New law ensures officers can park marked vehicles at home
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Ed Hooper carried the legislation in the Senate.

Some Florida law enforcement officers have been told they aren’t allowed to park their marked cars at home, but that’s about to change.

One of the first bills in the 2020 legislative session signed into law will ensure no homeowners association, condominium or community entity can prevent officers from parking patrol cars where they can legally park any other vehicle.

As of now, Florida law allows varying community or property associations to prohibit commercial vehicles from parking in driveways. There’s been ongoing debate on whether a marked patrol vehicle falls under this category, though a 2005 opinion from the Florida Attorney General’s Office states that a law enforcement vehicle is not a commercial vehicle.

Gov. Ron DeSantis approved SB 476 and HB 307 on Friday. It’s one of multiple law enforcement-related bills filed and sponsored by Democratic and Republican legislators this session. This one passed unanimously at every stage in the House and Senate with minimal questions.

A representative from the Community Associations Institute, an advocacy group for community associations, indicated support of the bill during its hearing in the House Commerce Committee in January. Law enforcement groups, like the Florida Sheriffs Association and Florida Police Chiefs Association, also indicated support.

Sen. Ed Hooper, a Palm Harbor Republican, filed the legislation after an incident happened in part of his district in Pinellas County. Last August, a Clearwater police officer potentially faced hundreds of dollars in fines for parking a marked vehicle in her driveway. Although the officer was cleared of her fines, Hooper wanted to ensure it didn’t happen again for her or others in law enforcement.

“I’m pleased to be in a position to help,” Hooper said.

Joe Adams, the co-chair of the Condominium and Planned Unit Development Committee of Florida Bar Real Property, Probate and Trust Law Section, said communities try to regulate areas for various reasons, like aesthetics.

“Most of us probably wouldn’t like a dump truck or Sherman tank parked in our neighbor’s driveway,” Adams said.

But where does one draw the line? Most communities don’t have issues with marked cruisers, he said. When Adams writes covenants for communities, he makes sure to allow marked cars in the community, so he personally supports the legislation.

Walton County Sheriff Mike Adkinson Jr. supports the bill and said that it should be common sense not to penalize or cause “frivolous aggravation” towards officers working in a community.

Officers park their patrol cars at home because when someone is an officer or deputy, they maintain that role 24 hours a day, seven days a week, Adkinson said. It’s also nice to have as a physical presence to deter criminal activity, and the vehicles tend to last longer when they’re not constantly switched between people.

He also said the marked cars are helpful for emergency situations in immediate need of a trained official.

For example, in his county, he said there was an instance where someone ran into a deputy’s home in the middle of the night with a child choking to death. And the deputy was able to save the child’s life, he said.

They knew a deputy was inside because a marked vehicle was in the driveway.

“We like our deputies and our police officers to be visible members of the community and it’s part of that currency of trust,” he said.

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This story was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications.

Associated Press



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