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EU wades into VRT row 18.05.09

THE EU Commission has said the requirement for Irish residents to pay Vehicle Registration Tax (VRT) within 24 hours of importing a car from the North is “impossible or excessively difficult to comply with”.
In response to a query from Fine Gael MEP Jim Higgins, European Commissioner for Taxation and Customs, Laslo Kovacs, said: “the requirement to register a vehicle within 24 hours should be considered to be a period that is so short that it makes it impossible or excessively difficult to comply with the requirements imposed.”
Jim Higgins criticised Revenue officials for “pressurising people and scaremongering on the issue of VRT”. He called on Revenue officials to cease the practice of informing people that registration must be completed within 24 hours and to give people a seven day timeframe.
“If they do not,” Higgins warned, “people would, it seems, be
entitled to take the Government to court in Europe and it would lead to more unnecessary and costly legal costs for the State.” A spokesman for the Revenue Commissioners emphasised that Irish law requires vehicles to be registered “not later than the next working day after its arrival in the State”.
“However, Revenue, as an administrative arrangement, allows up to seven days for registration,” the spokesman added. “We have publicised this fact on many occasions.”
Customs and Excise officials have been engaged in a crackdown on VRT evasion in recent weeks, with a number of vehicles being seized and warnings issued in other cases. (Inishowen Independent)
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