ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, January 22, 1993                   TAG: 9301220323
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B-1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: WARREN FISKE and BONNIE V. WINSTON STAFF WRITERS
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


REDUCING DUI LIMIT BACKED

Virginia would have one of the toughest drunken-driving laws in the nation under legislation endorsed Thursday by the House Courts of Justice Committee.

The bill, which the same committee rejected last year, provides that anyone cited for driving with a 0.08 percent blood-alcohol content would be presumed drunk by courts. It would be up to individuals to prove otherwise.

The law would keep intact current provisions for automatic drunken-driving convictions for anyone driving with a blood-alcohol content of 0.10 percent or higher.

Under the law now, there is no presumption of impairment for people arrested for erratic driving with blood-alcohol levels below the 0.10 percent level. As a result, judges are reluctant to convict people with levels below the threshold, said Sen. Kenneth Stolle, R-Virginia Beach.

Driving experts testified that a driver with an 0.08 percent blood-alcohol level is four times more likely to have an accident than one who has had nothing to drink.

Virginia would join 11 states in which drivers with 0.08 percent levels are either presumed drunk or automatically convicted.

The legislation was unanimously passed in the state Senate last year, but defeated in the House committee. Stolle said the panel was swayed this year by dramatic testimony from Frank Starr, a Chesapeake resident whose 25-year-old brother died in an automobile accident in 1991.

Starr said the driver of the car that struck his brother had a blood-alcohol content of 0.07 percent, and told police he could not remember events leading up to the accident.

Gun-limit bills introduced

Bills limiting most individuals to one handgun purchase a month were formally introduced Thursday in both chambers of the General Assembly, as behind-the-scenes bargaining intensified on the session's hottest topic.

The proposal, which has the backing of Democratic Gov. Douglas Wilder and Republican U.S. Attorney Richard Cullen, was introduced with 29 co-patrons in the 100-member House and 13 in the 40-member Senate.

Most of the co-patrons were from major population centers in the eastern half of the state. Those areas have been hardest hit by increases in crimes involving guns.

Opponents of the bill are expected to submit alternate proposals soon.

Representatives of organizations for teachers, principals, school superintendents, parent-teacher groups and college faculty were among those endorsing Wilder's anti-crime initiatives at a Capitol news conference.

"Unarmed child pugilists do not kill one another. Armed children do," said Rob Jones, president of the Virginia Education Association. "We must react to the repulsive specter of children killing children with strong and appropriate action."

Earlier raises proposed

Saying they want to boost the "day-to-day morale" of state workers, Republican senators called Thursday for $23 million in budget cuts that would permit the state to give its employees 2 percent pay raises eight months earlier than Gov. Douglas Wilder has proposed.

"Let's not promise, but deliver," Sen. Robert Russell, R-Chesterfield, told a news conference.

The Republican group has not taken a position on raises for Virginia's public schoolteachers; Wilder has proposed nothing for them.

Wilder's proposed amendments to the state's 1993-94 budget would provide $14 million to raise the salaries of the state's 86,000 classified employees by 2 percent on Dec. 1. The governor also wants to provide $10.7 million to give one-time bonuses of $250 to $500.

The GOP senators said Thursday that the $10.7 million ought to go directly to salaries, building the pay base to allow the state to attract and retain qualified people.

State employees got their first raise - 2 percent - in almost two years on Dec. 1.

In other action:

The House of Delegates voted 85-7 to approve a bill stating the program areas, including vocational-technical education, that must be taught in public secondary schools.

The Senate Transportation Committee endorsed a bill that would allow law-enforcement officers to use laser speed detectors.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

Keywords:
GENERAL ASSEMBLY 1993



by Bhavesh Jinadra by CNB