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Chapter 11: Public Safety and Corrections
Increase Public Safety by Strengthening Texas’ Drunk-Driving Laws
Summary
Driving while intoxicated or under the influence of drugs (DWI or DUI) is a
serious problem, particularly in Texas. In 1998, Texas surpassed all other
states in its number of alcohol-related highway fatalities. To reduce drunk
driving, a 1998 federal statute penalizes states that lack open container laws
and repeat DWI offender laws. Texas has neither, and so in 2001 we will see $37
million of our federal highway funds transferred from construction projects to
highway safety or hazard elimination programs. This amount will increase to an
estimated $84 million in 2003 if Texas still has not enacted laws. Texas law
should be changed to meet the federal requirements by October 1, 2001.
Background
Driving while intoxicated or under the influence of drugs is the most common
violent crime in the United States and a particularly severe problem in Texas,
which in 1998 led the nation both in the number and percentage of DWI-related
highway deaths.[1] In 1998,
approximately 1,800 people died in alcohol-related crashes in Texas, and 50
percent of Texas’ traffic deaths were alcohol-related, compared to a
national average of 38 percent.[2]
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates one in
three Americans will be involved in an alcohol-related crash at some point,
whether they drink or not.[3] According to NHTSA,
on an average weeknight, one in 13 drivers is alcohol-impaired, and on weekends,
one in seven.[4]
The Texas Legislature has taken steps to reduce the alcohol-related
casualties on Texas highways by inaugurating the state’s Administrative
License Revocation (ALR) program in 1995; passing a “zero-tolerance”
law in 1997 that prohibits drivers under 21 from operating a vehicle with
any amount of alcohol in their blood stream; and by lowering the legal
Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) limit for adult drivers from 0.10 to 0.08 in
1999.
Even so, to comply with federal law, Texas needs to do more.
TEA-21
The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21), the 1998 federal
highway bill, provides penalties for states whose open-container and repeat
drunk-driving offender laws do not meet federal requirements. TEA-21 says that
if a state fails to enact and enforce either of the required laws by October 1,
2000, it will see part of its federal highway construction funds transferred to
its highway safety or hazard elimination programs. This will occur each year
until the required laws are passed.
In federal fiscal 2001 and 2002, 1.5 percent of a state’s construction
funds will be transferred due to an unacceptable open-container law, and another
1.5 percent because of an unacceptable repeat offender
law.[5] Those amounts will double in 2003 and
continue at that level until the federal government determines that a
satisfactory law has been passed. The transferred amounts augment existing funds
for safety and hazard elimination programs.
Texas missed the October 1, 2000 deadline, and so in 2001, $37 million of
Texas’ federal highway funds ($18.5 million for an unacceptable open
container law plus $18.5 million for an unacceptable repeat offender law) will
be transferred from construction projects to safety and hazard elimination
programs.[6] These include anti-DWI projects,
concrete median barriers on interstates with high rates of head-on collisions,
and shoulder-texturizing, which alerts inattentive drivers that they are
wandering off the highway. The remaining funds will go to the Hazard Elimination
Program, which is largely federally funded and specifically created to reduce
the number and severity of traffic
accidents.[7]
The Hazard Elimination Program funds such projects as providing left-turn
lanes, erecting concrete median barriers and guardrails, installing traffic
lights and flashing beacons, and improving pavement
markings.[8] Without acceptable laws, up to an
estimated $42 million more will be transferred in 2002, and up to $84 million in
each following year.[9]
Toughening the Open Container Law
Texas has no prohibition against driving with an open container of alcohol in
a motor vehicle. A driver can legally have a drink in one hand and the steering
wheel in the other as long as a peace officer doesn’t see the driver
drinking.
Texas’ open container law, which fails to meet TEA-21 guidelines,
reads, “A person commits an offense if the person consumes an alcoholic
beverage while operating a motor vehicle in a public place and is observed doing
so by a peace officer.”[10] The
law’s maximum $500 fine is hard to enforce because an officer must
actually see the driver take a drink.
