Depends on your definition of "exists." If you are referring to the smoking strip of rubble filled with insane assclowns ricocheting their vehicles off the underpass retaining walls... yes, that thing exists. In a Mad Max, funhouse alternate reality sort of way.
I was pretty early on the scene for an accident there about a month ago. No emergency services had arrived yet, and other drivers were carefully tiptoeing past the two cars that hit the tunnel wall that looked like they might be getting ready to explode... with the idiot drivers/passengers still sitting in them...
So if you have a fleet of cars whose registrations need renewing, what you have to do is drive 40 minutes upstate to Middletown DMV.
I went to DMV today to renew registrations for 3 vehicles. 3.
The lady wouldn't budge. No more than two for businesses, and it did not even matter that they weren't all 3 registered to the same business.
I'm thinking if I ever become a sadist I should apply there for a job.
I think you can do them all online, you know. Unless there are unique requirements for businesses (as you seem to have shown.)
I'm thinking if I ever become a sadist I should apply there for a job.
Have you ever considered dentistry? ;-p
I went back to the DMV today, different lady but you could tell she is friends with the first lady. Today she wouldn't do it because the insurance card I had brought expires within 45 days. Every single car in the rental fleet now has renewed registration, and every single one was done with insurance cards which would expire within 45 days. But not today.
When I insisted I had insurance and just hadn't received the new cards yet, she gave me that "What's your point?" look and handed me back the papers. I asked her to call my insurance company to verify, and she told me calling my insurance company is not her job. I asked to speak to the manager, and mind you, he was standing just a little behind her anyway, and he looks up and says "put her in the supervisor queue" and I didn't want to wait another half hour for him to tell me to fuck off, so I gave up again for the day. I had to get to work anywaya, but man, if you ever think you are a patient person and want to put it to the test, the DMV is the place to go.
You are aware that there is a whole movie called The Dentist? http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0116075/
This DMV "service" seems to be a global conspiracy. In Germany, the departments are usually completely overcrowded, on any day, at any time. Normally, you send your mom or any other relative who does not have a regular day job to get the paperwork done for you. In this rather small town where I live now, you only wait half a day to get to the desk. And the guys that press your plate are in direct neighborhood, instead of 1km+ away. But the guy behind the desk is in a bad mood, if you are lucky. He might be bored, overworked and suicidal, if you are not lucky. The insurance guys always make a big fuss that you need to apply weeks in advance for an insurance move, if you plan to unregister your old car and register a new one. When all you have to do is ask them on the phone for a stupid 10 digit code that the clerk has to enter into his computer and Presto! everything will work fine. But both the clerk behind the desk and the insurance person on the phone will make sure that you feel like an utter scumbag full of fowl rodent testicles for this.
The beneficial fallout from that is that when you go to the DMV to renew registration you almost always do *not* need proof of insurance - it's on their computer.
Wait times used to be, on average, about 15 minutes but since the financial impact of the Obama Depression that has grown, significantly, to around an hour. DMV was forced to close/consolidate many of their offices, sending those mini-crowds to the offices still open, resulting in bigger crowds and longer wait times.
However, it still beats the living daylights out of "DMV In New Jersey" which has always been my example of Hell On Earth.
But it still puzzles me why *anyone* would have to actually go to the DMV. Here, at least, just about *everything* can be done online.
In Minnesota, they send the renewal in the mail. You just have to mail off a check with the included return envelope and they mail it back in about a week. I think there is a website, but I guess I see that as an overly complicated way to do it.
Online is getting better now, even for the DMV. I renewed my registration a couple of weeks ago, and for the first time I did it online. They actually put it online a few years ago, but they charged extra for an online transaction.
I guess someone finally figured out how stupid that was.
Sep 24 2014 4:38am from IGnatius T Foobar @uncnsrd (Uncensored)
Online is getting better now, even for the DMV. I renewed my
registration a couple of weeks ago, and for the first time I did it
online. They actually put it online a few years ago, but they charged
extra for an online transaction.
I guess someone finally figured out how stupid that was.
...or some Citizen threatened to sue them for charging more for something that costs them less. In most governmental jurisdictions, that *is* illegal, even for GovDroids.
Very similar process for my license renewal last time. I still looked like my picture from the previous license (a sign I am getting old, no doubt; 5 years used to involve significant visual evidence of change), so I paid a fee online and was mailed a new license.
I haven't been to the office physically since I bought my '73 Capri and had to re-register it, and I probably could have done that online, too, if I'd been willing to be a little more patient.
Wait, what, you register your driving license? Not your car?
My driving license (or rather the document itself, not the fact that I have a license) will expire 18. January 2033, for some odd reason. I guess the TZOG will force us to have a biometrically chipped device in order to track the movement of our cars better. From there on, it will expire every 15 years. This means, unless I lose my document, I will have a picture taken in 1999 on my license until 2033. :D
Since we have an administration worshipping the gods of bureaucracy, we have another document which is used as id card, the Personalausweis (invented by the Nazis, ja!) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_identity_card
he was when he got it, but he was young. He renewed it several times by mail or on-line, they just sent him a
sticker to go over the back updating the information. While his physical appearance matured his picture did not
change.
Since we have an administration worshipping the gods of bureaucracy,
we have another document which is used as id card, the
Personalausweis (invented by the Nazis,
ja!) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_identity_card
Heh. Before moving to California I lived in New Jersey for roughly 30 years.
Back in the very early 1930s, Charles Lindbergh's baby was kidnapped from his home during the evening of Marh 1, 1932. The subsequent investigation was handled by local cops, and soon after headed by the New Jersey State Police.
I mention this for the following:
The head of the NJ state police was Norman Schwarzkopf (father of General Norman Schwarzkopf of 'Desert Storm' fame).
He was, to be polite, the consumate authoritarian.
He is remembered for his handling of the kidnapping, and...
... for commissioning the design of the uniforms worn to this day by NJ State Police troopers and officers. Schwarzkopf personally designed the uniform.
Later on, it turns out that a certain organization in the (now) infamous Third Reich found out that the actual manufacturing of the NJ "StaatsPolizei" uniforms was done by a German company and this group fell in love with the design, adopting it for their own.
That group, originally formed in 1925, is noneother than the ShutzStaffel, now much more commonly known as the SS.
...which is why most residents of New Jersey have this subconscious urge to snap to attention, click our heels, and shout Sieg Heil whenever pulled over by a member of the NJ StaatsPolizei! <very evil grin>