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Officials looking to toughen suspended license laws in Ohio

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Sgt. Dan Rice of the Sagamore Hills Township Police Department prepares to start his shift on Friday, Oct. 31, 2008, in Sagamore Hills Twp.

Associated Press
CINCINNATI " Some judges and prosecutors say it's time to strengthen Ohio's laws governing unlicensed drivers, especially as the number of people driving without a license grows.
Almost 12 percent of Ohio drivers are under suspension, or more than one in every 10 drivers, according to a review of state data by The Cincinnati Enquirer. That's up 40 percent since 2000.
The percentage of suspended drivers in Ohio is higher than Kentucky, with 6 percent of drivers under suspension, and in Indiana, with 4 percent.
Advocates for change say the law needs to be strengthened to deal with repeat offenders but also streamlined to reduce an unwieldy number of suspensions.
"The system we have right now is extremely broken," said State Rep. Shawn Webster, a Republican from Millville in southwest Ohio. "It needs to be overhauled."
Fees, fines and court costs to reinstate a license can be astronomical, costing hundreds of dollars, Webster said.
Hamilton County Municipal Court Judge Nadine Allen says her docket is clogged with license suspensions.
She says lawmakers should stop passing laws with a suspended license as a penalty. She says many suspensions aren't related to dangerous driving behavior.
In Ohio, a person's license can be suspended for dozens of reasons, including failing to pay child support or for a drug conviction.
Multiple suspensions are common because it is difficult to stop a person from driving without a license. Drivers with suspended licenses are also more likely to cause accidents, leading to higher insurance rates, according to Bob Scopatz, consultant with the Texas-based public safety company Data Nexis.
One way to reduce the number of suspensions is to do away with the two-year mandatory suspension for drivers caught driving without insurance, says Sheila Doll, supervisor of Hamilton County Municipal Court's driver's license intervention program.
"As soon as a person has insurance, they should be allowed to get back behind the wheel," she said.
Another issue: while one common reason for having a suspended license is failure to have insurance, the state doesn't require proof of insurance when people renew their plates.
Butler County Prosecutor Robin Piper says repeat offenders should face longer prison terms. He says too many unlicensed drivers defy judges' orders and get behind the wheel of a car.
"I don't like knee-jerk reactions, asking for new laws every time something happens," Piper said. "But driving under suspension in my mind is different."




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 3 Total Comments
3.
    Posted by Rusty Oldma November 18, 2008
Naw, parents are given chance after chance to START paying their child support before their license are suspended. It is one of the last warnings given to these absent parents. If they aren't paying for their own children to eat, you must assume they are not taking responsibility to follow other laws. They don't deserve THE PRIVILEGE to own a car or drive. And drug offenders ARE a danger on the road. These laws are necessary, IMO. Trouble is the lack of enforcement to back the laws.
The same people, time after time are caught driving, to many time committing the same crimes their license was suspended for in the first place IE speeding, reckless driving, running drugs, driving drunk. They are NOT picked up driving home from a place of work. Check it out.
With 12 percent of known dangerous drivers sharing our road is very frighting. And these are only the ones who have been caught!
If we are caught driving without license, the car should be towed on the spot and the driver taken straight to prison. But, too many times the driver is just ticketed FOR SEAT BELT VIOLATIONS and let go. There is no enforcement to back the law. People with suspended license can still buy AND REGISTER cars. Insurance companies are still giving insurance to people with suspended license.
Cops are the last one to know the offender is on suspended license. The records are not updated on the computers and the flag is buried in the file. People on suspension still renew their license and PDPS flag is NOT put on the new card!
PVQ
Victim of a repeated drunk driver on suspension. Yea and she is still out there on the road, you bet. She's been caught driving under suspenion in 1999,2001,2002,2004,2006 and again in February 2008, when she killed my Mother.

2.
    Posted by Whatdoyouexpect November 17, 2008
Failing to pay child support, drug charges, and failure to pay fines are jus a few of the ridiculous reasons that they suspend licenses here in Ohio. If you take away a person's ability to get to a job, what do you expect them to do? I think the range starts at around $500.00 to have your license reinstated, all they're doing is adding to the problems that they're trying to correct. A good majority of the people affected, can hardly keep their heads above water, and the others just give up even trying.

"Drivers with suspended licenses are also more likely to cause accidents, leading to higher insurance rates, according to Bob Scopatz, consultant with the Texas-based public safety company Data Nexis." This would be correct if the suspension were related to dangerous driving, but as stated above, most of Ohio's suspensions are not.

1.
    Posted by AndrewP November 17, 2008
I learned my lesson after my license was suspended 90 days for failure to show proof of insurance.

That will NEVER happen again.


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