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    A Newlife for the Road Traffic Act 1988 - Jennifer's Storys

    DISABLED CHILDREN ARE MISSING OUT BECAUSE OF A TECHNICALITY IN THE ROAD TRAFFIC ACT WHICH IS PREVENTING THEM RECEIVING CERTAIN TYPES OF ...


    road traffic act 1988 - News


    Toddler Involved In A Road Traffic Accident Receives Compensation
    Every insurer underwriting compulsory motor insurance, under the Road Traffic Act 1988, is obliged to a member of the MIB and to contribute to the bureaus funding. If you have been involved in a road traffic accident, involving an uninsured driver or

    No height limit to longer semis is DfT's preferred option
    UPDATED: Longer semi-trailers could be running on UK roads by the summer under Section 44 of the Road Traffic Act 1988, according to the Department for Transport (DfT). A DfT spokeswoman says that, subject to the outcome of its current consultation,

    Boy racers caught speeding at 128mph
    The pair were also given a separate charge for racing on a public road under Section 12 of the Road Traffic Act 1988. During the Easter weekend from Friday to Sunday, 301 motorists were caught driving at excessive speeds in the Strathclyde area.

    Sars invites comment on draft Customs Control Bill
    On April 15, the Minister of Transport gave notice, in a 222-page document, of his intention to make regulations in terms of the Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offence Act of 1988. The Minister invited interested parties to submit written

    Why is the law stopping young people using advanced wheelchairs?
    Why is the law stopping young people using advanced wheelchairs? The 1988 Road Traffic Act not only bans children under 14 from using very technologically advanced wheelchairs – a "class three vehicle" weighing up to 150kg – but it classes wheelchairs heavier than 150kg as cars, which can only be driven legally by

    Hundreds of 'speeding drivers' let off because cases were too slow to reach court

    Police have been forced to abandon hundreds of cases against drivers – because motorists were not being brought before the courts quickly enough.

    Bosses at Greater Manchester Police have withdrawn 300 on-going cases involving drivers accused of failing to provide details to officers.

    The prosecutions have been ditched following the emergence of a landmark ruling on technical time limit breaches when bringing the cases to court.

    It is thought the move could plunge thousands of similar prosecutions across the country into chaos and lead to an avalanche of appeals against old convictions.

    GMP’s withdrawal of the cases comes after a Scottish High Court ruling from October 2010 – which found police were wrong in prosecuting a motorist more than six months after failing to provide driver details for an alleged speeding offence. The ruling has been used by solicitors to challenge a case in Manchester magistrates’ court.

    It sparked a GMP review of their so-called ‘failure to furnish’ cases – which often come after a car is flashed by a speed or traffic light camera and can result in six penalty points.