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    • I think my post is too long so I've split it ino two: It seems the solicitor has got your case listed for this “appeal” but not for the Stat Dec(SD). You need to ensure you can perform your SD on the day. If you are able to make your SD in court, the situation you are in now is more straightforward than if you made your SD via a solicitor. You have been convicted of two offences (and two were dropped) via proceedings of which you were not aware. The way to remedy that is to perform an SD. No appeal is necessary (nor is it available via the magistrates’ court). If you are able to make your SD this is how I see it panning out: You will make your SD to the court. The court must allow you to make it as it will have been made within 21 days of you discovering your convictions. You will then be asked to enter pleas to the four charges again. At this point you should plead not guilty to all four but make the court aware that you will plead guilty to the speeding charges on the condition that the FtP charges are dropped. The prosecutor will be asked whether or not this is agreed. In my opinion the overwhelming likelihood is that it will be. If it is you will be sentenced for the two speeding offences under the normal guidelines. In the unlikely event it is not accepted,  the speeding charges will be withdrawn (they have no evidence you were driving). You have no viable defence to the FtP charges and so should plead guilty. This will mean 12 points and a “totting up” ban (as you have already suffered). You can present an “Exceptional Hardship” argument to try to avoid this (explained below).   Because of this, I don’t see any need to make an argument to ask to have any ban suspended (pending an appeal to the Crown Court) unless and until you are banned again. The only reason I can think the solicitor suggested this is to secure a (Magistrates')  court date. I was surprised when you said you had an appointment so quickly; a date for an SD usually takes longer than that. However, if you can use it to your advantage, all well and good. I think my post is too long so I've split it into two: It seems the solicitor has got your case listed for this “appeal” but not for the Stat Dec(SD). You need to ensure you can perform your SD on the day. If you are able to make your SD in court, the situation you are in now is more straightforward than if you made your SD via a solicitor. You have been convicted of two offences (and two were dropped) via proceedings of which you were not aware. The way to remedy that is to perform an SD. No appeal is necessary (nor is it available via the magistrates’ court). If you are able to make your SD this is how I see it panning out: You will make your SD to the court. The court must allow you to make it as it will have been made within 21 days of you discovering your convictions. You will then be asked to enter pleas to the four charges again. At this point you should plead not guilty to all four but make the court aware that you will plead guilty to the speeding charges on the condition that the FtP charges are dropped. The prosecutor will be asked whether or not this is agreed. In my opinion the overwhelming likelihood is that it will be. If it is you will be sentenced for the two speeding offences under the normal guidelines. In the unlikely event it is not accepted,  the speeding charges will be withdrawn (they have no evidence you were driving). You have no viable defence to the FtP charges and so should plead guilty. This will mean 12 points and a “totting up” ban (as you have already suffered). You can present an “Exceptional Hardship” argument to try to avoid this (explained below).   Because of this, I don’t see any need to make an argument to ask to have any ban suspended (pending an appeal to the Crown Court) unless and until you are banned again. The only reason I can think the solicitor suggested this is to secure a (Magistrates')  court date. I was surprised when you said you had an appointment so quickly; a date for an SD usually takes longer than that. However, if you can use it to your advantage, all well and good.
    • It seems the solicitor has got your case listed for this “appeal” but not for the Stat Dec(SD). You need to ensure you can perform your SD on the day. If you are able to make your SD in court, the situation you are in now is more straightforward than if you made your SD via a solicitor. You have been convicted of two offences (and two were dropped) via proceedings of which you were not aware. The way to remedy that is to perform an SD. No appeal is necessary (nor is it available via the magistrates’ court). If you are able to make your SD this is how I see it panning out: You will make your SD to the court. The court must allow you to make it as it will have been made within 21 days of you discovering your convictions. You will then be asked to enter pleas to the four charges again. At this point you should plead not guilty to all four but make the court aware that you will plead guilty to the speeding charges on the condition that the FtP charges are dropped. The prosecutor will be asked whether or not this is agreed. In my opinion the overwhelming likelihood is that it will be. If it is you will be sentenced for the two speeding offences under the normal guidelines. In the unlikely event it is not accepted,  the speeding charges will be withdrawn (they have no evidence you were driving). You have no viable defence to the FtP charges and so should plead guilty. This will mean 12 points and a “totting up” ban (as you have already suffered). You can present an “Exceptional Hardship” argument to try to avoid this (explained below).   