Over the past several weeks I have made quite a few
snide remarks about my frustrating experience with the Division of Motor
Vehicles. I have alluded to rude and incompetent employees, bureaucratic paper
shuffling, and even used my experience to illustrate what we might expect once
Obamacare is fully implemented. First a bit of background.
My Mom died in June of 2012. By the time Dad’s
county tags for his van had to renew in October of this year, Hanover County
refused to issue new tags since my Mother had passed away in the interim and
her name was on the title. So, in order to get new tags issued, I had to remove
Mom’s name from said title. This would involve contacting the DMV for instructions
as to how to proceed. Thus began my three week odyssey within the bowels of the
dehumanizing, soul-crushing world of government bureaucracy.
Anyone who has visited the DMV knows the drill. You walk
in and are greeted with a sign that says that before you can join the throngs
of people sitting in plastic chairs waiting for service, you must first stand
in the information line. This is a
line that snakes across the back of the sterile, strange smelling room where
you wait to tell a bored Asian woman why you are at the DMV in the first place,
to which she says, “I not sure this will work,” then gives you a piece of paper
with a number…C123. Discouraging, but at least I’m now in a plastic chair.
The man next to me has mud-caked boots and smells of
bourbon at 9:30 in the morning, all the while mumbling “mo***r fu**ng
government.” I decide to stand. After 15 minutes, a woman’s voice announces over
the cracking PA system, “now serving number C123 at station 11,” in that
halting, robotic, creepy simulated human voice sort of way. I find station 11
and am greeted by an extremely pale woman, who without once looking up from her
computer screen says, “What do you need?”
I proceed to share my tale of woe. I explain my two
previous visits, I detail the difficulty I’ve had with all of the incorrect
instructions I have been given by her colleagues that has caused me
considerable angst. I lay out all of the completed paperwork in front of her,
hoping to impress her with my due diligence. There’s Mom’s death certificate, a
copy of my Power of Attorney, a Title transfer and change authorization form
and all of the pertinent vehicle data. The pale one looks at the forms, then
without explanation disappears behind the opaque glass wall behind her. This
has happened on both of my previous visits. This is the place where DMV
apparatchiks go to get away from me and plot their strategy for my destruction.
Whenever they return from this cone of silence, it is never good news. Bad,
even sinister things always seem to happen behind the opaque glass wall. She
spends a full seven minutes back there before emerging, her face a mass of
complete nonchalance. She says nothing to me. Instead she begins frantically
typing away on her keyboard. Finally, after another four wordless minutes she
grunts, “you be paying for one year or two?” Forty minutes after entering the
DMV for the third time in as many weeks, I leave clutching my Dad’s county tags
proudly in my hand. I immediately went home and took a shower.
The day before
my triumph, my Dad got the following letter from the DMV.
The professional government employee who typed this
letter has the most coveted possession in all of America. She has a guaranteed
government job from which she can never be fired. She has very generous benefits,
plenty of perks and never has to compete for anything. And this poor woman can’t
even spell the street name of her employer’s address correctly. …To have you wifes name refomved has
become an instant classic in my house.
Yeah, I’m sure the fears about government run health
care are all overblown. What could possibly go wrong?
.......and this is following two prior DMV visits by your brother-in-law who is less "edumacated" in such matters of governmental interactions. Obamacare.....we're ready!
ReplyDeleteHey, it's working for the British and Israelis, isn't it.... Nevermind.
ReplyDelete