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#1 |
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On Thursday, March 11, 2025, the N.H. House of Representatives voted YES to eliminate the N.H. yearly car safety inspection, HB-649 by a vote of 212-143. Now, it goes to the 24-member N.H. Senate and then if passed to Gov Ayotte.
Big trucks with a gvw of 24,001-lbs or more will continue to require a yearly safety inspection. Eliminating the yearly motor vehicle safety inspection will make driving in New Hampshire less safe and more dangerous. Unsafe tires and unsafe brakes will make the N.H. roads less safe for everyone. New Hampshire definitely should want and require a yearly car inspection to help keep the roads more safe, and less dangerous. Without the yearly car inspection, you will no longer be driving that golden N.H. safe road. You will be driving a more dangerous road.
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#2 | |
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#3 | |
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Tires and brakes have become very expensive which makes it more challenging to replace unsafe tires and brakes while at the same time people need to drive their car to go somewhere. The N.H. yearly car inspection, first initiated in N.H. in 1931, is very much needed to keep the N.H. roads safe.
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#4 |
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If anyone could know - it would be "TheTimeTraveler"...
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#5 |
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The house vote was on the 6th, 212-103 to eliminate inspections:
https://www.wmur.com/article/nh-hous...-0325/64080031 FLL got the date wrong however I agree with his comments. Alan |
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#6 |
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Many states have been eliminating safety inspections. Fifteen states have a periodic (annual or biennial) safety inspection program, while Maryland requires a safety inspection and Alabama requires a VIN inspection on sale or transfer of vehicles which were previously registered in another state. An additional 16 states require periodic emissions inspections. Florida has no vehicle inspections.
I would think the best way to determine if safety inspections truly help to promote safety would be to look at a comparison between state accident rates attributed to things like bald tires in states with and without inspection laws. I never thought the NH inspections would be eliminated due to the NH Auto Dealers Association influence over politicians. The repair shops like inspections that generate work, or sometimes even the need for a new car. The next law to face a challenge might be the NH front license plate law. Currently only 29 states require a front plate but you cannot pass a state inspection in NH without one. |
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#7 |
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For sure - however there is a major conflict of interest to have a garage, which makes money selling parts and repair services, be the entity that decides if a vehicle is safe or not... The system now is a state-mandated business development program for service stations. Not sure what the answer is, but it would be better to have an independent inspector tell you what needs to be done rather than the shop who stands to gain by flunking you. Maybe pay a garage for an inspection and to prepare a state-approved report that the owner could take to any garage (including the inspecting one if they chose) for the repairs? On several occasions in my life, I have been failed with a huge estimate for repairs (usually tie rods, ball joints, tires, brakes) and taken it to a different garage and passed...
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#8 |
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When a vehicle does not past inspection and it's expensive to comply, I know of folks that would drive their vehicles to FL or a state with no inspections and use or sell the vehicle.
If NH eliminate annual inspection, there should be a huge fine in case you get into an accident because of faulty equipment. My garage pretty much go over the vehicle for defects every time I go in for repairs or maintenance.
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#9 | |
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That being said, I never felt the cost was prohibitive, I could always take my vehicle for a second opinion, and the states I've driven in that don't have inspections clearly had vehicles that were potentially unsafe. For these reasons, I support having inspections. HOWEVER, I do think there should be a system to challenge rejections and report repair shops that prey on people. Sent from my SM-S911U using Tapatalk |
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#10 |
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I am of mixed feelings on this. Personally, I take my car in annually for basic service and a good lookover/inspection. I don't want to be driving a vehicle with bad tires or marginal brakes. Or more subtle problems like rust damage that could risk safety. So even if the legal requirement goes away my behavior won't change.
But will I then be at the mercy of people who choose not to or cannot afford to maintain their cars. Are they going to ram into me because their brakes gave out? Are they going to swerve into my lane because their bald tire blew out? It seems we all have a responsibility to each other to have safe vehicles on the road. As with all such things, some will do the right thing and others will not. An inspection law makes sure that everyone does and allows for a visible indicator to see who is not, allowing for corrections. How does this work out for states with no inspection? Are there higher "junk" car accident rates or are they not even bothering to keep track. "Car swerved into the other lane causing the accident." But no mention of the cause of the swerve being that the bald tire blew out? |
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#11 |
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Maybe an inspection requirement every two years would be a good compromise?
Dan
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#12 |
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interestingly, every two years is the requirement for cars running antique plates... while these cars are not for daily use, they are old by definition - and perhaps more worn, so a case could be made for more frequent inspections rather than less, ironically. They do not have modern safety systems, generally, like ABS, airbags, etc., either.
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#13 | |
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#14 |
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Cars less than [emoji[emoji6
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#15 |
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I remember back in the day when New Hampshire required you to have your car inspected and get a new sticker every six months.
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#16 |
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I remember that too! My parents used to get a new car every three years. It had to be inspected six months after it was bought and then six months again. Before anything was ever wrong with it, they always sold it. I always thought this was so ridiculous.
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#17 |
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Back when you had brake shoes front and back and could get a recapped tire for under twenty bucks.
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#18 | |
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Periodic inspections are a good idea IMHO, but the interval is in question. Perhaps every time a car is offered for sale which would be new sale, maybe 5-6 years after that, and then, I suspect, more often as used cars get sold or traded more frequently. |
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#19 |
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If they eliminate the Safety inspection, then they need to require that registered vehicles have minimum insurance to pay for damage caused to other vehicles, property, or life!
Right now, you can register a vehicle with no proof of insurance and many never get it. If you don't have money to maintain your vehicle then you probably don't have money for insurance. |
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#20 | |
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#21 | |
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Dan
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#22 |
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Google says that is still the case: 8.8% for MA. 7.8% for NH... go figure
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#23 |
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MA insurance is very expensive, although Rockingham County is catching up. If I hear the TV news correctly, Boston has lots more illegals, so I'd guess that translates to more uninsured cars, more cars without valid registration, more unlicensed drivers, etc etc.
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#24 |
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Ford Ranger pick-up, unknown year ..... http://www.imgur.com/gallery/no-vehi...lorida-g6lPcqD ...... "No vehicle inspection in Florida" and "The bodywork is supporting the frame" or something? ..... ha-ha-ha ....
![]() This old Ranger would get stopped by a N.H. police officer in about five minutes or less ....... "You got to be kidding me! ...... What's up with this car!"
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#25 | |
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Once the DMV knows you no longer have insurance, when your insurance company notifies them, then your registration becomes invalid. Now I'm sure there are people driving with no insurance and an invalid registration until they get caught! Last edited by Biggd; 03-08-2025 at 07:15 PM. |
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#26 | |
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Cars, car repairs, tires, brakes, gasoline ..... is all VERY expensive. Without the annual N.H. state safety inspection, initiated in N.H. in 1931, there will be an increase in cars driving on the N.H. roads with bad tires and bad brakes and burnt out lights and other safety items like windshield wiper blades and big rust and cracked windshield. I betcha this bill, HB-649, gets NAYED in the N.H. State Senate which has 24-members. Nay is an olde expression of negation used in legislative votes and means NO.
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