The amendments to the law adopted by the Parliament just two weeks ago foresee that OCTA will also be required for vehicles which do not participate in traffic, if their registration has not been suspended.
On Thursday, November 28, the Parliament referred to the responsible committee amendments to the law that would abolish this requirement. The Saeima voted in favor by a large margin – 92 in favor, with one abstention.
The head of the Parliament’s Budget Committee, Janis Reirs (New Unity), insisted that compulsory OCTA for all vehicles in registration is required by a European Union directive, and the only problem is that the Road Safety Directorate “has not tidied up the removal and placement in the registration – if this issue could be solved with one click on the Internet and it would not cost a lot of money, there would be no problem”.
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Based in New York, Stephen Freeman is a Senior Editor at Trending Insurance News. Previously he has worked for Forbes and The Huffington Post. Steven is a graduate of Risk Management at the University of New York.