![]() That is exactly why I have never had and expect to never have EZpass. After a few phone calls, they determined the mistake, gave me a $140 credit and I presume charged the other person.īTW, getting back to the original question, I trailer my snowmobiles through tolls quite often and have never had an issue. I was being charged for their charges and they for mine. It seems that ezpass marked down the wrong id number when they sent me my pass. So, I finally checked my statement and realized that my third car was going down 93, over to 95 up onto the Maine turnpike about 3 times per week. Since my wife lives at the lake in the summer and it is just me commuting on the weekends, it takes quite a while to accumulate $30 in charges. I'll admit that I never check my statement but I did notice quite a few of those $30 charges on my credit card. I've had 2 ezpasses for about 10 years and I recently added a third when we added a third car. In order to obtain a Florida driver's license I had to claim to be a Florida resident even though I am only there less than 1/2 the year. The way the laws are written they leave you no way to be right. While in Florida I bought a new car to drive back to NH but my town refused to register it because without a NH driver's license they could only issue me a non resident registration and they wouldn't do that because they concluded (correctly) that to get back from Florida the car would be out of town overnight. The Florida company required that I get a Florida driver's license. I know this because I drove a company vehicle in Florida while working there this past winter. So even if your primary residence, the town you vote in and file your income taxes from is in New Hampshire you can only get a non resident registration if your driver's license is from another state. The NH Department of Motor Vehicles assumes residency based on what state your driver's license is from. And, if they do know, an officer from another state can't write you a ticket for violating a NH law. I would be surprised if any police officer from another state knows about that NH law. The registration issued will say "non resident" on it. Granted this was almost 20 years ago, but something to double with with your PA/NH tripĪ non-resident may register a car or trailer in NH but the vehicle registered cannot be out of state overnight. The basis of this was because we were MA residents and registering something out of our resident state. We were told if we registered our boat trailer in NH we could not tow it out of the state of NH. Years ago when I lived in MA, my family had a place in NH.
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