Tuesday 31 July 2012

Louisiana Road Rules Take Effect



Louisiana law enforcement will begin enforcing multiple new rules on Wednesday, Aug. 1, which cover trucks, first-time drivers, uninsured vehicles and drunken driving. One new law will bring Louisiana’s commercial driver’s licensing rules in compliance with Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations. Lengthier license suspensions will be imposed for drivers caught violating an out-of-service order. Getting behind the wheel of a truck subject to an OOS order will result in the driver’s license being suspended for six months. Currently, state law authorizes 90-day suspensions. Louisiana law already prohibits texting while driving any vehicle. The change specifically prohibits the distracting activity while driving truck. State law already authorizes towing of uninsured vehicles when a driver cannot provide proof of insurance on second and subsequent violations. Starting Wednesday, towing is authorized after a first violation of the state’s mandatory continue

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Susan Vavala’s 15-year-old daughter, Kim, went to the movies one rainy night in 1995 with a 16-year-old friend who had just gotten his driver’s license and two other kids. They weren’t more than five minutes away from Vavala’s Wilmington, Del., home when the new driver, distracted by his friends’ conversation, lost control of the car. Kim was killed instantly in the crash. They hope that safety provisions included in the transportation bill signed into law by President Obama this month will encourage states to adopt or strengthen laws intended to protect teenage drivers — and everyone who shares the road with them. It is an effort strongly supported by Susan Vavala, who has worked in Delaware to stiffen regulations. “We knew [the driver] was a good kid. He’d been driving Kim to continue

http://www.ezdrivingtest.com/blog/2012/07/30/2576/

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