Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Florida Ramping up the Insanity


Florida: Does the State Care about Protecting Your Children, or Is It All about the Squeakiest Wheel getting the Grease? 

From http://www.uncomfortabletruth.org    Written by Cheryl

Our State is a jangled mess of city, county, and state ordinances telling sex offenders, no matter what their crime, where they can live, work, walk, in some instances drive, who they can associate with, if they can be on the Internet, go to a library or even McDonalds to grab a sandwich. 

The States sex offender homeless, transient, and absconded population has increased greatly since these laws have been put into place.  We know there is a huge problem, as we have seen by the international media coverage of the colony of registered sex offenders living under the Julia Tuttle Bridge.  Even our Attorney General, Bill McCollum has agreed we may well be creating a more dangerous situation.  While some few areas of this state have declined to place extended residency restrictions on the residence of these offenders, many areas are still either introducing greater restrictions or bypassing law by putting in school bus stops or parks where they see an offender or offenders they want to get rid of.

Broward County on the East Coast of Florida had an intelligent idea.  They decided to form a task force to study the impact and effectiveness of residency restrictions.  They did a good job and had 11 recommendations for the County and State.  As far as they went, these were excellent recommendations.

Broward Sex Offender Task Force Report  

RECOMMENDATIONS

Based on our review of the available evidence, we respectfully submit the following
recommendations for policy which reflects criminal justice research and "best practices."
While some of our recommendations were unanimously agreed upon, others were not.
Our recommendations reflect the consensus of the task force based on majority vote.

1. It is clear that bus stops diminish housing availability within buffer zones to a literal point of non-existence. We recommend that if a residential exclusion zone is passed, it should not include school bus stops as a prohibited venue.

2. Based on data provided by the county's Planning and Redevelopment Division (p.22), it is also exceedingly clear that a 2,500 foot zone as described in the existing ordinance will exclude sex offenders from residing in the unincorporated areas of the county. Because 24 municipalities have also passed 2,500 foot exclusion zones, few options exist for sex offender housing throughout the county. This raises concerns, not due to sympathy for sex offenders, but because research indicates that housing instability is a consistent and robust predictor of absconding, probation violation, and recidivism for criminal offenders in general and sex offenders specifically. Reports from FDLE indicate a growing number of "sex offender transients" in Broward, and many more in Miami-Dade County where homelessness resulting from residential restrictions has caught national attention.

3. Residence restrictions regulate only where sex offenders sleep at night and do nothing to prevent pedophilic or predatory offenders from frequenting places during the day where they can cultivate relationships with children and access opportunities for sexual abuse. Therefore, we recommend that the commissioners consider enacting a child safety zone preventing sex offenders from loitering without a legitimate reason in areas where children are present.

4. We recommend that in any ordinance that is passed, an exception be made for offenders who established their residence prior to the passage of the ordinance (a "grandfather" clause). Such clauses are commonly found in other municipal ordinances. Because housing throughout the county is so limited, such a clause will reduce the probability of homelessness and transience for RSOs who are already living in unincorporated areas. The proposed end-of-lease grandfather clause simply delays housing instability rather than prevents it. Grandfathering homeowners but not lease holders represents differential treatment based on financial resources.
Since there is no reason to believe that current lease holders present a greater  threat to the safety of children than homeowners, this differential treatment seems not only unfair, but illogical.

5. We recommend that an exception be made (referred to as a Romeo & Juliet clause in Florida statutes) for young adults with a single victim and who, at the time of the offense, were under the age of 22 and committed a "statutory" offense with a teenage victim no more than 4 years younger than the offender. While we recognize that such behavior is unlawful, and that minors cannot legally consent to sexual activity with an adult, we also recognize that such offenders are not typically diagnosed as pedophiles and probably do not pose a significant danger to commit
future sexually violent crimes.

6. We recommend that commissioners strongly urge our elected state senators and representatives to enact a statewide solution to sex offender management. The problem of clustering is a direct result of the multiplicity of ordinances throughout the state (at least156) which push offenders into areas with less restrictive buffer zones.
The best solution is for the Florida legislature to enact a uniform statewide
residential policy for sex offenders. We recommend that the county commissioners adopt a resolution asking the legislature to create a statewide residence solution, which should include a Romeo & Juliet clause as well as a grandfather clause. The recommendation to the legislature should also urge the adoption of a uniform statewide child safety zone provision preventing RSOs from loitering within 300-500 feet of a school, park, daycare, designated school bus stop, or other place where
children regularly congregate. We also recommend that the legislature review the crimes that require registration and that Florida create a more refined, risk-based classification and tier system of offenders that might, in some circumstances, lead to individuals eventually being deleted from the registry but only upon meeting criteria established by statute and requiring judicial review.

