Race, Poverty, and Debt-Related Driver's License Suspensions

被引:0
|
作者
Mikelbank, Brian A. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Cleveland State Univ, Cleveland, OH 44115 USA
[2] Legal Aid Soc Cleveland, Cleveland, OH 44113 USA
关键词
Driver's license suspensions; Debt-based suspensions; Fines and fees;
D O I
10.1007/s41996-024-00150-6
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Most driver's license suspensions in the State of Ohio are, in fact, not the result of being a bad driver. Rather, they are based on an unpaid debt. Known as debt-related suspensions (DRS), they create physical and financial barriers, disrupting the everyday lives of those impacted. Despite progress in limiting the practice, half of all states, including Ohio, still engage in the practice, and so research into the scale, scope, and implications of DRS takes on a heightened importance. This research focuses on three understudied dimensions of DRS. First, it adds to only a handful of statewide analyses by providing an accounting of the practice in Ohio from 2016 to 2020. Second, the analysis provides specific detail in terms of the financial implications of DRS across seven different DRS categories. Third, the research examines race, poverty, and other correlates of DRS in a regression framework. Findings show DRS in Ohio to be a problem of scale: In an average year, the state has over 3.2 million active DRS on 1.7 million Ohio drivers. They levy over $758 M in fees and costs, and drivers pay over $167 M. On average, the unpaid DRS debt is over $900 M annually, reaching over $1 billion in 2018, its peak year. DRS are overrepresented in Ohio's high poverty and high People of Color communities. Ohio's highest poverty ZIP Codes had 40 times the DRS compared to the lowest poverty ZIP Codes. Similarly, Ohio's ZIP Codes with the highest percent People of Color had more DRS than the lowest percent People of Color ZIP Codes-nearly 140 times more. Regression results reinforce these findings, indicating particularly severe impacts among Ohio's working poor and in communities of color. The burden of Ohio's debt-related suspensions rests disproportionately on the shoulders of these communities. These findings raise several questions about the state's policy and practice surrounding debt-related suspensions.
引用
收藏
页码:4 / 18
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [23] Vision requirements for driver's license examiners
    Johnson, CA
    OPTOMETRY AND VISION SCIENCE, 2005, 82 (08) : 779 - 789
  • [24] UNDERGRADUATES' DESIGNATED ORGAN DONOR STATUS ON THEIR DRIVER'S LICENSE: AGE, RACE/ETHNICITY, GENDER, AND RELIGION MATTER
    Albright, Cheryl
    Saiki, Kara
    Wilkens, Lynne
    Biddle, Ashley M.
    Devine, David
    Pacheco, Misty
    Smith, Pamela
    ANNALS OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 2017, 51 : S1343 - S1344
  • [25] Michigan's Commercial Driver's License (CDL) experience
    Dorothy, PW
    Lyles, RW
    Narupiti, S
    JOURNAL OF TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING-ASCE, 1998, 124 (02): : 172 - 178
  • [26] Evaluation of California's Commercial Driver License program
    Research and Development Section, California Dept. of Motor Vehicles, P.O. Box 932382, Sacramento, CA 94232-3820, United States
    Accid. Anal. Prev., 5 (547-559):
  • [27] Variations in Teenage Activities with and without a Driver's License
    David F Preusser
    William A Leaf
    Susan A Ferguson
    Allan F Williams
    Journal of Public Health Policy, 2000, 21 : 224 - 239
  • [28] Engineering RNA synthesis with a driver's license but no map
    Pederson, T
    ASM NEWS, 2005, 71 (03): : 118 - 120
  • [29] Evaluation of California's commercial driver license program
    Hagge, RA
    Romanowicz, PA
    ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION, 1996, 28 (05): : 547 - 559
  • [30] Variations in teenage activities with and without a driver's license
    Preusser, DF
    Leaf, WA
    Ferguson, SA
    Williams, AF
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY, 2000, 21 (02) : 224 - 239