ABANDONED VEHICLE ASSESSMENT H.B. 4400 (S-2):
FLOOR SUMMARY
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House Bill 4400 (Substitute S-2 as reported)
Sponsor: Representative Andrew Kandrevas
House Committee: Transportation
Senate Committee: Transportation
CONTENT
The bill would amend the Michigan Vehicle Code to permit the court to impose a $25 assessment on a person who abandoned a vehicle, to be used to reimburse the law enforcement agency for expenses incurred in enforcing the prohibition against vehicle abandonment.
Section 252a of the Code prohibits a person from abandoning a vehicle in the State. If a vehicle has remained on public property for a specified period or on private property without the consent of the property owner, the vehicle may be taken into custody and stored at the owner's expense.
A police agency with jurisdiction over the vehicle must determine if the vehicle has been reported stolen, enter it into the Law Enforcement Information Network, and notify the Secretary of State that the vehicle has been taken into custody as abandoned.
The owner may obtain the release of the vehicle by paying a fee of $40 and the accrued towing and storage fees to the custodian of the vehicle. The custodian must forward $25 to the Secretary of State, who must deposit the money into the Abandoned Vehicle Fund.
If the owner fails to redeem the vehicle, he or she is responsible for a civil infraction and must be ordered to pay a civil fine of $50.
Under the bill, if a person were responsible for a citation issued for a violation of Section 252a, the court could impose an assessment of $25 as reimbursement for the expenses that the law enforcement agency incurred in the enforcement of that section, in addition to any other civil fine or charge allowed by law. The assessment would have to be remitted to the treasurer of the local unit of government or the State Treasurer, as applicable.
MCL 257.907 Legislative Analyst: Curtis Walker
FISCAL IMPACT
The bill would result in additional revenue for the State and local units of government. Approximately 90,000 vehicles are annually processed through the Department of State's Abandoned Vehicle System. In 2009, 4,963 of the total were handled by the Department of State Police. Revenue generated would depend on the number of civil infraction citations issued under MCL 257.252a.
Date Completed: 6-30-10 Fiscal Analyst: Bill Bowerman
Analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent. hb4400/0910