BIPOC Adult Industry Collective
BIPOC Adult Industry Collective is a sex worker-led group for Black, Indigenous, and other people of color in the adult industry. They help with mutual aid, advocacy, education, mental health and wellness referrals, and support for people facing unsafe work, violence, eviction, or basic needs problems.
Plain-language summary, written with AI
Read the full original description
The Black, Indigenous, and People of Color Collective is a performer and sex worker-led collective that places sex workers at every level of leadership and decision-making. The organization... Main Services emergency payments help pay for food help pay for healthcare immediate safety financial assistance one-on-one support support groups mediation Serving adults young adults seniors criminal justice history all disabilities female lgbtqia+ male transgender or non-binary benefit recipients More Less low-income uninsured underinsured african american asian latino native american caregivers fathers mothers parents trauma survivors abuse or neglect survivors domestic violence survivors human trafficking survivors sexual assault survivors
Sign in to save this to a project or list.
What they offer 7
- Not yet verified
Supportive Services for BIPOC Sex WorkersService
- Recently verified· Jun 25
Mutual Aid Fund / Financial AssistanceGrant
Provides direct financial help to sex workers in need who work in NSFW adult media.
- Recently verified· Jun 25
Education and Skills SharesProgram
Offers skills shares and virtual workshops to support independence and financial empowerment for performers.
- Recently verified· Jun 25
Wellness ProgramProgram
Connects community members with donation-based, sex-positive wellness coaching and related wellness support.
- Recently verified· Jun 25
Mediation ReferralsService
Helps community members connect with mediation specialists when needed.
- Recently verified· Jun 25
Resource Referrals and Peer SupportService
Provides peer support and referrals for needs like eviction, basic needs insecurity, escaping violence, workplace problems, health care, and legal resources.
- Recently verified· Jun 25
Mental Health Access PartnershipsProgram
Works with mental health partners to expand access to no-cost one-on-one therapy for BIPOC sex workers.
Community checks
Used this organization recently? A 5-second check keeps this page honest.
Sign in to confirm this info works — every check helps the next person.
No community checks yet.
Called them? Visited? A 5-second tap below keeps this info alive for the next person.