I
itworker69@netscape.net
Guest
This new legislation as proposed by the American Assoc. of Motor
Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA) (Web - http://www.aamva.org) should be
strongly opposed by motorists. If this comes up in the state house,
you will need to let your legislators know that you are opposed to
this. It is wrong to get punished at home for a traffic violation
that you committed in a different state and you paid that state's
penalty. You should not get punished twice with a fine and points in a
state you got a ticket in and then points and the following insurance
hike when you get home !
Most of you are familiar with reciprocity between states on tickets.
This reciprocity is governed by the Driver's License Compact (DLC) and
Non-Resident Violator's Compact (NRVC). The NRVC is beneficial to the
motorist such that when when the out of state motorist gets stopped,
he doesn't have to post bond before going on his way or go to jail.
The DLC, only benefits states and insurance companies by recording out
of state traffic offenses against your driver's license. Both of
these compacts have some limitations that protect motorists that would
be gone under the Driver's License Agreement (DLA).
The DLA was brought into existence by the American Assoc. of Motor
Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA). Quite a few of their essential pages
are protected by username and passwords. I guess the reasoning is
people are not allowed to see what kind of traffic laws they are
proposing because they are afraid of our scrutiny would derail their
police state agenda.
Now, to the down and dirty details of the DLA. Below is the DLA as
passed in Connecticut since the AAMVA copy is "locked" from our prying
eyes. The DLA will be covered in detail. Comments will include Section
& Subections, etc that can be referenced below. Now the time to put
some sunshine on this !!
1. Not shown below in the CT statute is the ID provisions. Connecticut
passed this in the 2002 CT General Assembly and it was before the
AAMVA starting working on enhancing the DLA due to the Sep 11, 2001
terrorist bombings.
The ID provisions have certain conditions such as what is on your
license, how it is formatted and required information. This is a
backdoor way to implementing a National Identification Card. Most
people are against a National ID for good reasons. Before, the AAMVA
advocated the use of the Social Security Number as a License
Identifier which means it is displayed. They are now quiet about this.
2. First thing is Section 34, part 6. Take notice that this agreement
can mean your state can punish you (with points against your license)
for any offense not only in these United States but also Canada and
get this, Mexico. Mexico is well known as being a corrupt country if
not more than some states of the US. In Mexico, you have no right to
innocent until proven guilty. Laws and procedures vary by country and
these can snare people who think it is alright to do something here at
home.
As with Mexico, think about it, get a DUI due to a corrupt cop and a
breathalyzer that is rigged. Unknown to you when you get home, your
driver's license is gone after you were happy to get out of the
Mexican jail. Don't forget, pay more money for high risk insurance. No
due process built into the DLA. Even a speeding ticket in Mexico or
Canada can cause you problems when you get home.
Also further down the road but not mentioned yet is the possible
addition of other countries including member countries of the EU into
the DLA. One day, a ticket from France can haunt you back at home.
AAMVA is already working on model wording of licensing agreements
between states and foreign countries like Germany and France.
Violations are not mentioned yet but they can be added in later. In
fact, Florida and Province of Quebec have an agreement on traffic
violations along with Michigan trading info with Ontario, NY and Maine
trading with Ontario and Quebec as well.
3. Section 36, part 2 can be an additional burden. Look at the part
that says "and to comply with the procedures for the disposition of
such charges" can mean that a driver ticketed in a different state
might have to jump through more hoops than just paying a fine on a
ticket if he wants to keep his license. A good example is a driver
gets a ticket for tinted windows in Virginia even though the tint is
legal at home. The court orders him to fix the tint as per Virginia
law as a condtion to close the case on his ticket. If he wants to
keep his license, the tint must get fixed. Virginia does apply its
tint law to non-resident motorists.
4. Section 39, part d means if you blow off your ticket, your state
will suspend your license until you pay it. There is also a part that
would suspend your vehicle registration and/or driver's license. The
DLA even applies to ignoring out of state parking tickets. The NRVC
specifically excludes parking tickets from being used as a means to
suspend your driver's license and/or vehicle registration. Vehicle
registration revokation/suspension is not mentioned in the DLC/NRVC.
5. Section 40, I don't see much problem since these are the major
violations such as DUI/DWAI/DWI, reckless driving. On reckless
driving, the downside is the State of Virginia hands reckless tickets
out like candy for offenses that would be something like speeding in a
different state. Virginia's abuse of writing many Reckless Driving
tickets can cause a lot of problems at home.
