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Bill

LC 4135

Generally revise license plate laws

2025 Regular Session

Broadly overhauls license plate laws, affecting issuance, fees, design, and display; would impact vehicle owners and the DMV, but the measure died in process.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · LC 4135

LC 4135 — Generally revise license plate laws

Summary
LC 4135 is a bill titled “Generally revise license plate laws.” It was introduced on December 15, 2024 and is labeled as an LC (Draft) with the status “Died in Process” as of May 22, 2025. The drafter was assigned on the bill’s introduction date. No text of the bill is provided here, so specific provisions cannot be stated. The designation “Died in Process” indicates the measure did not advance through the legislative process.

Purpose and intent (as suggested by the title)
- The bill appears to aim at broadly updating or restructuring the state’s license plate laws. Without the bill text, the exact objectives (e.g., modernization of issuance, design standards, enforcement, or revenue provisions) cannot be confirmed.

Key provisions (not available in the provided information)
- Because the actual statutory language is not provided, the following are potential areas such bills commonly address. These are not confirmed features of LC 4135, but represent typical topics in license plate reform:
- Issuance and renewal processes, timelines, and deadlines
- Personalization, vanity plates, and eligibility criteria
- Fee schedules, funding for plate programs, and allocation of revenue
- Plate design standards, production, security features, and anti-counterfeiting measures
- Display requirements (front and/or rear plates), visibility standards, and placement
- Replacement, damage, loss, or stolen plate procedures
- Penalties for non-compliance or improper display
- Special plates (e.g., military, disabled veteran, organizational, specialty plates) and related eligibility or pricing changes
- Data privacy, records management, and interagency coordination (e.g., with law enforcement or tolling authorities)
- Transition provisions for current plates if new standards are adopted

Who would be affected
- Vehicle owners and registrants who interact with plate issuance, renewal, and personalization
- The department responsible for motor vehicles or licensing (e.g., DMV/Department of Transportation)
- Law enforcement and toll authorities relying on license plate data
- Plate manufacturers and suppliers
- Agencies administering specialty or personalized plates

Procedural and timeline aspects
- Introduced: December 15, 2024
- Drafter assigned: December 15, 2024
- Last action: May 22, 2025 — “Draft Died in Process”
- Status implication: The bill did not advance toward enactment in its current form. Future reform would require reintroduction and passage through the legislative process.

Notes and next steps
- The exact text and provisions are not provided here. If you can share the bill’s full text or a link to the official bill page, I can produce a precise, provision-by-provision summary, including specific impacts, fiscal notes, and timelines. If you expect this bill or a similar measure to be reintroduced, I can also help track its potential legislative path.

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

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