New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is dropping a proposal to ban all modified stretch limousines, an idea prompted by last fall’s crash that killed 20 people.
The Times Union of Albany reports that the provision was stricken from Cuomo’s state budget proposal.
Cuomo is still seeking other several changes to enhance regulations of limos, and a spokesman said Cuomo still wants to prohibit any stretch limos that violate federal safety standards. Under that proposal, state motor vehicle officials could revoke the registration of any stretch limo missing its federal safety certification tag.
The Oct. 6 crash in Schoharie County west of Albany involved a limo that prosecutors say shouldn’t have been on the road.
The operator of the limousine has pleaded not guilty to criminally negligent homicide.
Related:
- Lawsuit Filed Against Operators of Limo in Fatal New York Crash
- Limousine Company Operator Arrested Following Deadly New York Crash
- Limo Service Lawyer Says Violations Fixed Before Fatal New York Crash
- New York Governor Says Limo That Crashed Shouldn’t Have Been on the Road
- Feds Upset Over Lack of Access to Limo in Fatal New York Wreck
- Judge Seeks to End Standoff Over 国产一福利 Access to Crashed Limo in New York
- Federal Preliminary Report on New York Limo Crash Offers No Cause Yet
Topics New York
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