7. We recommend that commissioners strongly urge leaders from the League of Cities to endorse a uniform county-wide ordinance. The problem of clustering is a direct result of the multiplicity of differing ordinances throughout the county (24) which push offenders into areas with less restrictive buffer zones. In the absence of legislative reform, the best immediate solution is for city councils to agree to enforce
uniform residential policies for sex offenders throughout this county.

8. We urge leaders from the League of Cities to undertake an analysis of potentially compliant housing in each municipality and amend ordinances to allow for reasonable housing availability to alleviate clustering. Information designating compliant residential locations should be provided to DOC probation, law  enforcement agencies, and other case managers to assist RSOs in securing housing.

9. We recommend that commissioners consider text amendments to land use plans to allow residential units in industrial areas as a permitted use. The feasibility of alternative housing options for sex offenders needs to be more fully investigated, as any alternative housing would be subject to zoning variances and practical considerations such as affordability and access to residential infrastructure (public transportation, shopping, services, etc.). Innovative housing options are recognized as a possible long-term solution requiring complex planning and development, and therefore should not be considered as a singular alternative to our other
recommendations.

10. We support Mayor Ritter's letter to Governor Crist asking for leadership and assistance in addressing the matter and suggesting a statewide or regional taskforce to allow for uniformity of residence requirements.

11. Based upon concerns raised by the Broward Sheriff's Office and the State Attorney's Office, we recommend that commissioners and the county attorney review the language defining "temporary" and "permanent" residence in Ordinance 2009-22 as "a place where a person abides, lodges, or resides for fourteen or more consecutive days.  

* * * *

Then we read a story by Fred Grimm(http://tinyurl.com/nj5zz4) that tells us of a small Mission called St. Francis that is being forced to remove all the sex offenders that the DOC ASKED them to house and provide a program for, because the City placed a Park within the restricted area of the Mission.

First, it should have been the Cities responsibility NOT to place a park within that distance of this Mission

Second, the Mission should have been given a variance or exemption because it was there first. Many areas have used placing school bus stops and parks in areas where registered sex offenders live as a means to force those offenders to move.  In an area where there is such minimal housing opportunities for Registered Offenders, that type of game playing should be criminal in itself.
And thirdly, and most importantly, when is  this cycle of placing our most vulnerable citizens at risk due to the public being given false or incomplete information regarding registered sex offenders and of our politicians playing politics with our children’s safety going to end?

I would have to say that due to the placing of this park and the removal of registered sex offenders from a Christian Transitional Facility, where, to quote Fred Grimm’s article “You'd think that the supervision and discipline and therapy and strict curfews and drug testing and spiritual guidance and actual beds offered by the St. Francis Mission might be preferable to having jobless, homeless sex offenders prowl the streets and sleep under bridges.” Our Politicians are afraid of making the necessary changes to the ordinances and laws to rid of the ineffective ones that cause more harm than good.    They are afraid of the public outcry of those in support of these laws.  If they would educate the public and explain the reasoning for changing these laws, they would get much more support.  Senator Aronberg, who understands the “more harm than good” concept is running to State Attorney so he is not about to rock his boat.  State Attorney McCollum is running for Governor, so he must be very careful.  Governor Crist, who could have done and could be doing much to help in this time of crisis, is doing nothing at all, unless passing the buck can be counted as action.   

This State needs FULL TIME LEADERSHIP, not leadership when they are not running for an office. 

We need LEADERSHIP, not Legislators who follow the whim of those most squeaky wheels in order to avoid controversy.  If our leadership cannot LEAD then they need to get out of the way!  Vote them out of office!   How much experience do we need, how many studies do we need to tell us that residency restrictions do not  affect re offense and that they do more harm than good before we begin to act on those facts? How can we get people to stop their magical thinking of getting “rid” of these people and realize that former offenders who are in a transitional facility with support, therapy, and restrictions are 1000 times more safe for our communities than ones who are homeless, jobless, hopeless, without support, angry, and with nothing to lose? Some say the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.  The State, counties, and cities of Florida are engaged in insane behavior and our children are the ones suffering for it.

