Costa Mesa seeing cleaner massage industry
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Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- Massage parlors being used as fronts for prostitution
are not a huge problem in Costa Mesa anymore -- at least not as huge as
it was about two years ago, officials said.
When Costa Mesa Police Lt. Ron Smith, Sgt. Bob Phillips and Det. Keith
Davis were assigned to the task of getting rid of the pseudo-masseuses
four years ago, there were more than a dozen to deal with.
“Today we’re down to just two or three,” said Smith. “And we’re still
working on those.”
They’ve reached this point after hundreds of hours of undercover
operations, citations and even arrests, he said. Massage ordinances
passed by the City Council have also helped and continue to help in
weeding out these illegal and unqualified massage practitioners, Smith
said.
The Council as recently as March 5 changed an already existing massage
law, making it mandatory for all masseuses to go through a rigorous
licensing process to practice in the city. Earlier, the law exempted
state-licensed practitioners.
The revision limits hours of operation restricting massage parlors.
The law now also requires that businesses use only white lights and doors
that cannot be locked.
These, as well as the licensing test, were vital lessons Costa Mesa
learned from Newport Beach, which faced the same problem several years
ago, said Smith.
“This is not a problem that’ll go away,” said Smith. “It just
resurfaces some place else.”
That was probably what happened when Newport Beach started tightening
up its massage laws years ago, he said. The parlors moved to Costa Mesa.
Now that Costa Mesa has followed Newport beach’s lead, it’s Fullerton’s
turn, said Smith.
“They’re learning from us now,” he said of the city of Fullerton.
The key to Newport Beach’s success was the rigorous testing and
licensing, said Kim Reilly, Community Services Officer at Newport Beach
Police’s Vice and Narcotics Department.
“We require background check, fingerprint and testing,” she said.
“That helps us make sure they didn’t get their documents from diploma
mills.”
Newport Beach currently has about 80 massage practitioners, said
Reilly. The department has rejected very few applications over the last
three years, she said.
“The process definitely discourages people who are not legitimate,”
said Reilly.
In Costa Mesa, applicants are required to have 500 hours of training
from a legitimate massage school. The city has also developed its own
test based on Newport Beach’s format and on input from other
practitioners and business owners.
The procedures are not meant to increase red tape or to put up more
barriers for businesses, he said.
“We believe this protects legitimate businesses,” said Smith. “It
definitely gives them more credibility.”
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