ChatterBank12 mins ago
help!!
My friend has 6 points on her licence and has just had two more speeding tickets come through which will take her up to 12 points
Has anyone been in this situation - if she loses her licence she will lose her job. If she loses her job she will lose her flat
I've looked it up and it says you 'may' be able to get off a ban by showing that it will cause extreem hardship. Would this count as extreem hardship and where does she go from here. She's been advised to get a solicitor which could cost her upto �1000 which again she doesn't have
Any Help appreciated.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Englishbird. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Actually yes she can keep her license. If it can be proved that by losing her license she will be definately out of a job and cannot rely on any other means of transport i.e public. This is very rare however, also the court would take into consideration the fact that loss of her job would be a by product of her actions, they would suggest getting a local job where transportation is not required. As undercovers has pointed out they would not look positively on repeated offence and would feel that a more adequate punishment would be beneficial.
However i do know someone ( a lorry driver ) who has 13 points on his license and has kept it due to his job despit all the points being accumulated from speeding.
As others have said it is possible to not get banned with 12 points but quite rare. A solicotor may help but it's a lot of expense when they can't do anything she can't do herself . She's pleading guilty so you're only argueing about the punishment, just be contrite, articulate and constructive. If she can get a representative of her employer to go with her to confirm under oath that she will lose her job if she loses her license then that would help. I've heard about salesmen getting off by doing this and also making it clear that they and their kids would then become a burden on the state etc etc. I guess it also depends on the magistrates. Good Luck
I think what i was trying to say is that we all do it (especially on motorways) I'm not saying that she shouldn't have got the tickets, or that it's ok to speed or break the law at all, but i was looking for constructive answers rather than a ticking off. I do take your point shire, and i'm not disagreeing. It's a law of averages and a rep that is on the road most of the time is more likely to get more points than someone who only drives locally. It does seem a little harsh though that she - or anyone - stands to lose their job and home because of a couple of camera's catching you slightly over the speed limit. And the irony is that if you're the sort of person who drives without having your car registered to you, with no insurance and no tax - you won't get done anyway because they wont be able to trace you.