Because of this, I don’t see any need to make an argument to ask to have any ban suspended (pending an appeal to the Crown Court) unless and until you are banned again. The only reason I can think the solicitor suggested this is to secure a (Magistrates')  court date. I was surprised when you said you had an appointment so quickly; a date for an SD usually takes longer than that. However, if you can use it to your advantage, all well and good. I can’t comment on the argument that the two speeding offences were committed “on the same occasion” as I don’t have the details. That phrase is not defined anywhere and is a matter for the court to decide. It’s an interesting thought (and only that) that such an argument could equally be made for the two FtP offences. If the requests for driver’s details arrived at your old address at the same time, with the same deadline for reply, it could be argued that you failed to respond to hem both “on the same occasion” (i.e when the 28 days to respond expired) and so should only receive penalty points for one. Hopefully you won’t need to go there. I think you have information about avoiding a “totting up” ban. But here’s the magistrates’ latest guidance on "Exceptional Hardship" (EH) which they refer to: When considering whether there are grounds to reduce or avoid a totting up disqualification the court should have regard to the following: It is for the offender to prove to the civil standard of proof that such grounds exist. Other than very exceptionally, this will require evidence from the offender, and where such evidence is given, it must be sworn. Where it is asserted that hardship would be caused, the court must be satisfied that it is not merely inconvenience, or hardship, but exceptional hardship for which the court must have evidence; Almost every disqualification entails hardship for the person disqualified and their immediate family. This is part of the deterrent objective of the provisions combined with the preventative effect of the order not to drive. If a motorist continues to offend after becoming aware of the risk to their licence of further penalty points, the court can take this circumstance into account. Courts should be cautious before accepting assertions of exceptional hardship without evidence that alternatives (including alternative means of transport) for avoiding exceptional hardship are not viable; Loss of employment will be an inevitable consequence of a driving ban for many people. Evidence that loss of employment would follow from disqualification is not in itself sufficient to demonstrate exceptional hardship; whether or not it does will depend on the circumstances of the offender and the consequences of that loss of employment on the offender and/or others. I must say, I still do not understand what the solicitor means by “As a safeguard we have lodged the appeal and applied to suspend your ban pending appeal due to the time limit for being able to automatically appeal without getting leave of the Judge.” When they speak of “leave of the judge” I assume they mean they have lodged an appeal with the Crown Court. I don’t know what for or why they would do this. It seems to follow on from their explanation of the “totting up” ban. If so, I’m surprised that the Crown Court has accepted an appeal against something that has not yet happened. But as I said, i is no clear to me. Only you can decide whether to employ your solicitor to represent you in court. If it was me I would not because there is nothing he can say that you cannot say yourself. However, I am fairly knowledgeable of the process and confident I can deal with it. That said, I do have a feeling that the solicitor is somewhat “over egging the pudding” by introducing such things as appeals to the Crown Court which, in all honesty, you can deal with if they are required. I can only say that the process you will attempt to employ is by no means unusual and all court users will be familiar with it. I can also say that I have only ever heard of one instance where it was refused. In summary, it is my view that it is very unlikely that your offer to do the deal will be refused. If it is accepted, you may be able to persuade he court that the two speeding offences occurred "on the same occasion" and so should only receive one lot of points. Let me know the details (timings, places, etc) and I'll give you my opinion. Just in case your offer is refused, you should have your EH argument ready. Whether it's worth paying what will amount to many hundreds of pounds to pay someone to see this through is your call.  