Sanford lets
seat-belt bill pass `without my blessing' Governor, who said penalty not enough, had threatened a
veto HENRY
EICHEL Columbia
Bureau
COLUMBIA - Gov. Mark Sanford Thursday
let a mandatory seat-belt bill become law Thursday without his
signature, despite an earlier signal that he would veto it because
it lacked adequate penalties.
"It's going to become law, but without my blessing," Sanford said
at a news conference in his State House office. "I've got, still,
real reservations about this particular idea."
He had until 11:59 p.m. Wednesday to sign the bill passed by
lawmakers last week, veto it or step aside and allow it to go on the
books automatically.
The governor said he decided not to veto the measure because
although it has been illegal to ride unbuckled in South Carolina
since 1989, police can't stop adult drivers unless they committed
some other violation.
"There is no other law that my folks could find," Sanford said,
"wherein we have a specific prohibition against law enforcement
enforcing a law that's on the books."
He said, "My belief is you ought to have fewer laws. The laws
that you have, though, ought to be enforced."
The new law, which carries a $25 fine, goes into effect in
January. Officers will be able to stop any motorist they see not
wearing a seat belt. The law's supporters hope it will raise the
level of seat belt use in South Carolina -- currently one of the
lowest in the nation at 59 percent -- and thereby reduce the number
of deaths and serious injuries in wrecks. The S.C. highway death
rate is among the highest in the U.S., and 75 percent of those
killed had not been buckled up.
However, Sanford said, "I would anticipate that this bill will
not yield the results that people are hoping for."
Unlike North Carolina, where court costs drive the price of being
caught unbuckled to $75, South Carolina would charge only a flat
$25.
And unlike the mandatory seat belt laws in North Carolina and 20
other states, S.C. law enforcement officers would not be able to use
"Click It or Ticket" roadblocks to catch people who failed to buckle
up.
National highway safety experts say such roadblocks, and the
publicity campaigns that states use to advertise them, are what make
seat-belt laws effective.
Sanford said the best way to make people buckle up would be to
allow people being sued in cases involving injuries from wrecks to
introduce evidence in court that the injured person wasn't wearing a
seat belt. Such evidence could be used to reduce the amount of
damages awarded.
He said he would veto any future legislation strengthening the
seat belt law unless it includes such admissibility.
"I think it's a free market way of solving the problem," Sanford
said. "I think everybody ought to wear seat belts, but it ought to
be personal judgment."
Are You Buckled?
• The new law goes into effect in
January.
• Officers can stop any motorist
they see not wearing a seat belt.
• The fine is $25. |