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Retailers Install DMV Kiosks for Convenience

LAS VEGAS — A Buy Low Market here is the latest area food store where shoppers can renew their driver’s licenses and vehicle registrations.

Carol Angrisani

July 29, 2013

2 Min Read
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LAS VEGAS — A Buy Low Market here is the latest area food store where shoppers can renew their driver’s licenses and vehicle registrations.

That’s because the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles installed a “DMV in a Box” kiosk at the store last month.

Along with driver’s licenses and vehicle registration renewals, the kiosks offer insurance suspension reinstatements, driver history printouts, and the ability to order a duplicate license or ID. Services are provided in both English and Spanish.

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“Buy Low is thrilled to be able to add a new convenience for our customers,” Gus Carrillo, Buy Low store director, said in a statement. “We have a Hispanic customer base. Offering them services in Spanish and alternatives to DMV office visits is important to us.”

The kiosks are also in place in 13 area Albertsons and five Scolari’s stores. They operate during store hours.

“Customers enjoy a shorter wait time and the convenience for vehicle renewals/sticker issuance, and driver’s license renewals,” Christine Wilcox, vice president of communications and public affairs at Albertsons Stores, told SN.

The kiosk program was launched in 2003 in several locations — including AAA offices, the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and University of Nevada, Reno — to cater to DMV customers who otherwise would have to make a trip to the DMV and wait in line to be served by a technician.

“We’re trying to take our services outside our offices so that people don’t have to come in to the DMV and wait on line,” noted David Fierro, public information officer at the Nevada DMV.

The program was expanded to supermarkets in 2011 because of the one-stop-shopping appeal of food stores, said Fierro.

“We want to be where people are and where there is a high traffic flow,” he said.

The kiosks are widely used, and generated 540,000 transactions during the year ending June 30, 2013, up from 501,000 in 2012 and 450,000 in 2011.

In addition to the cost of the transaction chosen, kiosk users must pay a $3 kiosk service fee.

The kiosks currently accept checks and debit and credit cards, but a cash module is being explored.

 

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