...Because some people are confusing bylaws with the criminal code.
A licensed body rub is holds a municipal license to conduct a certain type of business.
The law is unclear and we don't know how it will be applied. We do know that the backgrounder to Bill C-36 specifically refers to massage parlours as a type of service that the drafters of the bill believe should be offside.
So, if a HJ (or bodyslide or russian or....) is considered to be illegal, it does NOT mean that a spa will suddenly lose its license. The city will happily continue to collect the license fees. However, it does mean that the spa cannot provide certain services because those services would be illegal.
As an analogy, consider cigarettes. Jo's Variety holds a business license with Ontario and Toronto. It can sell cigarettes. Let's say tomorrow all tobacco products are deemed to be illegal. Jo's Variety can still exist as a business. It can still hold a business license with the city and the province. But it can't sell cigs.
What's interesting about body rubs is that the licenses usually don't specify what can be performed (at least in Toronto). They don't talk about T,N,NR, BS, which is why spas couldn't advertise these services. (Body rubs are only permitted to sell what they are approved to sell.) I assume that some spas took the trouble to get endorsements for specific services. I wonder if the spas that did not, and therefore don't have anything specified on their license, are in a better position now.....