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jaycee113

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  1. Give them nothing! They do not need encouragement. In my experience, when I defended myself against NE Parking, I won and was awarded costs. Keep going.
  2. Having gone down the route of appealing to the PPC and then to the IAS, only to be stumped by the PPC failing to provide correct information for the IAS appeal, this also rules out an appeal to POPLA. I can't see any court standing for such an abuse of process.
  3. Not sure about cameras but signs fixed to walls are subject to planning consent. When I worked in the outdoor advertising business we had to have planning consent for all freestanding signs and for those fixed to walls. The only possible exception was where the the sign was fixed to a wall of a business premises and advertised a product relevant to the business. So a sign on a pub wall advertising a particular brand of beer was covered by deemed consent, whereas it would need full consent to advertise a brand of car.
  4. Google maps shows the position of that permit holders sign on the entrance to the car park as being in Vanguard Way. It also shows that in 2019 there were UKPC signs attached to properties in Vanguard Way on the other side of the road from the car park.
  5. "Now she has some outstanding legacy debts with Moorcroft's which date back from around 2009. These were originally from Halifax relating to overdraft and credit cards that defaulted due to her having to give up work suddenly due to ill health if I remember correctly and before you ask she did get PPI back on those accounts." This is interesting. I had three consecutive loans with a Building Society on which I claimed PPI. I was entitled to PPI on all three of them and I was advised of the amount of the PPI due on each one. To receive the total amount of PPI the loans needed to have been settled in full. Loan one was paid off by loan two, loan two by loan three and loan three by Lowell Portfolio when they bought the debt. Result! I owed the building society nothing. I don't think it would harm you to contact the Halifax but there's a fair chance you don't need to.
  6. "You'll know if it's a TV License sales rep at your door by their unkempt appearance and refusal to reveal who they are. They will instead keep repeating the name of who they believe to be the occupant and keep asking you to confirm that's you." Not to mention the Vauxhall banger rusting away in the street!
  7. You can ignore them at any time if you wish to do so. Neither do you have to buy a licence. Of course, you then invite their attention. They will write their threatening letters and you will eventually be door stepped. You don't have to let their agent in when they call. They will go away but keep on coming back. If you can dispense with all of that hassle by filling out an online form every 2 years why would you do otherwise?
  8. Go here: About you - TV Licensing ™ WWW.TVLICENSING.CO.UK Welcome to TV Licensing. Use this site to access a range of information about TV Licensing in the UK, including methods of payment and details of television licence regulations. Fill out the form and make a declaration for two years. After two years they will ask you to do the same again.
  9. At the risk of repetition: Until you receive a Letter Before Claim from Lowell's solicitors it's all shredder fodder. Don't waste your time with it and don't lose any sleep over it. I wouldn't bother keeping it in case it may be useful in the future. Read, laugh and shred. No LBC = no worries. Sleep well my friend!
  10. Until you receive a Letter Before Claim from Lowell's solicitors it's all shredder fodder. Don't waste your time with it and don't lose any sleep over it.
  11. Note what FTMDave says. So long as Parking Eye have your correct address, and are communicating their bilge to you at your correct address, then any Letter Before Claim issued to you will land on your door mat.
  12. It's a tempting place to put the old foot down. Having been held to 10mph round the Armley Gyratory you come off on the bypass and the dual carriageway opens up. It used to be 70mph only now it's 40mph. There's a lot of roads like it. Good of you to accept that you were in the wrong. Honesty is the best policy!
  13. Argos were exceptionally good at consumer rights - then they were bought by Sainsburys! (Or whoever owns Sainsburys these days).
  14. Website sales - Either your business operates its own website to display and sell your products, or you use a service like Amazon, eBay, or Etsy. If a consumer chooses to ‘click and collect’ this is still classed as distance selling as the contract was agreed at a distance, even though the goods are collected in person. However, the distance selling regulations would not apply if a consumer chose to reserve goods online and then goes to your shop to review the reserved items with no commitment to purchase. That’s because the goods aren’t purchased in an online transaction as that is simply a goods reservation. Distance selling regulations: returns, refunds and consumer rights HARPERJAMES.CO.UK Are you focusing your business efforts on online sales? Ensure you know where you stand when it comes to distance selling regulations and consumer rights. As dx100uk has pointed out to you: So long as you ordered and paid for the goods in full online you have the benefit of DSR and the seller must refund you regardless of your reason for return. It matters not that you collected the item from a store nor that you returned it in a likewise fashion. It does not matter that the box has been opened. You are entitled to test the goods for fourteen days and you cannot do that without opening the box! Watch the time limits: 14 days to notify the supplier of a return. 14 days to make the return, from the date of notification, and 14 days to receive your refund from the date of return.
  15. For 'partners' read Debt Collectors. I've had experience of this. Just shred their letters as you do Lowell's letters. Ignore them. They will eventually hand the matter back to Lowell who will offer you bigger and bigger discounts if only you will pay! Don't ever pay - do as you have been advised and come back here.
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