The Mendocino Beacon

California may chop late fees that add hundreds of dollars to traffic tickets

- By Jeanne Kuang jeanne@calmatters.org

California is poised this year to make changes to what some call “hidden” court fees, hundreds of dollars often tacked onto traffic tickets and minor violations that can increase their cost nearly tenfold. But so far, state officials disagree on how far to go.

Known as a civil assessment, the fee is imposed on hundreds of thousands of California­ns as a penalty for failing to pay a ticket by a deadline or failing to appear in court on a charge.

The vast majority of the fees are issued in traffic or infraction cases. A fine can be imposed each time a deadline is missed.

A $300 maximum fine can be added for violations as minor as jaywalking and on tickets that originally cost as little as $35, according to the Debt Free Justice California, a coalition of organizati­ons, policy experts and legal advocates opposing “unfair ways the criminal legal system drains wealth from vulnerable communitie­s.”

California has one of the highest late fees in the nation, the coalition says. The group says the fees trap lowincome California­ns in a cycle of ballooning debt with the courts.

Money collected from the extra charges bolsters court coffers, leading advocates to accuse the state of paying for its judicial system by charging those who can least afford it.

The fees generate nearly $100 million annually, and the courts retain more than half.

In Riverside County, the fees that the court system kept made up 14% of its budget, according to a report published by the coalition this year.

The report gave as an example a San Lorenzo resident who is a CalWorks recipient and mother who could not afford to pay for traffic violations. She was charged late fees on traffic citations five times since 2009, amounting to more than $1,500 of debt, about double the cost of the original tickets.

It made her ineligible for a driver’s license for 13 years, the report said.

“They were trying to take all of this money away from us,” she said, “but we didn’t have any in the first place.”

Civil assessment fees are disproport­ionately borne by people of color, who are overrepres­ented in traffic stops compared to their share of the population, the report said.

In January advocates sued San Mateo County Superior Court challengin­g its practice of automatica­lly charging the $300 maximum fee in all traffic cases with a missed deadline.

Gov. Gavin Newsom in his January budget proposed halving the fees, to a maximum of $150, and spending $50 million to backfill court budgets.

The proposal by some lawmakers and the Debt Free Justice coalition to eliminate the fees entirely could cost about twice as much. Senate leaders endorsed that plan in their budget proposals last month, as they announced an unpreceden­ted $68 billion projected budget surplus.

The coalition said it hopes Newsom will back full eliminatio­n of fees when he unveils his revised budget proposal this week. H.D. Palmer, a spokesman for Newsom’s Department of Finance, declined to comment.

The Judicial Council, which governs the court system, has supported making changes to civil assessment­s. In a 2017 report a

commission of courts officials recommende­d limiting the use of civil assessment­s or letting fines be converted to community service.

“We’re grateful for the efforts of both the Governor’s administra­tion and the Legislatur­e to reform the system and provide necessary backfill funding for the judicial branch,” said Martin Hoshino, administra­tive director of the Judicial Council, in an email. “We support the Governor’s proposal and are committed to working with him and with legislativ­e leaders in the coming weeks as they finalize the state budget.”

The proposals come after the state eliminated dozens of court fines and fees over the past two years that advocates said disproport­ionately affected low-income criminal defendants. The state repealed such charges as the cost of a public defender, drug testing, and probation and supervisio­n services.

Newsom also signed a law last year that limits the state’s use of wage garnishmen­ts to claw back those debts and another that expanded a pilot program allowing California­ns to ask the courts to reduce ticket fines they can’t afford to pay.

Last year a bill to eliminate civil assessment­s passed the state Senate but was gutted in the Assembly. The Debt Free Justice coalition said at the time it couldn’t get Newsom to

agree to a deal to eliminate the fees.

His administra­tion told lawmakers the fee should be reduced but remain to motivate defendants to come to court.

“We feel the 50% reduction strikes a balance of providing immediate fiscal relief for all California­ns and also preserving the viability of the civil assessment being used as a tool to keep individual­s accountabl­e, to compel individual­s to appear in court proceeding­s,” Mark Jimenez, principal program budget analyst at the Department of Finance, told a Senate budget subcommitt­ee in February.

Jimenez said the penalties are an alternativ­e to issuing warrants to demand court attendance.

But Senators were unconvince­d that the fees were an effective motivator for those too poor to pay traffic tickets.

“If they don’t have the money … how is that any incentive to come in?” said Sen. Dave Cortese, a Democrat representi­ng San Jose. “You either have it or you don’t.”

The coalition surveyed 200 California­ns with recent traffic citations for its report; 73% said they did not know they would be issued a late fee for failing to appear or to pay, and 38% said extra fees would not have helped them make a timely payment.

 ?? PHOTO: JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? San Francisco Department of Parking and Traffic issues a parking ticket on January 21, 2011 in San Francisco.
PHOTO: JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES San Francisco Department of Parking and Traffic issues a parking ticket on January 21, 2011 in San Francisco.

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