Los Angeles Times

Law will require interim license plates

Critics say bill will lead to more fines and economic hardships for poor people.

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SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislatio­n Monday requiring that newly purchased vehicles in California display temporary license plates, despite objections from social justice activists who say the bill will lead to more fines and economic hardships for poor people.

The bill aims to stop tollroad cheats and ensure law enforcemen­t officers can identify vehicles on the road. California requires only a small notice of sale, which can’t be read or photograph­ed from a distance, to be displayed on a vehicle while the owner is waiting for permanent plates.

The bill, AB 516 by Assemblyma­n Kevin Mullin (D-South San Francisco), will require car dealers to put a temporary plate on a vehicle when they sell it, beginning in 2019. Altering the expiration date would be a crime, with an option for prosecutor­s to decide whether to charge as a misdemeano­r or felony.

Mullin estimated that vehicles without license plates that skip tolls on roads and bridges cost the state $15 million a year.

Consumer and civil rights advocates worry the measure will significan­tly increase the number of people who receive fines for paperwork violations because it would be easier for police to spot expired temporary plates. They also worry people will be fined if their permanent license plates don’t arrive on time because of mistakes by dealers or the Department of Motor Vehicles.

Critics warn that registrati­on violations could subject low-income drivers who can’t afford them to a cascading series of court fines and late fees.

“It is blatantly unjust, and a waste of state resources, to penalize consumers by making it illegal for them to drive their own cars when they have not received their permanent license plates within the 90day deadline due to circumstan­ces beyond their control,” Rosemary Shahan, president of the advocacy group Consumers for Auto Reliabilit­y and Safety, wrote in a letter urging Brown to veto the bill.

That can happen, she said, when dealers don’t submit paperwork, go out of business or sell vehicles with unpaid liens or tickets. The legislatio­n protects people from fines if they can prove they’ve submitted registrati­on paperwork to the DMV, but Shahan and other critics say the protection isn’t strong enough.

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