become easier anytime soon for Pierce, or her fellow massage therapists.
Last week, the Department of Public Health reportedly served hundreds of massage therapists violation notices requiring them to come into compliance with the ordinance in 30 days, or be fined $1,000 a day.
Marianne Smith, who was served with a notice on Friday, says she was told by a Department of Public Health official that upwards of 226 massage therapists were served with notices. The DPH has not returned repeated inquiries regarding last weekโs enforcement action.
โItโs horrible,โ Smith told Mission Local on Monday. โItโs so frustrating that we โ legitimate businesses โ are always being lumped in with illegal syndicates.โ
Massage therapists say that the 2015 law, an effort to weed out human trafficking rings associated with massage parlors, has instead subjected San Franciscoโs entire massage industry to a bureaucratic full-court press: Initial inspections by three different city departments, licensing fees, and random visits by the Health Department โ processes individual massage therapists say they cannot afford.
Adrienne Lalanne was also served with a notice Friday, as she was not registered with the Health Department. She fears sheโll no longer be able to afford her spot in a chiropractorโs office that sheโs worked out of for 13 years, given the costs of registering with the city.
โI just saw the fees last night,โ she said. โThatโs astronomically high.โ
Initially setting up a massage establishment costs $6,327, which includes a panoply of registrations and inspection fees. Annually, establishments must pay $2,822. For a sole practitioner, especially, this is a lot. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates massage therapistsโ median income is $41,421 a year.
But the real cost burden lies in the conditional use process. Obtaining conditional use can take up to 11 months, according to the March 2019 Budget and Legislative Analyst report. Any business seeking conditional use โ including massage therapists โ must have a space selected at the very beginning of the process. That means a massage therapist must have months of rent saved up before beginning the process.
No other alternative health service โ such as acupuncture or chiropractic โ is subjected to the same rules and costs.
โHere we are in 2019 and we are seeing the effects of the law,โ said Candice Combs, president of the San Francisco Massage Council and owner of the InSymmetry Spa in the Mission. โItโs forcing everyone to go underground or leave the city. At some point, weโre not going to have services in San Franciscoโ
โYou donโt kill an entire industry because some people are doing it wrong,โ she added.
In January, more than 100 massage therapists, acupuncturists, hair stylists and others caught up crackdown at ActivSpace, a sprawling Mission building zoned for โproduction, distribution, and repairโ (PDR) โ but housing many businesses that did not fit this description.
While the Board of Supervisors in July passed legislation that granted amnesty to many of the scores of acupuncturists, tattoo artists, and hairstylists doing business there illegally, many massage therapists had jumped ship before the legislation passed.
The Office of Small Business, furthermore, reports that only around half a dozen massage therapists have officially sought to stay following the January crackdown. Because of the cityโs rules, itโs likely been difficult for them to find another place to set up shop.
At least legally.
Human Trafficking
The prevalence of so-called โsex massageโ establishments is unclear.
A Health Department spokesperson said the department โsuspectsโ that, as of 2019, roughly 30 percent of the 188 licensed massage businesses in the city are offering sexual services for money โ though that โsuspicionโ is based only on indicators like using beds instead of massage tables or how the masseurs are dressed.
A 2019 report by Department of the Status of Women stated that โstrongโ evidence exists that such an industry thrives in San Francisco. Regardless, the Health Department found only two cases of โillicit massage establishmentsโ in 2017. It found no such cases in 2016. (The report did not provide data for 2018.)
And yet, Polaris, a Washington, D.C. nonprofit that tracks human trafficking in the United States, argued in a 2018 report that San Francisco is one of three major nexuses of human trafficking, next to New York and Los Angeles โ based on an analysis of Mandarin Chinese-language website ads.
โ42 percent of the ads in California [San Francisco and Los Angeles] show one or more flags of trafficking (most commonly promises of more than $4,000 income a month, housing and transportation provided, visas handled, or parameters around an applicantโs appearance or age),โ the report says.
This situation appeared to amplify in San Francisco with the 2008 passage of California Assembly Bill 731, which made it possible for any massage establishment to bypass municipal control by obtaining a state massage license.
โSince the passage of AB 731 there have been two essential loopholes that have allowed for the proliferation of illicit operations to exist under the guise of legitimate massage establishments,โ wrote Regina Dick-Endrizzi, the director of the Office of Small Business, in a 2015 letter supporting Tangโs law.
This is where you go for all your neon-sign massage and family dental care needs. Photo by Mateo Hoke
Dick-Endrizzi explained that the law did not establish an agency that regulated recipients of the permits, and that it only required 200 hours of training to be considered an โadvanced practitioner.โ
A 2013 Health Department report asserted that the law created a high density of massage establishments, mostly located downtown. Out of the 154 establishments, โApproximately 50 percent of the massage establishments have not received a violation,โ the report states. โThe top 25 percent of violators are responsible for nearly 75% of active massage parlor violations.โ
San Francisco Police Department records show that 120 incident reports regarding โmassage establishment permit violationsโ were filed from 2013 to 2018. But of those, only six resulted in an arrest.
Regardless of whether illicit massage parlors are โ or were โ conduits for human trafficking, massage therapists argue, Tangโs legislation has been largely ineffective in stopping it. Currently, there are three health inspectors in charge of inspecting 188 massage establishments, according to a Health Department spokesperson.
But those inspectors are only inspecting the businesses that have bothered to jump through the hoops required of legitimate massage purveyors. City inspectors are not tasked with overseeing the many underground massage operations in this city.
And the number of underground operations may dwarf the legitimate ones. The 188 registered massage business appears to be only a fraction of those operating in the city. A basic San Francisco Yellow Pages search for the word โmassageโ turns up 563 results. (A basic Yelp search brings up 1,997 results.)
The businesses following the rules, meanwhile, are the ones being punished, Combs said. As a result, โeveryone is going underground.โ
Solutions
Combs and the seven-member San Francisco Massage Council, which was created in 2017 to advocate for massage therapists in the wake of the 2015 legislation, are in the process of urging the city to change the law. Itโs an โI told you soโ moment for Combs, who vehemently opposed the earlier legislation.
More than anything, Combs and others in the industry want to change the perception that massage is inextricably linked to sexual services and human trafficking. โWe are about health and wellness,โ she said. โThe end.โ
Combs said sheโs currently working with the Office of Small Business to identify areas for policy change and then will shop them around to the Board of Supervisors. Right now, specifics on any potential legislation are unclear.
โI believe once the supervisors see the facts, theyโre going to understand that this legislation destroyed an industry thatโs mostly female,โ she said. โWhen they see that theyโre going to pass common-sense legislation.โ
A body massage sign outside of 3914 24th St. Photo by Abraham Rodriguez.
Meanwhile, Pierce is still searching for a legal location. After leaving ActivSpace in April, she could not even find a place in so-called โwellness centersโ that offer a slew of alternative health services like acupuncture, midwifery, and yoga โ which are not subjected to the same standard as massage practitioners.
โThey said, โwe donโt want these kinds of inspections in our space, but youโre more than welcome to work here illegally,โโ she said.
Pierce rejected that offer, and remains on the hunt. โItโs been really hard,โ she said.