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AUGUSTA, Maine - Loon license plates do great things for Maine. The loon license plate was introduced in 1994, as a way to help protect Maine's endangered and threatened species, as well as Maine state parks. When registering a car, motorists have an option of purchasing the loon license plate for $20.00, and then renewing at their option each year for $15.00. Whether you are purchasing a plate for the first time or renewing, $8.40 is returned to the Department of Conservation and $5.60 to the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife. IFW dedicates the money to the nongame and endangered wildlife fund. But since peaking with over 110,000 in 1998, the loon plate now seems every bit as threatened as the endangered and threatened species it was designed to help. The first threat came when the general issue chickadee plate was introduced. Immediately, sales of the loon plate plummeted by nearly 20%, from over 110,000 plates to under 90,000 in just two years. Since then, other plates have been introduced as well, such as the University of Maine plate and the lobster plate. These plates have cut loon license sales even further, down to 79,704 in 2002, the lowest number of loon plates since their inaugural year. And this year, the legislature's appropriation committee tried to use loon plate funds destined for endangered species to offset budget deficits. The plan was later scuttled, but only after a public outcry. Loon license plates work. Here are just a sampling of projects they have funded:
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