Let me know if I can help further. It seems the solicitor has got your case listed for this “appeal” but not for the Stat Dec(SD). You need to ensure you can perform your SD on the day. If you are able to make your SD in court, the situation you are in now is more straightforward than if you made your SD via a solicitor. You have been convicted of two offences (and two were dropped) via proceedings of which you were not aware. The way to remedy that is to perform an SD. No appeal is necessary (nor is it available via the magistrates’ court). If you are able to make your SD this is how I see it panning out: You will make your SD to the court. The court must allow you to make it as it will have been made within 21 days of you discovering your convictions. You will then be asked to enter pleas to the four charges again. At this point you should plead not guilty to all four but make the court aware that you will plead guilty to the speeding charges on the condition that the FtP charges are dropped. The prosecutor will be asked whether or not this is agreed. In my opinion the overwhelming likelihood is that it will be. If it is you will be sentenced for the two speeding offences under the normal guidelines. In the unlikely event it is not accepted,  the speeding charges will be withdrawn (they have no evidence you were driving). You have no viable defence to the FtP charges and so should plead guilty. This will mean 12 points and a “totting up” ban (as you have already suffered). You can present an “Exceptional Hardship” argument to try to avoid this (explained below).   Because of this, I don’t see any need to make an argument to ask to have any ban suspended (pending an appeal to the Crown Court) unless and until you are banned again. The only reason I can think the solicitor suggested this is to secure a (Magistrates')  court date. I was surprised when you said you had an appointment so quickly; a date for an SD usually takes longer than that. However, if you can use it to your advantage, all well and good. I can’t comment on the argument that the two speeding offences were committed “on the same occasion” as I don’t have the details. That phrase is not defined anywhere and is a matter for the court to decide. It’s an interesting thought (and only that) that such an argument could equally be made for the two FtP offences. If the requests for driver’s details arrived at your old address at the same time, with the same deadline for reply, it could be argued that you failed to respond to hem both “on the same occasion” (i.e when the 28 days to respond expired) and so should only receive penalty points for one. Hopefully you won’t need to go there. I think you have information about avoiding a “totting up” ban. But here’s the magistrates’ latest guidance on "Exceptional Hardship" (EH) which they refer to: When considering whether there are grounds to reduce or avoid a totting up disqualification the court should have regard to the following: It is for the offender to prove to the civil standard of proof that such grounds exist. Other than very exceptionally, this will require evidence from the offender, and where such evidence is given, it must be sworn. Where it is asserted that hardship would be caused, the court must be satisfied that it is not merely inconvenience, or hardship, but exceptional hardship for which the court must have evidence; Almost every disqualification entails hardship for the person disqualified and their immediate family. This is part of the deterrent objective of the provisions combined with the preventative effect of the order not to drive. If a motorist continues to offend after becoming aware of the risk to their licence of further penalty points, the court can take this circumstance into account. Courts should be cautious before accepting assertions of exceptional hardship without evidence that alternatives (including alternative means of transport) for avoiding exceptional hardship are not viable; Loss of employment will be an inevitable consequence of a driving ban for many people. Evidence that loss of employment would follow from disqualification is not in itself sufficient to demonstrate exceptional hardship; whether or not it does will depend on the circumstances of the offender and the consequences of that loss of employment on the offender and/or others. I must say, I still do not understand what the solicitor means by “As a safeguard we have lodged the appeal and applied to suspend your ban pending appeal due to the time limit for being able to automatically appeal without getting leave of the Judge.” When they speak of “leave of the judge” I assume they mean they have lodged an appeal with the Crown Court. I don’t know what for or why they would do this. It seems to follow on from their explanation of the “totting up” ban. If so, I’m surprised that the Crown Court has accepted an appeal against something that has not yet happened. But as I said, i is no clear to me. Only you can decide whether to employ your solicitor to represent you in court. If it was me