House adopts voluntary 'green/blue envelope' program for motorists with disabilities
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Summary
The House passed Rep. Greg Glorioso's bill creating a voluntary envelope program (and placing it under existing DMV decal authority) to help drivers with autism or mental health disorders communicate needs during traffic stops; sponsor called it an officer- and individual-safety measure.
The Louisiana House on April 13 approved a measure creating a voluntary 'green/blue envelope' program to help people with autism spectrum disorder or mental-health conditions carry identifying information for traffic stops.
Representative Greg Glorioso, sponsor of the bill, told the House the program mirrors initiatives in other states that let a driver present a green or blue envelope containing registration, insurance and medical information to an officer during a traffic stop. ‘‘It's really an officer safety and, an individual safety,’’ Glorioso said, adding that the bill places the envelope program into the existing Department of Motor Vehicles regulatory framework used for decal programs.
Members questioned how the envelopes would be stored and used in practice and whether accompanying decals should be required. Glorioso and colleagues said the envelope is voluntary and that the Department of Motor Vehicles will set program details under rule-making authority; an amendment adopted on the floor put the envelope program under the same statutory framework the DMV uses for decals and left the program voluntary.
Supporters described the measure as a low-cost tool to reduce stress and miscommunication during stops and emphasized voluntary participation; questioners pressed on privacy, enforcement and whether a decal should be required where envelopes are used.
The House adopted the bill on a recorded vote, 95–0. The sponsor said the DMV will develop the enrollment and decal coordination in regulation.
