COLUMBIA, S.C. -- There's a change in the air at the
Department of Motor Vehicles, and customers are taking note.
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Willie
Jean Clement of Gaston brought her 16-year-old daughter, Shatara, to
a DMV office Thursday so the teen could take her driver's permit
test. The pair waited only about 15 minutes.
"It's not crowded. They're calling numbers faster," Clement said.
"Everybody's friendly - that makes the wait more pleasant."
It's a marked difference from two years ago, when the agency came
under fire after complaints about long lines and poor service.
Gov. Mark Sanford and DMV Director Marcia Adams announced new
initiatives Thursday designed to create even more improvements at
the agency.
In June, Sanford signed into law several reforms, including
making DMV a stand-alone agency instead of being a division of the
Public Safety Department.
One of the pilot projects announced Thursday allows dealerships
and salvage companies to register vehicles electronically through
the DMV's computer system.
Adams said the program has been running for two weeks and already
16 dealers have processed more than 500 title and registration
transactions.
DMV is working on a program that would allow county tax offices
to issue license plates and registrations at the time property taxes
are paid. Anderson, Clarendon, Dorchester and Georgetown counties
have volunteered to pilot the program, Adams said.
If the program goes well, it likely will expand statewide, she
said.
The agency also is expanding the number of branches where people
can get commercial driver's licenses and began a pilot program this
month that allows schools to administer the written test for
beginner permits.
Adams says the agency hopes to implement in March a system to
allow companies to submit insurance policy changes to the department
electronically. DMV officials hope this will help decrease the
number of uninsured drivers who go undetected and cut back on
paperwork for insurance companies and drivers who change policies.
The agency also is developing more online transactions, such as a
program that will allow people to purchase an official copy of their
own driving records. DMV is working on security measures for the
transactions and hopes to have the program implemented by March,
Adams said.
The new initiatives, along with reforms already in place, will
continue to make the agency more efficient, Sanford said. The
governor noted the average wait time at a DMV office was 66 minutes
in September 2002. That average time is now down to 15 minutes, he
said.
Sanford and Adams praised the DMV employees for the role they
have played in improving the agency.
"Our employees have met every challenge and they are making a
difference in the lives of South Carolinians every day," Adams said.