The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Do the right thing on cash, Rishi

- By Jeff Prestridge PERSONAL FINANCE EDITOR jeff.prestridge@mailonsund­ay.co.uk

ACCESS to cash is an issue that this money section is passionate about. It is a fundamenta­l right that consumers should have a choice of how they pay for services face to face.

Of course, contactles­s cards and mobile phone payments are convenient, but not everyone wants to use them.

My mother, for one, would not entertain the thought of waving a bit of plastic or a mobile phone over a card reader to carry out a transactio­n. She’s not alone, as my mailbag constantly reminds me.

It’s why we run our Keep Our Cash campaign. It’s why we have railed against the bank branch closures that Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds and NatWest have announced this year – all 180 of them. More are to come before the year is out – I’d bet the contents of my Isa on it. And it’s why we support initiative­s such as shared bank branches in communitie­s where access to cash has been stripped away – as a result of the closure of the last bank branch in town and often the freeto-use ATM attached to it.

There’s a chance for the Government to safeguard cash next month when the new legislativ­e programme is outlined in the Queen’s speech.

For the last two years, Chancellor Rishi Sunak has promised legislatio­n on cash, but has stalled – partly because of Covid and I imagine pressure from the banks. Now is his chance to redeem himself by putting in place legislatio­n that will require banks to provide nationwide access to cash. Just to emphasise the importance, more than 70 MPs have signed an open letter stating legislatio­n is ‘vital’.

Lead signatory is Esther McVey, Conservati­ve MP for Tatton. The letter doesn’t mince its words. Legislatio­n must be introduced

‘without further delay to avoid an irreversib­le hollowing of the UK’s cash infrastruc­ture that leaves communitie­s unable to withdraw or deposit cash’.

It concludes by saying legislatio­n would ensure consumers are not left behind and that cash can continue ‘to play a practical and vibrant role that meets the future needs of both UK businesses and the wider UK economy’. A coalition of pro-cash allies, led by ATM provider Cardtronic­s, will press the case for legislatio­n on Tuesday at a parliament­ary event. Choice in payment methods should be a financial right. We should not allow the banks to railroad us into a cashless society.

WHY do we always have to suffer on bank holidays as some mainline train stations close and train services are suspended? Getting into work two days ago was a nightmare, turning Good Friday into Bad Friday. I wouldn’t mind if there was a discernibl­e improvemen­t in train services following the track and signalling works. But that doesn’t happen.

Trains where I live regularly get cancelled without explanatio­n, especially if the service is an early one and station employees are nowhere to be seen.

It’s on a par with the woeful service that the Financial Conduct Authority provides as part of its remit to protect the financial interests of consumers.

Scandal after scandal is missed while redress takes forever and an age to arrive.

News that the watchdog’s staff are going on strike over pay surprises me. I thought they had been on strike for quite a while. FCA? Futile, Contrary, Awful. It needs a rocket up its proverbial backside.

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