THE STATE CALLED HER LICENSE PLATE INAPPROPRIATE AFTER 15 YEARS, BUT THIS MOM FOUGHT BACK AND WON

For over a decade and a half, Wendy Auger of Rochester, New Hampshire, drove her car with a sense of humor and a practical parenting tip displayed right on her bumper. Her vanity license plate, “PB4WEGO,” was a lighthearted nod to a phrase every parent in history has uttered before a road trip: “Pee before we go.” It was a family trademark, a conversation starter, and a harmless joke that had earned her countless smiles from fellow drivers since the mid-2000s. However, the laughter came to a screeching halt when a formal letter arrived from the New Hampshire Division of…
For over a decade and a half, Wendy Auger of Rochester, New Hampshire, drove her car with a sense of humor and a practical parenting tip displayed right on her bumper. Her vanity license plate, “PB4WEGO,” was a lighthearted nod to a phrase every parent in history has uttered before a road trip: “Pee before we go.” It was a family trademark, a conversation starter, and a harmless joke that had earned her countless smiles from fellow drivers since the mid-2000s.
However, the laughter came to a screeching halt when a formal letter arrived from the New Hampshire Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV). In a move that left the mother of four stunned,



