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Bill Summary · LC 2191

Summary: LC 2191 — Generally revise transportation and motor vehicle laws

Overview

  • Bill number: LC 2191
  • Title: Generally revise transportation and motor vehicle laws
  • Status: Draft Died in Process (no enacted law)
  • Introduced: December 4, 2024
  • Classification/Subject: Bill focused on Motor Vehicles and Transportation, including Taxation related to transportation, Traffic Regulations, and broader Transportation topics

Important: The provided information does not include the bill’s full text. The summary below reflects the bill’s stated scope, status history, and the potential implications of a general revision, based on the title and subjects listed.

Status and Timeline

  • 2024-12-04: Drafter Assigned — The bill’s drafting process began; staff prepared the initial draft.
  • 2025-02-18: Draft On Hold — The bill’s work paused, delaying progress through the legislative process.
  • 2025-05-22: Draft Died in Process — The draft did not advance toward enactment during that session.

“Died in Process” indicates the bill did not become law in the current legislative cycle. If reintroduced, it could re-enter the normal committee and floor review process.

Purpose and scope (based on title and subject)

  • The bill aims to generally revise transportation and motor vehicle laws.
  • Given the broad framing, potential areas of reform could include licensing and registration, vehicle titling and fees, traffic regulations, transportation funding and taxation related to transportation, safety standards, enforcement, and related regulatory processes.
  • The exact provisions, amendments to current statutes, and any new programs or requirements are not provided in the available data.

Potential impacts (conceptual, given lack of text)

  • Drivers and vehicle owners: Possible changes to registration requirements, fees, titling, or licensing procedures; updates to traffic rules or penalties.
  • Vehicle dealers and insurers: Potential revisions to regulatory compliance, reporting, and tax/tariff structures related to motor vehicles.
  • State and local agencies: Possible realignment of regulatory responsibilities, funding mechanisms, or administrative processes for transportation.
  • Public and businesses: Depending on the enacted provisions, there could be impacts on transportation planning, emissions or safety standards, and enforcement practices.

Affected parties

  • Individuals who own or operate motor vehicles (drivers, registrants, plate holders)
  • Vehicle dealers, mechanics, and insurers
  • State transportation department and related agencies
  • Local governments responsible for traffic and transportation planning

Procedural notes and next steps

  • No current text is available here. For specifics, consult the official legislative database using the bill number (LC 2191) to view the full draft, any amendments, fiscal notes, and final status.
  • If interested in potential future action, monitor for reintroduction or updates in the next legislative session.

Where to find more information

  • Official legislative website or database (search for LC 2191 by bill number and title)
  • Committee records and fiscal notes (if/when the bill is reintroduced or carried forward)

This summary provides a high-level understanding based on the bill’s title and status. For exact provisions, the bill text and accompanying materials would be required.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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