The artist Robin Haines Merrill—a Christian minister who goes by the identify Sister Robin—was employed in 2016 to color crosswalks and intersections in her residence metropolis of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. A part of the Protected Streets programme, the fee had full approval from the Florida Division of Transportation (FDOT). However final week, she acquired a letter informing her that her work doesn’t adjust to new FDOT requirements and shall be eliminated by 4 September, together with greater than 100 different vibrant crosswalks, avenue murals and artwork throughout the state.
“They’re coming after us based mostly on present pointers that they modified in a single day,” Sister Robin tells The Artwork Newspaper. “I’ve felt impending doom and panic concerning the state destroying my art work.”
At the very least 9 cities are preventing the state over an FDOT directive that has despatched 14-day notices to take away vibrant crosswalks, avenue murals and Satisfaction-themed artwork. The order originates from an FDOT memo that prohibits floor pavement artwork that includes “social, political or ideological messages” that don’t serve a traffic-control function. The state’s motion follows a directive from US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, who said final month that “roads are for security, not political messages or art work”. If cities oppose eradicating qualifying crosswalk artwork, they danger shedding thousands and thousands of {dollars} in state and federal transportation funding. To date, Florida is the one state that has cracked down on such public artwork.
“It is absurd and hypocritical, as I had amended my design to satisfy all FDOT requirements,” Sister Robin says. Her avenue murals are titled Aquifer Intersections, centred on the theme of water, and so they received her a avenue artist award. The items had been created with the intention of slowing visitors down as drivers approached the intersections, whereas elevating consciousness and respect for the town’s water sources, which originate within the Everglades.
Beneath the state’s governor, Ron DeSantis—who wrote final week on X: “We is not going to enable our state roads to be commandeered for political functions”—FDOT has already flagged and painted over LGBTQ avenue artwork, whereas sweeping away different crosswalk artwork and avenue murals as properly. Most just lately, a “excessive visibility” inexperienced biking path in an Orlando suburb, which Seminole County had spent thousands and thousands to put in, was painted over in black, irritating many residents.
One in all Sister Robin’s painted intersections, a part of her Aquifer Intersections sequence (2016) in Fort Lauderdale Courtesy the artist
“Ron DeSantis have to be allergic to color,” Sister Robin says.
A doable rationalization for all this lies in the truth that Florida has established laws authorising the operation and testing of autonomous autos within the state. It has additionally invested thousands and thousands to draw firms that develop self-driving vehicles. The FDOT memo states that uniform utility of avenue floor markings is “important” to the effectiveness of those autos, as they “depend on constant visitors management units”. This may increasingly present an impetus for masking up inexperienced bike lanes and vibrant pavement artwork.
Relating to the removing of LGBTQ crosswalks specifically, activists, lawmakers and municipal representatives have careworn that the brand new FDOT guidelines are getting used as a weapon in opposition to inclusivity and variety.
“We is not going to be erased,” Florida state senator Carlos Guillermo Smith said on social media.
In Orlando, the state has already taken motion, with FDOT crews working by evening to color over the rainbow crosswalk exterior the homosexual nightclub Pulse—web site of a 2016 mass capturing during which 49 individuals had been killed. Neighbours used chalk to revive the colors. Just a few days later, FDOT repainted it a second time in black and white. FDOT has additionally ordered the removing of scholars’ artwork on a motorcycle lane which had been a part of a pupil contest promoted by FDOT itself.

Miami Seaside’s rainbow crosswalk on Ocean Drive Photograph: Ken Lund, through Flickr
Whereas some cities are nonetheless difficult the state order, others have comlied fairly than danger shedding thousands and thousands in funding. Saint Petersburg, for instance, plans to take away 5 painted crosswalks. Town’s mayor, Kenneth T. Welch, launched an announcement saying: “Whereas we’ve got pursued exemptions from FDOT, our request has been denied.” After contemplating the implications of preserving the road murals, the mayor said that these have to be eliminated by the 4 September deadline, as per FDOT’s order.
“Town stays dedicated to working with our group to seek out lawful methods to have fun and categorical our values within the public realm. Whereas these particular artwork murals shall be eliminated, the spirit of what makes St Pete a particular place cannot be suppressed by legislative fiat, and we are going to discover significant methods to specific our shared values,” Welch added.
The Metropolis of Tampa may even adjust to portray over pavement artwork from its streets, a spokesperson mentioned, and has to this point introduced a listing to the state with 47 items of artwork slated for removing. These embody not solely rainbow-coloured crosswalks but in addition a pro-police avenue mural titled Again the Blue, painted in 2020.
For now, the Metropolis of Miami Seaside plans to struggle to save lots of its avenue artwork, together with a well-known rainbow crosswalk on Ocean Drive. Miami Seaside’s metropolis commissioner Alex Fernández known as the work “an emblem of security and inclusivity”, including: “We should attraction the state’s order. If the state denies our attraction, then we have to take into account all of our choices… to guard the rights of our group, to guard the visibility.”
As FDOT continues to color over rainbow crosswalks and murals throughout the state, protesters have pushed again. Demonstrations have been happening at rainbow crosswalks in Fort Lauderdale, Key West, Miami Seaside and elsewhere. However for a few of the artists behind the general public works, it feels just like the battle has already been misplaced.
“I am unable to struggle to save lots of my mural. That is the precise actuality now,” Sister Robin says. “However I do not need the state to destroy my art work. I might fairly do it myself in a funeral ceremony with the group concerned.”








