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You can register online here. If a stolen or abandoned bike is recovered by the police, they will check it against the registry. If it's registered, they'll contact the owner. If it's not, it goes to the warehouse for the quarterly auctions. Registration is painless. Everyone should take the 2 minutes it takes.
Thanks, didn't see Kevin's response when I last posted - I think we were posting at the same time.
I guess the whole "system" rides on the premise, "If a stolen or abandoned bike is recovered by the police." Do we have any evidence that that happens here in Chicago and that the police follow through as you suggest?
If the system works (in practice and not just "in theory"), there would be good reason to register. Otherwise, I can see why people wouldn't bother.
Kevin Conway said:You can register online here. If a stolen or abandoned bike is recovered by the police, they will check it against the registry. If it's registered, they'll contact the owner. If it's not, it goes to the warehouse for the quarterly auctions. Registration is painless. Everyone should take the 2 minutes it takes.
Thanks, didn't see Kevin's response when I last posted - I think we were posting at the same time.
I guess the whole "system" rides on the premise, "If a stolen or abandoned bike is recovered by the police." Do we have any evidence that that happens here in Chicago and that the police follow through as you suggest?
If the system works (in practice and not just "in theory"), there would be good reason to register. Otherwise, I can see why people wouldn't bother.
Kevin Conway said:You can register online here. If a stolen or abandoned bike is recovered by the police, they will check it against the registry. If it's registered, they'll contact the owner. If it's not, it goes to the warehouse for the quarterly auctions. Registration is painless. Everyone should take the 2 minutes it takes.
I'm with Amy. I'd like to see some "insider" info that thereactually is some sort of functional system in place. Anyone here know anyone who works for CPD?
I tried to use it - there log in didn't work. Not exactly 2 minutes either...
Kevin Conway said:You can register online here. If a stolen or abandoned bike is recovered by the police, they will check it against the registry. If it's registered, they'll contact the owner. If it's not, it goes to the warehouse for the quarterly auctions. Registration is painless. Everyone should take the 2 minutes it takes.
I'm at a real loss to understand why someone would not register. Especially someone as well informed and involved as you are, Howard.
Anyone that has read this thread has lost more time than it would take to use the online registration tool. Even if the site was a complete waste of time, you've only lost 2 minutes. But if there is even the slightest chance that it works, then you've potentially gained your bike back. At a minimum, should your bike get stolen and assuming you've registered your bike, the site will have some of the information you will need to fill out an insurance report (e.g., serial number, make and model, etc.).
Please explain to me what the downside is.
H3N3 said:I'm with Amy. I'd like to see some "insider" info that thereactually is some sort of functional system in place. Anyone here know anyone who works for CPD?
Well, precisely because I'm well informed, and because I like being well informed, I'd like to know what happens with the information once you send it off into the ether, particularly whether anyone is able to access it again and who and under what circumstances. I have never ever heard of anyone being contacted by the Chicago* police out of the blue to come pick up their recovered bicycle.
*stories abound for other municipalities though . . .
I will register later tonight just to see what happens (do you get anything you can print? if you do this could be very valuable)
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