Nebraska Motorcycle Safety fund may get the ax!!

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1/28/2011 10:11:15 AM
View user profile for BillBrews
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Nebraska Motorcycle Safety fund may get the ax!!

 

http://www.omaha.com/article/20110126/NEWS01/701269926/209

Motorcycle safety subsidy may get ax

 

 By Martha Stoddard WORLD-HERALD BUREAU « Metro/Region

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 LINCOLN — Learning to ride a motorcycle could cost would-be Nebraska bikers more in the future.

But the state could get a bit more money for road-building and agency operations under a bill advanced by state lawmakers Tuesday.

After a debate foreshadowing budget battles to come, senators gave 41-0 first-round approval to Legislative Bill 170.

The bill would eliminate a fund used to subsidize motorcycle safety education classes.

Money accumulated in the fund would be divided between the Highway Trust Fund and the Department of Motor Vehicles operations fund.

Lawmakers could tap the DMV portion to help with the state's $986 million budget gap.

State Sen. Deb Fischer of Valentine, chairwoman of the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee, called the bill a matter of money and equity.

The state does not subsidize training courses for any other class of driver, she said.

Yet it has been putting $3 of every motorcycle registration and $3.50 of every motorcycle operator's license fee into the motorcycle education fund.

“We have to decide what is the proper function of government,” Fischer said.

The money provides a $75 subsidy for each person who takes a motorcycle safety course.

Like driver education, the courses are optional for riders. However, riders who pass a training course can get a motorcycle license without having to do a driving demonstration.

Lawmakers also have to decide how to use scarce dollars, Fischer said.

About $270,000 goes into the fund each year. At least one-third of that amount is left over each year, leading to the accumulation of a $790,000 unused balance.

Sen. Steve Lathrop of Omaha argued against eliminating the subsidy, saying higher costs would mean fewer people getting training.

Already, only about one in four motorcyclists takes the courses.

Lathrop said lawmakers would be sending the wrong message about motorcycle safety, especially when coupled with a proposed repeal of the requirement for motorcyclists to wear helmets.

Scott Lucey of Omaha, state legislative coordinator for ABATE (American Bikers Aiming Toward Education), said the group opposes LB 170 because it would take money from motorcycle safety.

He suggested putting the unused balance into other efforts to promote rider safety, such as a “share the road” education effort.

Mark Amidon, another ABATE leader from Omaha, said there are not enough training courses available now for those who want them. He said some skip the training because of the waiting time to get into one. 

1/28/2011 10:16:36 AM
View user profile for BillBrews
Total Posts 965
Ride Free, Ride Often

Re: Nebraska Motorcycle Safety fund may get the ax!!

 

http://update.legislature.ne.gov/?p=2883

Senators debate bill repealing motorcycle safety course reimbursement
Published January 24th, 2011

Motorcycle safety education providers would no longer receive state reimbursement under a bill debated on general file Jan. 24.

The Motorcycle Safety Education Fund currently receives $3 from the Highway Trust Fund for every motorcycle registered in the state and $3.50 from the Department of Motor Vehicles Cash Fund for each motorcycle operator’s license issued during the previous year. The fund is used to reimburse motorcycle safety course providers up to $75 for each student who successfully completes a course.

Under LB170, introduced by Valentine Sen. Deb Fischer, the Motorcycle Safety Education Fund would be dissolved Jan. 1, 2012, and its balance — expected to be approximately $790,000 — would be transferred to the Roads Operations Fund.

Fischer said the state reimbursement granted from the Motorcycle Safety Education Fund is inconsistent with driver education programs in the state and should be eliminated.

“There are no other driver training schools that receive any kind of state subsidy, because the state does not mandate these classes,” she said.

Elk Creek Sen. Lavon Heidemann offered an amendment, adopted on a 45-0 vote, to change the diversion of the Motorcycle Safety Education Fund. Under his amendment, 25 percent of the the fund’s monies would be transferred to the Department of Motor Vehicles Cash Fund and 75 percent would go to the Highway Trust Fund. He said this distribution would match the receiving funds’ contributions to the Motorcycle Safety Education Fund.

Kearney Sen. Galen Hadley said LB170, as amended, would still aid motorcyclists. Returning money to the Highway Trust Fund would increase their safety, he said, because motorcyclists are at greater risk of harm from faulty roads.

LB170 would eliminate the $5 fee for motorcycle safety instructors’ permits and chief instructors’ permits, and replace it with a $100 fee for certification of a motorcycle safety course.

The bill also would broaden the DMV’s regulatory authority over motorcycle safety courses and reduce the life of the driving test waiver granted to those who complete courses from 48 months to 12 months.

Schuyler Sen. Chris Langemeier offered an amendment to partially restore the duration of the testing waiver. Nebraska’s climate limits the number of months in a year that people can ride a motorcycle, he said, so those who complete motorcycle safety courses should be granted more than one year to obtain their class M license.

The Legislature adjourned before voting on Langemeier’s amendment or the bill’s advancement.

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