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    • Monika the first four pages of the Private parking section have at least 12 of our members who have also been caught out on this scam site. That's around one quarter of all our current complaints. Usually we might expect two current complaints for the same park within 4 pages.  So you are in good company and have done well in appealing to McDonalds in an effort to resolve the matter without having  paid such a bunch of rogues. Most people blindly pay up. Met . Starbucks and McDonalds  are well aware of the situation and seem unwilling to make it easier for motorists to avoid getting caught. For instance, instead of photographing you, if they were honest and wanted you  to continue using their services again, they would have said "Excuse me but if you are going to go to Mc donalds from here, it will cost you £100." But no they kett quiet and are now pursuing you for probably a lot more than £100 now. They also know thst  they cannot charge anything over the amount stated on the car park signs. Their claims for £160 or £170 are unlawful yet so many pay that to avoid going to Court. When the truth is that Met are unlikely to take them to Court since they know they will lose. The PCNs are issued on airport land which is covered by Byelaws so only the driver can be pursued, not the keeper. But they keep writing to you as they do not know who was driving unless you gave it away when you appealed. Even if they know you were driving they should still lose in Court for several reasons. The reason we ask you to fill out our questionnaire is to help you if MET do decide to take you to Court in the end. Each member who visited the park may well have different experiences while there which can help when filling out a Witness statement [we will help you with that if it comes to it.] if you have thrown away the original PCN  and other paperwork you obviously haven't got a jerbil or a guinea pig as their paper makes great litter boxes for them.🙂 You can send an SAR to them to get all the information Met have on you to date. Though if you have been to several sites already, you may have done that by now. In the meantime, you will be being bombarded by illiterate debt collectors and sixth rate solicitors all threatening you with ever increasing amounts as well as being hung drawn and quartered. Their letters can all be safely ignored. On the odd chance that you may get a Letter of Claim from them just come back to us and we will get you to send a snotty letter back to them so that they know you are not happy, don't care a fig for their threats and will see them off in Court if they finally have the guts to carry on. If you do have the original PCN could you please post it up, carefully removing your name. address and car registration number but including dates and times. If not just click on the SAR to take you to the form to send to Met.
    • In order for us to help you we require the following information:- [if there are more than one defendant listed - tell us] 1 defendant   Which Court have you received the claim from ? County Court Business Centre, Northampton   Name of the Claimant ? LC Asset 2 S.A R.L   Date of issue – . 28/04/23   Particulars of Claim   What is the claim for –    (1) The Claimant ('C') claims the whole of the outstanding balance due and payable under an agreement referenced xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and opened effective from xx/xx/2017. The agreement is regulated by the Consumer Credit Act 1974 ('CCA'), was signed by the Defendant ('D') and from which credit was extended to D.   (2) D failed to comply with a Default Notice served pursuant to s87 (1) CCA and by xx/xx/2022 a default was recorded.   (3) As at xx/xx/2022 the Defendant owed MBNA LTD the sum of 12,xxx.xx. By an agreement in writing the benefit of the debt has been legally assigned to C effective xx/xx/2022 and made regular upon C serving a Notice of Assignment upon D shortly thereafter.   (4) And C claims- 1. 12,xxx.xx 2. Interest pursuant to Section 69 County Courts Act 1984 at a rate of 8% per annum from xx/01/2023 to xx/04/2023 of 2xx.xx and thereafter at a daily rate of 2.52 to date of judgement or sooner payment. Date xx/xx/2023   What is the total value of the claim? 12k   Have you received prior notice of a claim being issued pursuant to paragraph 3 of the PAPDC (Pre Action Protocol) ? Yes   Have you changed your address since the time at which the debt referred to in the claim was allegedly incurred? No   Did you inform the claimant of your change of address? N/A Is the claim for - a Bank Account (Overdraft) or credit card or loan or catalogue or mobile phone account? Credit Card   When did you enter into the original agreement before or after April 2007 ? After   Do you recall how you entered into the agreement...On line /In branch/By post ? Online   Is the debt showing on your credit reference files (Experian/Equifax /Etc...) ? Yes, but amount differs slightly   Has the claim been issued by the original creditor or was the account assigned and it is the Debt purchaser who has issued the claim. DP issued claim   Were you aware the account had been assigned – did you receive a Notice of Assignment? Not that I recall...   Did you receive a Default Notice from the original creditor? Not that I recall...   Have you been receiving statutory notices headed “Notice of Sums in Arrears”  or " Notice of Arrears "– at least once a year ? Yes   Why did you cease payments? Loss of employment main cause   What was the date of your last payment? Early 2021   Was there a dispute with the original creditor that remains unresolved? No   Did you communicate any financial problems to the original creditor and make any attempt to enter into a debt management plan? No   -----------------------------------
    • Hello CAG Team, I'm adding the contents of the claim to this thread, but wanted to open the thread with an urgent question: Do I have to supply a WS for a claim with a court date that states " at the hearing the court will consider allocation and, time permitting, give an early neutral evaluation of the case" ? letter is an N24 General Form of Judgement or Order, if so, then I've messed up again. Court date 25 May 2024 The letter from court does not state (like the other claims I have) that I must provide WS within 28 days.. BUT I have recently received a WS from Link for it! making me think I do need to!??
    • Massive issues from Scottish Power I wonder if someone could advise next steps. Tennant moved out I changed the electric into my name I was out the country at the time so I hadn't been to the flat. During sign up process they tried to hijack my gas supply as well which I made it clear I didn't want duel fuel from them but they still went ahead with it. Phoned them up again. a few days later telling them to make sure they stopped it but they said too late ? had to get my current supplier to cancel it. Paid £50 online to ensure there was money covering standing charges etc eventually got to the flat no power. Phoned Scottish Power 40 minutes to get through they state I have a pay as you go meter and that they had set me up on a credit account so they need to send an engineer out which they will pass my details onto. Phone called from engineer asking questions , found out the float is vacant so not an emergency so I have to speak to Scottish Power again. Spoke with the original person from Scottish Power who admitted a mistake (I had told her it was vacant) and now states that it will take 4 weeks to get an appointment but if I want to raise a complaint they will contact me in 48 hours and it will be looked at quicker. Raised a complaint , complaints emailed me within 24 hours to say it will take 7 days till he speaks with me. All I want is power in the property would I be better switching over to EON who supply the gas surely they could sort it out quicker? One thing is for sure I will never bother with Scottish Power ever again.    
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Asda Car park


