(ch) Except as provided in sub. (11m), if an all-terrain vehicle or utility terrain vehicle with headlamps is equipped with additional adverse weather lamps, spot lamps, auxiliary lamps, or any other lamp on the front of the all-terrain vehicle or utility terrain vehicle that is capable of projecting a beam of intensity of more than 300 candlepower, the operator of the all-terrain vehicle or utility terrain vehicle may not light more than 4 lamps on the front of the all-terrain vehicle or utility terrain vehicle simultaneously, not including flashing amber or yellow lights, within 500 feet of an oncoming all-terrain vehicle, utility terrain vehicle, or other vehicle upon a roadway, all-terrain vehicle route, all-terrain vehicle trail, or public area.
Wis. Stat. § 23.33
Par. (ni) was created as par. (nc) by 2011 Wis. Act 208 and renumbered to par. (ni) by the legislative reference bureau under s. 13.92(1) (bm) 2.
Par. (nk) was created as par. (nd) by 2011 Wis. Act 208 and renumbered to par. (nk) by the legislative reference bureau under s. 13.92(1) (bm) 2.
Par. (nm) was created as par. (nh) by 2011 Wis. Act 208 and renumbered to par. (nm) by the legislative reference bureau under s. 13.92(1) (bm) 2.
Subd. 1. is amended eff. 3-1-15 by 2011 Wis. Act 208 to read:
1. In addition to the applicable fee under par. (c), (d), or (e), each agent appointed under par. (i) 3. who accepts an application to issue, renew, or transfer registration documentation in person and issues a validated registration receipt under par. (ig) 1. a. shall collect a service fee of $3 each time the agent issues the receipt. The agent shall retain the entire amount of each service fee the agent collects.
A missing word is shown in brackets. Corrective legislation is pending.
.The safety certificate requirement under sub. (5) is a creation of the legislature, and the legislature has specified who is required to comply with the requirement. When a person is not required to obtain a safety certificate, that person cannot be negligent for failing to do so. Hardy v. Hoefferle, 2007 WI App 264, 306 Wis. 2d 513, 743 N.W.2d 843, 06-2861. County forest roads open to vehicular traffic are highways that can be designated as routes under sub. (8) (b). 77 Atty. Gen. 52. Even if the primary purpose of designating short county highway segments as ATV routes is to allow a private organization to enhance its system of trails that benefit club members and their invitees, such designations will not violate the public purpose doctrine if no county resources are expended and no county expenditures occur as a result of those designations. OAG 3-11.