I would not because there is nothing he can say that you cannot say yourself. However, I am fairly knowledgeable of the process and confident I can deal with it. That said, I do have a feeling that the solicitor is somewhat “over egging the pudding” by introducing such things as appeals to the Crown Court which, in all honesty, you can deal with if they are required. I can only say that the process you will attempt to employ is by no means unusual and all court users will be familiar with it. I can also say that I have only ever heard of one instance where it was refused. In summary, it is my view that it is very unlikely that your offer to do the deal will be refused. If it is accepted, you may be able to persuade he court that the two speeding offences occurred "on the same occasion" and so should only receive one lot of points. Let me know the details (timings, places, etc) and I'll give you my opinion. Just in case your offer is refused, you should have your EH argument ready. Whether it's worth paying what will amount to many hundreds of pounds to pay someone to see this through is your call.  Let me know if I can help further.
    • This must be part of the new tactic from Evri.  They know they are going to lose. They take it to the wire and then don't bother to turn up in order to save themselves costs and of course they don't give a damn about the cost to the British taxpayer and the extra court delays they cause. This is a nasty dishonest company – but rather in line with all of the parcel delivery industry which knows that their insurance requirements are unlawful. They know that their prohibited items are for the most part unfair terms. They know for the most part that a "safe place" is exactly what it means – are not left on somebody's doorstep in full view. They know that obtaining a signature means that they have to show the signature not simply claim that they received a signature. They are making huge profits especially from their unlawful and unenforceable insurance requirement. Although this is less valuable than the PPI scandal, in terms of the number of people who are affected nationwide, PPI pales into insignificance. I hope the paralegals working for Evri are proud of themselves and they tell their families what they have done during the day when they go home.
    • Your PCN does not comply with the Protection of freedoms Act 2012 Schedule 4 Section 9[2][a] (a)specify the vehicle, the relevant land on which it was parked and the period of parking to which the notice relates; The only time on the PCN is 17.14. That is only  a time for there to be a period there would have to be a start and and end time mentioned. of course they do show the ANPR arrival and departures  times but that is not the parking period and their times are on the photographs not on the PCN. They also failed to comply with S.9[2][f] as they omitted to say that they could only pursue the keeper if they complied with the Act. That means that they can only pursue the driver as the keeper cannot be held liable for the charge. As they do not know who was driving and Courts do not accept that the driver and the keeper are the same person they will struggle to win. Especially as so many people are able to legally drive your car and you haven't appealed giving them no indication therefore of who was driving. Small nitpicking point-the date of Infringement was 22/04/2024. They appear to be saying that they can charge an extra amount [up to £70 ] if they have to use a debt collector. You do not have a contract with a debt collector so they cannot add that cost. You paid for four hours so it can only be the 15 minutes they are complaining about. You are entitled to a ten minute minimum grace period at the end of the parking period which would be easier to explain if the car park had been bigger. However if you allow for two minutes to park and two minutes to leave that gives you one minute to account for. Things like being held on the way out by cars in front waiting to get on to Northgate or even your own car being held up trying to get on to Northgate at a busy time. then other considerations like having to stop to allow pedestrians to walk in front of you or being held up by another car doing a u turn in front of your car. you would have to check with the driver and see if they could account for an extra one minute things like a disabled passenger or having to strap in a child . I am not advocating lying since that could lead to serious problems [like jail time] but there can be an awful lot of minor things that can cause a hold up of a minute even the engine not starting straight away or another car being badly parked as examples. Sadly you cannot include the 5 minute Consideration period as both IPC and BPA fail to comply with the convention that you can include that time with the Grace period.  
    • Defence struck out not case struck out...you have judgment  Well done topic title updated Regard's Please consider making a donation if not already to support us to help others.   Andy.   .
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Sky Or Virgin Media??


