70°F
weather icon Clear

Rule barring cross-gender massages rescinded

A longtime restriction on cross-gender massages in Clark County was rubbed out today.

County commissioners voted to rescind the rule that licensed massage therapists say lumped them with prostitutes and severely hampered their businesses.

The rule mainly affected lone therapists doing outcalls at homes and hotel rooms. Casinos, spas and massage establishments were exempt.

Lifting the rule aligns the county with the cities. Last year, Las Vegas repealed its restriction on massages to the opposite sex. Henderson and North Las Vegas also allow cross-gender massages.

Those in the industry praised the action, saying it creates a uniform code across the valley and no longer treats legitimate therapists as prostitutes.

Heather Mehudar, a massage therapist, said the rule made it difficult for her to survive in the tough economy.

“Ninety percent of the calls I get for my business are males,” she said, “so I’m turning away 90 percent of my calls.”

Commissioners also approved shifting responsibility for overseeing therapeutic massage to the state board. The county will issue business licenses to therapists and let the state handle code enforcement.

Commissioner Chris Giunchigliani proposed the policy changes after state officials told her the county overstepped its authority in limiting what therapists could do.

She recalls trying to get the cross-gender rule repealed in 1991 but to no avail.

Having the state in charge of massage laws will make them consistent in every jurisdiction, Mehudar said.

One of her clients, Laura Stendel, who helps oversee a large massage staff, said the cross-gender law was stifling because most therapists are women, and most men prefer to be massaged by women.

She never dared to break the rule, she said, because undercover officers sometimes posed as customers. She blamed Nevada’s patchwork of legalized prostitution.

“It’s really only this complicated in Las Vegas,” she said.

Removing the cross-gender rule will simplify the profession and boost sales, said Becki Ortiz, a local therapist.

“In my neighborhood, I could massage the wife but not the husband,” Ortiz said. “Now I can do both.”

 

Contact reporter Scott Wyland at swyland@reviewjournal.com or 702-455-4519.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Rapper Lil Jon’s son reported missing in Georgia

Legendary rapper Lil Jon’s son Nathan Smith, who goes by DJ Young Slade professionally, was reported missing on Feb. 3, 2026.

Man who tried to shoot Trump at a Florida golf course gets life in prison

“American democracy does not work when individuals take it into their own hands to eliminate candidates. That’s what this individual tried to do” Assistant U.S. Attorney John Shipley told the judge.

Catalina Island’s entire deer population to be killed to restore its ecosystem

California wildlife officials have approved a plan to eradicate Catalina Island’s entire deer population as part of a broader effort to restore the island ecosystem, sparking fierce opposition from an unusual coalition of hunters and animal welfare advocates.

MORE STORIES