89R10661 AND-D By: Goodwin H.B. No. 5300 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT relating to a project to identify and address high injury road segments and the designation of highway safety corridors; increasing a fine. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. This Act shall be known as the Dr. Michael James Babineaux Act. SECTION 2. Subchapter H, Chapter 201, Transportation Code, is amended by adding Section 201.6014 to read as follows: Sec. 201.6014. HIGH INJURY NETWORK PROJECT. (a) In this section: (1) "High injury network project" means the project developed by the institute under this section. (2) "Institute" means the Texas A&M Transportation Institute. (3) "Intervention strategy" means a department plan to reduce traffic deaths and serious injuries in a certain public roadway segment. (4) "Political subdivision" means a municipality or county. (5) "Safety action plan" means a plan prepared for the Safe Streets and Roads for All grant program. (b) Subject to the availability of funds, the institute shall develop and maintain a high injury network project that includes an interactive map and data that allows ranking of all public roadway segments in the state according to the estimated total cost of traffic crashes for each roadway segment during the preceding five years, accounting for personal injuries, personal property damage, and cost of repairs to the roadway. The institute shall update the project's map and rankings at least once every five years. (c) The department shall annually develop an intervention strategy for: (1) the two highest ranking roadway segments in a rural district on the high injury network project; (2) the two highest ranking roadway segments in an urban district on the high injury network project; and (3) each of the 10 highest ranking roadway segments in any district on the high injury network project that are not described by Subdivisions (1) and (2). (d) The department may partner with a political subdivision to implement, on its own initiative or in collaboration with any governmental unit, for a roadway segment among the 100 highest ranking roadway segments on the high injury network project: (1) adaptive signal timing, signal preemption for emergency vehicles, wrong-way driving alerts, intelligent transportation systems, vehicle-to-infrastructure technology, or traffic demand management; (2) highway safety corridors or variable speed limits; (3) interim or innovative design improvements, including temporary improvements that do not involve permanent roadway reconstruction, including painting, plastic delineator posts, water-filled plastic barriers, planters, traffic cones, raised line separators, and temporary speed humps/bumps that may be used to right-size roadways, create curb extensions, shorten crosswalk distances, create roundabouts, establish bike lanes, and implement other safety countermeasures that slow speeds and make roads safer for multiple road user types; (4) upgrades to any portion of a right-of-way to optimize safe travel by any mode of transportation, including reducing the portion of a right-of-way dedicated to single occupant vehicle lanes if the department determines through an engineering and traffic investigation that an updated design will be an effective way to reduce deaths and serious injuries on one of the 100 highest ranking roadways identified in the high injury network plan; or (5) any proven safety measure, including any measure listed in the Texas Strategic Highway Safety Plan, the Federal Highway Administration's Proven Safety Countermeasures initiative as it existed on May 1, 2025, or Proven Safety Countermeasures in Rural Communities publication as the publication existed on May 1, 2025, or a local or regional safety action plan if the roadway segment is within the area covered by the safety action plan. (e) Notwithstanding any other law, a safety measure under Subsection (d)(1) or (5) may be implemented with no requirement for environmental process, public input opportunity, engineering and traffic investigation, or any other administrative procedure. (f) The department may not implement a safety measure under Subsection (d)(2), (3), or (4) before a simple majority vote in support of implementing the measure on that roadway segment or a broader area by: (1) the governing body of the municipality in which the roadway segment is located; or (2) the commissioners court of the county in which the roadway segment is located, if the roadway segment is in an unincorporated area. (g) This subsection applies only to an on-system roadway segment that is not a controlled access highway and has been listed as one of the 100 highest ranking roadway segments under the high injury network project for three or more years and for which total deaths and serious injuries have not decreased by an average of at least three percent per year. A municipality in which a roadway segment to which this subsection applies is located or a county in which a roadway segment to which this subsection applies is located if in an unincorporated area may request that: (1) the department address the safety problems in a manner consistent with