The Phuket News Novosti Phuket Khao Phuket

Login | Create Account | Search


Opinion: Hiding in plain sight

The Phuket News presents a reader’s opinion on the state of the illegible licence plates on vehicles across the island, but mostly carried on taxis, vans and buses carrying tourists to and from their hotels, the airport and tourist attractions around the island.

opiniontourismtransportcrimepolice
By The Phuket News

Friday 30 March 2018 10:38 AM


 

I don’t imagine anything will change anytime soon, but, for what it’s worth, here’s an observation that may well provide our governor and possibly even a few Phuket police chiefs with food for thought:

Hiding in plain sight, and rarely noted – at least by anyone I’ve spoken with – are thousands of cars, vans, buses, trucks, and even motorcycles. Most are commercial vehicles… you know, the ones with green-and-yellow plates.

Now when I say they’re “hiding in plain sight”, I mean to say that yes, you can plainly see that it’s a Toyota Camry, or white passenger van, but take a look at that license plate. Isn’t it difficult to make out the numbers now that they’re painted over with the same colour as the background?

Oh, wait a minute, maybe you’re looking at one of those immaculate plates that have the highly reflective plastic covers. Yes, those ones that catch any bit of sunlight and bounce it back in such way that the plate numbers are near to impossible to read. Bad enough during the day, but at night, the glare from your own headlights is enough to blind you!

Speaking of which, there is another interesting observation to be made: Next time it’s dark and you are in a line of cars waiting for the light to turn green, take a look around at the license plates. You will likely see a lot of vehicles that have the small lights meant to illuminate the rear plate either not working or, dare I say, “modified” to dissimulate the numbers barely on display.

If you’re keeping tabs, you will also note that the vast majority of these modifications are associated with the green-and-yellow license plates. Does that surprise you?

Now consider how many times you’ve seen vehicles racing through the streets, highways, and byways of this fine little island. And, for just a moment, stop and think – how many times have you noted green or yellow plates in those photos of horrific accidents that are all-too-often reported in our newspapers? What of the speed cameras and prolific use of CCTV to monitor every street, lane, and intersection? Surely that must go some way to reducing the carnage. (It seems we hear less of drivers fleeing the scene, so maybe there is a return on the investment, after all.)

Now if disguising your license plate amounts to a traffic violation, you would be right to assume the police are missing an opportunity to collect a hefty sum in fines levied against perpetrators. Since speed cameras are effectively rendered useless in the face of 30% of vehicles carrying plates that are unrecognisable, there again is huge loss in revenue.

Well then, what to do? What to do? Here’s an idea: Police checks and road blocks are common enough; fines are given out for driving without a seat belt, no helmet, no insurance, improper registration or lack of a driving license, etc. So why not for license plates that are illegible, modified, or intentionally disguised?

What about a public reporting system that allows citizens to photograph a plate and send it directly to the police? Officers could issue fines from the comfort of their desks. Before long, the practice of “hiding in plain sight” would lose its appeal. Instead of becoming more popular, it would diminish, possibly even stop altogether.

At the end of day, one has to ask: What is the purpose of a license plate if it cannot be read?

– via email


In response to this issue, the Provincial Land Transport Office (PLTO) claims that public transport drivers would not obscure their licence plates intentionally to avoid being identified by speed cameras or any other witnesses to traffic law violations as doing so would only break another law. (See Q&A here.)