Sponsor introduced HB1686 to allow installation of intelligent speed‑limiting devices on habitual speeders' vehicles as an alternative to license suspension. Witnesses including the Bike Walk Alliance argued ISA devices can prevent speeding more effectively than license suspension and noted technologies that use GPS or governors are already used elsewhere.
Jeff Rogers, who survived a high‑speed crash, said ISA devices are proven technology in commercial fleets and could be an effective alternative for repeat offenders. He and others encouraged further study, including tailoring parameters for residential streets (lower thresholds) rather than only extremely high speeds. Traffic officials and the DMV representatives recommended the bill be referred to the Traffic Safety Commission for detailed technical and fiscal study, warning the fiscal note for DMV implementation could be large.
Committee members and witnesses discussed device variants — audible alerts, fixed governors, GPS‑aware systems — and whether the device should be optional (choice between suspension or device) or mandatory for certain offenders. Some members suggested pilot programs and close study of equity, cost and enforcement details.
What’s next: Committee and the Traffic Safety Commission likely to examine fiscal and technical questions before legislative action.