Current:Home > FinanceBurley Garcia|Kansas unveiled a new blue and gold license plate. People hated it and now it’s back to square 1 -AdvancementTrade
Burley Garcia|Kansas unveiled a new blue and gold license plate. People hated it and now it’s back to square 1
Ethermac View
Date:2025-04-08 05:38:37
TOPEKA,Burley Garcia Kan. (AP) — Kansas has had enough problems with some outsiders seeing it as flyover country, so perhaps it didn’t need a new license plate that many people saw as ugly and drab.
Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly announced Tuesday that in response to criticism of a new navy blue and deep gold plate, she had slammed the brakes on its production — only six days after her office unveiled the design. Facing a threat that the Republican-controlled Legislature would intervene, she promised an eventual public vote on several possible designs.
The now-disfavored design, mostly gold with a navy strip across the top, navy numbers and no art. It was a sharp break with the current plate, which is pale blue with navy letters and numbers and features an embossed representation of the state seal, mostly in white. Those plates have deteriorated over the years, and many are difficult for law enforcement to read, according to the state Department of Revenue, which issues them.
Starting in March, motorists would have been required to buy a new plate for 50 cents when they renewed a vehicle’s annual registration. To avoid using the new plate, they would have had to opt for a specialized one and pay an additional $45.
Kelly initially praised the new design as promoting the state’s optimism. The bottom featured the first half of the state motto, “To the stars,” in navy blue script.
The second half of the motto is, “through difficulties,” perhaps an apt description of the opposition she would immediately face after introducing the plate, despite her administration’s professed good intentions.
Kris Kobach, the state’s Republican attorney general, tweeted that the design closely resembled a New York plate known as “Empire Gold.” A driver quoted by Fox4 television in Kansas City was reminded of the black and gold colors of the University of Missouri, once the arch-nemesis of the University of Kansas in a tame version of the states’ border fighting before and during the Civil War.
With legislators set to reconvene in January, Republicans were prepared to mandate a pause and public comment. Lawmakers earlier this year authorized spending up to $9.8 million on producing new plates, and tapping leftover federal coronavirus pandemic relief dollars to cover much of the cost.
Even a Democratic legislator responded to the new design by tweeting, “Absolutely not.” The Kansas Reflector’s opinion editor deemed it “ugly as sin” in a column under a headline calling it “slapdash and dull.”
And dull isn’t good for a state long associated in the popular mind with the drab-looking, black and white parts of the classic movie, “The Wizard of Oz,” its sometimes spectacular prairie vistas notwithstanding.
“I’ve heard you loud and clear,” Kelly said in a statement issued Tuesday by her office. “Elected officials should be responsive to their constituents.”
veryGood! (3825)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Millie Bobby Brown and Jake Bongiovi's First Pics After Wedding Prove Their Romance Is an 11 Out of 10
- Senate Democrats seek meeting with Chief Justice John Roberts after Alito flag controversy
- Woman pleads guilty but mentally ill in 2022 kidnap-slaying, DA says; cases against others pending
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Rare blue-eyed cicada spotted during 2024 emergence at suburban Chicago arboretum
- George Floyd's brother says he still has nightmares about his 2020 murder
- Will Pacers' Tyrese Haliburton, Celtics' Kristaps Porzingis play in Game 3 of East finals?
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- In one North Carolina county, it’s ‘growth, growth, growth.’ But will Biden reap the benefit?
Ranking
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- NBA commissioner Adam Silver discusses fate of ‘Inside the NBA’ amid TV rights battle
- Lenny Kravitz on a lesson he learned from daughter Zoë Kravitz
- Friday’s pre-holiday travel broke a record for the most airline travelers screened at US airports
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Nearly a decade into Timberwolves career, Karl-Anthony Towns has been waiting for this moment.
- In one North Carolina county, it’s ‘growth, growth, growth.’ But will Biden reap the benefit?
- Top assassin for Sinaloa drug cartel extradited to US to face charges, Justice Department says
Recommendation
Small twin
WNBA heads to Toronto with first international team as league expands
Man United wins the FA Cup after stunning Man City 2-1 in the final
Your Memorial Day beach plans may be less than fin-tastic: Watch for sharks, rip currents
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Globe-trotting archeologist who drew comparisons to Indiana Jones dies at age 94
Will Pacers' Tyrese Haliburton, Celtics' Kristaps Porzingis play in Game 3 of East finals?
UFL schedule for Week 9 games: Times, how to stream and watch on TV