New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission

Sample of a current New Jersey license plate
Agency overview
Formed 2003
Preceding agency
  • New Jersey Division of Motor Vehicles
Jurisdiction New Jersey
Headquarters 225 E. State Street, Trenton, New Jersey
Employees 2,400 [1]
Annual budget $409,454,000[1]
Agency executive
Parent agency State of New Jersey
Website http://www.njmvc.gov

The New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission (MVC) is the governmental agency responsible for titling, registering and inspecting automobiles and licensing drivers in the U.S. state of New Jersey. The MVC is composed of eight members, including the Chief Administrator.

Organization

The MVC is composed of eight members, four of whom are appointed by the Governor. Three cabinet members also serve on the MVC on an ex officio basis: the New Jersey Attorney General, the State Treasurer and the Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Transportation.[2] The eighth position is reserved for the Chief Administrator, a non-voting member, who also serves as the Chair of the MVC.

Laurette K. Asante, Scott Kisch, Walter S. Orcutt and Stephen S. Scaturro are the gubernatorial appointments. On February 1, 2010, Raymond P. Martinez was nominated to the position of Acting Chief Administrator of the MVC by Governor Chris Christie. Martinez is the 22nd individual to lead the organization in its more than 100 years of existence.[3]

There are approximately 2,400 MVC employees at 71 locations throughout the state.

History

Following the passage of the Motor Vehicle Security & Customer Service Act of 2003, the former New Jersey Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV) was renamed as the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission. The new agency underwent a number of major overhauls in the areas of security and service, including the implementation of a more secure licensing process and the digital driver license and enhanced customer service training. Like most other DMVs, the former New Jersey DMV had a notorious reputation for customer service.

Some of the major accomplishments in recent years have been a dramatic reduction of customer wait times, expansion of online services, decentralization of various services, modernization of the physical and technological infrastructure, enhancement of security measures and introduction of mandatory customer service training for employees.

Timeline of some notable MVC accomplishments

Administrative License Suspensions

The MVC has the authority under N.J.S.A. Title 39 to suspend or revoke a driver's license and/or registration in various circumstances related to, or unrelated to, judicial proceedings. Possible reasons where a driver could received a Notice of Scheduled Suspension arising as a direct result of administrative action include:

New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission License Suspension Hearings

The MVC will grant afford those with a scheduled suspension to request a suspension hearing by providing the MVC in writing prior to the date of proposed suspension. Upon requesting a hearing, the MVC will review the request, and determine if the driver has presented facts sufficient to warrant granting a hearing. If the MVC determines that no hearing will be granted, the driver's license will be suspended on the date indicated on the Notice of Scheduled Suspension. If the MVC decides to grant the hearing, a hearing date will be assigned by the MVC and sent to the driver by mail, and the scheduled suspension will be stayed until the hearing can be completed.[7]

The driver will need to attend a hearing with an administrative law judge at the 120 S Stockton St, Trenton, NJ 08611, regional location. The hearing affords the driver to present facts and mitigating circumstances to reduce of terminate the proposed suspension term. At the conclusion of the hearing, the administrative law judge will render a decision as to the new term of suspension, and this suspension will go into effect within the next 14 days.[8]

Decisions by the MVC regarding the granting of a hearing, as well as the revised terms of suspension following a hearing, are appealable to the State of New Jersey Appellate Division.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 2008 MVC Annual Report, accessed March 29, 2009
  2. Commission profile , New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission. Accessed August 1, 2007.
  3. "Chief Administrator". New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission. Retrieved 2010-04-04.
  4. Robert Sciarrino/The Star-Ledger/Court Pool. "N.J. will drop requirements for mechanical inspections of cars to save $11M yearly". NJ.com. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  5. "State of New Jersey - Motor Vehicle Commission". State.nj.us. 2013-12-17. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  6. Administrative License Suspension, accessed July 15, 2013.
  7. Request a Suspension Hearing to Reduce Your MVC License Suspension, accessed July 15, 2013.
  8. "What Happens at a MVC Suspension Hearing?", accessed July 15, 2013.
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