The MVA Website is Terrible

Over the weekend I had to renew the registration for my Honda Accord.  While spending $135 in the middle of prime Holiday shopping season definitely was not something I wanted to do, what choice did I have?

While Maryland is obviously overcharging millions of drivers in registration renewal fees each year it seems with all that money the Motor Vehicle Administration (MVA) could afford to build a good and well designed website.  After all the MVA is gouging us with high fees.  However, a clean and easy-to-understand website is not what you get when you visit the MVA website.   Here is a picture of the MVA's frontpage when I went to pay my vehicle registration renewal;

mva website

Not only is it confusing but it wasn't clear where I needed to go to pay.  In the documents I got in the mail they say

Registration renewals can be done on-line at www.mva.maryland.gov, by mail, by telephone at 1-410-768-7000 or using the self service kiosk located at MVA offices.

So at least I was under the impression I was in the right place but was hoping that I would save time and sanity by paying the registration fee online.  As you can see from the above picture the website is confusing and clunky to say the least.  I didn't see anywhere where it says “Pay Here” or “Pay Online” or anything with these types of terms.  Why wouldn't you want to make it clear where to give you money?  The web designers for the MVA website seemed to forget it's better to “Keep it Simple Stupid.”  Just look at all the options you have when you land on the front of the website and how poorly laid out it is.  I imagine the intent a visitor has when visiting the MVA website is to get information about vehicle and driver services in Maryland OR to pay a fee.

Whatever web design firm got hired to build the MVA website must have also done HealthCare.gov and probably charged waaaay to much money to do it too.  I wouldn't be surprised if there were some serious security holes in the MVA website in addition to it being poorly laid out.  Let's be serious, there are no good web designers in the government.  This is something Matt Mullenweg, the creator of WordPress, emphasized at the 2012 State of the Word at Wordcamp San Francisco.  If the creator of WordPress, what this site is built on and millions of others, doesn't like government websites he knows what he is talking about.

This is just me complaining really but I'd be curios to know if you live in Maryland and if you have found the MVA website confusing and frustrating too?  What did you need to do on the MVA website which you found difficult to accomplish?

 

I got my Title today!

I got my title today from the Motor Vehicle Administration (MVA)!  This means I officially own my Honda Accord, one of the best cars ever made!  I am glad I got the title.  Who knows that the MVA could have forgotten or not done between when I went it to do my registration and now.

I visisted the MVA Today

$266.40 for a Title, Registration, & 2 Tags!

You might think an auto writer/blogger would be able to find some way around the terrible experience of going to the Motor Vehicle Administration (MVA).  Unfortunately this is not the case.  I had to go to an MVA office today to get new Tags & a Title for my Honda Accord.  Here is the story of my experience.

I went late in the day, probably around 3pm.  Always a bad idea.  It is a better idea to go earlier in the day.  This is when people are just trying to make it afterwork or taking off early to go to the MVA.  Instead of going to Mondawmin Mall, where the Baltimore City MVA office was, I went to the new Hilltop Shopping Center office on Reisterstown Rd.  Apparently the Mondawmin office closed in May and they moved to the Hilltop location.

I waited in line for the information desk for about 20-30 minutes.  What I found strange is when I got up to the desk I told the lady, “I need to register my car and get Tags.”  I handed her the California title and inspection certificate, she took both and looked at the title like it was some weird document.  Without saying anything she went over and starting talking with the supervisor for 5 minutes.  I was thinking, “Really?  They don't see out-of-state titles?”  She came back to the desk and just said, “Fillout the information on the back as well.”

I took my ticket and sat down in the waiting area.  I started filling out the Title form and making sure I had everything set.  I realized I needed to go get the mileage from my car.  I thought I might not have time to do this… then I realized I was at the MVA.  There was plenty of time!

When I came back in from getting the mileage out of the car, I looked around at all the people in the MVA.  It didn't matter age, race, gender, whatever because everyone has the same exact look at the MVA!  “I just want to get out of here!”  Why won't this line move?”  “Why is it taking so long?”

Luckily I brought a book ‘Real Money' by Jim Cramer, but it is hard to read in there.  There is the automated voice that goes off every 20 seconds “Now serving C45 at number 12.”  After another 30+ minutes I finally got my number called.  You feel like jumping and up down when that happens.

I handed the lady my title, form, and bill of sale.  She was pretty helpful and nice.  She commented about my car, “Wow!  The mileage on this is really good!”  I told her the story of how I drove it across the country and that it was my Grandma's car.  “Oh so she just used it to drive to Church and the Grocery store?”  I replied “Yeah, pretty much!”  She told me her Grandma had a Mercedes that had very few miles on it too.  When I got out my credit card to pay I gave her my business card and said I was an auto journalist.  We talked about that for awhile and I told her about how I got a media pass to the Baltimore Grand Prix.  She seemed enthusiast about it and asked me some questions.

So I spent about 2 hours getting to the MVA office, waiting, waiting some more, and actually doing what I needed to do, before getting back to my house.  It cost $266.40 to register, get a title, and for 2 MD license plates.  Since I was smart enough to get a bill of sale stating the car was bought for $0 and therefore a gift, I was not charged 6% sales tax.  It would have more expensive if I did not have that.  Of course I still spent too much time there!

Driver’s Edge: Registration full, Sign-up for the Waiting list

Unfortunately registration is full for the Driver's Edge courses that are happening at FedEx Field on June 18th, and 19th that I reported on.  However, if you or your teenager are still interested you can sign-up to be put on the waiting list if any spots do become available.  You can also request to be put on the Notification List, for upcoming tour dates in different cities.  Two other cities currently are available (you can sign-up for the waiting list) in Nashville and Boston.  Additional dates become available during the summer, so it's good to check back on their website once in awhile.

Driver's Edge is a great program which gives teens the chance to work with professional race car drivers to gain experience controlling cars in difficult situations.  The programs are provided Free, so that anyone interested can attend a course.  You might be happy one day your teen got the chance to attend a Driver's Edge course, if it helps them avoid a car accident!