Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows
Committee hears second reading on HB303 to ease titling for older imported vehicles
Loading...
Summary
House Bill 303 would align Alaska titling rules with a rolling 25-year exemption from federal safety standards for older imported vehicles; DMV director said a regulation package would accomplish the same change and is under Department of Law review.
The House State Affairs Committee held a second hearing April 7 on House Bill 303, a bill sponsored by Representative Saint Clair that would allow imported vehicles older than 25 years to be registered in Alaska by exempting them from Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS) that apply to 1981-and-newer models.
John Charles Rodolino, a resident of Anchorage and a vintage-vehicle owner, testified in support of HB303, describing his effort to import a Mercedes Unimog and saying he was denied a clear title because his vehicle was manufactured in 1986 while Alaska’s benchmark remained 1981. Rodolino told the committee the DMV web guidance was ambiguous and that similar Unimog models made in 1978 and 1980 received road-legal titles while his 1986 model did not.
Kathy Wallace, director of the Division of Motor Vehicles, explained that Alaska does not apply FMVSS certification requirements to vehicles built before 1981 because FMVSS rules govern 1981-and-newer vehicles. She said all imported vehicles still must provide standard documentation proving lawful entry and ownership (customs, EPA, DOT importation documents) on initial entry to the United States. Wallace also said the DMV has a regulation package intended to achieve the same result as HB303; that package was sent to the Department of Law in February and is under review with no firm completion date.
Committee members pressed on technical details, including how a rolling 25-year exemption would function relative to other countries' approaches and whether it would allow titling of vehicles currently restricted in Alaska — such as certain mini trucks and some Skylines — that have safety limitations. Wallace said the roll-forward would exempt older vehicles from FMVSS but would not make a vehicle street-legal if it was never designed for highway use; restricted mini-trucks and other non‑highway designs would remain limited until they met applicable age or design thresholds.
Chair Kerrick set HB303 aside for further consideration and invited additional clarifying information; the committee did not take action on the bill at this hearing and expects to continue consideration later in the week.
