Delegates Telega Martinez (HB 5‑17) and Laufer (HB 10‑97) presented related measures to expand and publicize Virginia’s Blue Envelope program. Martinez’s bill would open the program to adults with disabilities beyond autism; Laufer’s bill would require the DMV to feature the Blue Envelope program prominently online and require Department of Education materials and driver‑education outreach to raise awareness.
Advocates from the Arc of Northern Virginia and the Virginia Board for People with Disabilities supported expansion and broader outreach, with Lucy Bidnell and Terry Morgan saying broader inclusion and public awareness could improve safety during traffic stops for people with communication or sensory disabilities. Representatives of autism organizations — including Mark Lobel and Commonwealth Autism — urged caution, arguing the program originated with autistic communities and should expand only after additional safeguards, study and implementation guardrails.
The subcommittee gently tabled HB 5‑17 and unanimously reported HB 10‑97 by a vote of 10–0, advancing the outreach and DMV‑website requirements while asking for more work on any broad expansion.