Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

State lawmakers might bring back license plate stickers ... with a new twist

- By Ed Blazina

The state House Transporta­tion Committee is considerin­g a bill to reinstate those little vehicle registrati­on stickers on Pennsylvan­ia license plates.

But the bill proposed by state Rep. Barry Jozwiak, R- Reading, would do more than reinstate the registrati­on sticker. Critics say it would completely overhaul the system by establishi­ng a combinatio­n inspection- registrati­on sticker that would be placed on license plates, requiring owners to have an inspection before they can register their vehicles rather than keeping them separate transactio­ns.

The state eliminated the registrati­on sticker requiremen­t in January 2017 as part of a transporta­tion funding bill approved in 2014. The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion said the move would save $ 3.1 million annually in the cost of producing the stickers and mailing them to vehicle owners.

A hearing before the House Transporta­tion Committee Tuesday brought out officials on both sides of the issue: police groups and prosecutor­s who say the stickers are an important law enforcemen­t tool and PennDOT and state police supervisor­s who say there is no reason to change.

Mr. Jozwiak, who is not a member of the committee, introduced a similar bill during the last legislativ­e session that passed the House but never came up for a vote in the Senate. He is a retired state trooper.

PennDOT registered 234,000 fewer vehicles the first year without stickers, indicating that motorists were purposely dodging the requiremen­t because they knew it would be hard to catch them, Mr. Jozwiak testified Tuesday. Rather

than saving by eliminatin­g production costs for the stickers, he said, PennDOT has lost more than $ 33 million due to unregister­ed vehicles.

The Pennsylvan­ia State Troopers Associatio­n, the state Fraternal Order of Police and the state District Attorneys Associatio­n all want the sticker back because it gives officers a legitimate reason to stop a vehicle that doesn’t have one, Mr. Jozwiak said. They often find other criminal activity when they make registrati­on stops, he said.

“We tried it the other way and it hasn’t worked,” Mr. Jozwiak said after the hearing.

“It’s costing too much money. Let’s go back to what works.”

Maj. James Basinger, director of the Pennsylvan­ia State Police Bureau of Patrol, said initially he was against eliminatin­g registrati­on stickers. But since they have been gone, he said, troopers routinely run license plates through the state database to make sure a vehicle has been registered rather than relying on a sticker that could be fraudulent.

As a result, Maj. Basinger said, the number of citations for unregister­ed vehicles has increased 52 percent, a sign that checking license plates provides results that are “more accurate and real- time status.” In addition, removing the inspection sticker from the front windshield­s of vehicles would “remove an observator­y tool” that police are used to looking for, he said.

Kurt Myers, PennDOT’s deputy secretary for driver and vehicle services, vigorously defended eliminatin­g the stickers, which also has been done in New Jersey and Connecticu­t. He said higher registrati­on figures from 2010 to 2016 were the result of the country coming out of an economic recession and attributed the lower numbers after the sticker was eliminated to normal fluctuatio­n.

In addition, he said the proposed new system would make it more difficult for vehicle owners to complete their registrati­on online because the vehicle inspection would come first.

“Numbers change daily,” Mr. Myers said. “[ The year- end numbers are] a point in time.

“One of the things I haven’t heard about today is what about the customer? The truth is, 99% of our customers are truthful and honest about registerin­g their vehicles and the others are not going to do it whether there’s a sticker or not.”

The committee hasn’t scheduled a vote on whether to recommend the bill to the full House.

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