Bill Text: NY S00336 | 2017-2018 | General Assembly | Introduced

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Requires a 60 day license suspension for any driver convicted of 2 speeding violations within a school zone, committed within an 18 month period of time.

Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Democrat 3-1)

Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2018-01-22 - referred to transportation [S00336 Detail]

Download: New_York-2017-S00336-Introduced.html


                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
                                           336
                               2017-2018 Regular Sessions
                    IN SENATE
                                       (Prefiled)
                                     January 4, 2017
                                       ___________
        Introduced  by  Sen. PERALTA -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Transportation
        AN ACT to amend the vehicle and traffic law, in  relation  to  requiring
          the suspension of the license to operate a motor vehicle of any person
          convicted  of  three  or  more  violations of school zone speed limits
          within eighteen months
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
     1    Section  1. Paragraph b of subdivision 2 of section 510 of the vehicle
     2  and traffic law is amended by adding a new subparagraph (xviii) to  read
     3  as follows:
     4    (xviii) for a period of sixty days where the holder has been convicted
     5  of  three  or  more  violations,  committed  within a period of eighteen
     6  months, of subdivision (c) of section  eleven  hundred  eighty  of  this
     7  chapter.
     8    §  2.  This  act  shall  take  effect  on  the first of September next
     9  succeeding the date on which it shall have become a law.
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD00128-01-7
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