Brandi Campbell started working in strip clubs as a college student. Nine years later, she started filing lawsuits claiming she'd been cheated out of tips, sexually harassed by co-workers and fired when she complained.
Campbell, who's been working as a dancer for 12 years, recently settled National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) complaints she had made against the Seville Club and Déjà Vu in downtown Minneapolis.
Dancers, she said, "need to be recognized as people — just like any other worker."
Across the country, dancers are suing the clubs they work for, saying they're treated as independent contractors but have the right to the pay and benefits of regular employees. Their advocacy has gained traction in Minneapolis, where some on the pro-labor City Council want to improve conditions for workers in the 14 venues that hire dancers.
The ordinance changes haven't been written, but they will focus on city health regulations of clubs. City Council Member Cam Gordon said he expects the council could take action in early 2018.
The question of whether entertainers should be treated as employees has continued to create a rift between entertainers and the clubs they work for, and among entertainers themselves. And though entertainers have been suing clubs successfully for years, those still working in the clubs say not much has changed.
Early this year, Minneapolis Health Department inspectors conducted a sweep of the city's 17 licensed adult entertainment establishments and found that bodily fluids were present at 11 of them. Those venues were declared a public health nuisance under state law and were reinspected last month.
A city-commissioned report by University of Minnesota researchers showed dancers face hazards ranging from injuries sustained during performances to physical and sexual assault. It's particularly bad in VIP rooms, where patrons pressure dancers to cross the line into paid sex, sometimes using violence when that doesn't happen.