No comments:

Post a Comment

One To See Change Past Posts

One to See Change Blog List

"When an American says that he loves his country, he means not only that he loves the New England hills, the prairies glistening in the sun, the wide and rising plains, the great mountains, and the sea. He means that he loves an inner air, an inner light in which freedom lives and in which a man can draw the breath of self-respect."
~Adlia Stevenson U.S. Vice President (1893–1897) and Congressman (1879–1881)

On a Personal Note

Thanks for the opportunity to express my thoughts regarding the issue of citizens’ rights, particularly addressing certain sex offenders’ crimes that do not fit the devastating, inequitable and endless punishment given.


As you know, many young men and women lives across the nation are being destroyed by incarceration, life-time registry and restrictive laws that do more harm than good. For those individuals, there is no second chance.

Below is a personal letter to President Obama:
* * * *
“Dear President Obama,

I truly agree with your sentiments that individuals, such as ex-felons, should be able to receive a second chance at life. Since we all know that one can veer off that path of life and travel along rough, rocky terrain, sometimes running off and ending up in some ditch. We all have made our fill of mistakes and sometimes those held a costly consequence that changed life forever. So we lived through it, trying harder to make things right with family, friends and those around us, but what about those who aren’t able to make things right even if they tried…because they’re labeled as too dirty, a leper, a person who is rejected from society and home.


But what if they’re a seventeen year old and had sex with a fifteen year old, consensual at that? Or they’re a teen that had gotten so enraged after a breakup that he sent out naked pictures of his girlfriend on his cell phone or email? Or an individual urinates where someone just happens to see them?


All are wrong and a travesty but do they deserve the life of no second chance with a registry that ends all. They are labeled, no jobs, no where to live…they have been deemed a menace to society, a plague. These certain circumstances, and many other situations similar to these, I believe still deserve a second change.

Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution


Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.


After my son’s early release and two years of prison, I thought I had handled that fact graciously knowing after serving his time he would be able to get that fresh start, that second chance. He was an exemplary inmate, GED, college courses and vocational classes. Little did I know that a second chance on the outside was the farthest from the truth? He now struggles and lives in a trailer park sharing a trailer with another and surrounded by others in the same rocking boat, one to float endlessly in shark infested waters. I see him little because of probation requirements (he couldn’t live with us because we were 800 feet near a school). My family is afraid of what would happen to them if he lived with them…vigilantism. My son has no other place to stay since others condemn him of his crime that is screamed from the highest rooftop. Sex offender, sex offender!

Not all sex offenders are pedophiles or predators but some are simply young kids that make one stupid and rash decision that eventually changes everything, and they have no idea what they’ve done until their life is never their own. Exactly, where is that second chance for those sex-offenders who are lumped together with pedophiles and predators? Now, it makes me sick to think of my son’s future and many like him that are on the registry and many with no second chance…ever. I am asking you as a mother and as another concerned citizen of the United States that these laws are looked at again and taken into serious consideration in what they are doing to the Constitution of the United States, not for sex offenders in general but the future rights of every citizen, before anymore are put into effect. They unjustly strip an offender of their rights and place them in a guillotine that can be easily set off by anyone and at anytime. Where is the second chance for ex-sex offenders in the present, pending and future laws?”
* * * *
What truly saddens me is the weakness and deterioration of what the sex offense issue is doing to our once, great nation. Across Europe, others are seeing the injustice and disregard of rights, but we ignore this problem and it makes me wonder where humanity is heading….

We have become a hysterical society in which our latest witch-hunt is a sex offender--no matter his/her crime.

Below is a email sent from a foreign advocate to a father of a sex offender:
* * * *
“The tragic story of your son's death is just so sad that it's difficult to explain how. It was very hard to read your letters. It seems almost unbelievable that this can take place in a democracy! From our point of view, there is no justice in this. Not in any way: not for you, your son, the former girl friend – or even the state.

It is an abusive legal system. It seems barbaric. And we are so very sorry that this takes place. That's why it's so important for us to try to neutralize the debate with this…, hopefully making some changes. ….. to show the every day life of the sex offenders, trying to show how they keep on being punished, even after served prison time…..But we will for sure tell the story of the injustice that your son has been exposed to.”
* * * *
I appreciate everyone's commitment and backing to protect everyone's civil rights, plainly as noted in the Constitution of the United States and is presupposed, giving ALL men are “life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.”