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![]() Skin and Ink Magazine | |||
Update on Los Angeles County Regulations Affecting the Tattoo and Piercing Body Arts by Pat Fish of Tattoo Santa Barbara As goes California, so goes the nation. Or so it is said. Proud as we on the Left Coast may be of our trend-setting in fashion and entertainment, the new regulations that have been mandated by the passage of California Assembly Bill 186 bode upcoming turmoil for the Body Art industry. So far there are no state regulations in place, and individual counties have the choice of writing their own codes, which will be superceeded by the state regulations when they are written, or the counties can ignore the issue and wait to see what the state does. My sources tell me this is a political hot potato and it will be years before the state gets its final regulations through committee. Meanwhile Los Angeles County adopted a whopping 84 page document as law in May of 1999, which deals only with the licenses, permits, regulations and fines and punishments. It says nothing about requiring autoclaved equipment, the wearing of gloves, or any of the other morally necessary regulations that legitimate tattoo artists and piercers have been backing for years. What it does, in no uncertain terms, is make tattooing after six months of the effective date of the ordinance without all the necessary permits a misdemeanor crime punishable by a fine of $1,000, imprisonment in county jail for a period not to exceed 6 months, or both. Each such act punishable as a separate offense, each subsequent day that an act continues constitutes a separate act punishable as a separate offense. The effective date seems to have been September 1, 1999, which makes most of this stuff kick in around March 2000. Much as those of us who run legitimate shops want to see scratchers shut down, believe me these laws will have an incredible impact on the people trying to be legal and will be merely an annoyance-factor to those who work below the bureaucratic radar screens. Sure, a few ex-cons may be ratted out by neighbors who hear the buzzing in the garage, but what is really going to happen is a mad scramble as every studio and tattoo artist and piercer tries desperately to understand all the permits and licenses they will be required to obtain. I have culled the material in the document down to this list, every one of which is required and who knows how to go about getting any of them?
Overall regulations contain these guidelines:
Well, there you have it. Ever tattoo anyone with a zit or a sunburn? Never again! Ever think someone's design choice might have indicated they might have been crazy ....... send 'em packin! Don't risk tattooing them! In the efforts of the Go-varmint to protect everyone from their bad impulses, the micro-management is focusing on all the ways that they can require fees and licenses, and totally ignoring what anyone inside the industry could have told them are the tru fly pressing health concerns. But WAIT! MORE is yet to come. By the time this article appears in print they will most likely have issued another set of regulations, probably modeled after other state laws. They are considering such things as specific floorplan requirements that will cause existing shops to be non-permittable, and open the way for the inevitable influx of the franchise Tats-R-Us strip mall discount McTat Huts. It is my deep concern that this is all happening while many tattoo artists see themselves as pirates; report for taxes only a small percentage of their income, if any; and operate with a rudimentary knowledge of sterilization and cross-contamination issues. This has been a renegade industry since time began, and now the authorities are smelling money to be made and a trusting public needing to be protected. Review that list and realise that if you tick off the local authorities they will now have the laws in hand to make it extremely difficult for you to do business. And if they pull your business license you don't get to ask for a reconsideration, you're out of business for a year! I don't think there is a precedent for this, but let's just hope they don't start in on seeing how long before they can legislate/aggravate away this nuisance industry. Over the past year I have been working with my local County Health officers to try to give them my perspectives. I believe they need to be educated to understand that the Bod Mod Biz will not go away, there will always be a human impulse towards it, and if they make it too difficult for legitimate operators then it will just go on underground. It will not stop. I strongly suggest that the time is NOW for all professionals in the Body Art community to work WITH their local governments. If the laws are in place there is still the possibility that sympathetic local authorities can grant reasonable variances, and such considerations may make the difference between being forced out of business or being allowed to continue. ADDENDUM http://www.bpcnet.com/codes/lacounty/index.htm Body art can be found at: Los Angeles County Code, Title 11, Chapter 11.36 If you have any questions or would like a copy of the Draft Body Art Regulations, please contact : gkclarke@dhs.co.la.ca.us (323)881-4123 | |||
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