Senator Bagby presented SB 435 to authorize motorcycle lane filtering — passing between stopped or slow vehicles — provided the motorcycle operator exercises "ordinary care" and traffic conditions permit. Proponents argued the change would reduce rear‑end collisions that disproportionately injure riders; one advocate recounted a fatal crash while a motorcyclist was legally stopped in traffic and urged a practical reform.
Opponents including the Virginia State Police, the insurance industry and safety organizations said data do not show rear‑end collisions are a dominant crash type for motorcycles and cautioned lane filtering could increase conflicts between motorcycles and motorists. Major Ron Maxey of the state police said rear‑impact crashes are less than 4% of motorcycle crashes and the policy risks creating a problem in search of a solution.
The committee heard technical testimony, considered a public education period and ultimately adopted amendments (including an education and delayed implementation plan) before approving the bill as amended. The recorded vote showed committee support (Eyes 12, No 3).
Outcome: SB 435 was reported from committee as amended; supporters plan outreach and a public education campaign prior to enactment.