

| Legislative Watch |
West Virginia |
4/16/02-Gov. Bob Wise signed SB256 into law earlier this month, giving officers who enforce truck weight limits the authority to carry handguns as an increased safety measure.
2/12/02-A West Virginia bill introduced in January would give officers who enforce truck weight limits the authority to carry handguns as an increased safety measure. SB256, introduced by Sen. William Wooton (D-Beckley), is in the Senate judiciary committee. A similar bill (HB4311) introduced in the House by Rep. Virginia Mahan (D-Green Sulphur Springs) is in the House finance committee. To contact Sen. Wooton or Rep. Mahan, call (304) 357-7880 or (304) 340-3106, respectively.
3/21/01 - A bill that
would have allowed city police officers in the Mountain State to enforce
truck safety regulations has fallen by the wayside. SB420's sponsor,
John Mitchell Jr. of Kanawha, rejected it because he said the intent
of the bill had been changed.
An amendment had been added to the bill since its introduction that
required all officers to complete an eight-week certification course
before they could enforce truck safety regulations. According to published
reports, Mitchell contended the added measure essentially made it more
difficult for truck safety regulations to be enforced.
3/22/01 - A West Virginia
bill that would have allowed city police officers to enforce truck safety
regulations has died in the state Senate. The bill's sponsor, Sen. John
Mitchell of Kanawha, persuaded lawmakers to defeat SB420 because its
intent had been changed.
Mitchell originally intended for the bill to expand truck enforcement.
Currently, state police and sheriff's departments have that authority,
but not municipal officers.
Mitchell told lawmakers that a Senate Judiciary Committee amendment
had completely changed the intent of the bill. The amendment, requested
by the Public Service Commission, would have required all officers
to
complete the eight-week certification course for PSC inspectors before
they could enforce truck safety regulations. "The intent was to
expand enforcement," Mitchell told news reporters. "What
has resulted is just the opposite. It has made it more difficult for
state
police, and sheriffs and police officers to enforce highway safety
laws."






