Sen. Robert Dover introduced LB991 to authorize the use of stop‑signal arm camera footage to support enforcement of existing school‑bus stop laws, saying it would improve student safety by giving law enforcement clear evidence of illegal passes. The bill requires clear advance warning signage on buses, mandates time and location metadata on recordings, and preserves motorists’ ability to contest citations in court.
Supporters included Bike Walk Nebraska, which argued automated enforcement is an effective deterrent and urged careful consideration of privacy safeguards. Proponents also noted that stop‑arm violations continue to pose danger to children boarding and exiting buses and that camera evidence can provide documentation when violations occur.
Opponents focused on privacy and procedural issues. Spike Eichol (ACLU and Nebraska Criminal Defense Attorneys Association) argued the bill could enable private vendors to collect and retain data and that because traffic infractions in Nebraska are criminal matters, automated camera enforcement raises constitutional and due‑process issues. Eichol noted other states structure camera‑enforcement statutes as civil fines, which changes evidentiary and procedural frameworks.
The bill author and supporters offered amendments to preserve law‑enforcement discretion, require advance warnings and metadata, and to ensure defendants retain the ability to contest citations. Committee members asked technical questions about when a bus’s stop arm activates (a senator noted it is tied to the bus door) and how school districts would handle vendor contracts and data retention. The committee closed the hearing after discussion of privacy and implementation details.