Waiting for the title to your new car to arrive? Or, do you need the title to your car in order to sell it?
You'll likely be wearing woolens before that happens. Since the beginning of the year, the wait for vehicle titles in Minnesota has stretched to about three months, instead of the usual 40 days.
The delays are being caused by a high volume of applications and staff vacancies, according to the Department of Public Safety's Driver and Vehicle Services Division, (DVS). It says it is offering voluntary overtime to employees and hiring temporary help.
Exasperated car dealers are imploring their customers to be patient. "I tell them to check with the state, but it reflects on me, like I'm not doing my job," said Dave Stoufer, owner of Stoufers Auto Sales in Madison Lake.
A title is a document that proves legal ownership of a vehicle. DVS typically processes about 1.42 million titles a year. But as of Friday, the state's website said it's working on title applications filed on June 21. The backlog means car buyers will go months without clear titles to their vehicles.
But the state says it records title applications in real time, so its database reflects updated ownership information — even if the title isn't issued until much later.
Car sales have recovered nicely since the Great Recession — last year some 17 million new cars and trucks were sold across the country.
And 2015 set the record for used-vehicle sales, too, with some 38 million vehicles being sold, according to Edmunds.com.