Introduced
by
To narrow a potential exception to a law that prohibits paying police on the basis of how many tickets they write. The bill prohibits police officer performance evaluation systems from requiring a predetermined number of tickets (but they can still consider ticket writing in general).
Referred to the Committee on Judiciary
Reported without amendment
With the recommendation that the amendment be adopted and that the bill then pass.
Amendment offered
To allow ticket quotas if a federal grant requires it, or for a "specific traffic unit," or a "selective enforcement unit".
The amendment passed by voice vote
Passed in the House 103 to 2 (details)
To revise exceptions to a law that prohibits paying police on the basis of how many tickets they write. The bill prohibits police officer performance evaluation systems from requiring a predetermined number of tickets (but they can still consider ticket writing in general). However, it would allow ticket quotas if a federal grant requires it, or for a "specific traffic unit" or "selective enforcement unit".
Referred to the Committee on Judiciary
Amendment offered
To replace the previous version of the bill with one that revises details but does not change the substance as previously described.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Passed in the Senate 33 to 0 (details)
To revise exceptions to a law that prohibits paying police on the basis of how many tickets they write. The bill prohibits police officer performance evaluation systems from requiring a predetermined number of tickets (but they can still consider ticket writing in general). However, it would allow ticket quotas if a federal grant requires it, or for a "specific traffic unit" or "selective enforcement unit".
Passed in the House 96 to 1 (details)
To concur with the Senate-passed version of the bill.