Los Angeles Times

It’s come to this at the DMV

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It will probably not surprise you to learn that the troubled California Department of Motor Vehicles — still infamous for last year’s unconscion­ably long lines, technology failures and dysfunctio­nal management — has a clunky and not particular­ly user-friendly online system for making appointmen­ts. So much so that one enterprisi­ng company has found a niche for itself offering to book you an online appointmen­t so you don’t have to invest the time in (and experience the potential frustratio­n of ) doing it yourself.

For a fee, of course. The YoGov.com service promises an appointmen­t within three to four weeks, which is apparently a lot better than what you may get if you try it yourself. The company offers other government­related services, such as a “concierge” who will wait in the line for you at the DMV for about $100 and expedited passport service, and it operates in about 20 states. But its appointmen­t services in California are what prompted a crackdown by state officials.

The DMV has been investigat­ing the company, which it suspected of hoarding appointmen­ts, for months. But so far it lacks proof that the company is hoarding. Then last month one legislator proposed a law that would criminaliz­e the selling of appointmen­ts, even though the company claims it is only selling a booking service in which its employees do the work for you. The bill’s author, freshman Assemblyma­n Tyler Diep (R-Westminste­r) says appointmen­ts ought to be free to everyone. Well, if time is money, than there’s nothing free about having to wait months for an appointmen­t or spend hours during the work day to wait in line.

The bill offers the wrong solution to the problem. Certainly YoGov is capitalizi­ng on failures at the DMV.

But there’s a better way to make YoGov and companies like it go away: Take away its market. If it were made easy to stop in at the DMV and register a car or get a driver’s license renewed, or to do so online, the need for appointmen­ts — and appointmen­t booking services — would vanish. In-person wait times have improved dramatical­ly since last summer and by December were down to just under 45 minutes for people without appointmen­ts. And DMV officials say they are working to make the online appointmen­t system more efficient as well.

That’s good, but it will take much more than this to remake this government agency into something serving the needs of California­ns in the 21st century.

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