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Guest Gertie100

Anyone listen to radio 5 approx 5.30pm yesterday?

Apparently Asda are going to start ticketing / clamping people who abuse the disabled / parent & child parking spaces (and I don't mean standing there and shouting at the space :-D :-D )

 

The presenter clearly asked if they had the right to do this, and the answer was yes, because the car parks were private and run by a management firm who are registered with the DVLA.

The pilot scheme ran in Liverpool, and is just about to be rolled out in London before it hits all asda stores.

 

I shop in Asda, but do not park in disabled or parent/child (unless my girl is with me). However there are rumblings in our local town that Asda are going to put a limit on the time in which you can park in their car park. The shop is in the middle of the town centre and people park there regardless of whether or not they are visiting the shop because as far as Joe Public is concerned it is simply another town centre car park.

So it wouldn't surprise if eventually they also tagged this restriction to the abuse of restricted spaces.

 

Question is in a nutshell:

Do Asda have any rights at all to apply charges for any of the above.

Currently the car park is free - as are all the car parks in my town.

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I am totally support Asda and would gladly provide my services free of charge to issue tickets to people who have no consideration for others.

I have noticed that most abusers drive very expensive cars or 4x4`s

which they can`t park due to there inability to control the vehicle.

I would also clamp the vehicles and get immediate payment thus saving paper work appeals etc.

Good make the fine £500 £400 for charity

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Guest Gertie100

So they can not ticket / clamp people who park in spaces they shouldn't?

 

IIIuminate - I'm going to ignore your post as that is not what the question was about. Go start your own thread instead of hi jacking everyone elses.

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The land belongs to Asda and by using there land you are entering into a contract.

 

Very unlikely. The land will belong to ASDA's landlord in most cases. And it will be their land.

