East Bay Times

Is camera-calibratio­n bill on a rental legit?

- Christophe­r Elliott is the founder of Elliott Advocacy. Email him at chris@elliott.org or get help by contacting him at elliottadv­ocacy.org/help.

DEAR TRAVEL TROUBLESHO­OTER >> I rented a car from Budget last summer in Jacksonvil­le, Florida. I noticed several dents and scratches, which I planned to point out during the walkaround inspection.

But the attendant told me that they “don't do inspection­s” because they keep records of any damage that happens to their vehicles. That didn't seem right, so I took photos of the damage.

When I returned the vehicle, there was also no inspection. The next month, I received a letter from Budget telling me it would charge my credit card $250 for damages. They claim that the damage involved a windshield camera — not any of the dents or scratches I had photos of.

I assured Budget that nothing had happened to the vehicle while I had possession of it, and I asked for paperwork on the damage. Budget never produced any evidence of the damage.

My credit card company told me that the time for a dispute had expired and there was nothing they could do. Can you help?

— Tony Parise, St. Louis, Missouri

ANSWER >> Budget was charging you to recalibrat­e one of its windshield cameras — a camera you probably didn't even know existed.

The problem with Budget's claim is that it didn't elaborate on the damage. Why did it have to recalibrat­e the camera? Often, it has to recalibrat­e the camera when it decides to replace the windshield. But I didn't see an invoice for a replaced windshield. So, this one is a real mystery.

You took almost every precaution to make sure you didn't face any extra charges. Asking for a pre-rental inspection was a terrific idea. It doesn't matter that Budget conducts its own inspection. You need your own photos. Your case is a reminder to take preand post-rental images of everything, including the windshield. Why is the windshield so important? The leading cause of damage to car rentals is a chipped windshield. You need proof that you returned your car with an intact windshield.

I'm not saying your camera-calibratio­n bill was fraudulent. But I had questions. You can buy a decent windshield camera for about $100. How can you justify a $250 charge just to calibrate a windshield camera? Also, where's the bill from the repair shop for the calibratio­n? And why didn't Budget tell you about the problem, instead of just billing your credit card?

By the way, you need a new credit card company. If you notified your card about the questionab­le charge within 60 days, then it didn't comply with the Fair Credit Billing Act.

A brief, polite email to one of the Budget executives might have also resolved this problem.

I contacted Budget on your behalf. A representa­tive responded and promised to fix the problem.

But Budget only refunded $166, shortchang­ing you by $84. I contacted Budget again, and it finally refunded the rest. That's a lesson learned for the rest of us: Watch those windshield cams on your rentals.

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