Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fans flock to Knights license plate

DMV says over 11,000 have been ordered so far

- By Mick Akers Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas resident Bernard Turner eagerly removed the temporary dealer paper plate from his recently purchased vehicle, looking to do what thousands of other motorists have done over the past couple of months.

Turner, a 25-year resident of Las Vegas, immediatel­y screwed the black “Vegas Born” Golden Knightsthe­med specialty license plate on his Cadillac SUV Tuesday morning, just after leaving the Department of Motor Vehicles office on east Sahara Avenue.

Like many others in the Las Vegas Valley, Turner became hooked as a fan during the Knights’ whirlwind inaugural season, making it an easy decision to register for the plate.

“To support them (Golden Knights),” Turner said. “I love the Golden Knights.”

The specialty plate has generated 11,478 orders — 8,738 active registrati­ons and 2,740 personaliz­ed plates that have yet to be placed on a vehicle — in the first two months of its availabili­ty, officials said.

For a plate to become active, it must be produced, shipped to a DMV office and picked up by the customer, said DMV spokesman Kevin Malone.

The active registrati­ons have made the Vegas Born plate the sixth most popular of the 30 active Nevada specialty plates available, which account for 245,190 active registrati­ons in all.

The Las Vegas 150th anniversar­y commemorat­ive plate, which became available in 2013, tops the list with 92,883 active registrati­ons, the DMV said.

As the team did last season, the Knights license plate got off to a hot start, with 4,517 sold in its first week. In comparison, the 150th anniversar­y plate generated 475 registrati­ons in its first week of availabili­ty.

The black plate features the team’s primary logo on the left and “Vegas Born” at the bottom, flanked on both sides by the team’s secondary logo. Fans can order the plate at dmvnv.com or by scheduling an appointmen­t at a DMV office.

A standard “Vegas Born” plate runs $43 for those swapping out their current plates and $72 for those opting for a personaliz­ed plate online. The plate also requires an annual fee of $10 for the standard version or $30 for personaliz­ed ones, in addition to normal registrati­on fees.

A Raiders Nevada specialty license plate is also in the works. The DMV does not have a time frame for its possible release, other than to say it is expected to be available ahead of the team’s first season in Las Vegas in 2020.

Contact Mick Akers at makers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2920. Follow @mickakers on Twitter.

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