All Roll Calls
Yes: 209 • No: 6
Sponsored By: Atoosa R. Reaser (Democratic)
Became Law
Delinquent children; loss of driving privileges for alcohol, firearm, and drug offenses; truancy. Allows the court discretion in ordering the denial of a child's driving privileges in instances when the child has failed to comply with school attendance and meeting requirements as provided in relevant law. Under current law, the court is required to order the denial of such child's driving privileges. The bill also provides that if the court has ordered the denial of a child's driving privileges, the court shall order such child to surrender his driver's license, which shall be held in the physical custody of the court during any period of license denial. This bill is a recommendation of the Committee on District Courts and is identical to SB 146.
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4 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 2 costs, 2 mixed.
If a court finds a child age 13 or older failed to follow school attendance rules, it can deny driving for at least 30 days. If the child is under 16 years and 3 months, the court can delay when the child may apply until 30 days after reaching 16 years and 3 months. For a second or later finding, denial can be one year or until age 18, or a one-year delay after the child reaches 16 years and 3 months.
Courts must deny a teen’s driver’s license for certain offenses if the child was at least 13. For DUI, test refusal, some drug crimes, or certain other listed offenses, denial is one year or until age 17 for a first offense, and one year or until age 18 for later offenses. For some alcohol offenses, denial is six months. Other listed offenses carry at least 30 days, and some gun or “streetsweeper” offenses carry two years. If the child is under 16 years and 3 months, the law delays when the child can apply. If the DUI involved transporting someone age 17 or younger, the court also adds a fine and community service by law.
A judge can grant a restricted permit for hardship if the teen had a license, but only for limited travel like work or school. No permits are allowed for some offense types, for repeat violations, or for rides to school when buses are provided. A teen can ask the court to lift the denial after 90 days for a first order, or after one year for later orders. Courts can send youth to an alcohol safety program for certain alcohol or test-refusal cases, or to other rehab or education. In some first-time cases, after finishing court terms and getting the license back, the court dismisses the case without a guilty finding; this does not apply to certain serious or repeat offenses. Breaking restricted-permit rules is a crime.
If the child had a license, the court takes it and holds it during the denial period. DMV must refuse to issue a license until the denial ends or the court withdraws the order. The court sends DMV a short record of the order and counsel status that only police, prosecutors, and courts can see. No other records go to DMV unless there is a guilty adjudication.
Atoosa R. Reaser
Democratic • House
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 209 • No: 6
Senate vote • 2/23/2026
Passed Senate Block Vote
Yes: 38 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/20/2026
Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading)
Yes: 40 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/20/2026
Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Yes: 0 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/18/2026
Reported from Courts of Justice Block Vote
Yes: 13 • No: 0
House vote • 2/3/2026
Read third time and passed House
Yes: 91 • No: 6
House vote • 1/28/2026
Reported from Courts of Justice
Yes: 18 • No: 0
House vote • 1/26/2026
Subcommittee recommends reporting
Yes: 9 • No: 0
Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0069)
Approved by Governor-Chapter 69 (effective 7/1/2026)
Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 13, 2026
Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 10, 2026
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB123)
Bill text as passed House and Senate (HB123ER)
Enrolled
Signed by President
Signed by Speaker
Passed Senate Block Vote (38-Y 0-N 0-A)
Read third time
Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading) (40-Y 0-N 0-A)
Rules suspended
Reported from Courts of Justice Block Vote (13-Y 0-N)
Referred to Committee for Courts of Justice
Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading)
Read third time and passed House (91-Y 6-N 0-A)
Read second time and engrossed
Moved from Uncontested Calendar to Regular Calendar
Read first time
Reported from Courts of Justice (18-Y 0-N)
Subcommittee recommends reporting (9-Y 0-N)
Assigned HCJ sub: Criminal
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB123)
Chaptered
4/6/2026
Enrolled
2/25/2026
Introduced
1/2/2026
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