PAHRUMP, Nev. — Nevada is the only state where people can legally purchase sex, and now sex workers at one of the state's oldest brothels are fighting to become the nation's first to be unionized.
''We want the same things that any other worker wants. We want a safe and respectful workplace,'' said a worker at Sheri's Ranch in Pahrump, Nevada, who goes by the stage name Jupiter Jetson and asked that her legal name not be used for fear of harassment.
Prostitution is legal at licensed brothels in 10 of Nevada's rural counties. That doesn't include Clark County, home to Las Vegas, though Sheri's Ranch is about an hour's drive away. The majority of the brothel's 74 sex workers submitted a petition to unionize with the National Labor Relations Board last week under the name United Brothel Workers, represented by the Communications Workers of America.
Jetson said the drive was spurred by a new independent contractor agreement issued in December that would give the brothel power to use the women's likeness without permission, even if they no longer work there.
''This is how you end up the face of a Japanese lubricant company without ever having signed a document," Jetson said. ''This is how you end up finding yourself on a website offering AI companionship without ever seeing a penny.''
Sex work, and the employment rights of the those who do it, remains a largely taboo topic worldwide. Prostitution is only legal in a handful of countries, including Germany, and organizing efforts vary. In Spain, where prostitution is unregulated, the government approved a union for sex workers in 2018 but a court quickly outlawed it, saying it made the exploitation of prostitutes legal.
''All workers are guaranteed certain human decencies and dignities, and the right to organize is one of those,'' said Marc Ellis, state president of the Nevada Communications Workers of America.
Sheri's Ranch respects the right of workers to ''express their views on workplace structure,'' Jeremy Lemur, the brothel's marketing and communications director, said in an email. The business's focus is on providing a ''safe, lawful and professionally managed environment."