Posted on 01/15/2010 5:45:49 AM PST by Thirteen
BRISTOL, Va. Theresa Titman knows all the jokes about the last name she proudly displays on a personalized license plate, but she isnt laughing over a state agencys recent ruling.
Last month, the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles notified Titman and her husband that they must surrender the tag shes had for seven years T1TMAN because someone might find it socially, racially or ethnically offensive or disparaging and used to describe intimate body parts or genitals.
The tag was issued in error, according to the letter.
Theyre not getting my tag, Titman said. I was utterly I dont think any word could describe how I felt. That is my name. It has been my name for the 22 years Ive been married and for someone to say it is vulgar is offensive to me.
Titman said the state agency declined a request to issue the plate about 16 years ago because it was offensive, but relented several years later when they agreed to replace the i with the number 1.
Displayed for years on a Jeep and now a Chevrolet Impala, the tag has generated some attention.
I have people want to take a picture of it or theyll say its the coolest thing ever, she said. Not once has anybody ever said it was vulgar.
Titman said she understands how someone might be taken aback by the plate if they didnt know her name, but cant understand the agencys response.
This state has closed all but two rest areas between here and Fairfax, theyre contracting out plowing the roads and people [in Richmond] dont have anything else to do but worry about this? I just dont get it, she said.
Agency spokeswoman Melanie Stokes said the agency tries to catch offensive plates before theyre issued.
The personalized license plate program is extremely popular. We have a computer program to catch inappropriate messages and we have eight criteria that we use. It sounds like this one did not pass the test, Stokes said in a phone interview.
When told the tag has been in service for several years, Stokes admitted, We definitely miss a few.
Along with its Dec. 15 letter, the state agency included a new innocuous plate XLU-3506, but Titman has refused to install it on the car she drives daily to work every day as a dental assistant in Bristol, Va.
She also plans to continue displaying the personalized tag, even after it expires next month.
I feel like the state is discriminating against me, Titman said. I pay taxes. I vote. I work every day. My husband works he served 12 years in the Marine Corps and I have a son getting ready to deploy to Afghanistan.
Neither she nor her husband got any relief when they called the Abingdon and Richmond offices of the DMV to complain.
I told the lady, That is my name, and she said they didnt pay attention to that, Titman said.
This week, the couple submitted a letter requesting a hearing to appeal the ruling.
I want a hearing as soon as possible and I also want to hear from the person who lodged a complaint against my family, she wrote in the letter. To discriminate against my family is criminal and, if a lawyer needs to be brought into this, I will do so and I can assure you I will win.
Stokes, the DMV spokeswoman, said the couple has some options.
If someone wants to keep a tag, we have an informal administrative hearing where the customer can explain all relevant information i.e., its their last name, Stokes said.
That information then goes to the DMVs hearings office, which reviews the information and makes a recommendation to the agencys commissioner, who makes the final decision, Stokes said.
That decision can ultimately be appealed to circuit court.
Saw a picture of a Volkswagen Rabbit with the license plate “FXLK12”...
Yeah.... well, I guess that only works if you are in a state that actually puts plates on the front of the car.
Some of things are so obscure it’s not possible to decipher them unless you know the person’s inside story...or are just plain stupid. In either case, you wonder why people waste their money.
She stopped at a redlight and I asked her {young, attractive woman} what it meant and she smiled and said, "Do I look like I give a f---?"
I know it was a little rank, but both my son and I laughed our butts off.
I’m ashamed to admit I got that one immediately.
I saw the same car on the PA turnpike.
ping
Doesn’t work in MI. Only rear plates are required. :)
LOL!!! I needed the clue. I did not get that at all. Very funny!
For sure....check that Adam’s Apple.
Doesn’t mean anything either way, just some jumbled letters and numbers!
“Island creek, I live on Island creek.”
Ahh yes, VA personalized plates (which if I remember correctly from when I lived there from 2000-2004, they run just $10) The two plates I remember the best were BEER PLZ and LQR PLZ, both seen at NAS Norfolk.
“In VA your license plate is required on front and back, think about how this would look in a rear view mirror.”
AINIGRIV ? Phonetically A-”n-word”-IV?
Probably not. It’s just that the program they use to figure out what is OK wouldn’t think to check the letters requested against the background.
If someone took that picture and sent it to the DMV, my guess is that the plate would be recalled.
Yes, people think the license plates should be a free speech issue, but they are issued by the state, so they are not.
If you want the word “TITMAN” on the back of your car, there is nothing to keep you from getting a bumper sticker.
The best vanity plate I’ve seen on a VW Bug was “FEATURE”. Of course you kinda have to be a little geeky to get it.
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