To meet TEA-21 guidelines, an open container law must prohibit the possession
or consumption of any alcoholic beverage in the passenger area of a motor
vehicle; apply to all occupants; and cover all motor vehicles on any public
highway or public right of way.[11]
A tougher law would not curtail all alcohol-related activities. In
Texas’ “dry” areas, restaurants and other businesses often let
customers bring their own alcoholic beverages. NHTSA guidelines say open
containers of alcoholic beverages are not allowed in the passenger areas of
motor vehicles but may be transported in the
trunk.[12] In 1999, two open
container bills introduced in the Texas Legislature would have exempted
passengers in the living quarters of a house coach or trailer and in vehicles
designed to transport persons for compensation (e.g., taxis, buses, and
limousines).[13] The NHTSA says these
exemptions are permitted.[14]
A “Real” Repeat Offender Law Needed
About a third of all US drivers arrested or convicted of drunk driving are
repeat offenders with more than one DWI or DUI conviction in five
years.[15] These persons are the most likely of
all drivers to be involved in severe
crashes.[16] Most have serious drinking
problems and continue to drive while intoxicated despite the consequences,
because they think they will not be caught.[17]
Some reports show that DWI offenders drive drunk between 200 and 2,000 times
before finally being arrested.[18]
Driver’s licenses often are suspended in an attempt to get repeat
offenders off the road. However, motor vehicle officials estimate that 80
percent of all repeat offenders in the US continue driving after their licenses
have been suspended or revoked.[19] A few
states have addressed this problem successfully through the means prescribed by
TEA-21: impounding or immobilizing the vehicles of repeat offenders, or
requiring them to have ignition interlock devices installed. These are breath
alcohol analyzers connected to the car’s ignition that prevent the vehicle
from being started unless the driver can pass a breath alcohol test. California,
for example, has significantly reduced repeat DWI offenses through vehicle
impoundment, and Maryland has found that ignition interlock devices decrease the
risk of repeat offenses by 65 percent.[20]
Tolerating repeat DWI offenses may encourage other destructive behavior. Most
repeat offenders are not “social” drinkers, and their drinking often
goes hand in hand with criminal behavior. A 1992 study of the criminal records
of DWI offenders in Louisiana reported that 72 percent of the repeat offenders
had a criminal record beyond DWI arrests.[21]
Compared to first-time DWI offenders, they were four times more likely to have
been involved in a robbery and twice as likely to have been involved in a
burglary.[22]
TEA-21 Requirements
By July 2000, 15 states—but not Texas—had passed and were
enforcing repeat drunk-driving offender laws acceptable under
TEA-21.[23] According to NHTSA, Texas does not
meet TEA-21 requirements and will continue to be sanctioned until it passes and
enforces an acceptable law.
TEA-21 requires each state to have a repeat intoxicated driver law providing,
at a minimum, that someone convicted of a second or subsequent offense for DWI
or DUI shall:
• Receive a minimum one-year driver’s license suspension.
• Be subject to the impoundment or immobilization of each motor vehicle
they own or drive or the installation of an ignition interlock system on each
vehicle.
• Receive an assessment of his or her degree of alcohol use and
appropriate treatment.
• Receive a mandatory minimum sentence of at least 30 days’
community service or five days of incarceration (for a second offense) and at
least 60 days’ community service or 10 days of incarceration (for third
and subsequent offenses).[24]
Texas Law’s Shortcomings
Texas does not require a one-year license suspension for DWI/DUI offenses.
Under the state’s Administrative License Revocation (ALR) program, adult
drivers with previous DWI/DUI offenses generally have their licenses suspended
for only 120 to 180 days.[25] (In cases in
which a driver refuses to take a breath test and has a previous license
suspension on record at the time of the second offense, the suspension is
extended to a year.)[26]
In addition to the ALR program, another track is available to prosecutors for
license suspensions. Section 521.344(b)(2) of the Transportation Code requires a
longer suspension period of 180 days to two years for second and subsequent DWI
offenses. Still, the 180-day minimum falls short of TEA-21’s one-year
minimum license suspension.
Texas also allows offenders with suspended licenses to obtain occupational
licenses to go to and from work. Federal guidelines specifically disallow
occupational, restricted, or hardship licenses for repeat DWI offenders during
the required one-year license suspension period, except in extreme cases.
