Plain English Summary
The Seatbelt Act makes several changes to North Carolina's traffic and impaired driving laws. It requires repeat speeding violators to install Intelligent Speed Assistance systems in their vehicles, lowers the alcohol concentration threshold for certain ignition interlock requirements from 0.15 to 0.08, and expands school zone traffic cameras to enforce not just speed limits but also seat belt and texting violations.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue these measures improve public safety by deterring dangerous driving behavior. The Intelligent Speed Assistance system prevents speeding violators from reoffending, the lower alcohol threshold catches more impaired drivers before they cause harm, and expanded camera enforcement protects children in school zones. The bill also includes affordability provisions allowing low-income drivers to reduce costs by up to 50% and requires data privacy protections.
Arguments Against
Opponents raise concerns about privacy invasion from monitoring systems and vehicle tracking through ISA technology, the financial burden on drivers even with assistance programs, and potential due process issues with automated enforcement cameras. Critics also question whether technology mandates are the most effective approach compared to other safety strategies, and argue the lower 0.08 alcohol threshold may penalize casual drinkers who pose minimal risk.
AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.
Sponsors

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 37

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 25

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 9

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 35
Cosponsors (11)
Representative · District 53
Representative · District 95
Representative · District 6
Representative · District 26
Representative · District 23
Representative · District 59
Representative · District 100
Representative · District 97
Representative · District 57
Representative · District 105
Representative · District 83