The Los Angeles Times reported that the number of permits issued for
porn productions in LA County dropped by 90 per cent between 2012 and
2013, to a total of 40. According to Film LA, the body responsible for
the permits, just 20 were issued in the first seven months of this year.
In 2011, an estimated 5,000 adult films were produced in Los Angeles,
many of them in the San Fernando Valley, which is considered the
industry’s spiritual home. Porn is thought to have accounted for as many
as 20,000 jobs in the region. That is, until the new law, known as
Measure B, was passed by LA County voters in November 2012, after AIDS
activists campaigned on its behalf, claiming it would prevent the
disease spreading among porn performers.
Porn professionals insist the law is unnecessary, because the
industry already enforces mandatory HIV testing for performers, many of
whom dislike wearing condoms. Audiences are also thought to prefer their
adult entertainment condom-free, which is why porn production has
largely relocated to more laissez-faire locales, including Las Vegas,
Florida, Latin America and Eastern Europe.
Paul Audley, the president of Film LA, described the decrease in
permits in LA County as “dramatic”, telling the LA Times, “It is a cause
for concern that people who are manning the cameras, lights and other
things on those sets are not working anymore.”
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