OFF THE WIRE
 Brenna Donnelly
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) -- Indiana State Police troopers say almost 
everyone they've pulled over in violation of the Indiana Left Lane Law 
told them they didn't know it was illegal to drive slower than traffic 
in the left hand lane.
The measure went into effect in 2015 and 
states that drivers traveling in the left lane of a road with more than 
one lane must move to the right if there's a car behind them moving 
faster, even if the car in the left lane is going at or above the speed 
limit. Some have called it the "Slowpoke Law," referring to the slow 
drivers plugging up the passing lane.
"It's really annoying 
because it slows everybody down," said Tracey Everett, a driver in 
Indianapolis. "Especially when you're trying to get to work, get home 
from work. Super frustrating."  
"I feel like it causes the 
drivers in the other lanes to speed up and it gets more dangerous as a 
result," added Courtney Burks, also an Indianapolis driver.
Indiana
 State Police troopers aren't enforcing polite driving when they pull 
over a slow left-lane driver; they say they're making roads safer.
"If
 they can't get by in the left lane, they're going to weave in and out, 
over to the center lane, to the right lane, back to left lane and that 
by itself creates substantial hazards for everyone else on the road," 
said Sergeant John Perrine with ISP.
A ticket for violating the 
Left Lane Law will cost between $150-200, according to Perrine. He said 
on average, ISP hands out 100 Left Lane Law tickets per year, and 1,500 
warnings.
"More importantly, we want to educate people about the 
importance of staying out of that left lane. So the vast majority of the
 stops we've made over the last few years have resulted in warnings," 
said Perrine.
Captain Erv Faulk with ISP says in his experience, 
the law has helped him flag distracted or impaired drivers. He described
 an instance on I-70 when he pulled over a slow left lane driver who was
 backing up traffic.
"I stop him, find out he's impaired, he's 
been drinking, he's trying to focus on the road. He doesn't want to get 
in those right two lanes," said Captain Faulk. " You end up having the 
traffic backed up, people getting mad."
"People just need to learn," said Dan Bookout, a driver in Indianapolis. "Stay out of the left lane unless you're passing."
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