Yes, like the article below says, there are indeed a number of reasons why the revenue from vehicle excise duty is down but I'm still shaking my head nearly two years later at the decision to remove the visual tax disk from vehicles.
I have around 10 vehicles I need to make sure are all legal and road worthy and the visual windscreen tax disk expiry date was a simple but efficient way of ensuring this but the more crucial fight against un-taxed vehicles I believe is much harder to monitor now that the visual disks are gone. With police budgets stretched over the past two years the number of police vehicles with built in license plate recognition cameras can't be as much as predicted so I'm not surprised revenue is down and I would bet that any new survey figures would show the number of un-taxed vehicles would now be greater than before the tax disk was culled.
Ian Jones
25/7/2016 20:31:37
Driving down to Ayrshire last week, passed 2 DVLA vehicles in lay bys presumably checking if passing cars were taxed.
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Scott
25/7/2016 20:38:39
Interesting to hear Ian, suppose in main cities and trunk routes there is a greater presence.
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25/7/2016
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