FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Protesters are expected to hit the streets of South Florida Monday to fight back against state orders to remove rainbow crosswalks in places like Fort Lauderdale, Miami Beach and Key West.
Four crosswalks in Fort Lauderdale are in the crosshairs of the Florida Department of Transportation.
The state recently sent the city a non-compliance letter, demanding the different designs and murals be removed.
“It’s an attempt to try to erase the presence of anything to do with the LGBTQ community,” Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis said.
The state sent similar letters to Miami Beach, Key West and Delray Beach, citing safety issues, but Trantalis says it has nothing to do with safety.
“It could be the gay community this year -- who knows what’s going to be next year,” he said. “We don’t know where they are going to keep trying to eliminate the diversity of what represents Florida.”
Two of the crosswalks in Fort Lauderdale on the state’s list are along Breakers Avenue at Terramar and Riomar streets.
Another one is at East Las Olas Boulevard and Almond Avenue, and the final one is at Sebastian Street along A1A.
That will be the site of one of two demonstrations against FDOT’s order set for Monday night.
Both protests were organized by Eric Swanson, who is better known as Miss. Bouvèé.
“A crosswalk doesn’t define us,” Miss. Bouvèé said. “It’s the principle of the fact (that) it symbolizes a safe space for us.”
“I am outraged by the State of Florida’s decision to forcefully remove Pride crosswalks — symbols of love, support, and unity in our communities,” Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Thursday.
“These vibrant installations are more than paint on pavement. They reflect the values we hold dear in Miami-Dade: respect, appreciation of fellow neighbors, and the fundamental right to live and love openly,” she said in a statement.
The warnings to communities across Florida come after last week’s removal of a rainbow-colored crossing marking the 2016 massacre outside the Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, where 49 people were gunned down. It was painted over in the middle of the night by work crews, but has since been restored by a group of demonstrators.
The issue has been simmering since a July 1 directive from U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, who gave U.S. governors 60 days to identify what he called safety improvements.
“Roads are for safety, not political messages or artwork,” Duffy said in a statement at the time.
The Federal Highway Administration said in a statement Friday to The Associated Press that Duffy “has made every state receiving federal dollars responsible for identifying hazards on their roads.”
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday amplified those comments, saying on X: “We will not allow our state roads to be commandeered for political purposes.”
A statement from FDOT said the agency has a duty “to ensure the safety and consistency of public roadways and transportation systems.”
“That means ensuring our roadways are not utilized for social, political, or ideological interests,” it said.
Efforts to remove the crosswalks are “clearly an anti-LGBTQ push on behalf of both the federal government and the copycat version from the state government,” said Rand Hoch, founder of the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council.
“They’re basically blackmailing municipalities, counties and states by saying if you don’t do this, we’re going to withhold funding,” Hoch said. “It’s absolutely ridiculous.”
It is unclear whether other states and communities outside Florida are being ordered to remove rainbow crossings, but Florida is often the vanguard nationwide in fights over what some call the culture wars of politics. Those include battles over the removal of library books deemed inappropriate by DeSantis and other Republicans.
In Key West, state transportation officials said that if pavement markings in its historic downtown aren’t removed by Sept. 3, “the Florida Department of Transportation will remove them by any appropriate method necessary without further notice.” In a letter to Key West’s city manager, federal authorities also threatened the “immediate withholding” of state funds if it finds “additional violations.”
The Aug. 15 letter to Key West leaders said that many local communities in Florida “immediately began undertaking actions to ensure compliance.” It did not specify how many communities have cooperated or what steps they have taken.
Miami Beach has also been ordered to remove its rainbow crosswalk on Ocean Drive by the first week of September.
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