Just in time for whale watching season, a new Oregon license plate with the image of a gray whale mother and her calf will be available at Department of Motor Vehicles offices beginning Friday, Feb. 1.
DMV has ordered 10,000 of the specialized plates, the state has announced.
The plate will cost $40 to order or renew – $35 of that total will go to Oregon State University’s Marine Mammal Institute in Newport for marine mammal research, graduate education, and public outreach.
The whale plate is the first design to successfully navigate new state guidelines that created a process for approving custom license plates for higher education institutions, nonprofits or other public bodies, The Oregonian reported. Oregon State University sold 3,000 vouchers to help make the whale plate a reality.
People who purchased vouchers for the plates may submit those at DMV offices in lieu of the fee. People transferring new whale plates to an existing Oregon-registered vehicle will have some small additional fees to transfer new month and year stickers to the new plates. More details about the license plate can be found here: http://bit.ly/2B2LeSz.
“This is a wonderful way to support marine mammal conservation on a local and even a global basis,” Bruce Mate, director of the Marine Mammal Institute based at Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport, said in a news release. “The plates should be popular because they are really striking and the proceeds go to a good cause.”
The first 20 numbered plates will go to the people who support the coast, including Oregon’s coastal caucus of state senators, representatives, the governor and OSU President Ed Ray, who each paid for their own vehicles’ plate changes. The whale license plate legislative effort was led by Rep. David Gomberg on the central coast, who championed the idea for several legislative sessions.
“Some of the proceeds from the plate sales will target marine mammal research and education,” Mate said. “The plates are a way that citizens can support marine mammal research at a very modest biannual basis and let other folks know about their interests, support and concerns for the coast as they drive down the road.”
The program will support public outreach efforts, including the notable “Whale Watch Spoken Here,” where OSU researchers annually train more than 100 new volunteers to staff coastal viewpoints on 22 headlands along the Oregon coast every Christmas vacation and spring break. These volunteers provide information on migrating whales and conservation issues to Oregon Coast visitors and residents. Oregon State Parks manages the program that annually reaches up to 45,000 visitors from 50 different countries.
Internationally renowned wildlife illustrator Pieter Folkens drew the whale mother and calf gray whales that appear on the new license plates. Emmy-award winning graphic artist Pete McKeeman added a two-toned background representing emulating the sea and sky and highlighted by a coastal lighthouse in the upper left corner. The bottom inscription reads “Coastal Playground,” reflecting the importance of the coast to marine animals and to coastal tourism.