KA LEO O NĀ KOA
Volume X
Issue 1
September 26, 2014
A1
MOVE
OVER
By FAITH OWAN staff writer One little known part of the Move Over Law, which was actually put in place in Hawaiʻi in July of 2012, says that drivers must change lanes when a tow truck is at work on the side of the road. Over the course of two weeks in August, the Maui Police Department issued over 60 citations to motorists for violating the Move Over Law during a “Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over” campaign. With all the traffic laws to learn, it’s hard to know everything about them, but the more we know the better to avoid getting pulled over and ticketed for one of those laws. The law states that you must move over for any emergency vehicles, including tow trucks. When an emergency responder is present on a road or shoulder, this law states that one must change into the left lane farthest away from the side of the road where emergency
vehicles are performing a service. These vehicles include police, fire department, ocean safety, emergency medical service, and freeway service patrol vehicles, like tow trucks. Officer Marjie Kahookele-Pea from the community relations’ section of the Maui Police Department said that the law was designed to “create a lane of buffer so that nobody gets hurt.” A version of this law has been enacted in all fifty states, however, Washington, D.C., still does not have one. Hawaiʻi was the last state to implement this law. SEE LAW PAGE A4
Photo by FAITH OWAN
INDEX:
NEWS.........................A1 ‘ĀHA’ILONO.................B1 LIFE............................C1 PUZZLE.......................C4 COMIC........................C5 OPINION....................D1 SPORTS......................E1
Puna.............................A5
Chemistry......................A4
Football.........................E3