mpaton2004 wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
I think it's daft as a brush and I pity the people who are abroad or in hospital when their insurance expires.
Why do you think it's daft?
Because it's just a weak proxy for the desired behaviour. It'll end up messing up the lives of hundreds of thousands of responsible people who have no intention of driving without insurance.
mpaton2004 wrote:
If your insurance has expired and your car is on the road, it's illegal.
But this daft law will make it a minor offence even if it isn't on the road.
mpaton2004 wrote:
If you know you're going to be out of the country for long enough have to worry about your insurance renewal, isn't it sensible SORN your vehicle anyway.
Maybe it is, but do you really think it should be a crime to forget?
mpaton2004 wrote:
I would suggest that the number of people this would affect in an unfortunate way would be less than 1%, and they could probably appeal it anyway given mitigating circumstances.
What? 1% of the entire driving population every year? That's 340,000 people each year.
mpaton2004 wrote:
It will hopefully provide some deterrent to those who just don't bother renewing, like the guy who reversed into my neighbours car a few months ago. Respectable, 60 year old chap - not insured. Hadn't been for years.
What makes you think that the folk we need to find had insurance in the first place? The vast majority of them didn't. (OK, that's just a smart guess.)
This new law only kicks in when insurance expires.
And it gives everyone one more reason to avoid registration requirements.