The Palm Beach Post

Death spurs airboat safety course proposal

Senate bill also would require first aid and CPR instructio­n.

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — Commercial airboat operators would have to complete a state-approved course before taking on passengers under a measure — named for a 22-yearold woman killed this past year — that started moving through the Senate on Monday.

But support from members of the Senate Environmen­tal Preservati­on and Conservati­on Committee came after the proposal (SB 1612) was watered down so violators wouldn’t face jail time.

Called “Ellie’s Law,” the proposal, in part, would require airboat operators to take a Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission course and complete a course in first aid that includes cardiopulm­onary resuscitat­ion.

Sen. Lauren Book, D-Plantation, said the proposal would ensure “the public safety while experienci­ng the beauty of Florida’s Everglades while on airboat rides.”

Book is co-sponsor of the measure with Sen. Kevin Rader, D-Delray Beach.

Before the vote, the committee amended a portion of the bill to make violations a noncrimina­l infraction carrying a fine up to $500. The original version of the bill would have carried a penalty of a second-degree misdemeano­r, which has a maximum punishment of 60 days in jail or a $500 fine.

“One of the things we’ve been focused on in the Senate is not creating new crimes,” said Committee Chairman Rob Bradley, R-Fleming Island.

“I think we’ve criminaliz­ed a lot of things in the world. And every year, whenever there is something that comes up, people will say, let’s create another crime . ... Jail is not the answer for every ill that our society faces.”

Alan Richard, an attorney and former marine patrol officer with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission, expressed concern that the change will result in tickets being issued only when crashes occur.

“That signals to the courts, that signals to the law enforcemen­t officers out there with the ticket book and pen, that the Legislatur­e puts a very low priority on this,” Richard said.

The measure is named after Elizabeth “Ellie” Goldenberg, who died in May after being thrown from an airboat on an Everglades tour.

Goldenberg was with her family celebratin­g her graduation from the University of Miami, where she was an honor student involved with the Ring Theater.

The operator “stopped abruptly” as another craft was blocking the waterway, tossing her and her family into the water.

The bill would still have to clear the Senate Environmen­t and Natural Resources Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee, which is chaired by Book, and the Appropriat­ions Committee, which is chaired by Bradley, before going to the Senate floor.

The House version (HB 1211), sponsored by Rep. Joseph Abruzzo, D-Boynton Beach, has yet to be heard.

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