OH I NO I NO.
We could have a set of governing rules that said if you do something, you pay the consequences, crash with no insurance - your kidneys are sold to recover costs etc
Then we could have people go out and enforce these rules, placing a juristiction over said areas where a body exists to checks for innocence.
We could call them laws, the enforcers could be called police, and the body could be called the courts.
Reactor Online. Sensors Online. Weapons Online. All Systems Nominal.
in the uk when you rego your car you have to have wof certificate and insurance at least third party no insurance no rego and if you get caught driving with no rego and insurance you have three choices 1/ the car is towed to a compound at your cost until the right paperwork is shown to the police, 2/ the car can be towed to a private registerd garage/workshop that is approved at your expense. 3/ the car is crushed and recycled if none of the above can be done and if the right documents are not shown in 28 days the car is crushed.
now bring that in with third party insurance and imagine some of these blings cars going through the crusher i think that they should be forced to press the button as well, also you can not buy a car in the uk without insurance whether you take it out through the dealer or allready have insurance its and offence and the dealer gets done and can lose his licence.
i pay full comp on my bike and van why should i pay for some snotty nosed kid to take me out in his bling machine and not have to foot the bill for the damage, last time i got took out the geek went through red lights hit me in the back at 60k and got away with diversion and with the agro from inusrance my bike was off the road for allmost 7 monthes.
They enforce laws??!!
How novel, wonder if it'd work here...
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
it would not be that hard to impliment and also do away with the stupid green and pink stickers take a lot of junk off of the roads and all modifications would have to be listed on your insurance or the policy would be voided and the insurance would pay out for damage done by the offender and raclaim the costs back through the courts if needed to.
Yeah, I know dude. It's just that we wouldn't be even talking about it if the existing rules were effectively enforced, there wouldn't be a problem.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
In the UK I paid the equivalent of $1050 third party, fire & theft. Clean licence, 5 years no claims, qualified instructor, bike was garaged etc. etc. but I was under 25 and on my OE.
BTW this was for a (pos) Honda 400 in 1985. Welcome to the brave new world.
Hope I'm wrong but if this insurance lark comes in young riders are going to get hammered.
I cannot believe that if you hand an industry a monopoly you wont get higher prices. Remember Telecom in the bad old days?
Last edited by MaxB; 25th September 2007 at 23:00. Reason: was was typo
but and here is the big BUTT acc is paying out millions of our $ to all these bling drivers that have no regard for other road users either through the damage that they do to others or themselves now if they were made exempt from acc payouts for injuries sustained to themselves or being carried in an uninsured vehicle then that would be fair on the people that pay acc riduculas levies and it should also not pay anyone who is in custody or jail or commiting a crime now matter,
It would be interesting to know the actual $ amount of destruction that bling drivers cause. A lot of posts on this thread seem to be about the fear or hatred these kids seem to stir up not what actual damage they do.
A death of a young driver is actually quite cheap in insurance terms (God forbid the rest of us think like that). Someone confined to wheelchair needs care for life. For the ACC this is the worse case scenario. What would be done with the boyracers who end up in a wheelchair? Leave 'em to die? Put 'em out of their misery? We are talking about someones kid here. Plus we still end up paying indirectly via taxes for the benefit or the health service.
I do agree with one thing raised on this thread, if you commit a criminal act you do not get ACC. This could include dangerous driving. Theres no way a crim should be compensated for getting injured 'at work'.
Dude the insurance they're talking about compulserising is 3rd party property, not personal. ACC would continue to cover medical costs, (and compensaion) as it currently does.
If you want to know what the value of the destruction any particular demographic causes in a given year ask for a quote from an insurance company. Their prices are directly driven by that data and they know the average costs to the dollar.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
Ocean is totally right. Imdying and the other examples of high UK premiums for first small cars do cover the high cost of insurance in context. The mkt is competitive. I too paid more - much more - for my first insurance on my 1970 mini in the late '80s than I then did with 5 yrs no-claims I was paying paying 1/3 of the cost to insure the mini to insure my 306 Pug in London (not a cheap place to insure cars). Why should not young drivers' premiums reflect their risk? When I was young in the UK it was a pain, but it stopped me getting a GTi. And the risk was real - I was about the ONLY one of my peer group not to have had an accident or written of at least one car within 2 yrs of getting wheels. Why should I pay high ACC etc the rest of my life to cover these fools?
The reason UK prices seem a rip-off in comparison with NZ is down to many factors; crucially the ACC. Take in all these costs and I think the prices begin to look more in line.
If uninsured drivers have their vehicles removed from them and can't get them back until the fines are paid how can this not be an effective way to remove the uninsured from the streets?
The argument - present in the NZ Herald articles and others - that people will carry on driving uninsured anyway is ludicrous within the context of some 'teeth' to go with any policy change.
If nothing is done to enforce compliance then insurance costs will rise; but if there is enforcement then this could be a revenue stream for the police that actually is linked to reducing road problems, and lowers the road toll - unlike obviously their current ridiculous focus on speed.
Motorcycle songlist:
Best blast soundtrack:Born to be wild (Steppenwolf)
Best sunny ride: Runnin' down a dream (Tom Petty)
Don't want to hear ...: Slip, slidin' away, Caught by the Fuzz or Bam Thwok!(Paul Simon/Supergrass/The Pixies)
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