Secondly, Texas does not require that all vehicles driven by a repeat
offender be impounded or immobilized or have an ignition interlock system
installed. To meet federal criteria, states must require at least one of the
three sanctions be applied, but not all three. If a judge orders vehicle
impoundment or immobilization, all vehicles owned by a repeat offender must be
immobilized or impounded for an unspecified period. Likewise, if the judge
orders the installation of an ignition interlock system, all vehicles owned by
the repeat offender must be equipped with the device for an unspecified period
after the license suspension period ends. TEA-21 allows exceptions to the
impoundment and immobilization requirement only for hardships incurred by the
offender’s family and vehicle co-owners, not the
offender.[27]
Texas has no DWI-related requirement for immobilizing or impounding an
offender’s vehicle; such actions are left to the judge’s discretion.
Texas’ requirement for ignition interlock devices applies only to repeat
offenders placed on community supervision or who apply for an occupational
license. Also, the law does not require the device to be installed on all
vehicles owned by a repeat offender.[28]
Furthermore, Texas does not meet the requirement that repeat offenders
receive an assessment of their alcohol use and appropriate treatment. Under
present law, judges can require repeat DWI/DUI offenders to submit to an
evaluation and treatment approved by the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug
Abuse as a condition of DWI community
supervision.[29] But a judge can make other
determinations in these cases, and may use discretion in ordering assessment and
treatment. TEA-21 clearly requires assessment and appropriate treatment for all
second-time or subsequent DWI convictions.
Texas does not meet the federally-required minimum of five days’
incarceration for second-time DWI/DUI offenders. Judges have several sentencing
options for these offenders, and only one of them involves DWI community
supervision, which includes a mandatory three-day
incarceration.[30]
Highway System in Crisis
Without acceptable laws, Texas will see millions of annual federal highway
construction dollars transferred to highway safety or hazard elimination
projects.
The Texas Transportation Commission has reported that Texas’ highways
are in crisis. A fourth of the state’s interstate highways in urban areas
are functioning at 95 percent of traffic capacity. Texas’ interstate
system, mostly completed in the early 1970s, is near the end of its 30- to
40-year life expectancy. And Texas traffic has tripled over the past 30 years.
Texas Transportation Commissioner Robert Nichols has told legislators that the
state lacks the resources needed to maintain, much less expand, its highway
system. The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) maintains that top
projects previously planned for the next 10 years actually will require 21 years
to finish, due to inadequate funding. According to Max Proctor, director of
Programming and Scheduling at TxDOT, “We now have 36 percent of the money
we need to keep pace with
growth.”[31]
Recommendations
A. | State law should be amended to prohibit the
possession of any open alcoholic beverage container, or the consumption of any
alcoholic beverage, in the passenger area of any motor vehicle located on a
public highway or the right of way of a public highway, as required by the
federal Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21).
Otherwise, Texas will see 1.5 percent of its highway construction funds
transferred to safety and hazard elimination in 2002, and 3 percent each year
thereafter. |
B. | State law should be amended to establish a
repeat intoxicated driver law for second and subsequent DWI offenses that meets
TEA-21 requirements.
Otherwise, Texas will see 1.5 percent of its highway construction funds
transferred to safety and hazard elimination in 2002, and 3 percent each year
thereafter. |
Fiscal Impact
Whether or not the recommendations above are adopted, Texas will not lose any
federal highway funds under TEA-21. But failure to adopt the recommendations
will severely limit the state’s discretionary use of these funds for
construction. If it does not enact and enforce laws acceptable under TEA-21
before October 1, 2001, in federal fiscal 2002 the state will see
approximately $42 million ($21 million for an unacceptable open container law
plus $21 million for an unacceptable repeat intoxicated driver law) in federal
highway construction funds transferred away from such uses to highway safety or
hazard elimination. These amounts would double on October 1, 2002 ($42 million
for open container plus $42 million for repeat offenders) and continued each
year thereafter. In all, Texas would see up to $84 million transferred in 2003
and following years until it complies with TEA-21.
Enacting laws to meet TEA-21 requirements would involve some costs to the
state.
According to the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS), extending the
minimum license suspension period for second and subsequent DWI convictions to
one year would cause a one-time delay in revenue collected from license
reinstatement fees in fiscal 2002. The Comptroller’s office estimates the
amount of delayed collections at $1,356,000.
According to DPS, an estimated $273,000 would be needed in fiscal 2002 to
update computer codes and programming related to the new one-year minimum
license suspension requirement. Moreover, one additional full-time equivalent
(FTE) programmer would be needed in fiscal 2002 and subsequent years, at an
annual cost of about $64,000 for salary and benefits. The total cost to the
General Revenue Fund in fiscal 2002 would be $337,000 ($273,000 plus $64,000);
in fiscal 2003 and subsequent years, the cost would be $64,000.
