Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Home business law worries some

- By Lisa J. Huriash South Florida Sun Sentinel

A Florida law that encourages people to run businesses from home is drawing fear of what could open right next door in neighborho­ods — maybe an ammo supply shop, a strip club or more.

It remains to be seen how many home-based businesses have opened as a result of the recently enacted law, House Bill 403, in Florida. But one of the first instances to amplify concern came when the owner of Popping Smoke Ammunition filed paperwork to start up his ammunition-supply company from his two-bedroom home in Lauderdale Lakes. That sent frantic officials pleading for help from Tallahasse­e lawmakers.

Lauderdale Lakes city officials say they likely couldn’t stop the applicatio­n from moving forward under the new law.

The city “is willing to take the lead to right this wrong,” Lauderdale Lakes Mayor Hazelle Rogers told the South Florida Sun Sentinel. “We would like for every residentia­l community to get the same protection,” adding the law has left certain neighborho­ods “vulnerable” — including those not shielded by more stringent restrictio­ns offered by homeowner and condo associatio­ns.

“I am concerned about the safety of the residents of Lauderdale Lakes,” said Commission­er Veronica Edwards Phillips. “I am concerned about anything that would harm our residents.”

New set of rules

Until this summer, cities could have a tighter grip on

the type of home-based business that could be permitted. Florida House Bill 403 now allows businesses to operate in a residentia­l neighborho­od and be rid of pesky rules like the how much square footage a person uses inside their home to work, what products are sold, and how many family members can work for a home-based business.

The bill was passed this summer and signed into law by Gov. Ron DeSantis. The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Mike Giallombar­do, a Republican from Cape Coral, promoted it as a way “to keep Florida at the forefront of freedom.” Enacting House Bill 403 “would show that Florida is open for business — all business,” he wrote in a guest opinion article for the Orlando Sentinel.

The Lauderdale Lakes man is Jameson Labady, a 33-year-old who lives in a neighborho­od just southeast of the city’s main corridor by State Road 7 and West Oakland Park Boulevard.

He has had dreams of expanding his business from his home office. He intends to buy ammunition “from manufactur­ers like Sig Sauer, Winchester, Remington in order to resale them online,” he wrote in his applicatio­n filed at City Hall.

His business is legally called JSL Security Intelligen­ce and he said it provides private security, but this new venture selling ammunition would be doing business under the name Popping Smoke Ammunition.

Labady told the Sun Sentinel he had no intentions of keeping the ammo inside his house, but would purchase it online from the manufactur­er and send directly to the person buying from him. He said he could buy it cheaper by being the middleman and still make a profit: “To make a profit you have to get it from the manufactur­er.”

The price of “ammunition is going up like crazy because people thought [President] Biden would be banning it. That caused the price to go up,” he said. What used to be “$9 a box is almost $60 a box.”

But he’s ultimately standing down on the idea, he said, recalling how his homeowner’s associatio­n reacted by saying “it’s not the right time.” He said he figured that wasn’t a legitimate reason, but still decided that “I wasn’t fighting it” and will look for commercial space instead.

Raising concern

Reacting to the applicatio­n, Mayor Rogers sought help when the local delegation of Broward senators and representa­tives recently met to discuss bills and policies. “Please help us,” Rogers pleaded. “I need you to help us right a wrong.”

She told them the request for the license is pending at City Hall and there is no restrictio­n in place. If a business follows the law, the city has no choice but to allow them to open, Phillips said.

Rep. Michael Gottlieb, the chair of the delegation, was moved by the city’s concerns, and said there had been concern in Tallahasse­e that “a brothel or gentlemen’s club” could go up in single-family homes, but doesn’t recall anyone talking about firearm ammunition.

“That was the slippery slope,” he said.

“When Tallahasse­e preempts local government from acting sometimes we wind up with bad policy like this,” he said.

“We’re going to have to refine this legislatio­n because the world changed rapidly for many of us due to the pandemic, and I think we all now appreciate the need to accommodat­e home-based businesses,”

Gottlieb said.

Moving forward

After Rogers raised her concerns, Broward Republican Rep. Chip LaMarca reached out to Giallombar­do, the bill sponsor, about unintended consequenc­es.

The result: LaMarca said in the upcoming Legislatur­e “there may be some tweaks” to the bill, possibly more clarificat­ion about “specific industries” that are not allowed in a residentia­l community.

The bill’s intent was to make it easier so an “insurance salesman or consultant wouldn’t be penalized for working from your dining room table,” but elected officials don’t want to “change the character of neighborho­ods.”

Giallombar­do could not be reached for comment in recent days.

Encouragin­g business has been the whole point of the law.

Skylar Zander, the Florida director for Americans for Prosperity, which

supported the bill, said the idea was to lower the cost of creating or maintainin­g a small business by dropping the requiremen­t for expensive and unnecessar­y

office space. It was to allow “people to live the American dream and start a small business.”

 ?? JOSEPH ODELYN | AP FILE ?? A new state law that encourages business owners to set up shop in their homes is drawing fear of what could be opened next to your house.
JOSEPH ODELYN | AP FILE A new state law that encourages business owners to set up shop in their homes is drawing fear of what could be opened next to your house.

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