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Old 03-13-2013, 04:02 AM   #4
richfaa
Montana Master
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: North Ridgeville
Posts: 20,229
M.O.C. #2839
We have no experience in these areas but I do not believe that law makers pass laws because they have nothing else beter to do. IMO I think there is legitimate reason for passing these motor vehicle laws.This is Ohio

"We Found:
The Ohio Department of Public Safety and Ohio State Highway Patrol support the two-license plate requirement because of three major considerations:
1) Public Safety
: The front license plate is the only highly reflective item on the front of a motor vehicle. At night, this feature allows drivers to spot oncoming left-of-center vehicles with one headlight out or both headlights not lit (drunk drivers occasionally fail to turn on their headlights). It also allows motorists to spot vehicles at night which have become disabled on the road due to a crash or mechanical failure.
2) Crime Prevention/ Criminal Apprehension
: From school bus drivers who observe the front license plate of oncoming motor vehicles which pass their stopped school bus to neighborhood block watch groups which rely upon both front and rear license plates to report suspicious vehicles, the front license plate is both a crime deterrent and tool to apprehend.
3) Law Enforcement Investigatory Tool
: When investigating hit/skip crashes, law enforcement officers rely upon eyewitness accounts and physical evidence to track down drivers who damage property, injure, and sometimes kill with a complete lack of social responsibility. The front license plate is sometimes the only lead officers possess. There are countless cases of major crimes which were solved because of a front license plate violation (In 2001, Ohio troopers were able to capture a van stolen by two teenagers after their initial traffic stop for no front license plate). The front license plate proves critical as a law enforcement tool in daily auto larceny investigation, DUI enforcement, and even bank robbery and homicide investigations.

Currently, 31 states have both a front and a rear license plate requirement and two states (Connecticut and Massachusetts) have recently returned to using two license plates. Because license plates are cut from large sheets of metal, labor costs are not significantly less for producing one plate instead of two. One cost which may rise however are insurance deductibles which will be paid by innocent motorists who are involved in hit/skip crashes which can no longer be solved without a front license plate.

It is the state law. The BMV does not make this decision. The only exempt vehicles from a front tag are dealer tags, motorcycles, and semi trucks. Most of the time, if you take your “newer” vehicles to the dealer, they will mount the front plates on for you.

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