The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Crackdown on firms making misleading claims over parcel deliveries.

retail: Firms placed on notice by watchdogs

- CaTriona WebsTer

A crackdown on companies who make misleading claims over parcel deliveries has been welcomed by campaigner­s.

An enforcemen­t notice has been issued by advertisin­g watchdogs to stop retailers across the UK making incorrect delivery claims and ensure any restrictio­ns or exclusions are made clear.

The move by the Committees of Advertisin­g Practice (CAP), part of the Advertisin­g Standards Authority (ASA) regulatory system, follows concerns about customers in rural communitie­s being subject to “rip-off” surcharges.

Companies will be required to take immediate action to ensure their advertisin­g complies with the new guidance or face enforcemen­t action, including the possibilit­y of legal action by trading standards.

Any claim of “UK delivery” will now include all parts of the United Kingdom, including the Scottish Isles, and surcharges will be banned if such a claim is made.

ASA chief executive Guy Parker said: “Companies must honour the delivery claims they’re making or stop making them.

“It’s simply not fair to mislead people about whether parcels can be delivered to them, or how much it will cost.”

SNP MSP Richard Lochhead, whose Fair Delivery Charges campaign has called for tougher action, said the move was “a significan­t first step”.

Earlier this year the Moray SNP submitted a dossier of 124 firms who had failed to be up front on charges for delivery to parts of Scotland to ASA, all of which will now be issued with the enforcemen­t notice.

He said: “I’m sure that people living across Scotland will be pleased to see companies taken to task – and told to stop advertisin­g free delivery when in many cases, for many customers, the reality is very different.

“It’s now incumbent upon those companies who are failing to be up front with consumers to sit up, take notice and change their practices. I hope they respond swiftly to this very clear shot across their bows.”

Scottish Conservati­ve Douglas Ross MP has also been campaignin­g for action on unfair delivery charges at Westminste­r. He said: “Although this is another positive step in my campaign for fairer delivery charges, more still needs to be done to end the scandal of this postcode lottery.”

Nina Ballantyne, consumer spokeswoma­n for Citizens Advice Scotland, said: “We hope the companies concerned will respond positively and fix their procedures to make sure that Scots are treated fairly.”

I’m sure that people living across Scotland will be pleased to see companies taken to task. RICHARD LOCHHEAD MSP

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