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60 cars a week towed away in DVLA road tax crackdown



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Published Date: 21 August 2008
ALMOST 60 cars a week are being towed away or clamped in Edinburgh as part of a crackdown on untaxed vehicles.
The total number of vehicles targeted has risen by over a quarter in the last year, with the DVLA catching a total of 3061 tax cheats in the last 12 months.

Increased patrols of wardens armed with the technology which instantly identifies vehicle
s without a valid tax disc is being credited for the rise.

Vehicle owners have 24 hours to pay an £80 release fee and any outstanding road tax, before the car is impounded and then sold or crushed after a further seven days.

Nearly 80 per cent of the 1050 vehicles towed away in the Capital last year were crushed. Most of these had either been abandoned or their owners had thought it wasn't worth paying to get the car released.

Next year's haul is likely to be even bigger with a greater emphasis on foreign-registered vehicles, as well as the introduction of new legislative powers in the autumn which allow the DVLA into more areas such as public car parks.

DVLA officials today insisted the crackdown was helping to make the roads a safer place for everyone on them by removing dangerous vehicles but some motoring groups raised concerns about the reliability of the DVLA databases. Bethan Beasley, of the DVLA's wheel clamping unit, said: "The result of this crackdown is great news for road safety in Edinburgh.

"Since car tax can only be purchased with a valid MOT and insurance certificate, it reduces the number of potentially dangerous untaxed, uninsured and unroadworthy vehicles on the road.

"This helps to make the roads a safer place for everyone. Our figures show that eight out of ten cars impounded for being untaxed are also without insurance."

NCP Services, the DVLA's contractor in Edinburgh, has wardens patrolling the city's streets in vans equipped with automatic number-plate recognition technology.

Each van is loaded with four cameras, which can read number plates at up to 20 miles per hour, and check them against the DVLA database.

Bruce Young, Lothian and Borders co-ordinator of the Association of British Drivers, said he had concerns.

Mr Young said: "From a driver's perspective, the number of uninsured drivers or those without licences on the roads is probably of more concern.

"I do have concerns that the DVLA records are notoriously unreliable, there have been a number of cases where cars have been destroyed because of mistakes in the DVLA database or by its on-street enforcers."





The full article contains 436 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 21 August 2008 9:58 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

AlanW,

Edinburgh 21/08/2008 12:23:50
Why would the DVLA expect a foregin registered car to display a UK tax disc?
2

Cappo Del Monte,

21/08/2008 12:25:03
Only 60 a week, they working half days instead of full ones.
I can sense petrolheid will be in here soon
3

"Hoots" Fandango,

21/08/2008 12:30:25
Spanish cars don't show a road tax disc. They show an ITV (MOT) sticker instead. You can't get one unless the car is taxed & insured.
4

Ecto,

London 21/08/2008 12:37:25
Foreign registered cars have to comply with UK legislation after a fixed period of time otherwise you could just go buy a car in France drive it back and never have to worry about insurance, road tax or an MOT! Some Belgian car that sits outside mt house was clamped the other day he has had it here for a while and obviously thinks he does not have to buy road tax.........Wrong
5

"Hoots" Fandango,

21/08/2008 12:42:13
4

Holiday cars don't have to comply. I don't know how long a holiday is meant to be though. Here (Spain) a lot of British registered cars are being impounded for the same reason. I think it's two months grace.

If you're stopped by the guardia, you've to prove you've been here less than 2 months. They'll ask you to report with your previous flight/ferry ticket. If you can't show it - tough. Bye bye car.
6

alex paterson,

edinburgh 21/08/2008 12:55:20
Wonderful,tow them all away and crush them,even the foreign ones.
7

"Hoots" Fandango,

21/08/2008 12:57:17
6 alex petty son

I have been reading your posts for a few months now.
I have wasted my life.
8

AlanW,

Edinburgh 21/08/2008 13:02:59
#5 I think you will find that it is 6 months within a 12 month period.

9

"Hoots" Fandango,

21/08/2008 13:14:12
8

Thanks.
10

Bill MacD,

21/08/2008 13:15:52
The pro-pollution lobby who fill these columns with their disgust at anything that doesn't head towards tarmacking over the entire city for them to race around in for fun will be disgusted by this. How DARE anyone insist that laws are obeyed?!! It's an outrage against human freedom!!
11

Dileas,

21/08/2008 13:26:30
Have they not got the wrong priority? Never mind that you can't get a tax disc without MOT and insurance - a tax disc doesn't mean to say that the vehicle is still covered by both MOT and insurance. This is just a scheme to increase DVLA's income and nothing to do with road safety.

Who cares whether the vehicle is taxed (other than DVLA of course)? And a current insurance policy covering the vehicle doesn't mean to say that the policy covers the driver now driving it.

What matters is how many of the vehicles' drivers have no licence or insurance.

We need more traffic police on the roads to check that they have both - and that their vehicles have a valid MOT.
12

Dileas,

21/08/2008 13:29:35
Oh Bill (10) - don't be daft - this has nothing to do with your dislike of car drivers. It is a money raising exercise. Nothing more.

Of course cars and their drivers should be properly licensed and insured anf their cars covered by a valid MOT but I really can't see what this has to do with tarmac, however much you might like it to.
13

D2,

21/08/2008 13:40:21
Is it really 24 hours - the two cars that have been clamped in our street recently sat there for days. One of my neighbours told me that they had been told it was 14 days between clamping and uplift?
14

me 2,

EDINBURGH 21/08/2008 14:23:18
we had a car sit in our street for over a year with a out of date tax disc and they did nothing about it even with many a call to dvla
15

Angus R,

21/08/2008 15:26:22
mind that story about the silver sierra? (i think) sitting in the new town before getting towed away? oh how i laughed, those were the days.
16

Iona Bicycle,

21/08/2008 16:00:27
4x4's in the city should be towed away and crushed if the owner cannot prove they have been used off-road in the previous month.
17

Liz,

Edinburgh 21/08/2008 16:06:43
#16
What do you mean?! Some of these drivers have to brave the wilds of Morningside to take their little darlings to school - how anyone could contemplate attempting this without the option of putting the vehicle into four wheel drive is beyond me.
18

tomias,

Edinburgh 21/08/2008 16:09:58
Market forces-alas slacking in the city
19

tumshie heid,

21/08/2008 17:25:02
I saw one of these vans clamping a car last week at Considine Gardens. The passenger sat smoking a cigarette in the van whilst the other guy clamped a car.
Hypocrites.
20

NorT,

Edinburgh 21/08/2008 18:17:40
#19 if the passenger was smoking in the vehicle you should have reported him as it is illegal to smoke in a place of work ie the van.
21

The Geniune Mario Antionette,

21/08/2008 20:24:06
crush them

 

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