Re: EA Action and Attachment of Earnings
The situation is that an AOE may not include bailiff fees. This has been resolved.
People are expressing opinions on why this is the case, NOT opinions on whether fees may be added.
Primary legislation states that regulations may include fees. The regulations do not currently allow for fees to be included. This is not opinion, it is fact. Why fees cannot be added is irrelevant and should not really be of any concern to us.
There is a possibility that amendments may be made in order to enable these fees to be included, but that is for the future and we should cross that bridge when we come to it.
Currently, I believe that a debtor has the right to be made aware of every option available to him/her. Amongst these options, is the choice of refusing bailiff s entry (which everyone agrees is the best policy) and ensuring that a vehicle cannot be seized. If the debt is ultimately returned to the council, then fees may not be added to any subsequent AOE. We should also ensure that councils are adhering to legislation as we've already discovered at least one council who got it wrong.
I believe that if a debtor seeks advice upon receipt of a NOE, it would be wise to point the debtor towards paying the extra £75, to avoid all the hassle. If a debtor has multiple debts (and consequently multiple compliance fees), it may well be worth ensuring the debts are returned but for one single case, I would always advise to pay and agree a payment plan at the earliest opportunity. We can then help and advise, to ensure that this plan is reasonable and not punitive.
For the debtor who has incurred the enforcement fee, there is little to lose by continuing to refuse entry provided any vehicle is safe. For the single mum, with no car who is prepared to not deal with the bailiff then it is a no-brainer to avoid the £310 in fees if legally possible.
I agree that this is tough on the bailiff companies but on the whole they are "quids in" with the new regs. The fees have taken into account that in a small number of cases, these fees will not be collected.
The situation is that an AOE may not include bailiff fees. This has been resolved.
People are expressing opinions on why this is the case, NOT opinions on whether fees may be added.
Primary legislation states that regulations may include fees. The regulations do not currently allow for fees to be included. This is not opinion, it is fact. Why fees cannot be added is irrelevant and should not really be of any concern to us.
There is a possibility that amendments may be made in order to enable these fees to be included, but that is for the future and we should cross that bridge when we come to it.
Currently, I believe that a debtor has the right to be made aware of every option available to him/her. Amongst these options, is the choice of refusing bailiff s entry (which everyone agrees is the best policy) and ensuring that a vehicle cannot be seized. If the debt is ultimately returned to the council, then fees may not be added to any subsequent AOE. We should also ensure that councils are adhering to legislation as we've already discovered at least one council who got it wrong.
I believe that if a debtor seeks advice upon receipt of a NOE, it would be wise to point the debtor towards paying the extra £75, to avoid all the hassle. If a debtor has multiple debts (and consequently multiple compliance fees), it may well be worth ensuring the debts are returned but for one single case, I would always advise to pay and agree a payment plan at the earliest opportunity. We can then help and advise, to ensure that this plan is reasonable and not punitive.
For the debtor who has incurred the enforcement fee, there is little to lose by continuing to refuse entry provided any vehicle is safe. For the single mum, with no car who is prepared to not deal with the bailiff then it is a no-brainer to avoid the £310 in fees if legally possible.
I agree that this is tough on the bailiff companies but on the whole they are "quids in" with the new regs. The fees have taken into account that in a small number of cases, these fees will not be collected.
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