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9:09 a.m. • 5-22-13

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Bill would scrap NC vehicle safety inspections

Published: 2013-02-22 18:20:00
Updated: 2013-02-22 19:19:41

Tags: Lawmakers

Lawmakers are making another run at eliminating the annual vehicle safety inspection requirement.

North Carolina is one of 18 states, along with the District of Columbia, to mandate the inspections, but House Bill 59 would scrap the requirement.

Some lawmakers say the move would cut back on bureaucracy and save drivers a little money. About 8 million cars and trucks are inspected each year, and the safety portion accounts for $13.60 of the $30 cost for an annual vehicle inspection, which also includes a check of the emissions system.

House Bill 59 doesn't call for eliminating the emissions test.

The House Transportation Committee is expected to debate the proposal next Tuesday, but many drivers and mechanics say they would like to keep the inspections.

"I think it's a small price to pay to make sure that people are driving vehicles that are in good working order and they're not going to create some sort of safety problem for everybody else," driver Jennipher Swanner said.

Out of about 20 cars he sees each day at Express Inspection and Service in Cary, Darren Clark said seven or eight have a safety problem. When money's tight, maintenance gets put off, he said, so the number of vehicles with problems has been on the rise in recent years.

"Gas is going up like crazy too, you know," Clark said. "Sometimes it's more important about getting to your destination than having a safe vehicle."

A similar bill was filed two years ago, and lawmakers have scaled back emissions tests in recent years to exempt newer vehicles from that requirement.

AAA Carolinas said annual inspections make North Carolina roads safer.

"In states that still have the mandated inspections, as opposed to those that don't, accidents are about 27 percent less," AAA's Jodi Woolard said.

Doing away with safety inspections could end up costing drivers more money down the road, Woolard said.

"If people are not required to get their vehicles inspected, they're going to let them go," she said. "They're prone to be in more accidents. More accidents equates to higher insurance rates, and that affects everyone who drives."

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162 Comments


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just don't think this is a good idea. It's worth the $30 to know your car is safe, as well as the other cards on the road. Without this there will more unsafe cars out there.

I'm all for regular safetly inspections just as long as state and federal governments don't get their greedy little hands on the driver's money.

We used to live in Florida which had safety inspections for a number of years, but was done away with in the 80's. The justification was LEO could inspect and write violations if vehichle was unsafe.

Recently we visited and noticed a rather large number of cars running on donut spares. One car had 3 donuts on, two had no rubber, just the cord.

Not looking forward to the same situation here in NC.

Don't kid yourself this move is all about more money for the insurance companies. Get rid of the inspections and the rates for your auto insurance will go sky high and why shouldn't it? The fact is I want inspections because as weak as NC auto inspections are they are much better than having nothing at all. Meanwhile all the righties will be fed how this is saving them money or how it is getting government out of their pockets. At what cost? Keep biting righties

The safety portion of the annual inspection is $13.60, about $1 a month. Small price to pay to alert drivers that their car may not be up to spec.

Too many cars have marginal tires and faulty exhaust systems, lights that are burned out or not functioning.

I do all my own repairs so not a problem for me but many other drivers do not have funds to pay for repairs, that can cost other drivers their lives.

There are already unsafe junk cars on the road because people skip the inspection until they have to renew their regestration this would make it even worse!

kr2, I'm a righty and I think that eliminating the inspections would be a terrible idea. I'm not sure why you would think that this has anything to do with politics.

Scrap it. 1 of 18 states to have it? Guess the remaining states are doing OK without it. We could also.

A little over $2 a month (year average) to make sure a vehicle is safe and fit for the road ? ..... not that expensive IMHO. I'd prefer the safety inspections stay, we have enough people driving around with lights not working, and bad exhaust as it is. I think the problem would only increase if no safety inspections were required. Just my .02 cents here.

In 2008, the NC Program Evaluation Division concluded 30 years of studies of safety inspections failed to show inspections reduced accidents, and even the 6% reduction cited in one study was suspect -- the AAA Jodi Woolard comment, if valid, that states with inspections have 27% fewer accidents does not indicate how many were safety related. Google "NC PED 2008-12-06" to read the study, something the reporter apparently neglected to do.

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