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Summary

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This bill amends the law regarding motor vehicle registration for disabled veterans. Currently, eligible disabled veterans receive free vehicle registration and special "Disabled Veteran" license plates, which can transfer to a surviving spouse after the veteran's death. This bill allows the special plates to be transferred to the veteran's spouse during the veteran's lifetime if the veteran is certified as no longer able to operate a motor vehicle.
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Analysis

Pros for Progressives

  • Expands government assistance and social safety net benefits for disabled individuals and their families by ensuring they retain transportation benefits even when the veteran can no longer drive.
  • Provides direct support to the caregivers and spouses of disabled veterans by transferring the registration benefit to them, easing financial and logistical burdens for the household.
  • Promotes equity by addressing a loophole where households with living but non-driving disabled veterans previously lost out on the practical use of their earned vehicle benefits.

Cons for Progressives

  • Deprives the state of potential vehicle registration revenue that could otherwise be used to fund broader public services and infrastructure benefiting the entire community.
  • Prioritizes a specific group (military veterans) for government subsidies over other severely disabled citizens who may also be unable to drive and have spouses acting as caregivers.
  • Fails to address broader systemic issues regarding accessible public transportation for disabled individuals who can no longer drive, focusing instead on subsidizing private vehicle ownership.

Pros for Conservatives

  • Honors and supports military veterans by expanding the flexibility of the benefits they earned through their service and sacrifice to the country.
  • Strengthens the traditional family unit by providing tangible support and financial relief to spouses who act as caregivers for their disabled veteran partners.
  • Reduces restrictive bureaucratic rules by allowing families to decide how best to utilize the veteran's earned license plate benefit when the veteran can no longer drive.

Cons for Conservatives

  • Expands a government assistance and waiver program, which effectively shifts the financial burden of vehicle registration fees onto other taxpayers.
  • Creates new administrative burdens for the division of motor vehicles, which must now process and verify medical certifications that a living veteran can no longer drive.
  • Extends a special tax benefit to an individual (the spouse) who did not personally earn the military-based qualification, conflicting with principles of strict individual merit.

Constitutional Concerns

None Likely

Impact Overview

Groups Affected

  • Disabled veterans
  • Spouses of disabled veterans
  • Division of Motor Vehicles

Towns Affected

All

Cost to Taxpayers

Amount unknown

Revenue Generated

None

BillBuddy Impact Ratings

Importance

5

Measures population affected and overall level of impact.

Freedom Impact

0

Level of individual freedom impacted by the bill.

Public Services

0

How much the bill is likely to impact one or more public services.

Regulatory

5

Estimated regulatory burden imposed on the subject(s) of the bill.

Clarity of Bill Language

95

How clear the language of the bill is. Higher ambiguity equals a lower score.

Enforcement Provisions

80

Measures enforcement provisions and penalties for non-compliance (if applicable).

Environmental Impact

0

Impact the bill will have on the environment, positive or negative.

Privacy Impact

0

Impact the bill is likely to have on the privacy of individuals.

Bill Status

Current Status

Held
Comm Passed
Floor Passed
Law

History

• 06/04/2026 Introduced, referred to House Veterans Affairs
• 06/07/2026 Scheduled for consideration (06/09/2026)
• 06/09/2026 Committee recommends passage
• 06/09/2026 Placed on House Calendar (06/10/2026)
• 06/10/2026 House read and passed
• 06/10/2026 Placed on the Senate Consent Calendar (06/11/2026)
• 06/11/2026 Senate passed in concurrence
• 06/16/2026 Transmitted to Governor
• 06/19/2026 Signed by Governor

Bill Text

SECTION 1. Section 31-6-8 of the General Laws in Chapter 31-6 entitled "Registration Fees" is hereby amended to read as follows:
31-6-8. Disabled veterans.
(a) Any veteran who has been honorably discharged from the service of the armed forces or the Merchant Marine of the United States in any of the wars or campaigns in which the United States has been engaged and who, while engaged in these wars or campaigns or as a result of engagement in these wars or campaigns, by reason of amputation, has lost one or both of the veteran’s arms, hands, feet, or legs, or who, by reason of other permanent injury, has lost the use of one or both of the veteran’s arms, hands, feet, or legs, or to whom has been granted a motor vehicle under chapter 870-2D, United States Public Laws 663, enacted 1946, 79th Congress, or has suitable documentation from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to establish that the veteran:
(1) Has a combined service connected disability rating of one hundred percent (100%); or
(2) Is considered “individually unemployable” due to the veteran’s service-connected disability, shall be exempt from the payment of any fee for the annual registration of and a license to operate that motor vehicle.
(b) The administrator for the division of motor vehicles shall issue to an eligible veteran for use on an automobile, or on a commercial vehicle having a gross weight of twelve thousand pounds (12,000 lbs.) or less, registration plates designated “Disabled Veteran.” Provided that:
(1) Upon certification that the veteran is no longer able to operate a vehicle, the "Disabled Veteran" plates may be transferred, during their lifetime, to the veteran's spouse; and
(2) Upon the death of the holder initial registrant of the “Disabled Veteran” plates, the plates may be transferred to the veteran’s surviving spouse for the spouse’s lifetime or until the spouse remarries. Only one set of
(3) “Disabled Veteran” plates shall be issued to an eligible veteran and or their spouse as provided for in subsection (b)(1) of this section only after certification of eligibility from the Veterans’ Administration or other satisfactory documentation of eligibility is presented.

SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.

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