Funke: To Protect Kids, Communities Should Be Able to Set Sex Offender Restrictions
Rich Funke
February 23, 2015
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ISSUE:
- Child Molestation
Senator co-sponsors bill empowering localities to establish residency restrictions for registered sex offenders; Legislation addresses impact of recent Appeals Court ruling
Advocating for more local control to better protect children, Senator Rich Funke today announced the introduction of S.3925, a bill granting municipalities the authority to establish residency restrictions for sex offenders. Funke was joined at the announcement by Tony LaFountain, Supervisor of the Town of Penfield, where plans to enact the Penfield Child Safety Act were recently thrown in flux by a court decision limiting a locality’s ability to set such restrictions.
“No two kids are the same, no two communities are the same, and that means that no two solutions to keep our children safe will be the same. Local communities need local control to set restrictions that make sense for their neighborhoods and families,” said Funke. “I am proud to be cosponsoring legislation that empowers communities to establish their own laws for sex offender residency and I look forward to working with my Senate colleagues to pass it as soon as possible.”
On February 17, 2015 the New York State Court of Appeals ruled in People v. Diack, overturning a Nassau County law that prohibited all registered sex offenders from residing within 1000 feet of a school. In its ruling, the Court reasoned that the County’s local law was preempted by State law. The decision immediately called into question sex offender residency restrictions on the books in municipalities across the State, including the proposed local law in Penfield.
The Penfield Child Safety Act includes a restriction to prohibit the residency of registered Level Two and Level Three sex offenders within designated Child Safe Zones, or 2,000 feet from any schools, parks, playgrounds, Town facilities, or daycare centers. The legislation was proposed, in part, due to the discovery that a Level Three sex offender had recently established residency less than 200 feet from Penfield’s Veterans Memorial Park, home to the Town’s Little League fields.
"When our Town Board received notice that a level 3 sex offender was living just a few hundred feet from one of our most attractive parks, we knew we needed to look for a better way to protect our youngest residents, our children," said LaFountain. "The State legislation lacked appropriate protection and did not adequately address someone living next to our many parks, playgrounds and town facilities. Penfield is fortunate to have Senator Funke fighting for our children and their families by introducing legislation to clarify the current State law and to allow local communities to set residency restrictions."
Co-sponsored by Senator Funke, Senator Venditto (R-C-I, Massapequa), and Senator Terrence Murphy (R-C-I, Yorktown), S.3925 includes two sections: The first clarifies the Legislature’s intent to allow municipalities to enact local laws regarding where registered sex offenders may reside and the second explicitly authorizes municipalities to impose such restrictions.
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