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Title: Couple sues after town bans front-yard gardens
Source: Yahoo
URL Source: https://www.yahoo.com/news/couple-s ... nt-yard-gardens-181405934.html
Published: Jun 8, 2016
Author: Curt Anderson
Post Date: 2016-06-09 11:11:07 by Deckard
Keywords: None
Views: 12785
Comments: 66

MIAMI (AP) — For 17 years, a South Florida couple grew vegetables in a front-yard garden until a new town ordinance was passed limiting such gardens to backyards. Now, the couple is asking a judge to uproot the ban they claim violates their constitutional rights.

Tom Carroll and Hermine Ricketts say they dug up the garden in front of their Miami Shores home in August 2013 when town officials threatened to fine them $50 a day if they didn't. The threatened fine came a few months after the Miami Shores Village Council adopted a new zoning plan for the town of about 10,500 north of Miami.

The couple sued, and at a hearing Wednesday their attorney said the ban violates the Florida Constitution in several ways, including improper limits on their private property rights and violation of the equal protection clause by singling out vegetables over other plants.

"We're not saying you can do anything you want on your property," attorney Ari Bargil told Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Monica Gordo. "We are simply saying you can grow vegetables on your property and that is protected by the Constitution."

Richard Sarafan, attorney for Miami Shores, said the new zoning rule was not irrational and treated all homeowners the same: their front yards should be covered with grass, sod or a "living ground cover" not further defined. It's no problem, he said, to have a vegetable garden in the backyard.

"There certainly is not fundamental right to grow vegetables in your front yard," Sarafan said. "Aesthetics and uniformity are legitimate government purposes. Not every property can lawfully be used for every purpose."

Carroll, who attended the hearing, said the couple sought to grow produce using organic practices, such as no use of pesticides. He said he had never gotten a complaint from a neighbor in all the years he tended the garden, which grew some 75 varieties of vegetables.

"It's important that we have the right to do something on our own property," Carroll said. "We're just trying to grow vegetables."

The couple is being represented by lawyers from the Arlington, Virginia-based Institute for Justice, which describes itself as a Libertarian nonprofit organization that focuses on issues such as private property rights, school choice and free speech.

Gordo did not immediately rule. Both sides said the judge could decide the matter without a trial, but either way the case is likely to be appealed, attorneys said.

*******

"Aesthetics and uniformity are legitimate government purposes..."

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 49.

#47. To: Deckard (#0)

their front yards should be covered with grass, sod or a "living ground cover" not further defined.

Not further defined. So that includes vegetables and their is no reason to single that particular kind of plant out for special treatment. Of course if we are singleing edible plants then anyone with dandelions needs to get fined. More plants are edible than the common person realizes.

It is an irrational city ordinance that will more than likely be struck down because of the stupidity of it. It's on par with illegal collection of rain water.

Titorite2  posted on  2016-06-26   3:47:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#48. To: Titorite2m Decjard (#47) (Edited)

their front yards should be covered with grass, sod or a "living ground cover" not further defined.

Not further defined. So that includes vegetables and their is no reason to single that particular kind of plant out for special treatment. Of course if we are singleing edible plants then anyone with dandelions needs to get fined. More plants are edible than the common person realizes.

It is an irrational city ordinance that will more than likely be struck down because of the stupidity of it. It's on par with illegal collection of rain water.

The landscaping ordinance is very specific and states the area “... shall be planted with grass, sod or living ground cover and a minimum of two trees. ...”

The ordinance goes on to specifically define “ground cover.”

DIVISION 17. – LANDSCAPING

Sec. 5386. landscaping descriptions and definitions.

[…]

Ground cover. A planting of living low growing plants which reach a maximum height of not more than eighteen (18) inches upon maturity that provide a complete cover over an area in one growing season and including the area of lawful mulch around the plant

[…]

The phrase “not further defined” does not appear in the “ground cover” section.

This is not "ground cover" as defined in the ordinance:

Gatlin  posted on  2016-06-26   5:09:37 ET  (1 image) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#49. To: Gatlin (#48)

No you're making stuff up as you go along just for the sake of arguing. By your logic and the illogic of the ordinance lettuce, carrots, squash, trimmed jalapenos plants , all of that and more would be fine.

Titorite2  posted on  2016-06-26   7:30:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 49.

#52. To: Titorite2 (#49)

I am making nothing up since I merely sourced the ordinance for you and quoted the definition of “ground cover” contained therein. In doing so, I offered no logic. If I were to offer logic, I would say the proper source upon which to base a comment for critical analysis is the ordinance and not some journalist’s interpretation.

Perhaps Tom and Hermine should plant Pueraria Lobata which thrives well in the Southeast US. The leaves, vine tips, flowers, and roots are edible; the vines are not. The leaves can be used like spinach and eaten raw, chopped up and baked in quiches, cooked like collards, or deep fried. Young kudzu shoots are tender and taste similar to snow peas. The kudzu plant also produces fragrant, purple blossoms which you can make into jelly, syrup and candy. The flowers which bloom in late summer have a very pleasant fragrance.

Check the house in the left background. Kudzu offers excellent insulation qualities.

Gatlin  posted on  2016-06-26 09:16:31 ET  (1 image) Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#53. To: Titorite2 (#49)

By ... the illogic of the ordinance lettuce, carrots, squash, trimmed jalapenos plants , all of that and more would be fine.

The ordinance could be interpreted that way, if the plants "provide a complete cover over an area."

I guess there could be trouble in getting an agreement on the definition of "complete."

Gatlin  posted on  2016-06-26 09:33:06 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 49.

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