Las Vegas Review-Journal

Specialty plates give charities boost

Organizati­ons draw in millions with program

- By Mick Akers Las Vegas Review-journal

Specialty license plates are a big hit in Nevada, and various charities benefit from many of the plates mounted to vehicles statewide.

There were 282,271 active specialty plates on Nevada vehicles as of June 30, 2018, generating

$5.8 million during fiscal year

2018, Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles data provided to the state Legislatur­e revealed. Revenue for the charitable organizati­ons is generated by $15 to $25 from the standard specialty plates’ initial

$62 cost and between $10 to $20 in annual renewal fees.

Since specialty plates were approved in 1998, the total revenue for the charitable causes they support is just under $68 million, DMV data shows.

The most popular of the specialty plates is the Las Vegas 150th anniversar­y commemorat­ive plate, which had 93,662 active plates generating $2.1 million in fiscal year 2018, which goes toward historic preservati­on projects in Las Vegas.

On the low end, the discontinu­ed Nevada Carpenters Union had 47 active plates, generating $962 in fiscal year 2018.

Although the state discontinu­es producing specialty plates if they fail to maintain a certain amount of active registrati­ons, the plates can be renewed as long as the owner wants to keep that plate.

Legislativ­e auditor Rocky Cooper said continuing to monitor the financial activity of discontinu­ed plates that are still active is a large task the audit division.

The carpenters union’s 47 plates resulted in 100 pages of documents provided to the audit division, for example.

“This creates an inefficien­cy in the audit division, because audit resources are spent monitoring organizati­ons that receive relatively insignific­ant amounts of specialize­d license plates,” Cooper said.

Assembly Bill 467, passed by the Assembly April 17 and heard April 18 for the first time by the Senate, aims to change the requiremen­t for out-of-production plates that generate less than $10,000 in a year.

Under the bill, the charitable organizati­ons behind those discontinu­ed plates would no longer be required to to provide a balance sheet, a bank statement and a descriptio­n of how the money was expended to the Commission on Special License Plates.

“By creating a threshold where we no longer have to monitor these small plates, it would just help the audit division tremendous­ly,” Cooper said. “Then we could focus our efforts on those higher-dollar resources.”

The specialty plates tied to two profession­al sports teams, the soonto-be Las Vegas Raiders and the Golden Knights, weren’t included in the report to the legislatur­e as both became available after June 30, 2018, the end of the 2018 fiscal year. But they have been big hits early on.

Since it debuted in October, the Knights plate has 22,098 active registrati­ons (as of March 31), while the Raiders plate has 3,398 since it debuted in late January, according to DMV spokesman Kevin Malone. The Knights plate is now the second most popular specialty plate, overtaking the Lake Tahoe plate (21,033 active registrati­ons) and sitting behind the Las Vegas commemorat­ive plate.

The Knights have yet to tie their charitable arm, the Vegas Golden Knights Foundation, to their plate sales. The organizati­on told the Review-journal earlier this year it planned to address the matter this year.

The Raiders have their Raiders Foundation tied to their license plate. The proceeds generated by the plate sales go toward a nonprofit organizati­on of the Raiders Foundation’s choice, through a grant process that is committed to increasing community and civic health, supporting the military or youth developmen­t.

Contact Mick Akers at makers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2920. Follow @mickakers on Twitter.

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? Specialty license plates on Nevada vehicles generated $5.8 million during fiscal year 2018, according to the Department of Motor Vehicles.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal file Specialty license plates on Nevada vehicles generated $5.8 million during fiscal year 2018, according to the Department of Motor Vehicles.

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