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EU launches VRT probe 22.03.11

by Caoimhinn Barr, Inishowen Independent

INISHOWEN anti-VRT campaigner Ryan Stewart has hailed a ‘massive breakthrough’ in his fight to abolish the controversial motor tax.
The EU Committee on Petitions confirmed that it would launch an investigation into the two specific issues relating to the car levy, which may contravene European human rights laws.
Stewart wrote to the Brussels-based committee claiming that two groups of Irish citizens were being unfairly treated regarding VRT, namely students who drive to colleges in the North and cross-border workers.
Chairman of the Committee on Petitions, Erminia Mazzoni, said Stewart’s concerns "are admissible in accordance with the Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament". Mazzonie revealed that the committee "decided to ask the European Commission to conduct a preliminary investigation of the various aspects of the problem".
Stewart, who has campaigned against VRT for almost a year and recently stood in the General Election, said the news could mark the beginning of the end of the tax.
“The fact that the EU Petitions Committee deems the cases admissible shows that it feels there are serious flaws regarding VRT. This confirms everything we have been saying for the past twelve months; it is a very positive step,” he said.
Ryan Stewart.
“If the Government are forced to exempt cross-border workers and students from paying VRT then revenue from the tax will be so low it will not be worth keeping. It is like building blocks; if we pull out a few at the bottom then the whole thing will collapse,” he added.
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