Why is the traffic violation information uploaded one year later?
2 Answers
It may be due to slow updates of the traffic management platform system or unresolved system bugs. However, as long as the violations are processed before the annual inspection, there will be no impact on the vehicle owner. Below is relevant information about traffic violations: 1. Overview: Vehicle violations refer to acts where motor vehicles violate the Road Traffic Safety Law and traffic management regulations. The handling of vehicle violations includes warnings, fines (vehicle impoundment), temporary suspension of driver's license, revocation of driver's license, cancellation of driver's license, administrative detention, and criminal liability for acts that constitute crimes. 2. Legal provisions: The Road Traffic Safety Law of the People's Republic of China stipulates that traffic management departments of public security organs and their traffic police should promptly correct road traffic safety violations. Road traffic safety violations should be handled based on facts and relevant provisions of this law.
I encountered this issue last year. I was caught speeding on a provincial highway in August, but only found out about the ticket when renewing my insurance this year. A buddy from the traffic police said cross-province violation handling is the most troublesome, especially with speed cameras on county and rural roads—data has to be manually copied to a hard drive and mailed back to the precinct. System upgrades can cause further delays. In some small jurisdictions with limited police resources, it’s common to see six months of backlogged data uploaded all at once. Another pitfall is when car owners change their phone numbers without updating their records, so 12123 SMS alerts never reach them. My advice: check your violation records on the 12123 app three times a year to avoid regretting it when late fees double.