Ad campaign takes aim at prostitution - Action News
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SudburyNew

Ad campaign takes aim at prostitution

A new billboard campaign in Sudbury is targeting men who pay for sex with young women in exploitable conditions.

Young women and girls in danger, say community groups

Groups including Health Sciences North and the local YWCA hope to deter the sex trade among young girls and women in the Subdury area. (Image provided to CBC)

A new billboard campaign in Sudbury is targeting men who pay for sex with young women in exploitable conditions.

The three-by-six metre sign reads "Real Men Dont Buy Girls," and will be posted at the intersection of Kathleen and College streets in downtown Sudbury, an area notorious for prostitution activity.

The billboard features the silhouette of a young girl dressed in a short skirt and heels, leaning into the drivers window of a car.

The project was spearheaded by a number of community groups, including Health Sciences North and the YWCA of Sudbury.

Also involved is the Sudbury Womens Centre, headed up by Christine Schmidt, a local woman who has seen the experiences of young prostitutes firsthand.

"Ive seen women with broken arms. Ive seen 17-year-olds that are pregnant. Ive seen women with two black eyes. Ive seen them without shoes on," Schmidt said. "These human traffickers know where they are, and they know how to locate them."

Schmidt says the campaign isnt meant to stamp out prostitution in the city, or to shame men, but rather is a way to address the issue of exploited street prostitutes in Sudbury.

Women put in "survival mode"

One of the dangers of street prostitution is the vulnerable state it puts young women in, said Melissa Lamontagne, who works at a local sexual assault centre.

"[The women] are doing everything they can at that point to stay alive and to be able to survive and to feed their children," she said. "Sometimes its to feed an addiction."

Many of the women she sees at the centre are under the age of consent, Lamontagne added.

The new billboard will be posted for one month.

"Its a direct message from women with lived experiences," Schmidt said. "In our view, real men dont buy girls. This is a problem."