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Jackson County could charge $500 towing licensing fee
Jackson County could charge $500 towing licensing fee

Yahoo

time06-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Jackson County could charge $500 towing licensing fee

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Jackson County could start licensing tow companies. It's a FOX4 follow up to our coverage of predatory tow companies taking advantage of unsuspecting drivers. Three of the four counties that include the city have such an ordinance for this. As of Monday afternoon, the county did not. Franklin County crash kills 8 people, including high school student from Oklahoma Despite that, the county legislature heard from tow companies and attorneys who represent them that said the fees the county was proposing were too much. In the original ordinance, early Monday afternoon, a fee for a tow company to operate in the county would have been $1,000 a year plus $250 per vehicle that they have. 'If you look at your neighbors to the north in Platte County and Clay County, their fees there are anywhere between $75 to $100 dollars per business,' Porto Law Firm founder Nicholas Porto said to a Jackson County Committee Monday afternoon. 'So, Jackson County is, you know, conservatively ten times that amount.' Porto was representing people like Jared Innis, the president of the Missouri Tow Truck Association, who also owns All Star Towing. Tuesday, April 29, FOX4 found out that the city can't require a business license or permit for a tow company. Only a county can. Regardless, Innis did not like the large amount the county was proposing. 'If my business was totally located here in Jackson County, my fee would be right at $10,000 a year for a business license, and we pay a couple hundred to the other two counties,' Innis said. 'I mean, it's got the making of a lot of these other counties, but it just stretches it a little bit too far in our estimation,' Porto continued right after that. 'So it's a good start.' Then, Republican Legislator Sean Smith and Democratic Legislator Megan Marshall said that there was an amended ordinance being proposed that would cut down the licensing to $500 a year per business instead of $1,000. 'But even at $500, I mean, $500 is literally five times what Clay County charges for the same things,' Porto replied. The committee advanced the ordinance with a recommendation of not passing it. Then, at the legislative meeting that same afternoon, FOX4 learned more about the ordinance changes. Companies will have to pay that $500 licensing fee. They'll also have to pay $100 per vehicle they use instead of $250. That ordinance passed by a vote of 9-0. Second person charged with murder in KC sports reporter Adan Manzano's death When it comes to the much larger amounts Jackson County could charge, than say a county like Clay, Democratic Legislative Chair DaRon McGee said you have to look at the population of Jackson County. It is more than 2 1/2 times the size of Clay County. 'So, our residents are much higher in population than the other surrounding communities around us,' he said. 'So, I think that the fee structure is appropriate with our large urban size.' There is no word whether Democratic County Executive Frank White will sign this. He was not at the committee or full legislative meeting. If he does, it will go into effect Jan. 1, 2026. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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