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Maine transportation committee advances bill allowing two‑year inspection stickers for large rental fleets

February 26, 2026 | 2026 Legislature ME, Maine


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Maine transportation committee advances bill allowing two‑year inspection stickers for large rental fleets
Representative Lydia Crafts introduced LD 2191, a committee bill that would permit businesses that rent noncommercial motor vehicles to receive a two‑year certificate of inspection for qualifying fleets if the business files an affidavit that its vehicles will meet the inspection standards administered by the chief of the Maine State Police.

Lieutenant Bruce Scott, commanding officer of the State Police Traffic Safety Unit, testified for the Department of Public Safety and the Maine State Police in support. He described prior work directing a multi‑year registration and inspection recommendation and said a two‑year sticker for fleets registering hundreds of vehicles in Maine would reduce the operational burden that causes some companies to register vehicles out of state. Scott estimated a modest ongoing fiscal impact (he cited about $15,000 per year) that could be offset by charging fleets an elevated fee for the two‑year sticker.

A rental‑industry witness identified as Sean, group risk manager for Enterprise Mobility in New England, told the committee the company maintains thousands of vehicles in Maine and supports LD 2191 for operational efficiency and to help keep fleets registered in the state. Sean said the firm tracks inspections and maintenance electronically and is willing to pay an increased inspection fee in exchange for the administrative relief.

Committee members probed details about the qualifying threshold, the method of implementing an increased sticker charge, fiscal impacts, and an effective date. Several members recommended amending the committee language to (a) lower the fleet threshold that qualifies for the two‑year sticker from 1,000 to 700 vehicles, (b) set the two‑year sticker price at the equivalent of two single‑year stickers (i.e., a doubled fee), and (c) make the provision effective Jan. 1, 2027, to align with the sticker purchase cycle.

The committee moved LD 2191 into work session for amendment drafting and further consideration.

What happens next: LD 2191 will be revised in work session to reflect the committee’s amendments and returned for public record; fiscal staff will reconcile the estimated sticker revenue and the $15,000 estimated workload change cited by supporters.

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