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SOS: State law may take historic military vehicles off the road
Chris Rickert
crickert@madison.com
Over the last four years, Mike Ponty estimates he's put $15,000 into restoring his World War II jeep, a vehicle he said cost $860 when it rolled off the assembly line in 1942, not including the manufacturer's $40 rebate to the U.S. government.
But Ponty said his investment - not only of money, but of time and no small measure of heart - pays dividends every time he gets to show it off to a group of aging veterans.
"It's all worth it in one smile on their face," he told SOS.
Now Ponty, a 64-year-old retired police officer from Madison, and others who collect historic military vehicles worry that the Division of Motor Vehicles could put their passion in jeopardy.
The first sign of trouble came this summer and involved a Swiss-made military transport truck called the Pinzgauer.
In August, the DMV sent letters to the owners of the state's 29 Pinzgauers, which look a little like souped-up VW buses, to let them know the state had registered the vehicles in error and they could no longer legally drive them on state roads, said Linda Lewis, program chief of vehicle records for the DMV.
State law doesn't allow the DMV to register vehicles, such as the Pinzgauer, manufactured for off-highway use unless they have been modified to meet safety standards set out in federal law.
"We didn't know at the time what the Pinzgauers really were," Lewis said, explaining why the vehicles were registered in the first place.
The action stemmed from an effort last year by the DMV to clarify rules for what vehicles the state should and shouldn't be registering. DMV employees were told that if vehicles didn't have vehicle identification numbers marking them as safe for highway use, then the vehicles' owners needed to have proof that they had been modified to meet federal highway safety standards.
"It really wasn't a change," Lewis said. "It was really just to (do) what ... we should have been doing."
Still, Ponty worries that if the state can pull the registration on the Pinzgauers - arbitrarily, he thinks - his jeep and Vietnam-era military ambulance could be next.
"The way the law is written right now the state could come along now and say, 'We're pulling the title on this vehicle,'" he said.
Lewis said "there's no plans right now" to search state records for other vehicles that might not be properly documented as highway-safe, but DMV employees are taking a careful look at new registrations that come in.
There are likely thousands of historic military vehicles registered in the state, Lewis said, although a more accurate count is not possible because there is no separate category in the DMV's record keeping for the vehicles.
Well-known manufacturers make military vehicles - Ponty's jeep, for instance, is a Ford - and because of this, Lewis said, it's often difficult to tell just from looking at a vehicle's registration records whether it was made for civilian or military use, and, if the latter, whether it is OK for highway driving.
In an effort to seek some middle ground, state lawyers are looking at regulating historic military vehicles for specific uses, such as parades and car shows, Lewis said.
Ponty said he and other owners aren't sure of their response to the DMV's recent actions, but he hopes any resolution will keep the vehicles on the road. It's not like owners are using them to run errands, he said, as most trips are to attend parades, gatherings of other military vehicle owners or similar events.
"In a way, it's almost like looking at a piece of rolling history," he said.
FYI, Paul