The Sunday Post (Dundee)

I should have gone to Specsavers but shouldn’t have got a ticket: We help reader see some light at end of the tunnel

- Picture Paul Reid

Lesley Hodgens shouldn’t have gone to Specsavers.

The college lecturer’s two-hour appointmen­t at the optician store in Arbroath, Angus, in February, ran over time.

As a result, she was issued a fine from the parking operators at the Abbeygate shopping centre, which climbed to £170 – and she was also being pursued by a debt collection agency for the money.

“Specsavers advertise their agreed arrangemen­ts for appointmen­ts which go over the two-hour limit,” Lesley, 49, said. “I had a routine appointmen­t which, due to complicati­ons, led to me being unable to drive.

“I wasn’t too worried about the appointmen­t taking longer because Specsavers said they had arranged with the parking company to have my car there slightly longer.”

However, Lesley was shocked when a parking fine for £40 arrived through the post a few weeks later.

“I took the letter to Specsavers, and they contacted the parking company, CP Plus, who they said had assured them it had been cancelled and I shouldn’t hear anything further,” Lesley said.

“I then received a debt collection letter, so again I got in touch with Specsavers who said they had contacted CP Plus again and who had reiterated that the charge had been cancelled.”

However, more demands for payment arrived at the couple’s home and the amount soon increased to £170.

“I was furious because I had already spent about £400 on new glasses,” Lesley said. “I was very worried that I was also going to be liable for this parking charge because it is a lot of money.”

After months of getting nowhere trying to get the ticket cancelled, Lesley contacted Raw Deal.

We wrote to both Specsavers and London-based CP Plus – and the parking charge was soon scrapped.

Jamie Buchan, store director at Specsavers Arbroath, said: “The nature of our healthcare business means the two-hour parking limit is not adequate for many of our customers – those with eye trauma may need longer appointmen­ts or those who have their pupils dilated must not drive for some time afterwards.

“When parking charges were introduced we raised this issue with centre management who agreed to cancel our customers’ tickets where required.

“We are pleased to learn centre management is now working positively towards a better solution for our customers which will be implemente­d in the near future.”

A spokesman for CP Plus added: “I can confirm that this charge has now been cancelled.”

Lesley said she was delighted that the stressful situation had been resolved.

She added: “Thank you, Raw Deal. I just couldn’t seem to get anyone to listen to me.”

If you have been wrongly charged by a parking firm, then challenge it. Don’t just give in and pay up.

Lesley Hodgens at home in Arbroath with her pet dog, above, and, right, at the Abbeygate shopping centre, where she received the parking fine

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom