Iowa Bill Gives Police Paper Trail For Tracking Stolen Catalytic Converters

Statewide Iowa — The Iowa legislature is working on a bill to address the surge in thefts of catalytic converters, the easily accessible vehicle parts that are attached to exhaust systems to reduce pollution.

Representative Cherielynn Westrich of Ottumwa says it costs as much as three-thousand dollars to get a stolen catalytic converter replaced.

According to the insurance industry, there was a 325 percent increase in catalytic converter thefts from the beginning of 2018 to the end of 2020. Westrich says officials in her local transit authority tell her catalytic converters have been stolen from many buses, too. Westrich says they have to figure out a place to house their buses and other vehicles so that people don’t steal their catalytic converters . Someone who steals a catalytic converter can get something in the range of 500 dollars for it, as it contains precious metals that can be extracted once the part is melted down.

The bill requires sellers to show recyclers and scrap metal dealers either a receipt showing they’ve purchased a replacement catalytic converter within the past month or the certificate for a vehicle that’s recently been junked. Recyclers and scrap metal dealers are to keep a confidential log of that paperwork, too.

Representative Charlie McConkey of Council Bluffs was part of a subcommittee that worked on the bill.

The Iowa Senate must agree to a slight change the House made in the bill before it can go to the governor for her approval. Last year, nearly a dozen states passed laws designed to deter catalytic converter thefts.

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