£100
fines handed out when drivers outstayed permitted period at car parks belonging
to Chiltern Railways
MET Parking Services was using the wrong law to issue the parking tickets
Company
also issues fines on behalf of McDonald's car park users
Firm,
which manages car parks on line between Marylebone and Birmingham, admitted
that 1,025 tickets were incorrectly issued
DVLA earns £10m
a year from private parking firms for right to access its database
Parking ‘pirates’ are accused of issuing thousands of bogus
penalty notices to travellers using railway station car parks on a busy
commuter line
.
Fines of £100 a time were handed out when drivers stayed
beyond the permitted period at car parks belonging to Chiltern Railways.
But MET Parking
Services was using the wrong law to issue the tickets, and is now accused of
demanding money under false pretences from as many as 40,000 commuters.
The tickets were
issued using a law introduced in 2012 which banned the use of wheel clamping on
private land, but allowed the owners to issue penalty notices. However railway
car parks are covered by different byelaws.
Commuter Trevor Carvey took on MET after receiving a ticket
in Ruislip, Middlesex. He used the Freedom of Information Act to discover MET
was using automatic number plate recognition cameras to identify drivers via
the DVLA database, then pursue them for payment – often with the threat of
court action.
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