- Joined
- Dec 8, 2023
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- 349
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- Houston & SE Wisconsin
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Display name:
StraightnLevel
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Usually there is a reason, often related to past high jinx of test takers themselves. Still, instead of getting your back up, call the testing center.Any thoughts as to how to prepare so that I don't get turned away by a mindless bureaucratic catch-22?
“A residence address must be furnished. If you want us to use your P.O. Box rather than your residence as your mailing address you may provide both.How do they deal with people like me who have multiple residences?
My flight school and primary office is in Texas, so that's my FAA, tax, and financial address. My farm and most of my vehicles are in Wisconsin, so that's where my driver's license and insurance are located (insurance reasons).
Not everyone has a life that fits into neat little bureaucratic boxes.
Then you created your own problem. The FAA simply wants an address where they can contact you and send things to. In my opinion, your best option at this point would be to either change your driver’s license or your address with the FAA. PSI is not really the issue here, they’re just a contractor for the FAA so it will eventually get messy if things aren’t rectified.I've been 100% consistent in using my TX address for every transaction involving FAA and the IRS. PSI is the issue - they want a photo ID that shows the same address, and that is the sticking point.
You don’t understand. Your “federal address” isn’t changing. It’s just the address that the FAA is using to send correspondence. There’s no reason it couldn’t be the same as your driver’s license.Changing my DL isn't an option because of state insurance regulations. Changing my address for federal activities would create a massive tax headache, as well as permanently sending all of my mail to the wrong address.
I'm stuck between competing state and federal bureaucracies.
USPS does forward mail. It’s a free service no less.Trouble with that is twofold:
1) All my official mail would go somewhere where I only visit every 45-60 days.
You are likely violating Texas law by not transferring your vehicle registrations and drivers license.I do live there. It's just not the home address that is on my Wisconsin driver's license.
If I move my driver's license to TX, my insurance for the farm and all but one of my vehicles will get cancelled, due to Wisconsin state law. My primary employment and flight school however, are in TX, and that's where my mail goes and is the address from where I file my federal taxes.
I also have a place in North Carolina that is near both my in-laws and my son's university. That address does not factor in this situation, however.
Not everyone has a life that fits into neat little bureaucratic boxes.
Have you ever actually tried doing this? I have, and I have never yet had success. They always want an in-state license and proof of in-state insurance, neither of which you can get with a license from another state.
Yes. And you can get insurance even without a license.Have you ever actually tried doing this? I have, and I have never yet had success. They always want an in-state license and proof of in-state insurance, neither of which you can get with a license from another state.
Why were you trying to register the car in NC if she wasn't claiming residency there?In North Carolina we tried this for one of my daughters and the person at the counter literally told us that not only could we not get her an in-state tag, she could not legally drive in the state of North Carolina after 30 days as a student when her legal address was in Wisconsin. (We knew that this was complete and utter nonsense, but trying to argue with a DMV bureaucrat is like nailing jello to a tree.) That's why we moved her out of the dorm and got a permanent place.
Are there places in Wisconsin that require an emissions test? Not here in Wausau.Because it didn't make sense to drive it 2,000 miles to get an emissions test done so that we could title it in Wisconsin.
Active US military are exempt from most state registration and operator license transfer requirements.I was in the Air Force stationed in Kansas, and purchased a car and registered it there. Kansas law required me to have a Kansas driver license. I also had a vehicle with a Wisconsin license plate and had a Wisconsin driver license.
Home on leave, I went to renew my Wisconsin driver license. One of the questions on the renewal was "Do you possess a current driver license from another state? If yes, which state?"
I answered honestly, and the clerk then asked me to surrender my Kansas license. But I said I need that, because I live in Kansas and one of our vehicles is registered there. The clerk's response: "You should have lied."
He then told me that I could operate in Wisconsin on an expired driver license as long as I was on active duty.
I think Illinois you just tell them it’s out of state and they waive it.
Texas too. And has a specific exemption for full-time students. You just get it inspected when you bring it back to the state.I think Illinois you just tell them it’s out of state and they waive it.
They also offer an exemption if the vehicle is in a location where testing isn’t available.