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Bill

Bill

SB 43

Relating to administration of anesthetics

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Mike Azinger and 10 co-sponsors

SB 43 removes routine tint checks from standard vehicle inspections, adds a $10 targeted tint inspection fee, and requires drivers to roll down windows when approached by police.

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Bill Summary · SB 43

SB 43 — Window Tint / Inspection / Approach of Law Enforcement Officer

Status (as provided): Passed 1st reading
Introduced: (legislative file) February 4, 2025
Effective date in bill text: December 1, 2025 (applies to offenses on or after that date)

Main purpose

SB 43 changes how vehicle window tint is handled in the vehicle safety inspection program and creates a new, express duty for drivers with tinted windows to lower a window when a law enforcement officer approaches the vehicle. It also establishes a narrow fee for targeted tint inspections.

Key provisions

  • Removes routine measurement of window tint from the standard vehicle safety inspection scope (amends G.S. 20‑183.3). The prior mechanics’ routine light‑meter test for tinted windows is no longer listed among items inspected as part of the standard safety inspection.
  • Allows a mechanic to perform a targeted tint measurement using an approved light meter only after the mechanic has determined that after‑factory tint has been applied. When such a targeted inspection is performed, an additional $10 fee applies (amends G.S. 20‑183.7(a)).
  • Adds a new statutory duty for drivers of vehicles with tinted windows (new G.S. 20‑127(g)): when a law enforcement officer approaches the vehicle, the driver must roll down the driver‑side window; if the officer approaches on the passenger side, the passenger window must be rolled down.
  • Effective date: December 1, 2025; the bill applies to offenses occurring on or after that date.

Who is affected

  • Motorists who have after‑market or aftermarket (after‑factory) window tinting.
  • Vehicle safety inspection mechanics and inspection stations (change to inspection scope and fee application).
  • Law enforcement officers (changed procedural expectation during stops/approaches).
  • Motor vehicle regulatory administrators (must implement fee/inspection practice changes).

Enforcement, penalties, and fee impact

  • The bill explicitly creates a driver obligation to lower a window when approached by an officer; the bill text supplied does not specify a penalty structure for failing to comply (look to other statutes or implementing rules for enforcement/penalty details).
  • Inspection stations may collect a $10 fee for performing a light‑meter inspection when after‑factory tint is suspected and measured. The standard safety inspection fee schedule is otherwise unchanged.
  • By removing routine tint checks from the standard safety inspection, routine, systemic tint enforcement through the inspection program is reduced; targeted enforcement remains possible (at the mechanic’s determination and with the inspection fee).

Procedural / timeline notes

  • The bill text sets December 1, 2025 as the effective date for the substantive changes.
  • As provided in the materials, SB 43 had passed its first reading and followed the legislative process indicated in the legislative actions log.

Practical considerations / potential impacts

  • Proponents: may reduce time and equipment burden on routine inspections, reduce administrative steps for inspectors, and standardize that tint checks are performed only when tint is suspected.
  • Concerns: requirement to lower windows on officer approach raises privacy and civil‑liberty questions for some stakeholders; enforcement details (who enforces, what penalties apply) will affect practical impact and are not specified in the excerpted text.
  • Local implementation: inspection stations must be ready to apply the $10 targeted‑inspection fee and follow the revised inspection checklist; law enforcement agencies may need to update approach/stop protocols and training.

If you want, I can:
- Pull the exact statutory text sections the bill amends for side‑by‑side comparison,
- Draft suggested implementing guidance for inspection stations or law enforcement, or
- Search for any amendments or companion measures that set penalties or clarify enforcement.

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

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