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Panel approves ham radio license plate amid concerns about precedent and design limits
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Summary
The committee voted to recommend HB 1483 to allow a specialty ham-radio license plate (treated as a vanity plate). DMV staff described character-space limits for call signs and said the plate would not generate fees beyond standard vanity charges; some members warned it could open the door to many special-interest plates.
The Finance Division II committee recommended passage on HB 14 83, a bill to authorize a specialty license plate for licensed amateur ("ham") radio operators.
DMV officials explained the practical limits of adding an emblem to a standard plate. "When you look at our current decal plates, we're limited in the number of characters that can be on there because we have to leave room for that 3 by 3 square," Jennifer O'Leary, administrator of the registration bureau, said. That constraint can limit the number of characters available for a ham operator's FCC call sign.
Committee members debated whether treating the plate as a vanity plate (and applying the existing vanity fee) would set a precedent for many other special-interest plates. Representative Rung asked whether a ham operator could simply buy a regular vanity plate and add a bumper sticker; multiple members replied that the ham community requested a distinct plate to advertise call signs and, in emergencies, help identify operators.
Representative Popovich said the vanity fee does generate net revenue. "For a vanity plate, yes," O'Leary confirmed when asked about revenue implications; later the chair said the typical vanity fee is $60.
The committee adopted an amendment that treats the ham-operator plate consistent with other decal/vanity options and then recorded a roll-call recommendation (7 to 1 in favor). The chair closed the item.
Next steps: The committee's recommendation will be forwarded for further legislative consideration.

