Friday, 13 September 2013

POPLA discard 35 day rule. BPA Ltd code of practice deemed not relevant

POPLA, in an amazing display of kowtowing to their masters, the BPA Ltd, have revoked their requirement for the operator to respond within 35 days or cancel the parking ticket, and have also ruled that transgressions of the BPA Ltd code of practice are not relevant when assessing parking charges.

Well...it would be amazing if it didn't happen so often. Its business as usual in POPLA fantasy land then!

Today's story begins when The Parking Prankster double dipped a car park in Yate back in March. Highview Parking duly sent him a parking charge notice, to which the Prankster replied.


Highview Parking tried to pretend that The Prankster had not appealed, but The Prankster sent them a series of stern letters and they eventually caved in, well after the 35 day limit, and issued a POPLA code.

As the POPLA website at the time clearly stated that all parking charges must be cancelled if the operator did not reply within 35 days, he therefore appealed on that reason alone.

Here is the screenshot from http://www.popla.org.uk/receivedaPCN.htm


Here is The Prankster's full appeal.
I appealed by first class post on 12/4/2013 and sent a second copy by first class post on 29/4/2013. The letter rejecting my appeal arrived on 7th June by second class post. POPLA state on their website On receipt of your representations, the operator must: [...] Within 35 days of receiving the representations, accept or reject it [...] If they have [...] failed to respond within 35 days, cancel the notice to keeper [...] Letters sent by first class post are deemed served on the second working day after posting. Accordingly, the deadline to reply ran out on 21st May, and no reply was received by that date. According to the rules posted by POPLA, the operator must therefore cancel the notice to keeper

Highview Parking did not answer the point. Although they did not carry out their usual rant against The Prankster, they also failed to state their case in any meaningful way.

After a relatively short wait of 93 days the assessor replied,turning down The Prankster's appeal.



The Prankster was initially flabbergasted, but that was because he had temporarily forgotten that POPLA are not really independent after all, but are in fact the BPA Ltd's lap dogs.Then it all started to make sense. A quick check on the POPLA web site showed they had conveniently rewritten history and made yet another of their silent policy reversals. Here is the new screenshot from http://www.popla.org.uk/receivedaPCN.htm#repres


The text has now changed to say the operator should reply within the timescales, not must reply. All mention that the operator must cancel the parking charge if they have not decided within 35 days has been removed. Hmm.

The Prankster considers that the assessor was wrong for the following reasons. The initial statement on the POPLA web site was not taken from the BPA Ltd code of practice, which at the time stated the following:

22.8 You must acknowledge or reply to the challenge within 14 days of receiving it. If at first you only acknowledge the challenge, you must accept or reject the challenge in
writing within 35 days of receiving it. We may require you to show that you are keeping to these targets.

It should be noted that the BPA Ltd CoP does not say and never did say that a parking charge must be cancelled if the operator does not make a decision within 35 days. The Prankster therefore considers that the statement on POPLA's web site is POPLA's own policy. POPLA must therefore follow its own guidelines; publishing something which a motorist is expected to rely on, and afterwards reneging on that commitment is not fair to motorists. The Prankster will therefore appeal to the Lead Adjudicator...again.

Meanwhile and ironically, POPLA's decision not to uphold the appeal will actually end up costing Highview Parking more money. Had the parking charge been put to bed, Highview could relax and breath a sigh of relief that it is all over. Now they will have to go to the tiresome bother of sending yet more letters out, which The Prankster will laugh at and poke fun at. Obviously, no money will be paid short of a court order.

This freedom of information request shows that Highview Parking have made no court filings since POFA 2012 went live. Will they man up and put in a claim against the Prankster, or will they show themselves to be snivelling cowards, happy to send bullying letters to motorists, but never having the balls to stand up and be counted and follow up on their empty threats? The Prankster knows which one he will bet on. Stay tuned to find out if Highview Parking have wasted £27 of their money and £100 of the BPA Ltd's by handing out a POPLA code, or whether they finally get their man. It seems this game of Parking Poker is not over yet.

They seek him here, they seek him there,
Those parkies seek him everywhere.
Has POPLA got him, is it true?
No, he double dipped, you'll have to sue.

