Directives issued by Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services regarding violations of COVID-19 safety measures

NEWS RELEASE

Transmission electron microscopic image of an isolate from the first U.S. case of COVID-19. The spherical extracellular viral particles contain cross-sections through the viral genome, seen as black dots.

Editor’s Note: With coronavirus cases in Indian River County now nearing the 1,000 mark, you may find The following information useful. 

 

FDACS Works to Increase Consumer Safety and Accountability for COVID-19 Directives

Tallahassee, Fla. – With over 10,000 new COVID-19 cases in Florida today alone, Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried is making available the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services’ (FDACS) Division of Consumer Services to help hold bad actors accountable for ignoring COVID-19 directives.

“As Florida’s COVID-19 cases skyrocket, we must all do our part to beat this virus. We’re making our Division of Consumer Services available to help hold bad actors accountable for ignoring COVID-19 directives,” said Commissioner Fried. “We have been in touch with the 40,000 licensed businesses we regulate to provide guidance on sanitization and safety procedures. But guidelines and directives only help reduce COVID-19’s spread if everyone follows the rules. Consumers who see businesses and organizations ignoring state or local ordinances should report it to FDACS at 1-800-HELP-FLA or FloridaConsumerHelp.com.”

Since March 1, FDACS has received 815 consumer complaints related to COVID-19 regarding travel, landlord/tenant, moving and storage, gyms and health studios, and other issues. FDACS has provided guidance to food retailers, markets, and other businesses on food safety and sanitization practices to help mitigate the spread of the virus.

“Slowing the spread of COVID-19 in Florida should be critical to every consumer, resident, and visitor,” said Susan McGrath, Executive Director of the Florida Consumer Action Network. “Keeping our communities safe will take everyone working together, and that includes holding accountable those who fail to follow state and local rules on public health and safety. We thank Commissioner Fried for making Florida’s consumer protection agency available to help ensure businesses put Floridians’ health first.”

For Consumers: To file a consumer complaint, use the Division of Consumer Services’ online form or call 1-800-HELP-FLA (1-800-FL-AYUDA en Español). Examples of state and local COVID-19 ordinances include requirements for wearing of face masks, closures and capacity limitations of certain businesses such as bars and restaurants, and the presence of handwashing stations in food preparation areas of retail establishments. Local communities have also encouraged residents to report violations of COVID-19 ordinances. Consumers should check local government websites for the latest information on local COVID-19 ordinances.

Background: The FDACS Division of Consumer Services is Florida’s state consumer protection agency, responsible for handling consumer complaints, protecting against unfair and unsafe business practices, and more. FDACS handles over 400,000 consumer complaints and inquiries annually, oversees more than 500,000 regulated devices, entities, and products like gas pumps and grocery scales, performs over 61,000 lab analyses on products like gasoline and brake fluid, performs nearly 9,000 fair ride inspections, and returned over $2.8 million to consumers through mediations with businesses. The Division regulates a wide variety of businesses including motor vehicle repair shops, pawnbrokers, health studios, travel sellers, intrastate movers, professional surveyors and mappers, sweepstakes/game promotions, and telemarketers.

One comment

  1. Oh BLAME the stupid other guide not the person who is responsible for providing
    sensible logical effective directions.

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