I live in CA but I am in Colorado this week and just got a well deserved Performance Award (he wrote me up for 59 in a 40 zone instead of the 61 that I was actually doing). I am wondering if I just pay the fine, if it will show up on my CA record. I ran across a web site that says:
In general most US states belong to the Nonresident Violator Compact of 1977. This means that speeding tickets received out of your home state will be reported back to your home state and included on your record for drivers license and insurance points.
However there are certain states that do not put out of state traffic tickets on your record and others that will only enter speeding tickets that are over a certain mph above the speed limit.
Kansas, Wyoming, Minnesota, Arizona, Iowa, and South Dakota will not put a speeding ticket on record unless it is 10 or more mph over the limit. Georgia will not enter speeding tickets unless they are more than 14 mph over the limit. New York and Colorado will not enter out of state speeding tickets at all unless they are serious violations like reckless. Michigan also has special rules about out of state tickets.
Do you read this as "Colorado won't put it into the system unless it is serious", or "Colorado won't read from the system unless it is serious"
The next step, of course, is traffic school. I have 8 vehicles so I would REALLY like to keep this off of my record...
Edit: I just spoke with the Clerk of the court in Dillon, CO. She said explicitely that there are 5 states that CO does not share info with as part of the compact, and CA is one of them. She said that if I wanted to, there was someone she could hook me up with to lessen the fine, but as long as I pay it, the info will not go on to CA. The fine is $70, and I could really care less about that. I even asked her twice, and the answer was explicitely was that CO does not share this information with CA. WooHoo! But I will definitely slow it down from now on....
In general most US states belong to the Nonresident Violator Compact of 1977. This means that speeding tickets received out of your home state will be reported back to your home state and included on your record for drivers license and insurance points.
However there are certain states that do not put out of state traffic tickets on your record and others that will only enter speeding tickets that are over a certain mph above the speed limit.
Kansas, Wyoming, Minnesota, Arizona, Iowa, and South Dakota will not put a speeding ticket on record unless it is 10 or more mph over the limit. Georgia will not enter speeding tickets unless they are more than 14 mph over the limit. New York and Colorado will not enter out of state speeding tickets at all unless they are serious violations like reckless. Michigan also has special rules about out of state tickets.
Do you read this as "Colorado won't put it into the system unless it is serious", or "Colorado won't read from the system unless it is serious"
The next step, of course, is traffic school. I have 8 vehicles so I would REALLY like to keep this off of my record...
Edit: I just spoke with the Clerk of the court in Dillon, CO. She said explicitely that there are 5 states that CO does not share info with as part of the compact, and CA is one of them. She said that if I wanted to, there was someone she could hook me up with to lessen the fine, but as long as I pay it, the info will not go on to CA. The fine is $70, and I could really care less about that. I even asked her twice, and the answer was explicitely was that CO does not share this information with CA. WooHoo! But I will definitely slow it down from now on....
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