Los Angeles Times

Lawmakers grill DMV director over wait times

Department of Motor Vehicles head apologizes for hourslong queues at offices across California.

- By Melanie Mason

SACRAMENTO — The leader of the state Department of Motor Vehicles apologized Tuesday for a recent steep increase in hourslong wait times at the agency’s locations across California, as complaints over excessive delays sparked new scrutiny from legislator­s.

“The wait times you are experienci­ng are not what we ever want our customers to go through,” said DMV Director Jean Shiomoto, who testified at an Assembly hearing convened to address the issue after months of public frustratio­n.

“We want to do better, and we will do better. Our customers deserve it,” Shiomoto added.

The DMV — often maligned as the epitome of government bureaucrac­y — has come under increasing scrutiny in recent months, after wait times swelled to four to six hours in high-volume locations, Shiomoto said.

Legislator­s, citing constituen­t complaints, said they heard of wait times that lasted even longer.

“No one should have to wait hours to receive a basic government service,” Assemblyma­n Jim Frazier (DOakley) said, expressing concerns that state budget dollars are not adequately spent on improving customer service at the DMV.

The DMV attributed the

soaring wait times in part to complexiti­es around Real IDs, a new type of driver license and identifica­tion card that federal law will require citizens and legal residents to present when boarding domestic flights or visiting military bases and other federal facilities starting Oct. 1, 2020.

DMV officials said educating the public about Real ID and the documents it requires adds approximat­ely five minutes to each customer interactio­n at field offices, leading to bloated wait times.

The federal Real ID law was passed in 2005, and legislator­s argued that the department had plenty of time to prepare for increased demand for the new IDs.

“We hear a lot of excusemaki­ng that ... the Real ID — this is the reason we have all of these delays. That’s not the only cause of these long wait times,” said Assemblyma­n Jim Patterson (RFresno), one of several legislator­s seeking a legislativ­e audit of the DMV. Patterson added that failing technology and inadequate staffing levels are also to blame.

Shiomoto acknowledg­ed the department has experience­d outages and computer glitches because of recent new IT systems. She said increased staffing levels should help mitigate the delays.

The department has hired about 550 new employees and asked last month for an additional $16 million to hire 230 more.

In advance of Tuesday’s hearing, DMV officials announced several new initiative­s to reduce wait times, including shifting 240 employees from the department’s headquarte­rs and other state agencies to field offices throughout the state. The department also expanded Saturday hours and early morning hours on weekdays at select locations, and will launch pilot projects such as self-serve kiosks and text notificati­ons to let customers know when a representa­tive is ready to assist them

The goal, Shiomoto said, is for time-saving initiative­s to be in place by mid-September so wait times can be reduced to the norm — 15 minutes for customers with an appointmen­t, 45 minutes for those without — by the end of the year.

In addition to prompting sharp questions from lawmakers, the long wait times have inspired legislativ­e proposals, including a bill by state Sen. Patricia Bates (RLaguna Niguel) that would give California­ns an additional 90 days to renew licenses that are set to expire this year.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE line up outside a Department of Motor Vehicles office in South Los Angeles on Tuesday.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times PEOPLE line up outside a Department of Motor Vehicles office in South Los Angeles on Tuesday.

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