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An overhaul of the license suspension process may be on the horizon for Ohio drivers
< < Back to overhaul-license-suspension-process-on-horizon-ohioCOLUMBUS, Ohio (Statehouse News Bureau) — The process to begin a driver’s license suspension can begin for a whole host of reasons in Ohio and Sen. Catherine Ingram (D-Cincinnati) knows the headache that can result.
“You cannot hold people hostage,” Ingram said.
State lawmakers have tweaked the law surrounding license suspensions before, and Blessing proposed this same bill last legislative session. It didn’t go anywhere.
Some child maintenance agencies argue pulling a person’s license offers a powerful tool to force payments.
The Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association opposes the legislation, too. Executive Director Lou Tobin said the bill is inflexible.
“I can envision circumstances where somebody with, in the throes of drug addiction, who has a history of drug and drug related convictions, would be a danger to others on the road, and the judge would like to suspend their driver’s license for a while, and this bill would prohibit that,” he said.
But the list of proponents of the bill is long and bipartisan.
“I think people are tired of the bickering. I think they just want to see legislators getting along and doing what they expect us to do: passing good legislation for the benefit of all,” Blessing said.
SB 37 has had several hearings in the Senate judiciary committee, but it still needs to clear both chambers and the governor’s desk before December to become law.
Blessing says even on that tight timeline, he thinks they can do it. If it doesn’t, the clock resets in January, meaning they would have to start from square one, and Ohioans navigating reinstatement will have to continue to make do.