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Always good to review the NC seat belt ticket law. In addition to the great article below, it is good to know the following.
1. Passenger seat belt violation by itself is not a reason to stop a vehicle by law enforcement.
2. There are no driving points or insurance points for a seat belt charge. However, there are drivers license points for an underage seat belt charge.
3. Failure to pay a seat belt ticket or go to court can result in a license suspension by DMV.
4. Seat belt must be properly fastened. This means you cannot have the shoulder belt under your arm. If you have a medical condition that prevents you from wearing the seat belt properly, you need a note from your doctor.
§ 20-135.2A. (See Editor's note) Seat belt use mandatory.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in G.S. 20-137.1,
each occupant of a motor vehicle manufactured with seat belts shall have a
seatbelt properly fastened about his or her body at all times when the vehicle
is in forward motion on a street or highway in this State.
(b) Repealed by Session Laws 2006-140, s. 1, effective
December 1, 2006.
(c) This section shall not apply to any of the
following:
(1) A driver or occupant of a noncommercial motor
vehicle with a medical or physical condition that prevents appropriate
restraint by a safety belt or with a professionally certified mental phobia
against the wearing of vehicle restraints.
(2) A motor vehicle operated by a rural letter carrier
of the United States Postal Service while performing duties as a rural letter
carrier and a motor vehicle operated by a newspaper delivery person while
actually engaged in delivery of newspapers along the person's specified route.
(3) A driver or passenger frequently stopping and
leaving the vehicle or delivering property from the vehicle if the speed of the
vehicle between stops does not exceed 20 miles per hour.
(4) Any vehicle registered and licensed as a property-carrying
vehicle in accordance with G.S. 20-88, while being used for agricultural
purposes in intrastate commerce.
(5) A motor vehicle not required to be equipped with
seat safety belts under federal law.
(6) Any occupant of a motor home, as defined in G.S. 20-4.01(27)k,
other than the driver and front seat passengers.
(7) Any occupant, while in the custody of a law
enforcement officer, being transported in the backseat of a law enforcement
vehicle.
(8) A passenger of a residential garbage or recycling
truck while the truck is operating during collection rounds.
(d) Evidence of failure to wear a seat belt shall not
be admissible in any criminal or civil trial, action, or proceeding except in
an action based on a violation of this section or as justification for the stop
of a vehicle or detention of a vehicle operator and passengers.
(d1) Failure of a rear seat occupant of a vehicle to wear
a seat belt shall not be justification for the stop of a vehicle.
(e) Any driver or front seat passenger who fails to
wear a seat belt as required by this section shall have committed an infraction
and shall pay a penalty of twenty-five dollars and fifty cents ($25.50) plus
the following court costs: the General Court of Justice fee provided for in G.S. 7A-304(a)(4),
the telephone facilities fee provided for in G.S. 7A-304(a)(2a), and the
law enforcement training and certification fee provided for in G.S. 7A-304(a)(3b).
Any rear seat occupant of a vehicle who fails to wear a seat belt as required
by this section shall have committed an infraction and shall pay a penalty of
ten dollars ($10.00) and no court costs. Court costs assessed under this
section are for the support of the General Court of Justice and shall be
remitted to the State Treasurer. Conviction of an infraction under this section
has no other consequence.
(f) No drivers license points or insurance surcharge
shall be assessed on account of violation of this section.
(g) The Commissioner of Motor Vehicles and the
Department of Public Instruction shall incorporate in driver education programs
and driver licensing programs instructions designed to encourage compliance
with this section as an important means of reducing the severity of injury to
the users of restraint devices and on the requirements and penalties specified
in this law.
20-137.1. Child restraint
systems required.
(a) Every driver who is
transporting one or more passengers of less than 16 years of age shall have all
such passengers properly secured in a child passenger restraint system or seat
belt which meets federal standards applicable at the time of its manufacture.
(a1) A child less than
eight years of age and less than 80 pounds in weight shall be properly secured
in a weight-appropriate child passenger restraint system. In vehicles equipped
with an active passenger-side front air bag, if the vehicle has a rear seat, a
child less than five years of age and less than 40 pounds in weight shall be
properly secured in a rear seat, unless the child restraint system is designed
for use with air bags. If no seating position equipped with a lap and shoulder
belt to properly secure the weight-appropriate child passenger restraint system
is available, a child less than eight years of age and between 40 and 80 pounds
may be restrained by a properly fitted lap belt only.
(b) The provisions of
this section shall not apply: (i) to ambulances or other emergency vehicles;
(ii) if all seating positions equipped with child passenger restraint systems
or seat belts are occupied; or (iii) to vehicles which are not required by
federal law or regulation to be equipped with seat belts.
(c) Any driver found
responsible for a violation of this section may be punished by a penalty not to
exceed twenty-five dollars ($25.00), even when more than one child less than 16
years of age was not properly secured in a restraint system. No driver charged
under this section for failure to have a child under eight years of age
properly secured in a restraint system shall be convicted if he produces at the
time of his trial proof satisfactory to the court that he has subsequently
acquired an approved child passenger restraint system for a vehicle in which
the child is normally transported.
(d) A violation of this
section shall have all of the following consequences:
(1) Two drivers license
points shall be assessed pursuant to G.S. 20-16.
(2) No insurance points
shall be assessed.
(3) The violation shall
not constitute negligence per se or contributory negligence per se.
(4) The violation shall
not be evidence of negligence or contributory negligence. (1981, c. 804, ss. 1, 4, 5;
1985, c. 218; 1993 (Reg. Sess., 1994), c. 748, s. 1; 1999-183, ss. 6, 7; 2000-117,
s. 1; 2004-191, ss. 1, 2; 2007-6, s. 1.)
Is there a restriction on the car category I can rent if I’m a driver under the age of 21 in US?
ReplyDeleteCar suppliers have different underage policies that affect the ability to pick up a specific class of the rental car. Indeed, when providing a Mercedes S-Class or Bentley, the company may suffer more monetary losses than when renting a Ford, Fiat, or any other compact car.
Consequently, such car groups such as sports cars, premium cars, SUVs, or vans can’t act as under 21 rental car.
What’s more, in NY State, it’s completely forbidden to offer anything bigger than a full-size car for young drivers.
Each vendor has its own under 21 restrictions concerning the vehicle class. You can check them out in the following chart. See more here: places that rent cars to 20 year olds .