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Prompt Change Urged in Va. Fees

Bad-Driver Law A Bust, AAA Says

House Speaker William J. Howell (R-Stafford), left, and Senate leader Walter A. Stosch (R-Henrico) promised to rewrite the abusive-driver law.
House Speaker William J. Howell (R-Stafford), left, and Senate leader Walter A. Stosch (R-Henrico) promised to rewrite the abusive-driver law. (By Steve Helber -- Associated Press)
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By Tim Craig
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, August 24, 2007; Page B01

RICHMOND, Aug. 23 -- The top Republicans in the General Assembly tried to salvage Virginia's abusive-driver fees Thursday by pledging to overhaul the law when the legislature convenes in January, but the nation's leading motorist advocacy group is warning lawmakers that they may have to act sooner if they want to regain trust.

AAA Mid-Atlantic urged lawmakers to consider a special session this fall to deal with the fees, which also are backed by Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D).

"I think motorists are saying they want quick action on this," said John B. Townsend II, manager of public and government affairs for AAA Mid-Atlantic. "The fees have been a lightning rod for criticism from day one, and the chances are they will remain a lightning rod for controversy. I think the motorists of Virginia have said they are outraged."

Responding to the uproar over the fees, House Speaker William J. Howell (R-Stafford) and Senate Majority Leader Walter A. Stosch (R-Henrico) promised to rewrite the abusive-driver law.

They said the new bill would limit the traffic offenses that trigger the fees, which range from about $750 to $3,000. It also would extend the law to cover out-of-state motorists and give judges greater discretion to waive a fee for those driving on a suspended license for failure to pay an earlier charge.

Even with the withering criticism, Howell and Stosch say they are standing by the concept of the fees, because they believe the fines have made highways safer since they went into effect July 1.

Between July 1 and Aug. 1, state police issued 23 percent fewer reckless-driving citations and 11 percent fewer speeding tickets than the previous year, Howell said. There were also 88 traffic fatalities in July, compared with 94 during the same period last year, according to state police.

"Many citizens believe the fees are unnecessarily harsh and do not fit the crime. That can and will be fixed," Stosch said. "But lost in that discussion has been the safety factor. Will our highways be safer because of this law? . . . There are some early indictors they will."

AAA, which has 835,000 members in Virginia, initially supported the fees, a stance it reiterated as recently as last month. But Townsend said AAA now believes "it's clear the fees cannot continue as is."

If a special session is not held, Townsend said, the Republican majority could be threatened in the November election, when all 140 seats of the legislature are on the ballot.

Some Democrats, as well as some anti-tax activists, say the fees are unconstitutional, unfairly target the poor and turn Virginia police into tax collectors. More than 170,000 people have signed an online petition calling for the fees to be repealed before Election Day or they will oust the lawmakers who supported them.

"Virginians don't like the law, period," Townsend said.


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