Jan 06, 2025
Colorado drivers may soon notice a new license plate design brightening up vehicles across the state. With a bright orange, red and yellow background resembling a serape, or traditional Latino woven blanket, the “Chicana/o Power!” plates joined the state’s sea of specialty license plate options on Jan. 1. The license plates were approved through a 2024 bill sponsored by Denver Democrats Rep. Tim Hernández and Sen. Julie Gonzales and designed by Alamosa artist Larysa Medina and Denver artist Anthony Garcia Sr. Related Articles Colorado News | The best Colorado license plate design isn’t the black one Colorado News | Colorado driver’s licenses, ID cards back online after national outage Colorado News | How to drive in snow and ice: A winter guide for newcomers, tourists and those who forgot Colorado News | Colorado DMV driver’s license appointments resume after statewide outage To get a license plate, Coloradans must make a one-time $50 donation to El Movimiento Sigue to obtain a PIN, which is used to order the plates through the Colorado Division of Motor Vehicles. El Movimiento Sigue is a Pueblo-based advocacy group that aims “to preserve and celebrate Chicanx/Indigenous cultures and their history” through conferences, training, events and collaboration, according to the group’s website. Drivers must also pay two one-time, $25 DMV fees for the plates. The license plates are printed on demand and will be mailed to drivers within four to six weeks, according to El Movimiento Sigue. Colorado legislators are discussing the creation of a “Chicana/o Power” license plate design. (Courtesy state Rep. Tim Hernández) Get more Colorado news by signing up for our daily Your Morning Dozen email newsletter.
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