The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Common-areas smoking ban being ignored

- By Gary M. Singer Sun Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) Gary M. Singer is a Florida attorney and board-certified as an expert in real estate law by the Florida Bar. Send him questions online at www. sunsentine­l.com/askpro or follow him on Twitter @ GarySin

Q: At our annual meeting, our condo community passed a “No Smoking” resolution into our bylaws. It encompasse­d the entire club area, including outdoor facilities. We now have a small group of new owners who vocally oppose this ban and continue to smoke at our community pool despite requests to stop. How can we enforce the ban? — Jerry

A: Smoking has been banned indoors in condominiu­m common areas for a while. The recent trend is to ban smoking in outdoor common areas, like the pool, and in limited common elements, such as balconies.

To see if your associatio­n has the right to do this, you must review the condominiu­m’s declaratio­n. If allowed, it will need to be voted on by a prescribed majority of the unit owners. As long as all of these hoops are jumped through, the ban goes into effect.

Generally, if a community rule is reasonable, it will be upheld if challenged in court. A smoking ban, even outside on a balcony or in the pool area, would likely be found reasonable because of the wellknown health issues associated with secondhand smoke.

The logic would apply to similar activities, such as pipe smoking or vaping.

Your community can enforce the new rule the same as any other rule. First, a warning letter should be sent to the offending homeowner. If this does not work, they can be fined for breaking the rules.

This situation is further complicate­d by rising use of medical marijuana. If it were legal, it seems recreation­al marijuana would be treated like tobacco. But an argument can be made that prescribed marijuana might be accepted in some cases as a reasonable accommodat­ion under housing and disability laws.

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