Western Mail

Passengers fined £7k in 90 minutes

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MAGISTRATE­S handed out over £7,000 in fines to Arriva Trains Wales passengers who failed to show a valid ticket – in just one 90 minute session last month.

In an hour and a half, £7,028.30worth of fines were awarded by magistrate­s at Cardiff and the Vale Magistrate­s’ Court against 14 passengers on March 24.

Arriva Trains Wales customer services director Lynne Milligan said the fines were a deterrent to make sure that passengers pay for tickets and limit the company’s losses.

One man from Rhondda Cynon Taff was fined £619 for a journey that would have cost him £5.70.

The fine level is made up of a number of compensati­on, costs, surcharges and a punitive fine.

The lowest fine imposed was £243. Fines increase for repeat offenders, those who failed to attend the court and those with higher incomes.

Pleading guilty saw fines brought down considerab­ly.

One passenger was initially issued a fine of £617, which was dropped to £244 after his guilty plea – the journey itself would have cost him £3.40. The fines are mostly made up of courts’ charges, with Arriva Trains Wales receiving only the cost of the tickets and a victim compensati­on charge of around £40.

Ms Milligan said: “When anyone is stopped leaving the railway network without the correct ticket... people have at least three opportunit­ies to respond with any mitigating informatio­n which is then reviewed by a senior manager.”

Ms Milligan said people must buy a ticket at the first opportunit­y.

The penalty system has been criticised by Welsh Conservati­ves leader Andrew RT Davies. He said: “Those who make a legitimate attempt to buy a ticket but find they are unable to should not be penalised.”

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