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Bill Summary · LC 1833

LC 1833 — Generally revise vehicle fee laws

Overview

LC 1833 is a proposed bill titled “Generally revise vehicle fee laws.” The available information indicates the bill’s intent is to broadly reform vehicle-related fee statutes. The bill was introduced on November 22, 2024, and is classified as a bill. The subject areas referenced include Motor Vehicles; Taxation—Transportation and Vehicles; Traffic Regulations; Transportation.

Status and Timeline

  • Introduced: November 22, 2024
  • Drafter Assigned: November 22, 2024
  • Legislative Action: Draft Died in Process on May 27, 2025
  • Current Status: Draft died in process; no further action recorded

Purpose and Intent

  • The bill’s stated purpose appears to be a general revision of vehicle fee laws. The exact objectives, goals, and policy rationales are not provided in the available information. The title suggests a broad review that could touch on how vehicle-related fees are assessed, collected, and administered across relevant agencies.

Key Provisions (Not Available)

  • The full text of LC 1833 is not provided here, so specific provisions, changes, or new requirements cannot be enumerated.
  • As a general framework, such legislation typically would address areas like:
    • Vehicle registration and renewal fees
    • Title and license plate fees
    • Fees tied to vehicle categories, weights, or emissions
    • Fee exemptions or reductions for certain vehicles or populations
    • Administrative processes, reporting, and enforcement
  • Important: The above are common themes in “vehicle fee” revisions, but they are not confirmed provisions of LC 1833.

Who Would Be Affected

  • Vehicle owners and lessees
  • Automotive dealers and title/registration offices
  • State or local agencies responsible for vehicle registration and fee collection
  • Taxpayers and registrants who would experience changes in fee amounts, timing, or procedures

Procedural/Impact Considerations

  • Because the draft died in process, LC 1833 did not advance to enactment steps, and there is no enacted impact to staff, revenues, or administrative procedures at this time.
  • If reintroduced, proponents and opponents would likely discuss revenue implications, administrative costs, transition rules, and any anticipated effects on compliance and public burden.

Notes for Tracking

  • To monitor potential future developments, check the legislative docket for LC 1833 around the introduction date (Nov 22, 2024) and any subsequent actions or reintroduction in future sessions.

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

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