Callie Richmond for the Texas Tribune

Editor’s note: Correction appended.

State senators expressed bipartisan disapproval Wednesday of an unpopular program that levies large surcharges on drivers for traffic offenses, with severalย calling for broad changes or for scrapping it entirely.

The Driver Responsibility Program, created in 2003 to address a budget shortfall and promote more responsible driving, requires drivers convicted of certain traffic offenses, such as speeding and driving while intoxicated, to payย additional annual surcharges on top of any court fines and criminal penalties to maintain their driverโ€™s licenses. Nearly 1.3 million drivers now have invalid licenses, according to theย Texas Criminal Justice Coalition.

Some lawmakers have previously defended the program because itย sends millions of dollars each year toย hospitals and trauma centers. While state Sen. Lois Kolkhorst, R-Brenham, raised those concernsย at Wednesday’s Senate Transportation Committee hearing, others on the committee suggested seeking alternative sources of funding, as critics spoke of the hardships the program’s penalties caused, such as lost jobs and stints in jail.

Democratic Sens. Sylvia Garciaย and Rodney Ellisย ofย Houston made comparisons between the program and payday loans scams.

โ€œIt just makes poor people poor,โ€ Garcia said.

State Sen. Don Huffines, R-Dallas, likenedย the programย to debtors’ prison, a comparison that other senators returned to throughout the hearing.

โ€œObviously, it doesnโ€™t bother a rich person, someone who has the ability to pay,โ€ Huffines said. โ€œBut weโ€™re creating a permanent underclass.โ€

During last year’s legislative session, the Senateย approved a proposalย to weaken the program. That measure died in the House. However, another bill passed that reduced some of the surcharges.ย Senators’ comments at Wednesday’s hearing suggested a strong interest in either dramatically reforming the program or scrapping it entirely when the Legislature meets again next year.

Elizabeth Henneke, a policy attorney at the Texas Criminal Justice Coalition, endorsed that approach and recommended using court costs and fees to replace any lost trauma care funding. She described one case she worked on in which a single DWI for a 67-year-old woman eventually escalated into $25,000 in fines and several prison stays.

Jennifer Quereau of the Legislative Budget Board said New York and New Jersey are the only remaining states with a similarly structured Driver Responsibility Program. Virginia repealed its version of the program, and Michigan is currently phasing its out, she said.

โ€œWeโ€™re one of the few states that still has this draconian system going,โ€ state Sen.ย Bob Hall, R-Edgewood, said. โ€œI think we need to look at what other states have done that has had success.”

Outside the hearing room, Bill Hammond, CEO of the Texas Association of Business said he was troubled by the way the program forces people who need to drive to work to risk exorbitant penalties.

โ€œItโ€™s failed public policy. Itโ€™s not working,โ€ Hammond said, describing it as “double jeopardy.”ย โ€œIn order for people to eat, they have to work, and in order for them to work, theyโ€™ve got to drive in most cases. So itโ€™s just a cascading situation that gets worse and worse, and it doesnโ€™t create the behavior itโ€™s intended to create.โ€

Judge Jean Spradling Hughes of Harris County Criminal Court also spoke out against the program.

โ€œI donโ€™t know if Iโ€™ve seen a public law with such dire unintended consequences,โ€ Hughes said.

Asked by Kolkhorst what could be done to promote responsible driving absent the program, Hughes argued that people have to be raised to be responsible from childhood.

โ€œWe have a population thatโ€™s never going to change,โ€ Hughes said. โ€œThe people that are going to flaunt the law are going to flaunt it. Even if I put them in jail for the maximum time, itโ€™s not going to change their behavior.โ€

Correction: An earlier version of this story misspelled the name of Judge Jean Spradling Hughes of the Harris County Criminal Court.ย 

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Jamie Lovegrove was a reporting fellow for The Texas Tribune in 2016. He graduated from Northwestern University, where he studied journalism and political science. Born in London, England, Jamie moved...