department plans and guidelines, the political subdivision's design manuals, local or regional safety action plans that include the roadway segment, and other local transportation plans that include the roadway segment; or (2) the department transfer ownership, operations, or maintenance responsibility for the roadway segment to the political subdivision. (h) If the department determines that a measure requested under Subsection (g)(1) is warranted through an engineering and traffic investigation, the department may implement the measure following a majority vote of: (1) the governing body of a municipality; or (2) the commissioners court of a county if the roadway segment is in an unincorporated area. (i) The department may, at the request of a political subdivision under Subsection (g)(2), transfer ownership, operations, or maintenance responsibility of a roadway segment to the political subdivision to allow for the political subdivision to address the safety issues on the roadway. (j) The commission shall adopt rules as necessary to administer this section. (k) This section may not be construed to limit existing department practices for making roadways safer. SECTION 3. Subchapter K, Chapter 201, Transportation Code, is amended by adding Section 201.9051 to read as follows: Sec. 201.9051. HIGHWAY SAFETY CORRIDOR. (a) In this section, "political subdivision" means a municipality or county. (b) The department may designate as a highway safety corridor a portion of a roadway if the roadway segment is one of the 100 highest ranking roadway segments in the high injury network project under Section 201.6014, and the governing body of the political subdivision identified under Section 201.6014(f) has approved the designation. (c) The department shall remove a highway safety corridor designation made under Subsection (b) on the 10th anniversary of the designation unless the governing body of the political subdivision that approved the designation notifies the department that the designation should be removed before that date or extended after that date. Each designation extension made under this subsection must be for a period of 10 years unless a shorter period is requested by the governing body and may be removed or extended as provided by this subsection for an initial designation. (d) The department may: (1) designate as a highway safety corridor a portion of a roadway containing a site with a high number of traffic collisions that lead to a serious injury or fatality as identified by the department; and (2) at the department's discretion, remove a designation made under this subsection. (e) The department shall erect a sign at each end of a designated portion of a roadway and at appropriate intermediate sites along the roadway: (1) indicating that the roadway is a highway safety corridor; and (2) stating "Fines double: highway safety corridor." (f) The department by rule may prescribe forms for use by a political subdivision for the designation of a highway safety corridor under Subsection (b) and the removal or extension of a highway safety corridor designation under Subsection (c). (g) The department may distribute literature to the public concerning highway safety corridors designated under this section. SECTION 4. Subchapter D, Chapter 542, Transportation Code, is amended by adding Section 542.405 to read as follows: Sec. 542.405. FINE FOR OFFENSE IN HIGHWAY SAFETY CORRIDOR. (a) In this section, "highway safety corridor" means a portion of a roadway designated under Section 201.9051. (b) If an offense under this subtitle, other than an offense under Chapter 548 or 552 or Section 545.412 or 545.413, is committed in a highway safety corridor: (1) the minimum fine applicable to the offense is twice the minimum fine that would be applicable to the offense if it were committed outside a highway safety corridor; and (2) the maximum fine applicable to the offense is twice the maximum fine that would be applicable to the offense if it were committed outside a highway safety corridor. SECTION 5. Section 545.353, Transportation Code, is amended by adding Subsection (l) to read as follows: (l) A speed limit established under the program established under Subsection (k) may be set at any speed supported by an engineering and traffic investigation if: (1) the roadway segment is one of the 100 highest ranking roadway segments under the high injury network project established under Section 201.6014; and (2) the department has determined a variable speed limit may be an effective way to reduce deaths and serious injuries on the roadway segment. SECTION 6. The change in law made by this Act applies only to an offense committed on or after the effective date of this Act. An offense committed before the effective date of this Act is covered by the law in effect immediately before the effective date of this Act, and the former law is continued in effect for that purpose. For purposes of this section, an offense was committed before the effective date of this Act if any element of the offense was committed before that date. SECTION 7. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this Act takes effect September 1, 2025.