Interpretation ID: nht90-1.89
TYPE: INTERPRETATION-NHTSA
DATE: 03/29/90
FROM: BRUCE VIELMETTI -- ST PETERSBURG TIMES
TITLE: U.S. CRACKS DOWN ON WINDOW TINTERS
ATTACHMT: ATTACHED TO LETTER DATED 06/25/90, FROM PAUL JACKSON RICE -- NHTSA TO LAWRENCE J. SMITH -- CONGRESS; A35, VSA 108 [A] [2] [A]; STANDARD 205; LETTER DATED 05/30/90 FROM NANCY L. BRUCE -- DOT TO LAWRENCE J. SMITH -- CONGRESS; LETTER DATED 05/25/9 0 FROM LAWRENCE J. SMITH -- CONGRESS TO NANCY BRUCE -- DOT; NEWSPAPER ARTICLE; UNDATED BY UPI; US SUES 4 AUTO TINTING SHOPS; OCC 4842; NEWSPAPER ARTICLE DATED 03/30/90; BY STEVE MOORE -- BUSINESS MARKETS; LOCAL CRAFTSMAN UNSWAYED BY FEDERAL CIVIL LAWSUIT S; NEWSPAPER ARTICLE DATED 03/29/90 FROM JIM LEUSNER -- ORLANDO SENTINEL; US SUES CAR - WINDOW TINTERS - LET THERE BE MORE LIGHT; 1984 FLORIDA AUTO TINT LAW; PRESS RELEASE DATED 03/28/90 BY UNITED STATES ATTORNEY MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA.
TEXT: Four Tampa Bay shops sued for violating safety codes
-- In a move that could cripple Florida's booming auto-tint industry, the federal government has sued four Tampa Bay tint shops for violating national traffic safety codes.
But dealers say they are in compliance with Florida's own law on window tinting and vow to fight for more relaxed tinting standards.
The U.S. Justice Department, on behalf of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, filed four separate lawsuits Wednesday in federal court in Tampa.
Named as defendants are Seminole Solar Systems, Inc., 69 Ulmerton Road in Largo; Window Kote, 3801 16th St. N in St. Petersburg; Solar Graphics Inc. 3337 22nd Ave. S in St. Petersburg; and Allied Glass Tint Inc., 1404 N. Armenia in Tampa. Two Orlando -area tint shops also were sued in separate federal court actions in Orlando.
Each complaint charges the businesses with installing window film on cars that allows less than 70 percent of natural light to pass through. Each shop has tinted at least 800 cars since 1986, the suits claim, making each shop liable for $ 800,000 in fines, the maximum allowed under the relevant federal regulation.
Drivers of cars already tinted would not be affected by the lawsuit, but could still be ticketed by police enforcing Florida's statute on window tint.
Tim Hurd, a National Highway Traffic Safety Administration spokesman in Washington D.C., said an investigation begun in July 1987 found a large concentration of tint dealers operating in Central Florida.
The lawsuits are the first and only of their kind, Hurd said.
Auto tinting "presents a safety problem because it reduces the ability to see what's coming at the car," Hurd said. "We've also had complaints from state law enforcement officials."
Police have long disliked the practice of tinting car windows because it makes it difficult to see inside vehicles.
But the treatment remains extremely popular with drivers in Sun Belt states, who say the window film protects interiors, reduces heat and glare, and makes cars look better.
Phil Hoffman owns Window Kote in Largo and franchises three other shops under that name. His Largo shop tints about 4,000 cars a year. He said Wednesday that he was surprised by the lawsuits.
Drivers of cars already tinted would not be affected by the lawsuit, but could still be ticketed by police enforcing Florida's statute on window tint.
Hoffman said the four area shops named as defendants all voluntarily allowed federal transportation officials to inspect their records in 1988. He said they were told at the time that their installations violated the federal regulation, but that his own attorney said since Florida law allowed the darker tint, the practice was legal.
A 1984 Florida statute allows tinting that allows as little as 35 percent of natural light to enter front side windows, and that allows as little as 18 percent of outside light through back windows. No tinting is allowed on windshields.