Mumof21985
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Firsty sorry if this is in the wrong place, I am just exploring at the moment and keep finding more things on here :D

 

Currently we are with Virgin Media.

 

*Phone

*Net

*XL tv (sports, kids, movies)

 

We are paying £86!!!:( I am 99% sure it keeps going up as we were told £62 when agreeing.

 

Anyway, is Sky much cheaper?

 

We have to have kids and sports. Also the whole package.

 

Thanks in advance

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You can get

Sky talk (Unlimited)

Sky Broadband Max. 16MB unlimmited usage

Sky plus HD box

Sky sports 1

Kids channels

All for £53.25 per month.

 

 

You can create your own package and have as little or as much as you want and check out the prices here Sky Packages - Digital TV, Broadband and Phone - Buy Now

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I think sky is £42 for all the channels you mention

What package are you on for phone and net?

How long have you been with Virgin?

Have you asked for a breakdown of the costs?

 

 

 

 

 

P.S given the choice i'd stay with Virgin its far more reliable than sky

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phone is talk evenings and weekend. broadband is £17 (no idea what MB that is though)

 

I like the idea of the HD box with sky....

 

Another thing keeping us with virgin is setanta for free and virgin on demand. Do sky do any kind of service where you can watch music videos,films,programmes as and when you want to?

 

Thanks for the replies

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sky have sky anytime where there is radom programmes saved to view. they do not have VOD at the moment.

 

with sky phoneline and evenings and weekends is £10

bb max is now £15 (£10 til jan 2010 if u have skytalk)

full package is £46

 

= £66

 

if you take hd then £9.75 for hd channels

 

Ida x

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  • 2 weeks later...

I have virgin media and I get:

 

Talk Unlimited (to landlines, also love the saynoto0870.com)

Broadband 10mb

and TV XL

 

for £40

 

I've done a bit of bartering in my time, and last year I threatened to move to sky (paid for the installation and everything) they then gave me a offer I couldn't refuse (upgrade to XL tv for free)

 

I also spotted that when I went to upgrade my broadband that the website said £20 a month, when it's actually billed at £25. I did this whole false advertising speech, and now I get £5 chopped off my bill every month. Ring up the sales people and really threaten to leave, it's amazing what a bit of bargaining can do.

 

Goodluck x

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  • 3 months later...

I'd think carefully about Sky. They're very good with getting you to sign up but their customer care is awful, and don't even get me started on cancellations.

 

I'd personally call up Sky, get an accurate quote for everything you have with Virgin at the moment. Then call Virgin and say you're thinking of cancelling and going with Sky as your bills are too high, and ask if they can beat the quote Sky have given you.

 

If they can, great. If not, then you can search around for better deals.

 

x

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If you have been with Virgin and are now out of contract why not see what they can do for you to keep you as a customer?

 

I had them reduce my package by £30 if I signed a new 12 month term.

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Be wary though, as I believe with Virgin, if you add or change any of your services, they automatically put you on a brand new 12 month contract. I done this in January, and was quite pleased with the deal i got, then recently found I'm paying £25 a month for 10mb broadband, when new customers can get 20mb for £20.

 

A friend of mine works for Virgin, and he said don't bother emailing them, as they just got rid of the department who deals with email queries, so best go straight to the phone.

 

I'm gonna get in touch with sky and tell them my contract is up in January, and what smart little deals can they do for me! They've called me about 5 times this years as it is, so hopefully I'll get something decent.

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No - you can change your package without restarting your commitment. Only when you negotiate a new deal or add a service is this added, for the new service only.

 

IF TV choice is important, then there's no question Sky provides the best choice. HOWEVER, they require to use BT's lines for Internet, and ADSL is pretty awful as a delivery mechanism.

 

IF Internet is important, then there's no question VM will offer a more robust connection, with or without a Phone connection - something you cannot do with Sky.

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You should be aware that Sky's much-touted HD channels are not full HD.

 

They are transmitted as 720p not 1080p.

 

That is very interesting.