 

You cannot enter into a contract (implied or otherwise) merely by being present on the land. There must be adequate, legal and enforceable, signage to provide the terms of any implied contract and these should be available to the driver before they park. It could then be held that the driver, by parking, has made an informed acceptance of the implied contract. Note than any such contract can only be with the driver and not the RK as RK.

 

I suggest that you read up on private parking on the forum before posting. That way you will have a much better understanding of what can and what can't be done about parking on private land.

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Naturally the owner of the land can try to do anything they want within reason, but noticed this article today and PMSL.

 

Whoops!

 

ASDA to fine drivers in wrong parking bay

 

ASDA is to fine drivers for the misuse of disabled and parent and child parking bays in its car park at the Crumbles Retail Park.

 

All profits generated from the fines will go back to baby charity Tommy's and Motability, the leading car scheme for disabled people.

 

The move, which is part of a national policy from the group, will see abusers fined £60 for parking in parent and child and disabled spaces and comes into force over the next few weeks.

 

The scheme was trialled in the north, and when surveyed four out of five ASDA customers supported rolling out the scheme nationwide.

 

The trial, which lasted three months' operated in six stores in Liverpool. As a result the number of free parking spaces increased by more than 60 per cent for disabled drivers and parents with young children.

 

A spokesman said, "At ASDA we have decided to take a stand to keep specialised parking spaces available to those customers that need them.

 

"Most customers using these bays without good reason don't realise their actions impact on people who rely on them to do their weekly shop.

 

"We are not handing out tickets to make a profit as money raised will go back to charity.

 

"Signs in all stores will clearly state that you will get a fine if you park here unnecessarily.

 

"We would encourage anyone who manages a car park to take our lead."

 

Jane Brewin, chief executive of Tommy's, the baby charity, said, "A routine trip to the shops can turn into a nightmare for some parents — especially when they don't have adequate parking spaces and other much-needed parent and baby services made available to them.

 

"Tommy's believes that organisations that claim to put the needs of parents first should seriously look at their parking policy for parents to uncover whether their schemes actually work in practice.

 

"ASDA is setting a great example by ensuring that supermarkets are as accessible for parents as possible, by penalising those who exploit bays specifically reserved for parents with young children.

 

"Putting fines in place for parking misuse is a bold move by ASDA but is the right one for giving parents with young children a helping hand."

 

From the Eastbourne Herald 11/1/08

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This

parent and child
and this

parents with young children.
are not synonymous.

 

Parent/child spaces have no parallel in highway parking - unlike disabled spaces.

 

If I take my 86 year-old mother or my 22 year-old son shopping, I presume that I can use a parent and child space?

 

At what point does a child cease to be 'young'; by definition a child nust be younger than the (natural) parent?

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I am totally support Asda and would gladly provide my services free of charge to issue tickets to people who have no consideration for others.

I have noticed that most abusers drive very expensive cars or 4x4`s

which they can`t park due to there inability to control the vehicle.

I would also clamp the vehicles and get immediate payment thus saving paper work appeals etc.

Good make the fine £500 £400 for charity

 

I have never heard such a load of bowlarks in all my life :shock:

Tip us a wink on my scales if you think I may have helped at all;)

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If I take my 86 year-old mother or my 22 year-old son shopping, I presume that I can use a parent and child space?

 

At what point does a child cease to be 'young'; by definition a child nust be younger than the (natural) parent?

 

Absolutely.

 

I have no qualms about using parent and child parking spaces when visiting a supermarket with my 9 year old and where there are no unmarked bays available. I am a customer, spending money in their store and profiting them by doing so. They earn no less from me than they would from somebody with a smaller child so I am not depriving the store of money, nor greatly inconveniencing anybody else, and there is no signage to suggest any age limit for use of such spaces.

Any advice given is done so on the assumption that recipients will also take professional advice where appropriate.

 

PLEASE HELP US TO KEEP THIS SITE RUNNING

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The presenter clearly asked if they had the right to do this, and the answer was yes, because the car parks were private and run by a management firm who are registered with the DVLA.

