Costa del mar license plate
![costa del mar license plate costa del mar license plate](http://www.broadwaytackle.com/thumbnail.asp?file=assets/images/catalog/zoomlic.jpg)
My call to police was to ask if they had it, for it not, I would then be reporting it stolen.Ī friend, also in Toronto, on my last visit, told me of her story of having her car towed with only 10 minutes expired on the meter. There is nothing more violating than to return to your vehicle and it’s not there.Īlthough I have not had this experience in Costa Rica, I did in Toronto (Canada), where my badly parked car was towed. The logical, sensical would be to tow the vehicle that is the cause of the congestion.
![costa del mar license plate costa del mar license plate](https://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-QB807_GUNSHO_M_20161002182029.jpg)
COSTA DEL MAR LICENSE PLATE DRIVERS
But do you think there won’t be other drivers with other vehicles to take their place?Ī question that has been asked repeatedly is, why does the Policia de Transito prefer confiscating license plates instead of towing vehicles?
COSTA DEL MAR LICENSE PLATE DRIVER
I can assume that tomorrow, these same cars won’t be there, the driver having learned his/her lesson, officials will argue. I mean, there is a row of illegally parked cars, all blocking traffic flow, a driveway, garage, on the sidewalk, in the middle of the street (not being funny, it really happens), all without license plates but still blocking traffic. So, assuming the answer is yes, the vehicle stays put, does it not not solve the problem the law to confiscate plates in the first place was enacted to resolve, that is to eliminate or reduce traffic congestion? Since I don’t have first-hand knowledge of this and have yet to find someone who has gone through this, or at least that they will admit to, thus I ask for anyone who knows the answer to post it here, in the comment section. In all this, another question has arisen, one that I did not think about until I saw it being asked on a social media website: when a Transito confiscates the plates, does the vehicle remain where it is until the driver returns? And the hours in line when your day comes up.ĭriving a vehicle without license plates means an additional fine and since there are no plates to confiscate, good chance the Transito (Traffic official) will seize the vehicle as well.
![costa del mar license plate costa del mar license plate](https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mbworld.org-vbulletin/2000x1504/img_0702_c962985ff47b3dc03427c187755914962c144ac7.jpg)
I suppose the plan to rid of the bad parking or what I prefer to call “indifference parking” habit in Costa Rica comes with a hard lesson, not so much for the fine, but the days and weeks of waiting to get the plates back. And no plates are recoverable on Saturdays, Sundays and legal holidays (the next one coming up on September 15, Independence Day, just so you know). With more than 6,000 license plates – the majority in San Jose – confiscated of vehicles badly (Illegally(parked and the limit of a max of 200 plates returned daily by the Cosevi office in La Urua, San Jose, how long will it take to get the your confiscated plates back?Ībout 30 days or more than six weeks given that the Cosevi office is open only weekdays (Monday to Friday).