Predation and the Disproportionate Risk of Driver’s License Suspensions in Economically and Racially Marginalized Communities

Author:

Waller Maureen R.1ORCID,Rich Peter1ORCID,Robbins Nathan L.2

Affiliation:

1. Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA

2. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany

Abstract

Millions of people have their driver’s licenses suspended each year when they do not pay traffic fines or appear in court, with significant and compounding consequences for their lives. The increased use of fines and fees has been likened to a predatory system that exploits the most vulnerable groups to fill state and local budget gaps. States have begun limiting suspensions for unpaid traffic tickets out of economic and racial equity concerns, but many still sanction drivers for failing to appear in court or comply with other regulations. Merging the full universe of New York Department of Motor Vehicles suspension records in 2017 with the American Community Survey at the zip code level, we find that Black, Hispanic, and economically disadvantaged communities were disproportionately impacted by both nonpayment and noncompliance suspensions. Predictive models suggest that reforms ending suspensions for both the failure to appear in traffic court and the failure to pay traffic tickets could substantially reduce these disparities.

Funder

Cornell Population Center

ABF/JPB Foundation Access to Justice Scholars Program

David M. Einhorn Center for Community Engagement

Cornell Center for Social Sciences

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference61 articles.

1. American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators. 2018. “Reducing Suspended Drivers and Alterative Reinstatement Best Practices.” https://aamva.org/getmedia/b92cc79d-560f-4def-879c-6d6e430e4f4d/Reducing-Suspended-Drivers-and-Alternat%20ive-

2. Bender Alex, Bingham Stephan, Castaldi Mari, Piana Elisa Della, Desautels Meredith, Herald Michael, Richardson Endria, et al. 2015. “Not Just a Ferguson Problem: How Traffic Courts Drive Inequality in California.” https://lccrsf.org/wp-content/uploads/Not-Just-a-Ferguson-Problem-How-Traffic-Courts-Drive-Inequality-in-California-4.8.15.pdf.

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1. Race, Poverty, and Debt-Related Driver’s License Suspensions;Journal of Economics, Race, and Policy;2024-08-12

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