17 comments:

  1. Love it.;..keep up the good work!!

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  3. Back in the old days we would have put a couple of coats 12 feet apart at one end of the car park and settled our differences with a penalty shoot-out. Nowadays POPLA will come along when it's your turn and move the goal posts. They're especially good at that.

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  4. Claiming to comply with the Code of Practice of a Trade Association while failing to do so contravenes the Consumer Protection Unfair Trading Regulations and should be reported to Trading Standards.

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  5. One thing I don't understand - you mentioned in your first letter to the PPC that you did not stay there for the full length and that this is the reason why you appeal. Why has POPLA not taken this reason to allow the charge? Clearly the assessor hasn't read the case bundle properly, as the PPC would have provided a copy of your initial letter, thus POPLA would have had this information. So I would also complain to the Lead Adjudicator stating that you have initially appealed due to double dipping and the PPC has not even bothered to argue with this, but that the Assessor has not considered this at all. That way, at least the decision may be overturned for the statistics?

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    1. The way POPLA works is that the PPC does not need to state their case. This can been clearly seen from my POPLA cases, where the PPC has *never* stated their case but instead preferred to rant and rave. The assessor will then pick through the documents submitted by the PPC and make the best case they can from them.

      This does not work the other way round. If the motorist does not clearly state a point in their case then the assessor will not pick through the available evidence and add these points to their side of the case.

      I have complained to the Lead Adjudicator about this several times, with no response.

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    2. Hmm, I just mentioned this because I vaguely remember another case where the Assessor did indeed do exactly that - they picked up an appeal reason from the motorist's initial appeal letter even though they did not include that particular reason in their appeal statement to POPLA. But if you want to know where this was from - sorry... haven't got a clue.

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    3. >"Letters sent by first class post are deemed served on the second working day after posting."

      Where's that coming from? If it's the Interpretations Act S7 then I'd invite you to read this and have a ponder on what passes for reasoning in the Crown Court these days:

      http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?345228-Failure-to-notify.-Another-case!/page5

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  6. This is a cheeky bit of interpretation from POFA 2012, which states that letters posted by the parking company are deemed served on the second day after posting, unless proved otherwise. The Parking company were free to argue to POPLA they did not receive the letters on these days, but did not bother; I also asked them to confirm when they received my letters, but they did not reply. I of course, keep a copy of the free proof of postage for my letters.

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    1. Ah, well spotted. Of course, that only applies to them, not to us. If you're expecting some reasonable quid pro quo if it ever gets beyond Kangaroo Kourt, well, see the sorry tale above.

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  7. This is a cheeky bit of interpretation from POFA 2012, which states that letters posted by the parking company are deemed served on the second day after posting, unless proved otherwise. The Parking company were free to argue to POPLA they did not receive the letters on these days, but did not bother; I also asked them to confirm when they received my letters, but they did not reply. I of course, keep a copy of the free proof of postage for my letters.

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  8. Don't lose sight of the fact that there is still a cheeky little 'MUST' in the CoP which the PPC goons either failure to adhere to or simply ignore (no doubt distracted in their excitement over the removal of the 'MUST' for the 35 days)

    "22.8 You MUST acknowledge or reply to the challenge WITHIN
    14 days of receiving it"

    Therefore if they have failed to acknowledge or reply within 14 days then they are prohibited by the CoP from acknowledging or replying outside 14 days - they are stuffed - game over.

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    1. Not complying with the BPA Ltd CoP is not grounds for a successful appeal at POPLA. They ignore the 35-day rule they sure as hell aren't going to accept that breaching the 14-day rule is reason to uphold an appeal.

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  9. Have they now removed all mention of the 35 days from the POPLA website.
    I can't seem to find it at all?

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    1. http://www.popla.org.uk/receivedaPCN.htm Still here

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  10. Oh yes, I was looking at their previous link from their homepage "how to make an appeal"

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  11. I had a code that didn't work.. I sent a letter to my ticket issuer and waited.. they never got back... letter from bailiffs followed and I checked the number on POPLA again and hay presto it was working again.. to date the ticket issuer hasn't replied to a multitude of letters sent... where do I stand with that?

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