The increased cost of incarceration related to the new laws would be absorbed
by local governments. The estimate assumes that Texas has an average of 18,151
second-time DWI convictions annually and that judges will order incarceration
instead of community service in half of these cases. The extra two days of
imprisonment required to meet federal guidelines for second-time offenders would
cost local governments just under $34 per day or $613,000
annually.[32]
The cost of alcohol abuse assessments and treatment required under TEA-21
would fall on DWI/DUI offenders, except for those who lack adequate financial
resources. For these persons, assessment and treatment would be provided by
TCADA based on financial eligibility criteria. The additional cost to TCADA
cannot be estimated, since it is impossible to project the number of repeat
offenders who would meet TCADA’s eligibility criteria or the type of
treatment that would be appropriate. An assessment costs TCADA $30 to $60, and
treatment options could range from costly inpatient hospitalization to a
referral to Alcoholics Anonymous, which costs nothing.
FiscalYear
|
Savings/(Cost) to the General Revenue Fund
|
Cost to the State Highway Fund
|
Changein FTEs
|
Cost toLocal Governments
|
2002
|
($1,356,000)
|
($337,000)
|
+1
|
($613,000)
|
2003
|
$0
|
($ 64,000)
|
+1
|
($613,000)
|
2004
|
$0
|
($ 64,000)
|
+1
|
($613,000)
|
2005
|
$0
|
($ 64,000)
|
+1
|
($613,000)
|
2006
|
$0
|
($ 64,000)
|
+1
|
($613,000)
|
[1 ] Fax communication from
Jodi Finley, project coordinator, Public Policy Department, Mothers Against
Drunk Driving National Office, Irving, Texas, July 10, 2000; and National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, National Center for Statistics &
Analysis, Traffic Safety Facts 1998—Alcohol (US Department of
Transportation (Washington, DC, November 1, 2000), p. 7
(http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/ncsa/pdf/Alcohol98.pdf). (Internet
document.)
[2 ] National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, National Center for Statistics & Analysis, Traffic
Safety Facts 1998—Alcohol (US Department of Transportation
(Washington, DC, November 1, 2000), p. 7.
[3 ] US Department of
Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Overview:
Traffic Safety Facts 1997 (Washington, DC, July 4, 2000), p. 2
(http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/ncsa/ovrfacts.html). (Internet
document.)
[4 ] Bill Bronrott, “MADD
Launches Nationwide Campaign Taking Aim at Repeat Offenders and Super-Drunk
Drivers,” MADD News (December 29, 1999)
(http://www3.madd.org/media/pressrel.cfm?ID=65). (Internet
document.)
[5 ] The federal fiscal year
begins on October 1 and ends on September 30 of the subsequent calendar
year.
[6 ] E-mail communication from
US Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
November 1, 2000; and telephone interview with Gary Taylor, senior regional
program manager, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration-Region VI
Office, Fort Worth, Texas, December 21, 2000.
[7 ] E-mail communications from
Denise Pittard, legislative analyst, Texas Department of Transportation, October
31, 2000 and November 1, 2000.
[8 ] Fax communication from
Denise Pittard, legislative analyst, Texas Department of Transportation, April
11, 2000; and e-mail from Denise Pittard, October 31, 2000.
[9 ] US Department of
Transportation, Federal Highway Administrator, Notice: Advance Notification
of Federal Aid Highway Funds to be Apportioned (Washington, DC, June 30,
2000), tables 2, 3; and telephone interview with Gary Taylor, senior regional
program manager, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration-Region VI
Office, Fort Worth, Texas, December 21, 2000.
[10 ] V.T.C.A.
§49.03(a), Texas Penal Code.
[11 ] Texas Department of
Transportation, “Open Container of Alcoholic Beverage Fact Sheet,”
July 20, 2000.
[12 ] Fax communication from
Gary Taylor, Region VI, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Dallas,
Texas, August 7, 2000; and memorandum from Heidi L. Coleman, assistant chief
counsel for General Law, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
Washington, DC, to Adele Derby, associate administrator for State and Community
Services, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, March 5,
1999.
