Missouri
Senate & The Anti-Adult Biz Bill
The Missouri Senate took just one hour for the Missouri Senate
to convene and pass the third reading of SB 32, a sweeping anti-adult
business bill that increases penalties for violations, limits
hours of operation, prevents virtually all interactions between
strippers and their audience, and creates new categories of
"public nuisance" that can close businesses completely.
"I
hope the passage of this bill on its third reading will be a
wake-up call to the larger chain stores in Missouri and surrounding
states," stated Marilyn Glessner, owner of Lilith's Lair, an
independent adult boutique in Springfield, Mo., in a press release.
"This
bill will send adult clubs and stores in Missouri back to pre-WWII
days." The bill, which passed by a vote of 23-7, now goes to
the Missouri House of Representatives for consideration – but
with the bill having been approved by all of the relevant Senate
committees and passed just two months after its introduction
suggests that it may be on a "fast track" through the House
and on the governor's desk for signature before the summer.
As noted AVN.com's previous coverage of this onerous legislation,
the bill, which is virtually unchanged from the version detailed
here, includes an expansive yet vague "definition" of a "sexually-oriented
business," an over-inclusive definition of "sexually-oriented
materials" and imposes clearly unconstitutional special tax
burdens on adult businesses which are not required of other
First-Amendment-protected speech providers. Regarding adult
cabarets, exotic dancers (or any other employees) who show so
much as an "anal cleft" – i.e., the very top of the ass crack
– are forbidden to have any direct contact with customers, and
must remain on a stage two feet high and 10 feet away from the
nearest customer, separated by a 2-foot high railing. Adult
businesses must be closed for 10 hours each day, and all day
Sunday and on all official state or federal holidays, plus all
employees must undergo extensive background checks (with no
privacy guarantees regarding any personal information supplied
to the state) and be specially licensed.
The
Missouri Association of Club Executives has mounted an extensive
lobbying campaign in an attempt to defeat the bill, and several
independent store owners are targeting legislators as well.