WeVote

Bill

Bill

HB 1688

An Act amending the act of December 5, 1936 (2nd Sp.Sess., 1937 P.L.2897, No.1), known as the Unemployment Compensation Law, in compensation, further providing for rate and amount of compensation.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Marc Anderson and 16 co-sponsors

HB 1688 expands who may use dealer extra plates and their allowed uses, and declares all such uses not a taxable withdrawal from stock nor subject to sales/use tax.

Referred to Labor & Industry
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HB 1688

Summary — HB 1688 (Arkansas) — Dealer's Extra License Plates

Note on sources/metadata: the materials provided include multiple unrelated bills that share the number “HB 1688” (Indiana, Illinois). This summary focuses on the Arkansas bill text and fiscal/legal analyses included in the packet (sponsored by Rep. Cavenaugh; Sen. Stone cosponsor). Legislative activity in the packet indicates passage and enrollment in spring 2025 (Act 710), although other metadata in the packet conflicted.

Purpose / Intent

HB 1688 amends Arkansas law governing dealer's extra license plates to (1) expand who may legally use dealer extra plates, (2) broaden permitted uses for vehicles bearing those plates, and (3) expressly treat use of such vehicles as not constituting a taxable “withdrawal from stock” for state sales and use tax purposes.

Key provisions

  • Authorized users: Adds “owners” and “officers” to the existing list (dealers, managers, salespersons). Defines “manager” to expressly include regional manager, division manager, department manager, and sales manager.
  • Expanded authorized uses: In addition to current allowed uses (commuting, business/personal trips inside/outside the dealer’s county, transporting the vehicle, demonstrating the vehicle), HB 1688 adds:
    • Use in community-related events (e.g., parades, car shows, festivals, fairs, trade shows, school/university events).
    • Use to comply with a manufacturer’s dealership sales and service agreement.
  • Tax treatment: Any and all uses of a vehicle for sale to which a dealer’s extra plate has been attached “shall not constitute a withdrawal from stock” and are exempt from the Arkansas gross receipts (sales) tax and compensating use tax. This language explicitly states the exemption applies to authorized and unauthorized users alike.
  • Penalties and enforcement:
    • Criminal/administrative fines for misuse: up to $250 (first offense), $500 (second), $1,000 (third+).
    • Secretary of DFA may suspend some/all dealer extra plates: 6 months for first misuse or unauthorized use; 1 year for subsequent misuse.
    • Dealers entitled to administrative hearing under the Arkansas Administrative Procedure Act; judicial appeal rights provided (suspension not automatically stayed by appeal).
  • Administrative changes required: updates to OMV manuals, DFA materials, training for Revenue/Driver Services/OMV staff; possible Sales & Use Tax rule updates.

Who is affected

  • Motor vehicle dealerships and their owners, officers, managers, sales managers, and salespersons.
  • Employees who use dealer plates and persons attending community events where dealer-plated vehicles are used.
  • Department of Finance and Administration, Office of Motor Vehicle, Revenue offices — for implementation, enforcement, and guidance.
  • State tax administration and potentially state tax revenue treatment for vehicle use.

Fiscal and legal notes

  • DFA Fiscal Impact: None anticipated in direct dollars; administrative updates and training noted but considered manageable.
  • Legal analysis: DFA cites Dept. of Finance & Administration v. Trotter Ford, Inc. (2024) — a case that treated certain dealer-plated vehicle use as taxable withdrawal from stock. HB 1688 would exempt similar uses when a dealer extra plate is attached. DFA recommended an amendment to avoid language that could be interpreted to create a perpetual tax exemption for vehicles merely because a dealer plate was once attached.

Procedural / timeline highlights

  • Introduced December 2024 (packet dates vary). Packet legislative actions show committee consideration and, later, Senate amendment #1 and enrollment in March–April 2025; packet indicates Act 710 designation (April 16, 2025). Some supplied metadata lists a different status (Died in Committee) — see note above.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.