Orlando Sentinel

1st responders with PTSD, others get new laws

- By Jim Turner and Tom Urban

TALLAHASSE­E — Laws that will take effect next week will add benefits for first responders who suffer post-traumatic stress disorder and will impose harsher penalties on people who abuse animals, along with other measures signed by Gov. Rick Scott after the 2018 legislativ­e session.

The laws taking effect Oct. 1 also include allowing credit cards to be used for background checks when firearms are purchased and doling out tougher punishment for people who steal bee colonies or trespass at airports.

Most laws written during the legislativ­e session, including the state’s $88.7 billion budget, hit the books on July 1. But others had later effective dates.

The change for first responders (SB 376) would expand workers’ compensati­on insurance benefits for firefighte­rs, police officers, paramedics and emergency-medical technician­s who suffer from PTSD.

Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, who has started running a campaign ad that highlights his support for the law, announced last week the launch of training materials for first responders on PTSD.

“We’ve heard terrible stories about the impact tragedies like Pulse, Parkland and most recently Jacksonvil­le Landing, have on our first responders and their families,” Patronis, whose job includes serving as state fire marshal, said. “The training is an important step needed to help our first responders.”

According to a 2015 article in the Journal of Emergency Medical Services, 6.6 percent of 4,000 first responders surveyed had attempted suicide, which is more

than 10 times the rate in the general population.

Under the new law, first responders who have witnessed the death of a minor or a death that involved “grievous bodily harm of a nature that shocks the conscience” can file workers’ compensati­on claims for lost wages.

The new law is expected to increase workers’ compensati­on costs for cities and counties that employ first responders by more than $7 million, according to the National Council on Compensati­on Insurance.

Another new law (SB 1576) taking effect next week stems from the beating death last year of a 9-month-old Labrador retriever puppy in Volusia County.

The new law, named “Ponce’s Law” after the puppy, allows judges to bar people convicted of animal cruelty from owning pets. The legislatio­n also increases the severity ranking of animal-abuse related crimes, making it more likely that offenders would go to jail upon conviction.

Kate MacFall with the Humane Society of the United States hopes the new law will allow judges to make sure people who mistreat animals are not allowed to repeat the cycle of abuse.

“It gives that judge discretion to say they can’t have any contact with animals during their probation,” MacFall said. “It clarifies that and gives the judge the authority to have that as part of the sentencing, so that the criminal cannot have contact with animals during their probation.”

The new law also creates policies and procedures for animal shelters to use following natural disasters, such as hurricanes, to return lost pets to their owners.

“It stiffens the penalty for people who abuse animals,” MacFall said. “Who wouldn’t support that? This all came from a dog named Ponce, that was beaten to death last year.”

Other new laws going into place on Oct. 1:

HB 55, allows people buying guns to use credit cards to pay for background checks. They have been required in the past to pay with personal checks, money orders or cashier’s checks.

HB 135, allows deaf people to voluntaril­y identify themselves as hearing-impaired when they register vehicles. The idea, which came from a Tallahasse­e police officer whose son is deaf, is intended to prevent communicat­ions issues with deaf drivers that could inadverten­tly lead to confrontat­ions.

HB 523, increases penalties to a third-degree felony for people who trespass on airport property to injure other people, damage property or impede the operations of aircraft. The bill is in reaction to instances since 2014 of people getting on property at Florida airports, including Orlando Internatio­nal, Tampa Internatio­nal and Miami Internatio­nal.

HB 961, allows businesses such as bars to receive up to 10 cases of branded glassware — 24 glasses per container — a year from brewers or importers. Supporters of the “beer glass” bill maintained that the change would allow small businesses to save on the cost of glassware. But a number of craft brewers opposed the measure, arguing it would allow a small number of brewers who could afford the costs to flood the market with company-branded glassware.

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