Dating Firms Fight Gender-Price Bill

Released on = March 16, 2006, 9:09 am

Press Release Author = DatingServices-Online.net

Industry = Entertainment

Press Release Summary = Are dating services truly gender biased? Find out the
details right here!

Press Release Body = Two major online dating services have hired an influential
Liberal lobbyist to stop legislation that would outlaw gender-based price
discrimination.

Lavalife and Quest, two Toronto-based firms, have hired Hill and Knowlton
vice-president Bob Lopinski, a former adviser to Premier Dalton McGuinty, to kill
Bill 9, a private member\'s bill by Liberal Lorenzo Berardinetti that would bar
retailers from charging men or women different prices for essentially the same goods
and services.

The dating services charge men for their phone service, while women get it for free.

A brief sent to politicians by Hill and Knowlton warns the firms \"will be forced to
leave Ontario\" if the bill passes.

Lavalife employs 320 people and has annual revenues of about $90 million. Quest has
170 employees and annual revenues nearing $75 million.

\"Why they would need to leave Ontario: Because their servers and call centres are
located in Ontario, there is strong reason to fear that Bill 9 would apply not just
to their Ontario customers, but to all of their transactions around the world,\" the
brief says.

\"Both Lavalife and Quest charge men for using their phone service while providing
women with free access. This is the standard industry practice worldwide.\"

Berardinetti said he was taken aback that the firms had hired a big-gun lobbyist.

\"I was a little bit surprised by that, because I really didn\'t think the issue was
really about Lavalife (or online dating),\" he said.

\"I thought the issue was about fairness and about gender-based pricing when it comes
to areas like haircuts and dry-cleaning and alterations to suits and so on.

\"For example if a woman spends 20 minutes to get her hair done and if a man spends
20 minutes to get his hair done, the price should be roughly the same for the same
kind of work.\"

Based on consumer law in California, Berardinetti\'s bill -- inspired by his wife,
Michelle -- would use the Ontario Human Rights Code to impose fines of as much as
$5,000 on offending firms.

\"We\'re not trying to put anybody out of business. We\'re just telling them to operate
fairly,\" he said.

Latest update in online dating industry is provided by
http://www.datingservices-online.net from the reliable sources.


Web Site = http://www.datingservices-online.net

Contact Details = Anees Ahmed||Beverly Hills||Beverly Hills ,
90112||$$country||||323-3083703||aneeskalsekar@yahoo.co.in||http://www.datingservices-online.net

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