What an excellent idea!
I already have medical insurance, so I'd quite happily opt to not pay the ACC component of the rego, and sort myself out if I'm damaged. Shirley it must be possible for ACC to 'know' who's covered and who isn't?
It's bollocks anyway - if I run over an unemployed pedestrian, they're covered by ACC, despite not having paid any ACC levies. ACC levy payments are not fairly applied.
... and that's what I think.
Or summat.
Or maybe not...
Dunno really....![]()
And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.
- James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.
ACC revenue is just tax.
If the gubermint are so serious about road safety, why can they not redirect income from road safety fines collected and redirect them to ACC, rather than the 'consolidated fund'.
If these costs do in fact go up, the cops will be on the look-out (more so) for bikes without rego, sure a $200 ticket is 3 or 4 times cheaper, but 5 or 6 of them a year is gonna hurt... This is only for peo[ple with one vehicle though, like myslef, I guess having 4 bikes, you can only ride once, the 5 $200 tickets look appealing.
Are you still covered under insurance if you dont have a rego?
Technically correct, but misleading. You need a live rego to get a warrant, but technically the rego is the bike being in the system (ie it has a live plate). You DON'T need the bike to be licenced to get a WoF. When we speak of paying the rego we really should say paying the licence.
If the bike is not licenced for one complete year, the rego is cancelled. But, you can keep it live indefinately by putting it on hold.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Technically even with no rego you are still covered as you pay ACC via PAYE and fuel...?
I see one of these new flasshy small capacity bikes in my future.
for some reason i had this vague impression that riding or driving a vehicle that had its rego on hold (effectively disallowed from public road use) was viewed more seriously than just being snapped with your registration out of date. like bigger fines and possible confiscation
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