The House Regulatory Reform Committee voted to report House Bill 5995, a technical fix that prevents driver's-license points from being assessed against vehicle owners who receive citations from school-bus stop-arm camera systems.
Representative DeBoer explained the bill as a narrow correction: the existing implementation can result in points being assessed to an owner even when the driver who committed the violation is not identified. "We essentially take a picture of the license plate, and then a ticket is issued," DeBoer said. The bill clarifies that point penalties exempt certain camera-issued citations, consistent with original intent.
Committee members asked how citations are processed and whether points were intended when the program was enacted. DeBoer cited statutory language and the Legislative Service Bureau review that identified the mismatch; she said the bill simply aligns enforcement with the program's safety purpose.
Clerk read supporting letters from industry groups and from Bus Patrol; Representative Liberati moved to report the bill with recommendation and the motion prevailed in roll call.
The committee's action moves HB5995 toward the next stage of House consideration; sponsors described it as a noncontroversial, safety-focused technical correction.