"$3000 Speeding Ticket:
Is it just about road safety?"
Virginia is for lovers, or so the
state slogan has declared since 1969.
Starting Sunday, Virginia also will be
the home of the $3,000 traffic ticket.
In an effort to raise money for road projects, the state will start
hitting residents who commit serious traffic offenses with huge civil
penalties.
The new civil charges will range from $750 to $3,000 and be added to
existing fines and court costs. The civil penalty for going 20 mph over
the speed limit will be $1,050, plus $61 in court costs and a fine that
is typically about $200.
Virginia's traffic law is one of several thousand new state laws that
take effect Sunday. Jan. 1 and July 1 are the most popular dates for
state laws to become official.
July 1 is especially popular for new taxes and fees because it's the
start of the budget year in 46 states. For example, Arkansas will cut
its sales tax on groceries from 6% to 3% Sunday.
Virginia's new traffic penalties are expected to raise $65 million a
year and are part of an effort to improve the state's roads without
raising taxes.
A first-time drunken driver will face a $2,250 civil penalty, plus fines
and court costs that typically run about $500 or more. Driving without a
license? That's a mandatory $900 civil penalty, in addition to the
ordinary $100 for a fine and court costs.
"It's outrageous," says traffic court attorney Thaddeus Furlong of
Springfield, Va. "When Mr. and Mrs. Middle Class find out what they have
to pay, there's going to be a backlash like you've never seen."
Some other states impose extra civil penalties for traffic offenses, but
the cost is usually $100 or $200, Furlong says. "What sets this apart is
the Draconian size of the civil penalties," he says.
Another difference: The civil penalties apply only to Virginia
residents, not out-of-state drivers. Virginians must pay in three
installments over 26 months or lose their licenses. The state
Legislature didn't think it could enforce the extra penalties in other
states.
Motorist club AAA Mid-Atlantic supports the new penalties.
"These penalties are harsh, but normal fines haven't gotten people to
drive sanely. Maybe this will," says Lon Anderson, spokesman for AAA
Mid-Atlantic.
He says the new law will help reduce the nearly 1,000 traffic deaths the
state records annually.
"We wish motorists didn't have to pay more, but the fact is Virginia's
transportation trust fund is broke," Anderson says.
Source: USA Today 6-29-07