Fredericksburg.com - HOV hybrid exemptions extended

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Cars travel southbound on Virginia's Interstate 395 during rush hour traffic near the King Street exit in Arlington. All vehicles registered in Virginia bearing clean special fuel license plates can use High Occupancy Vehicle lanes regardless of their occupant numbers, except on I-95/395.
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HOV hybrid exemptions extended
Hybrid exemption in HOV lanes extended another year
Date published: 2/25/2010

By KELLY HANNON

A limited group of hybrid owners will likely have another year to use carpool lanes on Interstate 95 at rush hour, regardless of the number of people inside the car.

Both houses of the Virginia General Assembly have passed a bill extending the exemption for clean special fuel vehicles in High Occupancy Vehicle lanes.

The exemption was set to expire June 30, 2010. Now, if Gov. Bob McDonnell signs the bill, it will end on July 1, 2011.

All vehicles registered in Virginia bearing clean special fuel license plates can use High Occupancy Vehicle lanes regardless of their occupant numbers, except on I-95/395. On those interstates, vehicles with the speciality license plates must have been registered prior to July 1, 2006 to use the HOV lanes without passenger restrictions.

The 2006 limit for I-95/395 was set in 2005 by the General Assembly as a compromise measure, letting the lanes continue to be used by early adopters of the hybrid technology, but preventing them from being overrun by subsequent drivers.

The Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles designed a new license plate so law enforcement officers could distinguish between them.

A portion of the proceeds from clean special fuel license plate sales goes to the Virginia State Police for HOV enforcement. Last year, the plates raised $293,955 for HOV enforcement.

The legislation would affect a small subset of Virginia drivers.

There are 12,430 vehicles in Virginia registered with clean special fuel licenses dating before July 1, 2006, according to Virginia DMV. After that date, there have been 10,014 vehicles registered with clean special fuel plates in Virginia.

Statewide, there are approximately 7.5 million registered vehicles.

The bill passed the House of Delegates 78-17 and the Senate 40-0.

Del. Mark Cole, R-Spotsylvania, voted against the exemption.

Cole said he had no objection to the exemption initially, for owners who bought the cars shortly after they were introduced, but said it should now be phased out.

"I expect maybe in a few years down the road hybrids might become the norm rather than regular gas-powered cars," Cole said.

Also, he objects to what he described as a "loophole" in the law as written.


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Date published: 2/25/2010



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Not always Scott (posted by Dana1 , Feb. 25, 2010 12:52 pm)    0 likes
Our Hybrid, with the early purchased plates, sits at the commuter lot while hubby rides the bus.

One More Time... (posted by ScottOlsen , Feb. 25, 2010 9:05 am)    0 likes
Hybrid owners allowed to use the HOV lanes did NOT buy their hybrids out of some burning desire to help the environment, the planet or save gas. They bought them b/c they would be allowed to use the HOV lanes, which makes them just another bunch of hypocrites. Evidence the vast majority of HOV hybrids that have ONE person in them. Sadly, VA lawmakers lack the courage to end this "exemption."

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