Do We Ever Really Care Who Lived In Our...
Home & Garden4 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Dom Tuk. 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.It is untrue. I have done this myself a few years ago.
I had no cash, and my chequebook was buried under a Renault-5-boot-with-the-seats-folded-down's worth of boxes and various carp.
With no other means to pay - they gave me some sort of receipt asked me to make payment by cheque.
If you fail to do this you get a reminder, (as they have your registration number and therefore the car's registered address). I understand that if you fail to pay at this point, it is treated like an unpaid parking ticket, with various escalations in the steps taken to recover the debt (and the costs incurred).
I was certainly not turned, towed or escorted back.
Mind you, this was the procedure for Welsh drivers.
I believe that English drivers that attempt to cross into Wales without the means to pay have their cars dragged over the side and into the Severn Estuary.
(If you look carefully just after the toll barriers, you will notice that there is a removable section of the parapet fencing, and a winch and tow-rope arrangement where this procedure is carried out)
Brachiopod, in my quest to find the correct answer i approached a toll operator yesterday and was told that they will not accept anything other than cash or cheque and no such thing as a receipt for welsh drivers exist (as they say anyone can say they are welsh). So what happened a few years ago to you when you were carp fishing?. Are you sue it was the M4 toll bridge.
Nevertheless i find this arrangement unacceptable. Many people innocently leave their wallets home and very few people travel with cash in their pockets. To then turn someone back to a long journey back home is ridiculous. They should provide a telephonic credit card service.
There is plenty of warning. No Cards, cash only signs too.
I got over for free when I genuinely thought there would be services somewhere, where I could use the cashpoint. Next thing I was on the bridge heading to the tolls.
I told the toll collector I had no money, they asked if I had a chequebook, I said no...and they let me through out of the goodness of their heart. Apparently this is unheard of. Everyone thought I was pulling their leg...jokes about even the queen has to pay...
I think I just caught the toll collector on a good day and she took poty on me.
Dom, the bit about being unable to pay and being given a bill/notice to pay at a later date is true (this was about 1989).
And yes, as a Welshman living in London, I think I am certain it was the Severn Toll Bridge on the M4. (The sSC hadn't been built at that time).
The bit about Welsh drivers and English drivers was a joke. Did you honestly ask if there was preferential treatment for Welsh drivers ?!!!!
Brachiopod, yes i asked about the welsh and any preferential treatment. Why not, after all you are going back to what is your homeland and should get some advantages for it.
JNO my point is more about the inconvenience caused to innocent travellers who make a silly mistake. The govt department could easily install card readers etc or allow for telephonic payment from a third party (at an apprpriate premium). I know about all the ways to get into wales as i travel there very often (once a week nearly) and will be most put off if for a simple mistake i am made to go back home. The point being wherever i am going i can borrow from colleagues, by being send back i have to go home to get the wallet as i cannot stop at any ATM (assuming i have left all at home). I am trying to think of other equally unfair consequences for a simple mistake. passports and air tickets come to mind but then what is involved is international travel across controlled borders.
Why do we meekly accept it??
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