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lot has changed about our program since 1997!!
An Online Shortcut to Traffic School - March 1997
By Bob Pool
Times Staff Writer
Speeders beware: Racing on the Information Superhighway won't
be allowed at computer traffic school.
That seemed to be the verdict in a downtown courtroom Thursday
as judicial officials and computer technicians switched on
what they say is the country's first traffic school on the
Internet.
Motorists
in some parts of the Los Angeles area who want to erase traffic
tickets from their driving record can now take a course and
a test over the World Wide Web instead of going to class in
person.
But being interactive won't exactly be instantaneous, acknowledged
officials of the Sherman Oaks-based computer company that
is offering the new service.
Letter carriers will deliver certificates of completion to
the court for those who pass. They will also deliver a copy
of the certificate to the motorist's home.
Only motorists cited within the cities of Los Angeles and
San Fernando and on Santa Catalina Island will be eligible
to use the Internet traffic school, said Fritz Ohlrich, administrator
for the Los Angeles Judicial District.
But if the program proves popular, Los Angeles County's 23
other judicial districts are likely to climb online, too,
he said.
"It
will provide easy access for our customers - it will be very
convenient for the working professional, the handicapped,"
said Mel Red Recana, presiding judge of the Los Angeles Municipal
Court.
Officials say two other home-study traffic schools - one with
videotapes and the other with printed materials - have been
in use in Los Angeles for the last three years. There are
about 500 lecture-type schools as well.
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For $34 some offenders can study and take a test on the
Internet. Officials say the program is the first of its
kind. |
While
most traditional traffic schools don't administer tests, they
are required for home classes. "The overall goal of traffic
school is to educate people," said Municipal Court Judge Stephen
Marcus, chairman of the court's Alternative Sentencing Committee.
Court officials said searches of the World Wide Web have found
no other Internet traffic schools. They said one program being
tried in Ventura County requires motorists to use a rented
terminal connected by telephone to Texas to answer questions
while they watch instructional videotapes.
The head of The Online Traffic School , said motorists can
find the enrollment form at her company's Web site at www.onlinetraffic.com.
The owner, 30, of Sherman Oaks, said the idea for the computer
program came after she had problems with a home-study course
after her last traffic ticket.
"I
never got the study manual and I couldn't remember the name
of the company to call," she explained. "I had to go through
the court to find it. I got very close to my court due date
before I finished."
Company spokesman Marc Lawrence said traffic offenders have
45 days to take the course and must correctly answer 60 of
the test questions in order to pass. Those who fail can repeat
the program at no charge.
He said company employees will be available to answer email
inquiries from motorists enrolled in the program.
Lawrence said that sound effects included in the Internet
traffic school curriculum will make the program entertaining
for computer buffs. "Listen to this," he said, clicking the
computer mouse on the image of a truck horn on the screen.
A tiny beep-beep echoed through the courtroom.
"A book can't have little horns blowing for you."
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