Committee advances bill tightening penalties for drivers who run red lights or stop signs and cause crashes
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SB 1054 would raise fines and suspend licenses for repeat offenders who run red lights or stop signs and cause crashes; the committee adopted an amendment limiting required bodily‑injury insurance to one year for civil cases, and public safety officials testified in support before the committee reported the bill favorably.
Senator Martin presented SB 1054 to increase penalties for drivers who run red lights or stop signs and cause crashes. The sponsor said the goal is to make Florida roads safer by targeting drivers whose disregard for traffic controls creates serious public safety risks.
Under the bill as explained: a first violation carries a $500 fine; a second violation would carry a $1,000 fine plus a six‑month driver's license suspension; three or more violations would carry $1,000 fines for each offense and a one‑year license suspension for each offense. The bill also requires a driver who causes a crash and injures someone to carry bodily‑injury insurance for a year.
An amendment (barcode 427978) was offered to clarify that the one‑year insurance requirement applies to these civil cases only and is not intended to impose the three‑year insurance requirement used for DUI convictions; the sponsor said the amendment distinguishes the coverage period from the longer DUI standard. Captain James Cunningham of the Collier County Sheriff's Office testified in favor, recounting local crashes involving large commercial vehicles and school buses and urging support for enhanced penalties. Representatives from Florida AARP and Florida PBA also waved in support. After debate, the committee adopted the amendment and reported CS for SB 1054 favorably.
