INDIANAPOLIS — After a nearly three-year hiatus, Indiana will again be issuing new personalized license plates this Friday.
The Bureau of Motor Vehicles suspended the program in July 2013, when the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana sued the state for prohibiting a motorist from purchasing a plate that read, “0INK.” The ACLU of Indiana contended the bureau used vague standards in assessing the appropriateness of personalized license plates, and noted it had previously approved the “0INK” plate.
But the state Supreme Court in November ruled in favor of the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, mirroring an earlier U.S. Supreme Court decision on specialty license plates.
The state’s high court said the bureau has direct control over whether a message on a personalized license plate is approved or denied.
“I am pleased that we are able to return this very popular program to the public” Kent Abernathy, the commissioner of the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, said in a prepared statement. “Beginning this Friday, customers who have been waiting for a new PLP (personalized license plates) will be able visit a branch or go online to apply for one.”
The program brought in about $3.5 million a year, said spokesman Josh Gillespie.
Abernathy said said the agency has used the time since the court ruling to put procedures in place to handle the anticipated rush of requests.
"We wanted to make sure we do it in a fair way," Abernathy said in a conference call with reporters.
Though BMV stopped taking orders for new vanity plates it renewed an average of 66,000 a year during the moratorium. The plates cost $45.
Abernathy said the content of the requested plates must be in accordance with state code that allows the department to reject those that carry "a connotation offensive to good taste and decency or would be misleading." Hoosier vehicle owners, for an extra fee, could get a personalized plate that includes up to eight letters and/or numbers. The plates must be renewed each year, and their content also must be approved on an annual basis.
Online applications will be available to customers who are registering a new vehicle or renewing their registration for the year. Drivers who wish to switch out their up-to-date plates for a specialized plate will need to visit a license branch.
Motorists who currently have a personalized plate will be able to continue renewing their existing plates or may choose to apply for a new one.
Follow John Tuohy on Twitter: @john_tuohy
Related: