San Francisco Chronicle

Drivers fight loss of licenses over unpaid court debt

- By Denise Lavoie

RICHMOND, Va. — It can start with a couple of traffic tickets.

Unable to pay the tickets right away, a driver becomes saddled with late fees, fines and court costs. Soon, the driver may be taken off the road indefinite­ly.

More than 40 states allow the suspension of driver’s licenses for people with unpaid criminal or traffic court debt. But now, advocates across the country are pushing to change that, arguing that such laws are unconstitu­tional because they unfairly punish poor people and violate due process by not giving drivers notice or an opportunit­y to show they cannot afford to pay the fees.

Lawsuits have been filed in at least five states over the past two years.

“It’s not that I don’t want to take care of what I owe. I really wish I could,” said Brianna Morgan, a single mother from Petersburg, Va., who hasn’t had a license in three years because she owes more than $400 in traffic fines and court costs from traffic violations and a disorderly conduct citation.

Advocates had a victory this week in Tennessee, where a federal judge ruled that a law that allows the state to revoke the licenses of low-income people with unpaid court debt from past criminal conviction­s is unconstitu­tional.

U.S. District Judge Aleta Trauger called the law “powerfully counterpro­ductive” and ordered Tennessee to stop revoking licenses and to reinstate the licenses of people whose licenses were revoked due solely to nonpayment of court fees.

“If a person has no resources to pay a debt, he cannot be threatened or cajoled into paying it; he may, however, become able to pay it in the future. But taking his driver’s license away sabotages that prospect,” Trauger wrote in her ruling Monday.

In Virginia, nearly a million people currently have suspended driver’s licenses at least in part because of unpaid court debt, according to the Legal Aid Justice Center, a nonprofit that is challengin­g the practice in a federal lawsuit.

Millions of drivers nationwide have lost licenses because of such laws. In a study released in September, the justice center estimated that 4.2 million people then had suspended or revoked licenses for unpaid court debt in five states alone: Virginia, Tennessee, Michigan, North Carolina and Texas.

Lawsuits are pending in North Carolina, Montana and Michigan, in addition to Virginia and Tennessee. In California, legislatio­n enacted last year prohibits state courts from suspending driver’s licenses simply because of unpaid traffic fines. Denise Lavoie is an Associated Press writer.

 ?? Steve Helber / Associated Press ?? Brianna Morgan, shown with son Harlem at their home in Petersburg, Va., hasn’t had a license in three years because she owes more than $400 in traffic fines and court costs.
Steve Helber / Associated Press Brianna Morgan, shown with son Harlem at their home in Petersburg, Va., hasn’t had a license in three years because she owes more than $400 in traffic fines and court costs.

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