In our situation flecc i don`t think a `waiver` could over-rule our current Road Traffic Act with relation to Mopeds?
Well our informal waiver overruled both the 1983 EAPC regulations and the Road Traffic Acts in our case. In both our case and your current situation, the problem was caused by a previous failure of government to properly introduce required EU legislation, so I see them as almost identical.
Would the target not be over in Swansea, specifically the department that made this `ebike is a moped` registration decision in the first place?
As I posted previously, I think Swansea could issue a waiver since they appear to be the registration authority for N.I. But as servants the Civil Service cannot initiate the action, it must start with a request from an interested party (N.I. resident or national, or a lawyer acting for them). Then a meeting of all involved would have to agree on a waiver and the form it would take. Those at the meeting would be the DVLA, someone from the DVLA near equivalent in N.I., the Chief Constable of the PSNI or his representative, someone representing the cycle trade in N.I. selling e-bikes and anyone else considered to be an interested party with some relevant authority.
The DVLA didn't in truth really make that law for you, it was the default position for the whole UK prior to the 1983 EAPC regulations, so that became also your default. In the trade long ago it was how we had to sell every assisted bike, registered, number plated, driving licence needed etc.
I well remember my father commuting in England on his registered assisted bike with L plates, and then having to take the full motorcycle test to get rid of them. No simpler Moped test back then, but fortunately no m/c helmet law either.
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