In the last year, my state started requiring carrying proof of registration in a vehicle. This proof has my address on it. My vehicle has a garage door opener. If someone steals my truck, they’ll know my address and have a simple way to get into my house. I’d rather that they didn’t.
Question: Would you give someone a hard time if they’ve blacked out the address portion of the form?
I’ve heard of this before and the advice is to carry your registration with you, don’t leave it in the car or truck. I don’t know what the police will say but it seems pretty suspicious if you show them a modified registration.
My state has required having the registration while you’re driving for as long as I can remember. My state also allows you to show a photocopy to the police, so my husband and I carry copies of both car registrations. I can’t imagine why someone would leave it in the vehicle rather than in their wallet. I think blacking out the address is probably going to cause some problems if you’re stopped, even if it’s only extending the time of the stop.
I think in Australia you had to carry your rego papers in the car many, many years ago. I have been booked once in a while over the last 20 or 30 years and have never been asked for them. No-one carries them here. We don’t even have labels for registration any more. It’s amazing that somewhere would add the requirement to carry them. No computers in the state?
In California in the 50s, it was mandatory to have the registration with name and address, visible from outside the car. Buy a display sleeve that fit around the steering column. New Buick convertible parked on Hollywood Blvd, let’g go see whose it is. Hey look – Kirk Douglas. Cal DMV was open records. Lost track of a friend, post card to DMV, reply in a few days with current addy, no charge. Different world in those days,
Get a fit-for-purpose wallet, so. Or just keep the registration document in your pocket.
It’s mandatory for me to have my driver’s licence (in Western Australia) when driving. My licence has my address on it. It would never occur to me to leave my licence in the car - not because it has my address on it, though that is relevant, but because it would be such a pain to lose it, which I would, if my car were taken. I wouldn’t leave anything inconvenient-to-replace in my car.
(Having said that, the requirement to carry your registration document with you when driving does seem weird. Through the wonderful magic that is the internet today, the authorities can surely instantly access all the details of your vehicle’s registration equipped with nothing more than the licence plate number, which is fixed to the outside of the vehicle in a promiment position.)
There was a scandal in Michigan a few years ago. When you get your papers you were required to sign it and show it in a traffic stop. People were being fined $200 for failue to sign it ii the correct space on the back.
Regardless of whether you redact your registration, here’s two bits of advice:
-always look the door from your garage to your house. Someone may be able to get into your garage with an opener, but they won’t be able to get into your house without a key.
-As soon as you’re aware your car has been stolen, disable the garage door opener. Either unplug it, or change the code.
Do you think there’s a garage anywhere that doesn’t have sufficient resources to force an entrance through a locked door given a couple of minutes and some privacy? Once someone has entered your garage and shut the door they’re in your house, key or not. Locking that door into your house does nothing but give you a broken lockset to repair.
If that is the case, I suspect it is an exception. I can recall advice given 50 years ago telling us that drivers need to have “license & registration” readily available in the car when on the road.
In my experience, the standard request from the officer during a traffic stop is license, registration and insurance card. And I’ve always kept the registration and insurance card in the car, despite the slight danger.
State law requires I carry my registration with me when I drive. There is no way I’d always remember to have it unless I kept it in my car, where my insurance proof also resides. It’s too big to fit in my wallet.
I’ve never had a car stolen. I don’t know anyone who has ever had a car stolen. I can sleep well at night now worrying about it. If it is ever stolen, I’ll disable my garage door and buy a shotgun.
In my experience (though I haven’t been pulled over more than a handful of times), in Texas they ask for driver’s license and proof of insurance. Vehicle registration is on a sticker on the windshield. I’ve never been asked for registration documents.