Deborah Sharp
USA Today
Dec. 10, 2004 08:39 AM
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - Poppy Madden has emerged as an unlikely hero in a campaign known as the "Laundry Wars." She has triumphed - twice - at City Hall for the right to hang her wash in the hot Florida sun.
"I'm still hanging my purple panties," Madden says. Her clothesline is protected from neighbors' complaints by a state law that encourages solar power - in this case, using the sun rather than a clothes dryer.
"Seeing clean laundry hanging in a yard is a lot less of a problem than having someone's loose dog leave a deposit on your lawn, she says."
The clothesline battle in this waterfront city is the latest chapter in a familiar story about the balance between personal freedom and community standards. Such disputes can stem from city codes, which was the case with Madden's clothesline, or from restrictions set by homeowners associations.
A record number of homeowners now reside in neighborhoods or condominiums under the often-strict rules of community associations. Some of the fiercest struggles occur over what associations deem acceptable, whether it's holiday flags, fences or the color of a front door.
http://www.azcentral.com/offbeat/articles/1210laundry-ON.html