Oklahoma's New 'Left Lane' Law Yields 60 Citations Since November, Some Complaints

Back in November, Oklahoma passed a law making it extra illegal to use the left lane on all divided highways for any purpose other than passing. This law is already in effect throughout most of the U.S., but enforcement is tricky and highly dependent on traffic flow. Plenty of overtaking occurs above the posted limit, meaning drivers maintaining that speed often feel justified in staying in the left-most lane.

To clarify, Oklahoma already had a law forbidding motorists from hogging lanes on multi-lane highways. The November edict simply tacked on a fine (typically around $230) and a notice from the highway patrol that it wouldn’t tolerate the behavior anymore. “Basically, in simplest terms is, if you’re not passing a vehicle or overtaking a vehicle and you’re in the left lane, you’re in the wrong lane to drive,” State Trooper Clayton Fredrickson explained last year.

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Virginia State Police Help With Budget Crunch

A federally funded ticketing blitz in the state of Virginia landed a total of 6996 traffic tickets this weekend. The blitz, dubbed “Operation Air, Land & Speed” coincided with frantic efforts by state officials to close a$2.2 billion budget deficit. Supervisors ordered state troopers to saturate Interstates 81 and 95 to issue as many tickets as humanly possible over the space of two days.

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  • Cprescott Nissan has long become a third rate vehicle maker like Mitsubishi.
  • JMII Not me... but my brother had a hybrid Cayenne for awhile. He charged at home and at work. The vehicle had enough range that 90% of his commute was in EV mode. Since it had a gas engine he was never forced to recharge elsewhere.
  • IBx1 Imagine trying to shill a Focus/Fiesta with the powershift DCT.
  • CmorScagnetti Nissan makes decent products. Nothing class leading but get the job done stuff
  • Art Vandelay Long line precision placement. I used to watch contract birds drop containers on the mark in this manner because a convention sling load would bring the bird too close to the ground and the rotor wash would blow the FOB away. Took skill. It was mostly pilots that had worked for logging companies I always heard