[13] Texas H.B. 487 and Texas
S.B. 128, 76th Leg., Reg. Sess. (1999).
[14 ] Fax communication from
Gary Taylor; and memorandum from Heidi L. Coleman, assistant chief counsel for
General Law, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington, DC, to
Adele Derby, associate administrator for State and Community Services, National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, March 5, 1999.
[15 ] US Department of
Transportation. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, “State
Legislative Fact Sheet: Repeat Intoxicated Driver Laws,” January 2000.
(http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/outreach/stateleg).
(Internet document.)
[16 ] US Department of
Transportation. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, State of
Knowledge of Alcohol-Impaired Driving: Research on Repeat DWI Offenders, by
R.K. Jones and J. H. Lacey (Washington, DC, February 2000), p. 5
(http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/research/pub/Alcohol-impairedDriving.html).
(Internet document.)
[17 ] Katherine Prescott,
“Here’s Who Repeat Offenders Are; Here’s What To Do About
Them,” Washington Post National Weekly (Washington, DC, December 8,
1997), p. S2.
[18] Brandy Anderson,
“How Many Bites of the Apple Do We Give Convicted Drunk Driving
Offenders?” Driven Magazine (Fall 1998)
(http://www.madd.org/driven/fall98/repeat-offenders.shtml). (Internet
document.); and The Presidential Commission on Drunk Driving, Final
Report (November 1983), p. 1.
[19 ] National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, “How Do We Remove Drivers With Suspended
Licenses From Our Roads?” Traffic Tech (Washington DC, March 1998),
p. 1.
[20 ] US Department of
Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, “State
Legislative Fact Sheet: Repeat Intoxicated Driver Laws,” January 2000, p.
2.
(http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/outreach/stateleg).
(Internet document.)
[21 ] US Department of
Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, State of
Knowledge of Alcohol-Impaired Driving: Research on Repeat DWI Offenders, p.
13.
[22 ] L.A. Gould and K.H.
Gould, “First-time and Multiple-DWI Offenders: A Comparison of Criminal
History Records and BAC Levels,” Journal of Criminal Justice,
20(6), pp. 527–39, cited in US Department of Transportation, National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, State of Knowledge of Alcohol-Impaired
Driving: Research on Repeat DWI Offenders, p. 13.
[23] Fax communication from
Jim Cotton, Traffic Operations Division, Texas Department of Transportation,
Austin, Texas, August 15, 2000.
[24 ] Fax communication from
Jim Cotton, Traffic Operations Division, Texas Department of Transportation,
Austin, Texas, “Repeat Driving While Intoxicated Offenses Fact
Sheet,” July 20, 2000.
[25 ] V.T.C.A. Transportation
Code §524.022(a)(2)(3) and (b)(2).
[26 ] V.T.C.A. Transportation
Code §724.035(a)(c).
[27] US Congress,
Congressional Federal Register, Volume 65, Number 193, Rules and Regulations,
October 4, 2000, pp. 59112-59124; posted as “Repeat Intoxicated Driver
Laws: Final Rule” at
(http://www.dot.gov/nhtsa/whatsup/tea21programs/164FinalRule.html).
(Internet document.)
[28] Memorandum from Heidi L.
Coleman, assistant chief counsel for General Law, National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, Washington, DC, to Adele Derby, associate administrator
for State and Community Services, National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, March 10, 1999.
[29] V.T.C.A., Code of
Criminal Procedure §42.13(a)(2).
[30 ] Memorandum from Heidi
L. Coleman, assistant chief counsel for General Law, National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, Washington, DC, to Adele Derby, associate administrator
for State and Community Services, National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, March 10, 1999.
[31 ] Texas House of
Representatives, House Research Organization, Focus Report, Highway Funding:
Toward a New Fiscal Roadmap (Austin, Texas, August 3, 2000), p.
1.
[32] This estimate is based
on the number of misdemeanor and felony DWI convictions reported by the Texas
Office of Court Administration’s 1999 Statewide Summary of Reported
Activity for the Year Ended August 31, 1999 (Austin, Texas); the estimated
percentage of DWI offenders who are repeat offenders, as reported in National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Traffic Tech (February 1995), p.
1; and the daily cost of incarceration according to Christopher Medici, research
specialist, Texas Commission on Jail Standards, September 27, 2000.
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