This car has been sitting in my driveway, occasionally being ran up to temperature and moved around subtly, but overall sitting since the stickers expired in 2017.
Well, seems my good relationship with the city bylaw people has maybe come to an end, probably thanks to a complaining neighbour. In fairness, I probably had it coming, and the items they've ordered me to correct/improve are realistic. One of those was that this car's stickers are long expired, and they don't allow "inoperable" motor vehicles to be parked in view of the street (or something like that), and lack of stickers is assumed to mean it's inoperable.
This prompted me to renew the stickers on it today, which was relatively pain-free to do, but mildly annoying. Sometime next month the province is changing how it handles plate renewals and is getting rid of the fee, and I believe the sticker entirely. But renewal will still be required, and I suspect the part they haven't announced yet is something like an annual safety inspection...which is why I sprang for 2-year renewals on the 3 vehicles I had to bring up-to-date. Hopefully kick that can a little further down the road. The fees are being refunded in a month or so anyway (they're going back to 2020 for the refunds), so my reasoning was to get stickers dated as far down the road as possible in case some sort of mandatory inspection comes into effect for the next renewal thereafter.
A perk of having valid stickers and insurance, of course, is that it's road legal at the moment. I checked fluids, tossed a battery in, and took it for a drive. Put some gas in and drove it some more. I miss this car and look forward to having the time to give it what it needs.
Salt exposure tonight is pretty much a non-issue; the car is reasonably well undercoated and oil sprayed. The rust it already has is already beyond simple sanding and repainting, so it really didn't concern me too much.
Well, seems my good relationship with the city bylaw people has maybe come to an end, probably thanks to a complaining neighbour. In fairness, I probably had it coming, and the items they've ordered me to correct/improve are realistic. One of those was that this car's stickers are long expired, and they don't allow "inoperable" motor vehicles to be parked in view of the street (or something like that), and lack of stickers is assumed to mean it's inoperable.
This prompted me to renew the stickers on it today, which was relatively pain-free to do, but mildly annoying. Sometime next month the province is changing how it handles plate renewals and is getting rid of the fee, and I believe the sticker entirely. But renewal will still be required, and I suspect the part they haven't announced yet is something like an annual safety inspection...which is why I sprang for 2-year renewals on the 3 vehicles I had to bring up-to-date. Hopefully kick that can a little further down the road. The fees are being refunded in a month or so anyway (they're going back to 2020 for the refunds), so my reasoning was to get stickers dated as far down the road as possible in case some sort of mandatory inspection comes into effect for the next renewal thereafter.
A perk of having valid stickers and insurance, of course, is that it's road legal at the moment. I checked fluids, tossed a battery in, and took it for a drive. Put some gas in and drove it some more. I miss this car and look forward to having the time to give it what it needs.
Salt exposure tonight is pretty much a non-issue; the car is reasonably well undercoated and oil sprayed. The rust it already has is already beyond simple sanding and repainting, so it really didn't concern me too much.
Comment