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Vol. 73, No. 2, February
2000 |
Legislative Watch
OAR and OWS Law
Changes Begin
On Jan. 1, 2000, the Department of Transportation put into
effect several changes made as part of the Operating After Revocation
Law rewrite, 1997 Wis. Act 84. More changes will become effective
on May 1, 2000, and the remaining portions of the law will go
into effect in 2001.
By John Sobotik
1997 Wis. Act 84 completely rewrote Wisconsin's Operating
After Revocation and Suspension laws. The changes
made are so extensive that DOT needed to completely replace
some of its aging computer systems. In order to accommodate DOT
in this regard, the Legislature gave DOT authority to set effective
dates for provisions in Act 84 as its computer systems became
ready for the change.1 A good number of changes have now been
put into effect, and more changes will be implemented later this
spring.
In
August 1998, DOT put into effect Act 84 provisions related to
habitual traffic offender status calculation. As of Jan. 1, 2000,
DOT put into effect most of Act 84 provisions related to the
suspension or revocation of driver licenses. DOT expects to implement
the changes to section
343.44 (the actual OAR law) on May 1, 2000, and the
remaining portions of Act 84 by May 1, 2001.
Simplified Charging System
Under current law, whether a driver is subject to civil or
criminal penalties for operating a motor vehicle after suspension
or revocation of his or her operating privilege, depends on the
reason the person's privilege was suspended or revoked.
Act 84 will eliminate the need to determine the reason for a
suspension or revocation. Instead, penalties apply based on whether
a person's privilege is in a suspended or revoked status.
Persons who operate while suspended are subject to civil penalties.
Persons who operate while revoked and have one or more prior
OAR violations face criminal penalties. For an interim period,
from the effective date of the new law until May 1, 2002,
first offense OAR violators are subject to civil penalties.2
Thereafter, even first offense OAR violators will be subject
to criminal penalties. DMV hopes to implement these changes on
May 1 of this year.
New law specifies applicable sanctions. In order to
make this simplified charging system work, the Legislature needed
to make choices about whether to suspend or revoke operating
privileges for most driving offenses. Under prior law, courts
and DOT generally had authority to either suspend or revoke the
privilege. Because of the significant difference in treatment
between drivers in suspended or revoked status, the new law specifies
which sanction applies. For most offenses, the operating privilege
sanction, if any, is a suspension. Revocation action is reserved
for very serious anti-social driving behavior such as drunk driving,
refusing chemical tests, hit and run, eluding police, and repeated
operating after suspension. DOT's notice in the Dec. 1,
1999, administrative register puts into effect most of the Legislature's
choices in this regard.
It is worth noting that these changes are different, but not
necessarily more lenient toward bad drivers. For example, more
than 21,000 first offense drunk drivers will face license revocation
instead of suspension upon conviction when Act 84 is fully implemented
in 2001. (As under current law, proof of financial responsibility
will not be required of those drivers.)
Statutory requirements supersede judicial orders. A
complete list of the affected statutory sections accompanies
this note. As of Jan. 1, 2000, drivers committing any of the
offenses listed will be subject only to the operating privilege
sanction permitted by the statutes as amended by 1997 Wis. Act
84. Judicial orders in conflict with these statutory requirements
will be implemented consistent with these changes in the law.
For example, DOT will suspend the operating privilege of a driver
convicted of a nondriving juvenile alcohol violation if it receives
an order to revoke that privilege under section
125.07 of the Wisconsin Statutes.
The other major provisions of Act 84 being put into effect
are related to the length of suspensions imposed for nonpayment
of fees, fines, and forfeitures. Where prior law called for five-year
suspensions, 1997 Act 84 reduced those periods to two years.
Where DMV receives judicial orders for five-year suspensions,
it will impose the two-year suspension authorized by the newly
amended statutes rather than return the order.
Conclusion
Many of the provisions of 1997 Wis. Act 84 that specify whether
an operating privilege should be suspended or revoked for particular
driving offenses have been put into effect as of Jan. 1, 2000.
DOT expects to put the changes in 1997 Wis. Act 84 related to
the offenses of operating after suspension, revocation, or disqualification
into effect on May 1, 2000. Judicial orders in conflict with
these new statutory provisions will be implemented consistent
with the new statutory scheme.
Endnotes
1 Wis. Stat. §
85.515.
2 1997 Wis. Act 237 § 2751.
John Sobotik, U.W. 1985, is assistant
general counsel of the Wisconsin Department of Transportation.
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