House Bill 107 would create a pilot modeled on ignition‑interlock programs, allowing drivers suspended under the points system to participate in a speed‑assistance program that lets them continue driving under a speed‑limiting device rather than serving a full suspension.
Sponsor Delegate Allen said the pilot aims to improve safety while preserving people’s ability to work and meet family obligations: "We know about 75 percent of people whose licenses are suspended... they keep driving anyway. This is a way to make them physically make them drive safer," he said. The sponsor added program participants would pay monthly installation costs.
Policy staff and MVA discussed implementation details. MVA cautioned that the pilot will require policy decisions (mandatory vs. voluntary enrollment, program duration) and suggested drafting edits to enumerate violations more clearly rather than relying on point totals. MVA staff said first suspensions are often three months and the pilot as drafted would run for a year, and that logistics such as how people without their own vehicle participate need to be addressed.
Committee members asked technical questions about the device. The sponsor and proponents explained the system uses GPS mapping of speed limits (similar to modern vehicle navigation) and can be configured with a small variance to allow mobility while capping maximum speed. Members asked the sponsor to work with MVA and staff to refine statutory language and return with amendments on enumerated violations and program mechanics.