Politics & Government

Woodbury Family Testifies for Tyler’s Law in Senate

The bill would require education and testing about carbon monoxide poisoning as part of getting a driver's license.

Woodbury residents Kelly and Jeff Lavers took their to the Senate on Tuesday.

The couple has been working with local lawmakers to pass a bill that would require driver’s education courses to address the dangers of carbon monoxide poisoning and require a question about it on permit tests.

Their 19-year-old son Tyler—a sophomore at the University of Minnesota—died from carbon monoxide poisoning in December 2010 while working on his car in a garage. The door was wide open.

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The Lavers family was at the Capitol this week to testify about the bill before the state Senate’s transportation committee. “It was nice, we were first up,” Kelly Lavers said.

There is some question regarding how the law would be presented in its final form—as part of a larger omnibus bill or as a stand-alone bill. Regardless, momentum for the measure seems to be building, said Rep. Andrea Kieffer, the Woodbury Republican who authored the House version of the legislation (HF650).

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“I think it’s going to eventually prevail,” Kieffer said. “It’s got so much support on both sides of the aisle.”

That bipartisanship was on display when the bill was first proposed, Lavers said. It was initially thought that Sen. Ted Lillie, a Republican who represents Woodbury, would champion the bill in the Senate. Yet Lillie said it would be easier to gain broader support by having a DFLer—Sen. Chuck Wiger of Maplewood— (SF1042) in the upper chamber, Lavers recalled.

“I really respect that about him," she said. "(Lillie) was willing to give up that glory, if you will, just so it has bipartisan support when it goes to the governor’s desk."

Wiger, meanwhile, said there are hundreds of people across the U.S. who die each year from accidental carbon monoxide poising, and thousands more go to emergency rooms.

“The bottom line is that this is a prevention measure designed to save lives,” he said.

“It’s a very sad, tragic story that the Lavers shared with us about Tyler,” Wiger added. “By requiring more information in the instruction that goes on, it’s going to ultimately lead to more awareness. We had letters to police officers and others, a lot of people, they aren’t aware that even if your garage door is open, if the weather’s cold the carbon monoxide is going to linger. It’ll go right into the building and that is lethal, and within five minutes it could be lethal."

There is a $44,000 fiscal note is for administrative costs of adding a carbon monoxide question to the driver’s license exam, including translation and test-scoring costs, Wiger told Patch.

Lavers said people who see something that they would like to change should contact their lawmakers.

“Jeff and I and the kids are so appreciative to be able to work with these legislators,” she said. “They’ve been more than helpful. And I encourage others who have issues to talk to them. They bend over backwards.”


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