Porn studios denounced for not requiring condoms

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – An AIDS advocacy group  filed complaints against 16 adult-film studios in California yesterday, accusing them of violating state workplace safety  rules by failing to require porn actors to wear condoms.

The complaints, submitted along with five dozen DVD copies  of pornographic films produced by the companies as evidence,  formally call on the state’s Division of Occupational Safety  and Health to conduct an inquiry.

A former porn actress joined the filing with a complaint of  her own against three additional production companies.

The agency swiftly vowed to investigate the complaints.

“We take it seriously, and it will be addressed,” Cal-OSHA  spokesman Dean Fryer said of the situation.

The filing marks the latest effort by the Los Angeles-based  AIDS Healthcare Foundation to safeguard adult-film performers.

The $12 billion-a-year U.S. porn movie business is largely  centered in the San Fernando Valley suburbs of Los Angeles.

Last month, the foundation sued Los Angeles County,  accusing public health officials there of failing to enforce  laws aimed at curbing the spread of sexually transmitted  diseases within the adult entertainment industry.

The suit was filed after the disclosure that a porn actress  had tested positive for HIV in June, leading health officials  to reveal 16 more previously unpublicized cases among  adult-film performers since a 2004 outbreak that prompted  tougher testing and reporting rules.

The latest complaints say the films demonstrate that they  were made without performers wearing condoms, in violation of  state regulations requiring workers be protected from  blood-borne pathogens in the exchange of bodily fluids.

“They have a valid point here,” Fyer said of the filings.  “The blood-borne pathogens standard is designed to protect  workers where there is risk of transmission of diseases through  bodily excretions that occur as part of adult film activity.”

Public health figures show that more than 2,800 sexually  transmitted disease cases were diagnosed among 1,884 porn  performers in Los Angeles County, many suffering multiple  infections, from April 2004 to March 2008.

Porn executives insist the industry has successfully  policed itself with voluntary guidelines that call for monthly  testing and quarantines of actors found to be infected.