Pennsylvania 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

Pennsylvania House Bill HB649 Introduced / Bill

                     
PRINTER'S NO. 658 
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA
HOUSE BILL 
No.649 
Session of 
2025 
INTRODUCED BY KUTZ, ROWE, KHAN, SMITH, GAYDOS AND JAMES, 
FEBRUARY 20, 2025 
REFERRED TO COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORTATION, FEBRUARY 20, 2025 
AN ACT
Amending Title 75 (Vehicles) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated 
Statutes, in inspection of vehicles, further providing for 
inspection by police or Commonwealth personnel.
The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 
hereby enacts as follows:
Section 1.  Section 4704(b) of Title 75 of the Pennsylvania 
Consolidated Statutes is amended to read:
ยง 4704.  Inspection by police or Commonwealth personnel.
* * *
(b)  Notice of violation.--Any police officer or qualified 
Commonwealth employee, having probable cause to believe that any 
vehicle or mass transit vehicle, regardless of whether it is 
being operated, or its equipment, documents or load, are unsafe, 
not equipped as required, or are otherwise not in compliance 
with the law or department regulations, may at any time submit a 
written notice of the violations to the driver of the vehicle or 
the mass transit vehicle or to the owner, lessee or registrant, 
or if none of them is present, to an adult occupant of the 
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18 vehicle or the mass transit vehicle, or if the vehicle or the 
mass transit vehicle is unoccupied, the notice shall be attached 
to the vehicle or the mass transit vehicle in a conspicuous 
place.
(1)  The notice shall specify the particulars of the 
violations and require that the violations be corrected. 
Within [five days or, in the case of a motor carrier vehicle 
or bus, within] 15 days or before commencement of the 
vehicle's next trip, whichever occurs first, or in the case 
of emission testing, within 30 days, evidence must be 
submitted to the police or the Commonwealth, whichever is 
applicable, that the violations have been corrected.
(2)  If the police officer or qualified Commonwealth 
employee has probable cause to believe that a vehicle or mass 
transit vehicle is unsafe or not in proper repair or fails a 
roadside vehicle emission test, he may require in the written 
notice that the vehicle or mass transit vehicle be inspected. 
The owner or driver shall,[ within five days of the date of 
notification or, in the case of a motor carrier vehicle or 
bus,] within 15 days of the date of notification or before 
commencement of the vehicle's next trip, whichever occurs 
first, or in the case of emission testing, within 30 days, 
submit to the police or the Commonwealth, whichever is 
applicable, certification from an official inspection station 
that the vehicle or the mass transit vehicle has been 
restored to legal operating condition in relation to the 
particulars specified on the notice. Any person who fails a 
roadside vehicle emission inspection shall have 30 days in 
which to pass an enhanced vehicle emission inspection or to 
produce evidence that the subject vehicle has a valid 
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30 emissions test waiver.
(3)  After the expiration of the [ five-day,] 15-day or 
30-day period specified in paragraphs (1) and (2), whichever 
is appropriate, the vehicle shall not be operated upon the 
highways of this Commonwealth and a mass transit vehicle 
shall not be operated until the owner or driver has submitted 
to the police or the Commonwealth, whichever is applicable, 
evidence of compliance with the requirements of paragraph (1) 
or (2), whichever is applicable.
* * *
Section 2.  This act shall take effect in 60 days.
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