Marysville Appeal-Democrat

49ers to provide free license plates, ensuring specialty plate will be printed

- By Paul Rogers Bay Area News Group

A two-year campaign to create a new California license plate featuring the San Francisco 49ers logo to raise money for state parks and youth programs will apparently cross the goal line after all.

Under California law, motorists must prepurchas­e 7,500 orders for any specialty license plate before the state Department of Motor Vehicles will agree to print it. But through March

31, only 4,135 orders had come in for the proposed 49ers plate, with a May 31 deadline looming.

To finish the drive, the family of Denise Debartolo York, which owns the 49ers, has agreed to pay for the remaining 3,365 plates needed, as long as fans sign up for them, on a firstcome, first-served basis. The cost is $50 up front to buy a 49ers plate and $40 a year to renew on top of normal vehicle registrati­on fees, making the York family contributi­on about $168,250.

If the 7,500 total is reached as expected, the DMV will print the plate, and the 49ers will become the first profession­al sports team in the state with their logo on a California license plate.

“I’m over the moon.

I’m really excited,” said Wade Crowfoot, secretary of California’s Natural Resources Agency, which oversees state parks. “It’s a great win-win. It’s a way for fans to demonstrat­e their support for the team and to do something great for their communitie­s and California.”

Overall, 75% of the proceeds from sales will go to the state’s “Outdoors for All” program, which aims to expand access to parks to underserve­d communitie­s, along with other state parks projects.

The nonprofit 49ers Foundation also will receive 25% of the proceeds for the team’s youth and science education programs.

California motorists can obtain the compliment­ary license plate by going to 49ersplate­s.com and using the code “faithful” during checkout. There are some conditions: Anyone obtaining a free 49ers license plate will have to pay their own renewal fees each year. And the free offer is only for regular plates, not personaliz­ed plates, which cost $103 each.

They may also go fast:

The team announced the free offer to its season ticket holders first, and by noon Monday, about 2,700 free plates were left.

The specialty 49ers plates are eligible for autos, trucks, motorcycle­s or trailers registered in California.

“We had well over

4,000 folks sign up,” said Justin Prettyman, executive director of the San Francisco 49ers Foundation, of the numbers before the free offer was extended. “We made it more than halfway there. There was a lot of energy and excitement around the program, but it’s a long haul to get 7,500 people. It’s not an easy feat. We are really thrilled by the support and grateful to fans who did pledge.”

The 49ers Foundation provides programs to about 25,000 children a year across the Bay

Area and from Salinas to Sacramento. The foundation funds health and wellness programs, has classrooms in Levi’s Stadium to teach science, math and other subjects to participat­ing schools, and helps fund girls flag football programs.

Hall-of-fame receiver Jerry Rice already filmed a short video promoting the specialty license plate that was shown on the scoreboard at Levi’s Stadium during home games. The California Natural Resources Agency set up a booth at 49ers games to help increase sign-ups.

But the best marketing tool may well be once the plates hit the street, sometime next year, Prettyman said.

“People will pull into Levi’s Stadium parking lot, and other people will say how do I get one of those?” he said.

More than $200 million has been raised over the years from California’s 14 specialty plates, among them the Yosemite plate, which funds projects in Yosemite National Park; a Snoopy plate that raises money for California museums; a whale-tail plate that has generated money for beach cleanups and coastal programs; a veterans plate that aids military veterans programs; and other specialty plates.

“These plates are surprising­ly impactful,” Crowfoot said. “They protect open space, build hiking and biking trails, and support programs to get kids into parks. It’s a fun and creative way to support the outdoors. They are a big deal. And in an era of budget uncertaint­y they provide consistent funding.”

Crowfoot said he expects the 49ers plate to raise several million dollars over the next five years. The money will fund a range of programs, from grants to build and renovate parks in low-income neighborho­ods to school field trips to parks and historic sites.

But they don’t always succeed.

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