
That fervor to end prostitution in Oregon was matched inside the Red Lion's bland conference room, where advocates and politicians (including City Commissioners Amanda Fritz and Dan Saltzman) took to the podium demanding the state work harder to curb prostitution and develop a way off the street for underage victims.
As we reported on in the fall, anti-prostitution advocates have been hoping to open a shelter for human trafficking victims in Portland for years. Though an FBI sting in Portland last February picked up seven underage girls in the city in four hours (and a routine traffic stop in Beaverton last week ended in the rescue of a 14-year-old prostitute) the estimated $2 million pricetag of a trafficking-victims shelter has so far been too high a hurdle.

Wyden's speech at the trafficking conference this weekend was laced with rousing, go-get-em-rhetoric. "The young people who are being exploited are some of the most vulnerable in our country. We are going to push back and we are going to beat the pimps!" Wyden told the large crowd to applause. Wyden says that in the last decade, Portland has become a hub of human trafficking due to the state's large number of runaways, high unemployment and location along I-5.
Right now if police pick up an underage prostitute on the streets, the state's only real options are to send them back to their families or into foster care, explains Keith Bickford Deputy Director of the Oregon State Human Trafficking Task Force. The young victims are not guaranteed emotional therapy or, if they go back to their families, a secure home. "It's almost like we're trying to survive until we get a shelter built," says Bickford. Under a new local law, arrested prostitutes over 18 can receive counseling or go to jail in Portland.
Jeri Williams, a survivor of prostitution who speaks often in Portland about her experiences in the sex industry, says getting into a shelter was the key to turning her life around. She spent 14 months in a Portland women's shelter during 1993 and 1994 and went through therapy to deal with post-traumatic stress of living on the street. "That was the biggest part of my recovery," says Williams. "That was my saving grace."
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