6. As under the DLC, if you get a ticket in a different state for a
violation and your home state has the exact equivalence such as
speeding, you get points. If you get a ticket in a different state
where your state has no equivalent statute, no points for you. An
example is an Indiana driver gets a ticket for careless driving in
Michigan, since Indiana has no careless driving law, no points are
assessed under the DLC but the DLA will require Indiana to assess
some kind of point penalty and Indiana could do is treat it as a
reckless driving conviction. This is in part required by Section 36,
part 8.
7. More on Section 36, part 8, this would discourage states from
adding or taking from the DLA. Some states put in protections from the
full force of the current DLC. Some states don't assess points for out
of state violations except major violations. Other states only exempt
out of speeding from the points system such as Kentucky. Another state
like New Jersey charges a flat 2 points for any kind of out of state
moving violation even if it is worth 6 points at
home. In Colorado, in order to suspend/revoke for an out of state DUI,
the other state must allow for trial by jury or else the DUI is not
recognized. If a state joins the DLA, it must comply fully !
Overall, the DLA is going to be bad for motorists not only in the US
but if Canadian provinces join, their drivers and drivers from Mexico
even though they have more rights in Canada and US than at home.
The only way to stop this in its tracks is to bring it out into the
open in the motorist community. Please contact your DMV/BMV chiefs to
oppose this and if legislation shows up in your state,oppose it !
Most parts of the statute below has been stripped for bandwidth
purposes. The whole thing is located at
http://www.cga.state.ct.us/2002/act/Pa/2002PA-00070-R00SB-00020-PA.htm
and do a search on "Sec. 34" It is buried in other legislation on that
page and it was passed in 2002.
There is also a meeting of the DLC/NRVC Board in Oct in St. Louis. The
flyer concerning the DLA is found at:
http://www.aamva.org/Documents/drvDLCNRVCCompactMtgBrochure_10232004.pdf
This has to be stopped ! This can be used as a backdoor method to pass
legislation such as National ID.
Thanks
------
CT DLA
------
Sec. 34. (NEW) (Effective January 1, 2003) As used in sections 34 to
43,
inclusive, of this act, the following terms and their derivatives
shall
have the following meanings:
Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA) (Web - http://www.aamva.org) should be
strongly opposed by motorists. If this comes up in the state house,
you will need to let your legislators know that you are opposed to
this. It is wrong to get punished at home for a traffic violation
that you committed in a different state and you paid that state's
penalty. You should not get punished twice with a fine and points in a
state you got a ticket in and then points and the following insurance
hike when you get home !
Most of you are familiar with reciprocity between states on tickets.
This reciprocity is governed by the Driver's License Compact (DLC) and
Non-Resident Violator's Compact (NRVC). The NRVC is beneficial to the
motorist such that when when the out of state motorist gets stopped,
he doesn't have to post bond before going on his way or go to jail.
The DLC, only benefits states and insurance companies by recording out
of state traffic offenses against your driver's license. Both of
these compacts have some limitations that protect motorists that would
be gone under the Driver's License Agreement (DLA).
The DLA was brought into existence by the American Assoc. of Motor
Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA). Quite a few of their essential pages
are protected by username and passwords. I guess the reasoning is
people are not allowed to see what kind of traffic laws they are
proposing because they are afraid of our scrutiny would derail their
police state agenda.
Now, to the down and dirty details of the DLA. Below is the DLA as
passed in Connecticut since the AAMVA copy is "locked" from our prying
eyes. The DLA will be covered in detail. Comments will include Section
& Subections, etc that can be referenced below. Now the time to put
some sunshine on this !!
1. Not shown below in the CT statute is the ID provisions. Connecticut
passed this in the 2002 CT General Assembly and it was before the
AAMVA starting working on enhancing the DLA due to the Sep 11, 2001
terrorist bombings.
The ID provisions have certain conditions such as what is on your
license, how it is formatted and required information. This is a
backdoor way to implementing a National Identification Card. Most
people are against a National ID for good reasons. Before, the AAMVA
advocated the use of the Social Security Number as a License
Identifier which means it is displayed. They are now quiet about this.
2. First thing is Section 34, part 6. Take notice that this agreement
can mean your state can punish you (with points against your license)
for any offense not only in these United States but also Canada and
get this, Mexico. Mexico is well known as being a corrupt country if
not more than some states of the US. In Mexico, you have no right to
innocent until proven guilty. Laws and procedures vary by country and
these can snare people who think it is alright to do something here at
home.
