KRMG In Depth: Mason Treat Act changes Oklahoma’s vehicle tag laws, goes into effect September 1st

Last January, a young driver was pulled over by a Canadian County deputy because he didn’t have a tag on his car.

Roughly 14 minutes into that traffic stop, just as the deputy was telling the driver he was free to go – because he had not broken the law – a driver who had fallen asleep plowed into the young man’s vehicle at an estimated 70 miles per hour (see the video below).

[ Hear the KRMG In Depth Report with Sen. Greg Treat and his son Mason HERE ]

That young driver was Mason Treat, the son of Oklahoma Senate Pro Tem Greg Treat, and the Senator vowed he would see to it lawmakers passed changes to state law which would prevent innocent drivers from getting pulled over, prevent law enforcement from wasting time pulling over innocent people, and help make the roads safer at the same time.

The result is the Mason Treat Act , which changes how the state handles tags following the sale of used vehicles.

“Starting September 1, paper tags at a dealership will be good for ten days, and ten days only,” Sen. Treat told KRMG Thursday. “And, a private sale can either print a little tag at their home computer, but more importantly, they can go down to – what used to, what we call as tag agents historically, they’re called Service Oklahoma centers now – you can go there and get a metal tag immediately upon the sale, so you won’t be going out there without a tag on the back of your car.”

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