Los Angeles Times

Driver’s license suspension­s worsen poverty

More than 4 million California­ns have lost permits over traffic court fees, report says.

- By Lee Romney

SAN FRANCISCO — Traffic-court fines layered with escalating fees and penalties have led to driver’s license suspension­s for 4.2 million California­ns — or one in six drivers — pushing many low-income people deeper into poverty, a report released Wednesday by a coalition of legal aid groups found.

The report calls for, among other things, an end to license suspension­s for unpaid tickets and a reduction in fees and penalties that raise a $100 fine to $490 — or $815 if the initial deadline to pay is missed.

It comes a month after the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division issued its report on Ferguson, Mo., which criticized similar practices for their disparate effect on low-income and largely minority population­s.

“As in Ferguson,” the California report noted, “these policies disproport­ionately impact people of color, beginning with who gets pulled over in the first place.”

The threat of losing one’s license over traffic tickets and other infraction­s has long been viewed as an essential tool for compelling violators to pay the fines. As these citation revenues have mounted, and court budgets have been cut, the state has come to rely heavily on them to fund a variety of programs.

But recent figures released by the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office show that uncollecte­d court-ordered debt has grown to more than $10 billion.

“It doesn’t work,” said Meredith Desautels, an attorney with the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights

of the San Francisco Bay Area, the lead author of the report.

The report’s proposed solutions are likely to face significan­t hurdles.

A 2014 bill to guarantee the right to a hearing for those who have missed an initial court appearance but are unable to pay in full stalled because it would have overwhelme­d a strapped court system that has suffered $1 billion in cuts in recent years.

A broader bill failed the previous year.

In his January budget, Gov. Jerry Brown proposed a limited amnesty that would temporaril­y cut unpaid traffic fines and penalties in half in hopes of collecting revenue for two insolvent funds that support training for law enforcemen­t.

But the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office has recommende­d it be rejected, saying it is “unlikely to raise the amount of revenue required to address the shortfalls in the [programs], and could potentiall­y negatively affect future collection­s.”

A spokesman for Brown said Tuesday that the amnesty program “is designed to reduce the outstandin­g debt and we will continue to work closely with the Legislatur­e to address this issue.”

Advocacy organizati­ons hope to allay fiscal concerns with a proposal that would allow people to get their licenses back if they first agree to a payment plan, said Mike Herald, legislativ­e advocate for the Los Angeles-based Western Center on Law & Poverty, which collaborat­ed on the report.

If they fail to pay, he said, wage garnishmen­t could take the place of license revocation, providing a way to collect “that doesn’t destroy people economical­ly by ruining their ability to get or keep a job.”

“When you get 4 million people with suspended licenses and they’re not paying, I think we’ve got a systematic failure,” Herald said.

The report relays the experience­s of clients who found themselves unable to pay burgeoning fees, lost their licenses, in many cases lost their jobs, and often stopped paying when they realized it would take years to fully resolve their debt and earn back the right to drive.

“I did make a mistake, but how long do you pay for that mistake?” asked James Eugene, 45, whose debt grew to more than $2,500 after he was stopped for driving a new car without license plates and then missed a court date because he was hospitaliz­ed with a blood clot.

His license was revoked and his case sent to a collection­s company, leaving no way to get a hearing or get his license reinstated without first paying in full.

He kept driving to care for his children as he attempted to untangle his situation, he said, but was soon cited for driving on a suspended license and his vehicle seized.

“The hardest part is not being able to get back on calendar to talk to the judge,” he said in an interview. “Mine was a missing plate. So petty. But that one plate cost me six years.”

The San Francisco resident, who asked that his last name be withheld to protect his medical privacy, participat­ed in a program recently developed by legal aid organizati­ons with the San Francisco Superior Court.

As of January, those who are able to prove that they have a job offer contingent on a driver’s license can petition the court for its return — as long as they have negotiated a payment plan to pay in full with the collection­s contractor.

With extensive help from the lawyers’ committee, James Eugene was able to do so.

Now, he said, he’s “working on getting a car.”

Desautels said she considers the program — along with a few others statewide that offer monthly court dates so ticket-holders with unpaid debt can be heard by a judge — “work-arounds for bad policy.”

In Los Angeles County there are no such programs, though attorneys can seek hearings for certain cases, said Theresa Zhen, an attorney with A New Way of Life, which also helped prepare the report.

“I feel like I’m in a gaping hole that I can just not get out of,” said Everette Cain, 28, of South Los Angeles, who accumulate­d $4,365 in fees and fines and lost his license after receiving three citations.

 ?? Ken Hively Los Angeles Times ?? MANY OF THE TARGETS of traffic tickets are low-income people, a report says. As their traffic court fees and penalties escalate, the drivers lose their licenses and are driven deeper into poverty, the report adds.
Ken Hively Los Angeles Times MANY OF THE TARGETS of traffic tickets are low-income people, a report says. As their traffic court fees and penalties escalate, the drivers lose their licenses and are driven deeper into poverty, the report adds.

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