 

Registered with the DVLA - thats nice. That means they can get the RK details from the DVLA.

 

I wonder if they are registered with the SIA? They need to be if they are going to clamp people.

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Supermarkets are very sensitive to prices and profit margins, which is why they are continually having price wars with each other through the press.All it needs for every one to write to their local newspaper saying they will take their custom elsewhere for this nonsense to be stopped'

I wonder if Asda will in future include in their newspaper adverts that their 'fines' for parking and shopping with them are cheaper than Tesco's.:rolleyes:

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ASDA's have a store in Bedminster Bristol right in the middle of the Bedminster shopping area. This of course is very attractive to other shoppers. ASDA's deal with this by charging, unless you have a receipt for making a purchase in their store at that time. Incidently this was common practice in some car parks in the U S where the car park had agreements with local businesses. An idea that shoul be adopted in this country perhaps.

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Is asda simply being led by the reaction to the introduction by Tesco of ANPR cameras into 99% of their car parks, IE no real adverse reaction !.

 

My local asda is in a town centre, and has had ticketing or a 'civil car parking charge' as they like to call it for about 3 years now.

 

First Tesco, now Asda - only a matter of time until Sainsburys decides to go the same way. At least they seem to be donating it to charity rather than using it to line their pockets.

All opinions & information are the personal view of the poster, and are not that of any organisation, company or employer. Any information disclosed by the poster is for personal use only. Permission to process this data under the Data Protection act is NOT GIVEN to any company, only personal readers.

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First Tesco, now Asda - only a matter of time until Sainsburys decides to go the same way. At least they seem to be donating it to charity rather than using it to line their pockets.

 

I am very cynical about this statement.Asda say the Profits will go to charity; i.e what is left after expenses are paid. These could be anything up to 99% of the penalty charges, leaving 1% to charity.I would be much happier if they said ALL charges collected would go to charity; and finance the policing of their car parks themselves - after all it is nominally their property.

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I can ALL free customer parking in areas of high demand for parking being phased out soon. Whilst I realise these companies make large profits once all the parking spaces end up being used for the entire day by commuters parking and catching the train/tube they will start charging. Why should B&Q pay for a huge car park for it to be filled with people going to the Cinema or Asda provide parking for the local hospital? Up until now most drivers do get scared and worry about PPC notices. Starting a public campaign against them and informing people these companies are powerless is only going to end up with one result, everyone will pay to park to go shopping.

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Not at all green man. The owners of the car park can do as I previously mentioned. it's free if you use the business and a time limit can be put on the length of stay. Say two hours free for shopping in their store.

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Not at all green man. The oners of the car park can do as I previously mentioned. it's free if you use the business and a time limit can be put on the length of stay. Say two hours free for shopping in their store.

 

 

They already do that and no one pays the 'fines' for overstaying as they are according general opinion unenforceable.

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ASDA's have a store in Bedminster Bristol right in the middle of the Bedminster shopping area. This of course is very attractive to other shoppers. ASDA's deal with this by charging, unless you have a receipt for making a purchase in their store at that time. Incidently this was common practice in some car parks in the U S where the car park had agreements with local businesses. An idea that shoul be adopted in this country perhaps.

 

ASDA Bedminster have never asked to see my receipt when I have I shopped there. They do have barriers at the entrance to the car park but they never seem to use them and seem to not have any on the exits.

 

That said providing the charges are reasonable and that the conditions of entry are made clearly visible at the time of entry I think most people don't have to much of a problem paying to park or providing a receipt to prove that they have shopped in the store providing the parking. It's when we get to the realms of paying penalty charges or being clamped for non-compliance or alleged non-compliance that we get problems.

 

The supermarkets have to decide whether the lost business through commuters/non-shoppers parking plus the cost of having attendants to check receipts/accept payment plus the loss of goodwill (if any) is worth the revenue generated by the "extra sales to gain a receipt" plus the charges accrued from the parking charges.

 

I suspect that many Supermarkets may have trialled this sort of thing in the past and rejected it as un-economic. However I did encounter this at a store in the Midlands recently so it may be that the local stores are left to decide how to manage things.

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