As with Mexico, think about it, get a DUI due to a corrupt cop and a
breathalyzer that is rigged. Unknown to you when you get home, your
driver's license is gone after you were happy to get out of the
Mexican jail. Don't forget, pay more money for high risk insurance. No
due process built into the DLA. Even a speeding ticket in Mexico or
Canada can cause you problems when you get home.
Also further down the road but not mentioned yet is the possible
addition of other countries including member countries of the EU into
the DLA. One day, a ticket from France can haunt you back at home.
AAMVA is already working on model wording of licensing agreements
between states and foreign countries like Germany and France.
Violations are not mentioned yet but they can be added in later. In
fact, Florida and Province of Quebec have an agreement on traffic
violations along with Michigan trading info with Ontario, NY and Maine
trading with Ontario and Quebec as well.
3. Section 36, part 2 can be an additional burden. Look at the part
that says "and to comply with the procedures for the disposition of
such charges" can mean that a driver ticketed in a different state
might have to jump through more hoops than just paying a fine on a
ticket if he wants to keep his license. A good example is a driver
gets a ticket for tinted windows in Virginia even though the tint is
legal at home. The court orders him to fix the tint as per Virginia
law as a condtion to close the case on his ticket. If he wants to
keep his license, the tint must get fixed. Virginia does apply its
tint law to non-resident motorists.
4. Section 39, part d means if you blow off your ticket, your state
will suspend your license until you pay it. There is also a part that
would suspend your vehicle registration and/or driver's license. The
DLA even applies to ignoring out of state parking tickets. The NRVC
specifically excludes parking tickets from being used as a means to
suspend your driver's license and/or vehicle registration. Vehicle
registration revokation/suspension is not mentioned in the DLC/NRVC.
5. Section 40, I don't see much problem since these are the major
violations such as DUI/DWAI/DWI, reckless driving. On reckless
driving, the downside is the State of Virginia hands reckless tickets
out like candy for offenses that would be something like speeding in a
different state. Virginia's abuse of writing many Reckless Driving
tickets can cause a lot of problems at home.
6. As under the DLC, if you get a ticket in a different state for a
violation and your home state has the exact equivalence such as
speeding, you get points. If you get a ticket in a different state
where your state has no equivalent statute, no points for you. An
example is an Indiana driver gets a ticket for careless driving in
Michigan, since Indiana has no careless driving law, no points are
assessed under the DLC but the DLA will require Indiana to assess
some kind of point penalty and Indiana could do is treat it as a
reckless driving conviction. This is in part required by Section 36,
part 8.
7. More on Section 36, part 8, this would discourage states from
adding or taking from the DLA. Some states put in protections from the
full force of the current DLC. Some states don't assess points for out
of state violations except major violations. Other states only exempt
out of speeding from the points system such as Kentucky. Another state
like New Jersey charges a flat 2 points for any kind of out of state
moving violation even if it is worth 6 points at
home. In Colorado, in order to suspend/revoke for an out of state DUI,
the other state must allow for trial by jury or else the DUI is not
recognized. If a state joins the DLA, it must comply fully !
Overall, the DLA is going to be bad for motorists not only in the US
but if Canadian provinces join, their drivers and drivers from Mexico
even though they have more rights in Canada and US than at home.
The only way to stop this in its tracks is to bring it out into the
open in the motorist community. Please contact your DMV/BMV chiefs to
oppose this and if legislation shows up in your state,oppose it !
Most parts of the statute below has been stripped for bandwidth
purposes. The whole thing is located at
http://www.cga.state.ct.us/2002/act/Pa/2002PA-00070-R00SB-00020-PA.htm
and do a search on "Sec. 34" It is buried in other legislation on that
page and it was passed in 2002.
There is also a meeting of the DLC/NRVC Board in Oct in St. Louis. The
flyer concerning the DLA is found at:
http://www.aamva.org/Documents/drvDLCNRVCCompactMtgBrochure_10232004.pdf
This has to be stopped ! This can be used as a backdoor method to pass
legislation such as National ID.
Thanks
------
CT DLA
------
Sec. 34. (NEW) (Effective January 1, 2003) As used in sections 34 to
43,
inclusive, of this act, the following terms and their derivatives
shall
have the following meanings: