tbm3fan
Old Man with a Hat
What a day. My wife gets a phone call at noon telling her that the car has been found and that it is getting towed right now. So much for an earlier alert not that it would have mattered being 35 miles away and seeing appointments all day.
She finds out the tow company and they quote her $240 to get the car out this same day. Hours 8-5 and they need the release from the finding Police Department. Oh, and storage is at $60/day and there is a $60 gate fee extra if you want to get the car out on the weekend. However, guess what you cannot get a police report on the weekend. No report no car. Also, unlike the Concord Police who answer the phone, the Pittsburg Police never answered the phone or returned my calls.
Of course I have no idea if the car is driveable considering some hacking needed to be done to unlock the ignition, steering wheel, and the interlock on the floor shift. Come Monday we will be at $420 to get the car out. Also, of course, Monday is a work day with appointments which I just don't cancel. Talk about being screwed on both ends.
Did learn that these cars, if not picked up, eventually are sold off to Mexico for scrap. The tow yards get $60 for each car maximum. This person's ex-husband operates a tow company and so she knows the routine. Told me to walk in an offer them $150 take it or leave it since she knows they won't get more in the short run. I may do that otherwise I am going to ignore them if they want more.
Seems a state legislator is looking into changing the law regarding recovery a stolen cars. Think I am going to call him and pass on my observations. Namely a person should have 24 hours, the next business day to get their car. Monday to Tuesday and so forth except Friday would get till Monday. No storage fees during that time. After that storage fees, for stolen cars, limited to $30/day. To prevent them from going around the tow fee also limited for stolen cars.
The tow yards would no doubt complain they would go out of business. Well if poorly run or simply too many then that is just too bad. There is no way it is morally right to charge a person hundreds of dollars to recover a stolen car through no fault of their own. While not for me I am very sure this can be quite a burden on low income people who usually have cars with limited alarm protection. The "system" as set up is heavily weighted and penalizes innocent people while the real thief gets aways scott free and they know it.
She finds out the tow company and they quote her $240 to get the car out this same day. Hours 8-5 and they need the release from the finding Police Department. Oh, and storage is at $60/day and there is a $60 gate fee extra if you want to get the car out on the weekend. However, guess what you cannot get a police report on the weekend. No report no car. Also, unlike the Concord Police who answer the phone, the Pittsburg Police never answered the phone or returned my calls.
Of course I have no idea if the car is driveable considering some hacking needed to be done to unlock the ignition, steering wheel, and the interlock on the floor shift. Come Monday we will be at $420 to get the car out. Also, of course, Monday is a work day with appointments which I just don't cancel. Talk about being screwed on both ends.
Did learn that these cars, if not picked up, eventually are sold off to Mexico for scrap. The tow yards get $60 for each car maximum. This person's ex-husband operates a tow company and so she knows the routine. Told me to walk in an offer them $150 take it or leave it since she knows they won't get more in the short run. I may do that otherwise I am going to ignore them if they want more.
Seems a state legislator is looking into changing the law regarding recovery a stolen cars. Think I am going to call him and pass on my observations. Namely a person should have 24 hours, the next business day to get their car. Monday to Tuesday and so forth except Friday would get till Monday. No storage fees during that time. After that storage fees, for stolen cars, limited to $30/day. To prevent them from going around the tow fee also limited for stolen cars.
The tow yards would no doubt complain they would go out of business. Well if poorly run or simply too many then that is just too bad. There is no way it is morally right to charge a person hundreds of dollars to recover a stolen car through no fault of their own. While not for me I am very sure this can be quite a burden on low income people who usually have cars with limited alarm protection. The "system" as set up is heavily weighted and penalizes innocent people while the real thief gets aways scott free and they know it.
















