Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

War Eagle! Roll Tide! Go Dawgs!

DeSantis signs out-of-state college license plate bill

- By Jim Turner News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — Floridians will get a chance to buy new specialty license plates, including three for out-of-state universiti­es, while efforts to prevent shark “finning” got a boost Friday, as Gov. Ron DeSantis signed 14 bills into law.

DeSantis also vetoed a measure (HB 789) that would have imposed a $1 fee for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es who chose to have the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles put the letter “D” on identifica­tion cards. He signed a related bill (HB 787) that authorized putting the letter “D” on the cards.

“I believe making this option available to our fellow Floridians with developmen­tal disabiliti­es is good public policy,” DeSantis

wrote in explaining the veto. “However, imposing an additional fee could unnecessar­ily discourage a number of eligible Floridians from choosing this service designed to increase awareness and promote greater inclusion and participat­ion in the community.”

Valerie Breen, executive director of the Florida Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es Council, said her group had mixed feelings about the legislatio­n. While supportive of allowing people to identify themselves as having disabiliti­es, Breen said a concern was that it could put a stigma on the population of people with disabiliti­es.

The shark finning measure (SB 680) expands on a 2017 law that increased penalties for people who remove fins from sharks and discard the rest of the sharks into the ocean. The new bill bans the import, export and sale of shark fins, which are considered a delicacy in parts of Asia.

The measures acted on Friday were the last of 206 bills, including a new state budget (HB 5001), that reached DeSantis from the 2020 legislativ­e session, which ended March 19.

Among the new laws signed Friday was a longsought change to the specialty license-plate program (HB 1135). The proposal was sold as adding new rules for the program, while expanding the potential number of tags from the current 123 to 150.

The law allows new plates to get on the road if supporters can meet higher sales thresholds, while some low sellers will be bumped. It allows plates for Auburn University, the University of Alabama and the University of Georgia, giving fans a chance to showcase their support for the out-of-state schools.

Kevin Cate, a Tallahasse­e-based public-relations and political consultant, and James Grant, a former state representa­tive from Tampa who in August became the state’s chief informatio­n officer, started pushing for the out-of-state plates in 2016. Both went to Auburn.

After the bill was signed, Cate tweeted a video of the Auburn University Marching Band reacting to Chris Davis’ game-winning touchdown for Auburn against Alabama on the last play of the 2013 Iron Bowl.

“This video will also capture the moment we found out the bill was signed,” Cate tweeted.

The measure also creates a “super tag” template for nine black fraterniti­es and sororities dubbed the “Divine 9” —- Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Kappa Alpha Psi, Omega Psi Phi, Delta Sigma Theta, Phi Beta Sigma, Zeta Phi Beta, Sigma Gamma Rho and Iota Phi Theta.

A separate bill (HB 387) signed by DeSantis sets a standard $25 fee for most specialty license plates, with a $50 fee for the Auburn, Alabama and Georgia tags.

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