HOUSE BILL REPORT

 

 

                                   SSB 6252

 

 

BYSenate Committee on Law & Justice (originally sponsored by Senators Halsan and Talmadge)

 

 

Revising enforcement provisions for failure to comply with traffic infraction laws.

 

 

House Committe on Transportation

 

Majority Report:  Do pass.  (19)

      Signed by Representatives Walk, Chair; Baugher, Vice Chair; Cantwell, Cooper, Day, Doty, Gallagher, Haugen, Heavey, Jacobsen, Jones, Meyers, Prince, Schmidt, Smith, D. Sommers, Sutherland, Vekich and S. Wilson.

 

      House Staff:Louise Bray (786-7322)

 

 

                         AS PASSED HOUSE MARCH 1, 1988

 

BACKGROUND:

 

The Washington State Legislature enacted Substitute Senate Bill 5061 during the 1987 Legislature.  It allows a police officer to arrest a driver who has two or more charges of failure to appear on his or her driving record.  The driver must have willfully violated a written and signed promise to appear in court.

 

There has been some concern regarding whether venue is in the jurisdiction where the failure to appear occurred or where the defendant was arrested for failure to appear.  There also has been some difficulty regarding the proof necessary to show a violation to be willful and the procedure for establishing probable cause to arrest. 

 

SUMMARY:

 

The intent of the Legislature is clarified by including the reasons why traffic laws must be judiciously and fairly enforced. 

 

The requirement that a violation of a written and signed promise to appear in court be willful is deleted.  Probable cause to arrest a driver of a motor vehicle is established by an officer obtaining, orally or in writing, information from the Department of Licensing that two or more notices of failure to appear for any five-year period are on the person's driving record.  Venue for prosecution is in the court with jurisdiction in the area of the arrest.  A certified copy of the person's driving record, supplied by the Department of Licensing, will be proof of the existence of notices of failure to appear.  The failure to pay a fine for any pedestrian, bicycle or parking offense is not included in the crime of failure to comply.

 

Fiscal Note:      Available.

 

House Committee ‑ Testified For:    Captain Rick Jensen, Washington State Patrol.

 

House Committee - Testified Against:      None Presented.

 

House Committee - Testimony For:    This bill is necessary to clarify legislative intent and make necessary technical changes.

 

House Committee - Testimony Against:      None Presented.