 

I'm thinking if switching the TV from Virgin as their HD offering is dire. Do Virgin transmit in 1080 (for the few HD offerings they have?)

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Of course, 720 IS HD... just not as good as 1080.

 

As for VM's HD content - a whole raft on channels are launching in August, so at least VoD and BBC HD will have some company at last!

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As for VM's HD content - a whole raft on channels are launching in August, so at least VoD and BBC HD will have some company at last!

 

Thanks for that, I didn't reaslise !

 

I quite like Virgin as their on-demand stuff is excellent; my only real gripe that the the V+ box makes an absolute racket as the glas stand it sits on resonates (i've tried to use some rubber stands to prevent this!)

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Ofcom have been looking at broadband:

 

Ofcom reveals UK's average broadband speed | Ofcom

 

BBC NEWS | Technology | Broadband rates 'not up to speed'

 

Virgin came out top

 

AOL............. is slower than - O2, Orange, Plusnet, Sky, Talktalk, Virgin Media - and faster than - no one.

BT................. is slower than - O2, Virgin Media - but faster than - Tiscali

O2............. ....is slower than - Virgin Media - but faster than - AOL, BT, Tiscali

Orange..........is slower than - Virgin Media - but faster than - AOL, Tiscali

Plusnet.......... is slower than - Virgin Media - but faster than - AOL, Tiscali

Sky................ is slower than - Virgin Media - but faster than - AOL, Tiscali

Talktalk..........is slower than - Virgin Media - but faster than - AOL, Tiscali

Tiscali........... is slower than - BT, O2, Orange, Plusnet, Sky, Talktalk, Virgin Media - but slower than - no one

Virgin Media is faster than - AOL, BT, O2, Orange, Plusnet, Sky, Talktalk, Tiscali - and slower than - no one.

Of course, speed isn't the only consideration to be made.

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Stick with Virgin. Sky's customer service is dire. Esp their broadband customer service.

 

We are in the process of moving our broadband with them, in total over 3 days we spent 6hours on the phone trying to get our broadband sorted out, we kept being given the run around doing the same tests for 3 days and we tried to be put through to their customer solutions department for the same 3 days with no sucess. We also tried out the hd service and we saw no change in the picture quality, so we told them to take it back, that was 3 weeks ago and I only got the refund yesterday back to my debit card, because, hubby pays the sky bill, they put it back to the sky account, so we told them that if they did not pay it back to my card, I would have them done for fraud. After having hd removed, we went back to sky + with the same package then 2 nights ago I went to watch tcm movies, only to find that I would have to pay a £1 a month extra for that, but the previous week on hd I was still getting it for free, so I called customer services who told me I could pay the £1 a month, of course I went potty at this, and told them that they could put it back free of charge as they had never sent us notification that they had changed the package that it went with, it was movies it's now gone to life style, so i told them that they had 1 of 2 options either they put it back or I would take them to court for breach of contract, due to that they never told us, it was changing, but what really gets me, is that my mum and dad also get sky pretty much the same packages, bar the movie channel, but they still get TCM where as we don't or should say didn't, we've now got it back for 5 months, but when that time is up, I'll get it back again as they have admitted by putting it back that they had made a mistake.

 

Also don't go for the broadband, they have really dropped the download speed, we were getting 5 or 6meg speed and now it's dropped to 3, now a couple of months ago they wrote and told us that it would be going up, not going down, when we questioned them the other day on speed they told us to pay an extra £5 a month to get a higher speed, needless to say we told them where to go, because the service is crap. Sorry Ida, but it really has gone down hill. if we get Virgin down here we will be off like a shot. And we have been sky customers for 12 years.

[sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]

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I've got both Sky and Virginmedia. We couldn't have Sky internet as we don't have a BT line and BT wanted £300 to do the line - there has been one here but I'm not paying to have a new one installed....

 

If you have an 'all in one package' and there is a problem and you get cut off then you are well and truly stuck. That is something worth thinking about....

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