Brennie and I have enrolled in a driving course that starts this Saturday. I have been trying to register the car. This entry is about the enrolling and registering ..... therefore the title of “Big Time FUN!!”
PREFACE (copies)
Every step of any process requires copies either of stuff gotten in previous steps or of our Cedulas (gotten months ago as part of the residency visa process....... kind of a proof of residency) or Censos (a ‘where do you live’ identity card?). Passport size color photos are often required. When submitting copies, you also have to show the originals ..... but you keep the originals .......sometimes. Incidentally, there are copy stands either outside or adjacent to every govt office. In the larger complexes there are copy stands within the complex as well as surrounding them. Making copies is a thriving small business
(I have been sick the last several days [throat, lung and sinus nastiness] so the Brennie just handed my my meds and stood there until I took them. What ever happened to trust?)
PREFACE NUMERO DOS (govt offices and lines)
Every step of every process is done in a different place or office. The most convenient variation of this is when you go to a different window in the same building. Next most convenient is when you go to a different building in the same complex. Less convenient is when you go to a different building within a block or two. Next is somewhere on the other side of town. The worst is in a neighboring town (car inspection to be covered later), and down a dirt road to a place that cannot even be found by GPS or satellites. Every single step involves a line ....... sometimes a very long line.
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REGISTERING FOR DRIVING SCHOOL:
Prerequisite for this is the ‘Record Policial’. This is a document from the national police regarding your police record.
Clarke’s Record Policial:
1. Go to police window at Transit Commission complex where these are readily available for $5 and copies of Cedulas, Censos, (blood type?) and passport photos.
2. Oopsie. Clarke is not in the system. Therefore go to Judicial Police on other side of town and wait in a different line (same docs required).
3.. Get to window and fill out some kind of form with some personal info, submit all copies and fee and receive (very pretty) Record Policial.
4. DoneBrennie’s Record Policial a few days later:
1. Already know to go to Judicial Police and what to bring, so we do this and expect to fill out the same paper. WRONG.
2. Apparently the guy did me a favor by having me fill out the form and giving me my Record Policial. Apparently I had promised to return with other documentation later. How was I to know? Everything was in Spanish. He recognizes me as the lying scum that I am and cuts Brennie no breaks.
3. Told to go to another office at (or near ..... not sure) Fiera Libre on the other side of town and got some other doc. Not sure what. (He writes it on a piece of paper)
4. Told by someone else to get different doc at the central bus terminal. Again, not sure what. (Different thing written on a different piece of paper.)
5. We go to the central bus terminal because it is closer.
6. After standing in line (again) at the govt office at the bus terminal, the gal tells us we need to get something different at some other little office somewhere else. (She writes it on a piece of paper.)
7. Get a cab to the other office. Nobody knows what we are talking about. Actually, we showed them the piece of paper. So one guy looks a t the paper and says ‘oh yes, please wait here’. So we do. For a long, long time. A really long time. And that is it. We just sit there waiting and finally realize that nothing more is going to happen.
8. So we go to a line that everyone else is going to and show them our piece of paper. HUH? Nobody knows what the paper is asking for. Well, not true. Two people do (kind of) know and tell us two different things.
SO ......... we go home and call Lorena. Lorena is a friend of ours. A Cuencana from an old family with old money. She is also a lawyer. She doesn’t actually practice law ......remember the ‘old family, old money’ part?
Next day we repeat all the above, but with Lorena. She speaks both Spanish and Law. Same outcome.
So, we (with Lorena) now go to see our actual lawyer, Nelson. Lorena and Nelson know each other because they were in law school together. Lorena explains the problem. It seems that when we got our Cedulas, the data input people in Quito (the capital) failed to input complete info into the system. Lorena was told we would have to fly to Quito to have it fixed. Nelson shows us the submitted forms for the Cedula and the printed stuff received from the govt in return and all the info is there. Some of it was just not input into the (one of many?) systems.
Nelson makes some phone calls to Quito and asks us to come back In a couple days.
A couple days later, Nelson takes us up to the Judicial Police office again with the sheaf of papers he showed us in his office a couple days ago (and copies), walks to the front of the line, argues with the official that sent us away twice, calls Quito and hands the guy the phone. When he is all done, he tells us that we can get the Record Policial at 9:00 the next morning. Which we do.
So, now we have the Record Policial and can go sign up for the driving class. Maybe. Maybe not.
Total time spent for Record Policial: About 16 - 20 hours spread over 4 different days.
Total cost: $5 each for the document fee and about $20 for copies, photos and transportation.
Definitely more than $30 worth of fun and sightseeing!
Tune in again tomorrow for (maybe) signing up for driving class
Life is sweet,
Clarke
Sounds like the Army. It's right up my alley!
ReplyDeleteJames