Good Afternoon,
I am looking for some urgent help on a matter that is causing me some serious mental stress at the moment.
Background: "The Driver" has recently had to change their usual work commute to using a train service instead of driving in like they normally would. They started using the car park at the local train station owned by NCP without being aware of the parking charges or requirement to pay. On review, the signage is limited and difficult to read on entry to the car park for where they were leaving the car however it is there and could potentially be a push to get it thrown out on these grounds.
Issue: Today the keeper of the car has received a total of 9 parking charge notices at once for different days with the first dating back 67 days. The following 8 PCN's were issued at 65, 63, 62, 61, 57, 56, 49, and 48 days after the date of the incident. For reference, the earliest incident date was 17th May 2021 and the date of receipt (including the assumed 2 working days postal period) was 23rd July 2021. I am unsure at the time of writing whether this is going to be all of them or whether I should expect more.
Notes: No ticket was put on the windscreen and this is the first notification that I have received about the incident. I have attached one of the PCN's for reference.
I have no intention of confirming to the company whether or not the Driver and the Keeper are the same person nor whether any payment for the parking was attempted. I would like to appeal this on the basis that they were issued 14 days after the incident date. I would appreciate any help on wording my appeal to them and whether or not I should state the fact the signs are hard to read/see and that there is no parking meter meaning that your are limited to having to pay via online means which aren't available to everyone. I would also be open to doing a settlement amount, something along the lines of settling all outstanding PCN's for a single payment in order to save everyone the hassle and cost of taking legal action.
Many thanks in advance,
I am looking for some urgent help on a matter that is causing me some serious mental stress at the moment.
Background: "The Driver" has recently had to change their usual work commute to using a train service instead of driving in like they normally would. They started using the car park at the local train station owned by NCP without being aware of the parking charges or requirement to pay. On review, the signage is limited and difficult to read on entry to the car park for where they were leaving the car however it is there and could potentially be a push to get it thrown out on these grounds.
Issue: Today the keeper of the car has received a total of 9 parking charge notices at once for different days with the first dating back 67 days. The following 8 PCN's were issued at 65, 63, 62, 61, 57, 56, 49, and 48 days after the date of the incident. For reference, the earliest incident date was 17th May 2021 and the date of receipt (including the assumed 2 working days postal period) was 23rd July 2021. I am unsure at the time of writing whether this is going to be all of them or whether I should expect more.
Notes: No ticket was put on the windscreen and this is the first notification that I have received about the incident. I have attached one of the PCN's for reference.
I have no intention of confirming to the company whether or not the Driver and the Keeper are the same person nor whether any payment for the parking was attempted. I would like to appeal this on the basis that they were issued 14 days after the incident date. I would appreciate any help on wording my appeal to them and whether or not I should state the fact the signs are hard to read/see and that there is no parking meter meaning that your are limited to having to pay via online means which aren't available to everyone. I would also be open to doing a settlement amount, something along the lines of settling all outstanding PCN's for a single payment in order to save everyone the hassle and cost of taking legal action.
Many thanks in advance,
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