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DWI Surcharges - Some Hope On The Horizon? -

Thursday, September 03, 2009

There's finally a little bit of good news - or, at least, potential good news - regarding DWI surcharges.

Since I started defending people accused of DWI, I have noticed that most of my clients know that they are looking at a possible fine and jail sentence from the courts, but very few of them know about Texas's Drivers License Surcharges that come along with DWI convictions.

As it stands right now, if you're convicted of a first-time DWI, Intoxication Assault, or Intoxication Manslaughter, you will have to pay $1,000.00 a year to the Texas Department of Public Safety for three years in order to keep your license. If you're convicted a subsequent time, it shoots up to $1,500.00. And if your breath or blood test comes back at 0.16 or greater, it spikes to $2,000.00.

The surcharge system - which extends beyond DWI, incidentally, to driving without proof of insurance, driving with license suspended, and more, albeit with lower fees for those charges - results in a number of people who live in poverty, including some of my clients, driving around without a valid driver's license. A thousand or more dollars a year is a huge portion of a lot of people's income. And this puts them (and the public) at greater risk - without a license, they can't get insurance, and they're also susceptible to arrest for Driving While License Invalid, which both result in - yeah - another surcharge. It's a cycle that never quits going for people who don't make enough money to keep up. But what's the alternative? If they quit driving, most of them won't be able to get to work, and then they'll never pay off the fines. (Furthermore, you can't just quit driving for the three years, then go back and get your license once the fee period expires - when you try, you'll still be liable for the $3,000-$6,000 in back fees you racked up over those years.)

But there is good news. The DPS actually seems to understand the burden this puts on people, and the cyclical nature of the problem that means that this system makes an innocent driver's chances of being in an accident with an ininsured motorist more likely, as well as making people who've only really been convicted of one thing liable for more crimes. The minutes from the DPS meeting is on the DPS Officer's Association blog, and they feature a pretty cogent grasp of the problem as we see it:


One in nine people have warrants out for them in El Paso (11%) due to this program. The numbers were similar in Travis County (Austin). A one-time infraction costs $1,000. Suspended license – $1,000. We have a 70% non-compliance rate, since many violators are not able to pay the surcharges. The LBB said that it has lead to more uninsured drivers on the road. It fails to make roads safer. More than 1,080,000 drivers cannot pay.
[...]
Elizabeth Earle, County Court Judge, Travis County [...] We hear “I will never be able to climb out of this hole; Just put me in jail.”

Their proposal is encouraging. The full details are at Grits for Breakfast, but the short form is that those who qualify could replace the $1,000 annual payment with a $500 one-time fee; those whose fees would be $1,500-$2,000 annually would see them replaced with a single $1,000 charge. Qualification would require passing a Drug Court program, the details for which are unspecified right now. But at the very least, this is a step in the right direction.

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posted by Kristi Couvillon   permalink   1 Comments

1 Comments:

At September 19, 2009 2:09 PM , Blogger stellamanita said...

This is without a doubt the best news I have heard since I realized how much of an uphill battle I was going to be facing trying to get a driver's license again. Do people know about this yet? I imagine public support for this would be overwhelming!

 

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