The Exotic Dancers' Alliance (EDA), a
collective that was founded in 1995 to bring together both former and current strippers and their supporters, sought to establish minimum
employment standards for strippers in Ontario by contending with the AEAC, but the EDA ceased to exist in 2004. Also in 2004,
Ottawa instituted a law against
lap dancing, and the AEAC unsuccessfully attempted to have the law overturned in 2007. Starting in 2004, the AEAC and the
Department of Citizenship and Immigration Canada became embroiled in a long-standing controversy about
work permits for
foreign workers to be hired for the purpose of
striptease. In 2008, when
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Diane Finley allegedly received
threats from
sex industry officials in relation to her support of Bill C-17, which sought to allow
immigration officers to deny temporary
visas to prospective
strippers if they were suspected to be sex trafficking victims, Lambrinos said that "it's not plausible" that any of the AEAC strip clubs were responsible for the threats. In 2009, the AEAC invited
Toronto City Council members to attend a free lunch at a strip club in the city, and three
councillors accepted the invitation. The AEAC released a statement in 2010 that the government's crackdown on sex industry worker visas had resulted in a stripper shortage, and
Minister of Public Safety Vic Toews responded by saying that the strip clubs that were short on strippers because of the crackdown were engaging in
human trafficking. Toews then ordered the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police to investigate the relevant strip clubs in order to determine whether or not the strippers working there were
illegal immigrants or sex trafficking victims, and the AEAC launched a campaign to deny these allegations. ==References==