DMV

Registration available for license plate to honor fallen officers

OGDEN — Sign-up for a new license plate honoring fallen police officers will be available at two different events, one this weekend and one next.

The Department of Motor Vehicles requires 500 applications, with payment, to be collected and turned in together to produce the “Heroes — All Give Some, Some Give All” plates. The plate costs the normal annual registration fee and taxes, plus an extra $35 charity donation.

(MANUEL BALCE CENETA/The Associated Press) Sheila Brockington, project director of Family and Medical Counseling Service, Inc., left, and Deputy Director Angela Wood hold a swab kit outside the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) office in southeast Washington. At one office of the Department of Motor Vehicles in the U.S. capital, motorists can get a driver’s license, temporary road tax stickers and something wholly unrelated to the road: a free HIV test.

At DC DMV: Driver’s license, tag renewal, HIV test

WASHINGTON — At one Department of Motor Vehicles’ office in the nation’s capital, motorists can get a driver’s license, temporary tags and something wholly unrelated to the road: a free HIV test.

David Wisansky, right, an investigator with the California Department of Motor Vehicles talks with Magdalene Osherenko as he confiscates the Disabled Person Parking Placard from her April 12, 2011, after she left her vehicle with the placard hanging from her rear-view mirror along Camden Drive in Beverly Hills, California, where parking is scarce or expensive. The driver received a citation for misuse of the placard. (Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

DMV cracks down on fraudulent use of disabled parking passes

In Beverly Hills, a DMV agent confiscates a disabled parking placard from a woman leaving a fitness center.

In downtown Los Angeles, a motorist launches into a rant about "evil" meter readers after acknowledging that he's using someone else's disabled parking pass.

And in neighborhoods near UCLA, 17 students are stopped and questioned as they scurry to class, their cars parked in restricted zones, disabled parking badges dangling from their rear-view mirrors.

Fraudulent use of disabled parking placards -- those blue or red badges that allow motorists to park for free or in specially reserved spaces -- has exploded in the last decade, according to California motor vehicle officials. With 1 in 10 California drivers now legally registered to carry the passes, transportation experts say abuse has become commonplace. At any given moment, on any given street, more than a third of the vehicles displaying the tags -- and parking without paying -- are doing so illegally, say officials with the California Department of Motor Vehicles.

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