No you have it backwards they drive with them on anytime during the day.
incorrect
A funeral greeter cleans and drive funeral vehicles in a funeral procession. You have to place caskets in parlors or chaples to wake or funeral.
1. If you are directed to by a police officer 2. If you are part of a funeral procession 3. If you are part of a parade
Short answer is... no. But don't cut across the procession.MICHIGAN VEHICLE CODE (EXCERPT)257.654 Vehicles forming part of funeral procession; right-of-way; flags; passing through funeral procession with vehicle as civil infraction.Sec. 654. (1) A motor vehicle forming part of a funeral procession, when going to a place of burial, shall have the right of way over all other vehicles except fire apparatus, ambulances, and police patrol vehicles at a street or highway intersection within this state if the vehicle in the funeral procession displays a flag which shall be fluorescent orange in color, and upon which shall be printed, stamped, or stained a black cross, the star of David, or the crescent and star. The lead vehicle and the last vehicle in the funeral procession may carry an additional flag. The flags shall not contain a name embossed or printed on the flag, except the word "funeral". (2) A person passing through a funeral procession of motor vehicles, designated pursuant to subsection (1), with a vehicle of any kind, is responsible for a civil infraction.
Not if headlights are reqired by law.
Yes. Also, you can't drive through it, as from a cross street. They can also blow any traffic signs and lights, so it's safer just to pull over and try another route. Most jurisdictions have police travel units with a funeral, so it's almost a sure thing you'll be pinched.
You would not drive it at night or when the law says you must display headlights.
Because he likes to drive the hearse.
Your headlights
yes
eBay
That you adjust your speed so you can react and stop within the distance lighted by your headlights.