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Reporting an untaxe...
 

[Closed] Reporting an untaxed vehicle - would you?

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Definitely report it straight away. By ignoring it you are contributing to the apathetic "don't care" culture that allows so many to get away with not paying taxes, not insuring their vehicles, not obeying the normal rules and conventions that most of us follow in the interest of a harmonious life.

We have a residents' action group that is campaigning to get traffic calming in our street (no hope of that now) and it drives me mad when residents refuse to used the well-practiced system for reporting speeders and short-cutters; they moan and whinge but when you challenge them to do something they just whine "Oh I don't want to get involved." Frickin' muppets. Do you want to grow older and become part of the apathetic spoon-fed mediocrity? No you don't.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 7:33 am
 hora
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I saw a car yesterday with a wheel clamp on and a big yellow sticker on the windscreen saying 'untaxed vehicle', so maybe this is what they do in some areas.

I've always wondered what I'd do if my car was clamped. Considering the things I've done previously etc 😆


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 8:49 am
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residents refuse to used the well-practiced system for reporting speeders and short-cutters

Surely it's not an offense to short cut though?


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 10:02 am
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I've been on the receiving end of something similar - our rather scruffy 12 year old car was left on a back street round here, cos I came home late and it was the only space. I didn't use it for a couple of days (weekend car really). Someone called the police because they wanted to get a wide vehicle down there, and they didn't know who's car it was. Police came round, said to my wife that someone was moaning about our car, and was there any chance we could move it, and actually because she can't drive, they took the keys and parked it up on our road for us. No problems.

If you're up to date on things car related (insurance, mot etc), it really is no hassle having this kind of report against your car. If not, you blooming well should be, and you deserve everything you get - cars are dangerous buggers, and there are good reasons for all the regulation around them.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 10:14 am
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The one outside my place now has a nice big form attached to it (although right in the drivers eye line which isnt very helpful) saying if its still there in 7 days its £150 removal fee, £20 per day storage and then a £75 disposal fee if not collected or its scrapped.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 10:41 am
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If it was outside my house rotting in the street, or parked across my driveway, yes.

Otherwise leave well alone, its not my problem, I've enough of my own to worry about.

Definitely report it straight away. By ignoring it you are contributing to the apathetic "don't care" culture that allows so many to get away with not paying taxes, not insuring their vehicles, not obeying the normal rules and conventions that most of us follow in the interest of a harmonious life.

We have a residents' action group that is campaigning to get traffic calming in our street (no hope of that now) and it drives me mad when residents refuse to used the well-practiced system for reporting speeders and short-cutters; they moan and whinge but when you challenge them to do something they just whine "Oh I don't want to get involved." Frickin' muppets. Do you want to grow older and become part of the apathetic spoon-fed mediocrity? No you don't.

Obviously a busy-body with too much time on your hands. I'd like to see how you feel when someone takes objection to you poking your nose in and starts making your life a misery.

Live and let live maybe.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 10:57 am
 DezB
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I reported one once. It was opposite my drive, making it difficult to turn in. It was a knackered old Porsche 944. It was so easy to report online, I couldn't see why not - quicker than posting this!
Turns out it was a bloke 2 doors down - usually keeps it in his double garage with his Ferrari! Having work done on his kitchen so moved it for a couple of days. I don't think he got fined though, but it was moved the same day 🙂 He keeps his A5 on the drive. Bloody stupid to have so many cars when you live on your own anyway.

[i]I've always wondered what I'd do if my car was clamped. Considering the things I've done previously etc[/i]

Stamp up and down? Cry? What else can you do?


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 11:14 am
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I would, it's also not insured, so when the driver smashes into your lovely shiney vehicle it'll be your insurance that pays hence bumping up your policy.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 1:11 pm
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I can't be bothered reading any of the preceding posts, but re. the OP - Yes, report the vehicle, hopefully it'll be towed away and crushed to the size of a satsuma. Serve them right. Zero tolerance is the way forward with motorists.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 1:20 pm
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Obviously a busy-body with too much time on your hands. I'd like to see how you feel when someone takes objection to you poking your nose in and starts making your life a misery.

Live and let live maybe.

Not when our street is blighted by short-cutters speeding through to beat the traffic lights on the main road, despite the statutory access restrictions at each end. Lancashire CC have set up a Smiley SID, which has recorded drivers doing 70 mph late at night. We have the lowest number of accidents in Lancashire's league table of streets deserving traffic calming because we train our kids to stay off the road so our chances of funding are zero and even lower now that there's no cash. So Lancashire Constabulary encourages residents to use the non-emergency number to report speeders and short-cutters, reports are logged on the PNC and drivers get stopped for a chat and a producer next time they are seen by a car equipped with ANPR. It works and we've dealt with several habitual speeders by using the system.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 1:28 pm
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Yes and I have. A car was left outside my house for a few weeks then I noticed the tax had run out. Reported it using the dvla website and next day it had gone.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 1:31 pm
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I would, it's also not insured,

How do you know that?


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 1:39 pm
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i asked this a few years back, and the overwhelming stw view was yes.

my view is that if its not taxed its possibly/probably not insured and/or mot. if it hits me i'm the one whos going to have hassle and i'm the one paying ridiculous insurance to cover idiots like that.


 
Posted : 11/01/2013 3:12 pm
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