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Dateline: September 2, 2004
State begins 'point of sale'
for stickers
The Texas
Department of Transportation (TxDOT) is now introducing Point of Sale
Sticker Printing (POSSP) and a new design for vehicle registration
stickers. The new registration stickers feature several improvements to
deter sticker theft and streamline the state’s inventory control.
The new process
was piloted in Caldwell and Bastrop Counties and will be implemented in
185 counties across the state beginning August 25. This initial phase
involves counties that do not process transactions through subcontractor
stations (e.g. grocery stores) or automobile dealerships. These latter
types of transactions will be piloted in McLennan, Williamson, Angelina,
and Harris Counties over the next few months, with full statewide
implementation expected to be completed by early 2005.
Registration
stickers will now be printed at the point of sale. Information specific
to the registered vehicle will be printed directly on the sticker, which
will help deter theft. TxDOT switched from license plate stickers to
windshield stickers for most passenger vehicles about a decade ago to
cut down on theft, and the new method will enhance these efforts. (Plate
stickers are still used for motorcycles, trailers, and some other types
of vehicles.) Each sticker will show the last eight digits of the
vehicle identification number, the license plate number, county of
registration, and registration month and year.
Because each
windshield and plate sticker is vehicle-specific, it is important for
customers who own more than one vehicle to be sure they apply the
sticker to the correct one. Also, customers should carefully follow
instructions for peeling and applying the sticker. The new windshield
sticker must be peeled from the back of the form; otherwise, it could be
damaged and a replacement sticker would be necessary. Plate stickers
should be peeled from the front of the form.
When the POSSP
method is completely implemented, the new type of sticker will be issued
for all registration renewals, including in-person, mail-in, and
Internet transactions. POSSP prints the sticker on the customer’s
receipt, so stapling stickers and maintaining manual sticker books will
no longer be necessary. This also eliminates the manufacturing and
storage of 400,000 pre-printed sticker books annually for the current
system.
In the past,
yearly windshield stickers were printed in mass quantities based on
projections of annual vehicle registrations. POSSP will eliminate the
waste of excess stickers resulting from this process each year. As each
sticker is printed “on demand” for a specific vehicle rather than
pre-printed and later assigned to a vehicle, any internal accounting of
the blank forms used for the POSSP is now optional rather than
required. Registration transactions will be tracked through the state’s
automated Registration and Title System in much the same was as the
previous method.
“This new method
is a significant improvement in Texas registration processes,” said
Jerry Dike, director of TxDOT’s Vehicle Titles and Registration
Division. “It also offers greater protection by making the stickers
worthless if they’re stolen.” |