Cullingworth dad's anger over Bradford council tax debit errors (From Bradford Telegraph and Argus)
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Cullingworth dad's anger over Bradford council tax debit errors
7:00am Monday 10th September 2012 in News
By Jo Winrow, City Hall Reporter
Andrew Vaux with e-mails and letters from Bradford Council
A father-of-two is locked in a dispute with Bradford Council over extra charges the authority insists he owes after his council tax direct debit payments failed.
Andrew Vaux, of Lees Close, Cullingworth , has been successfully paying his council tax in monthly instalments for the best part of 20 years, but in May received a letter out of the blue from the Council stating he had missed April’s payment.
Upon investigation he realised that his bank account had not contained sufficient funds, so called the Council to pay the outstanding amount of about £130 by debit card.
He assumed that would be the end of the matter and that the direct debit would kick in again the following month and he was told over the phone that everything was in order.
As a result he said he was shocked to receive another letter in July stating he had missed a subsequent payment. Again he paid over the phone but was again not advised there was a problem with the direct debit.
A further letter stated he had missed two more payments and he would be taken to court and as a consequence owed court costs too.
Mr Vaux told the Telegraph & Argus: “I’ve offered to pay the £393 I owe in missed council tax payments but I do not believe I should be charged extra when no-one explained to me that the missed payments meant I had lost the right to pay by direct debit.
“Apparently I should have been sent an amended bill after the first missed payment, but I did not receive one. I want to pay what I owe and believe I have been completely reasonable about this, but I am really disappointed with how I have been treated.”
Mr Vaux’s direct debit was reinstated by the Council this month, with his payments recalculated to reflect the extra court costs he is in dispute over. As a result he has cancelled the payment.
Martin Stubbs, the Council’s assistant director of revenues and benefits, said: “We cannot comment on individual cases.
“The most cost effective way is to pay by direct debit, but if a direct debit fails, an alternative method of payment might be needed to prevent a further accumulation of debt.
“In many cases it is possible to continue to pay by direct debit even after a payment has failed. Any individuals can take up our complaints procedure if they so wish.”
Comments(17)
JDDixon
says...
8:56am Mon 10 Sep 12
Correctness
says...
9:01am Mon 10 Sep 12
The Council used to issue Payment Books which were easy to make payments with and straight forward but they said they were to costly to produce or is it more honest people knew when they had or had not paid and thats why extra revenue fell.
Thee Voice of Reason
says...
9:06am Mon 10 Sep 12
angry bradfordian
says...
9:12am Mon 10 Sep 12
a reasonable sort of chap
says...
9:53am Mon 10 Sep 12
Thee Voice of Reason
says...
9:54am Mon 10 Sep 12
a reasonable sort of chap wrote:You probably don't even pay council tax, it's paid for you.
That's why I don't use Direct Debit, it is unreliable and you can't trust them.
Joedavid
says...
10:35am Mon 10 Sep 12
a reasonable sort of chap wrote:The man in the story did not have suffient in the bank to meet the DD payment on the due date, so nothing wrong with the DD system.
That's why I don't use Direct Debit, it is unreliable and you can't trust them.
It is up to us to watch our bank balances to meet our outgoings.
We as indeviduals have got to learn to manage our accounts to cover such a situation of an accidental lack of funds you arrange automatic over draft arrangements with your bank.
Now what is wrong here is the council persecuting this honest man who when he realised there was a problem took immeadiate steps to put things right. He got really shoddy service from the council staff who I thought were supposed to work for us honest people.
Albion.
says...
11:06am Mon 10 Sep 12
wobbley-bob
says...
1:45pm Mon 10 Sep 12
Albion. wrote:The Council 'have a duty' to do lots of things.............D
The council have a duty to collect what is owing and any costs incurred. This story just shows what a slack set up the complainant is.
on't think I need to expand on that fact.
Albion.
says...
2:07pm Mon 10 Sep 12
wobbley-bob wrote:Would they be relevant to this story?
Albion. wrote:The Council 'have a duty' to do lots of things.............D
The council have a duty to collect what is owing and any costs incurred. This story just shows what a slack set up the complainant is.
on't think I need to expand on that fact.
SensibleLass
says...
8:47pm Mon 10 Sep 12
Colin Allcars
says...
9:54pm Mon 10 Sep 12
Bring back the Poll tax and make taxes in Bradford fairer.
Michael Clayton
says...
9:02pm Tue 11 Sep 12
SensibleLass
says...
9:50pm Tue 11 Sep 12
Michael Clayton wrote:Quite agree! People need to take responsibility for their own actions and stop blaming others for their own errors. He is sent an annual bill that sets out the terms on which payments can be made - he should read it - andas you say, his own errors caused this situation to arise. Not the Council's fault. This is not news!
Annual Council Tax is legally enforceable on 1st April. However, tax-payers are given the opportunity to pay by instalments. Of course, the fact this man flouted the privelage (i.e allowed three months arrears to build) is everyone's fault but his. He should hang his head in shame. As should the T&A for implying that the errors are attributable to the council.
SensibleLass
says...
10:09pm Tue 11 Sep 12
Michael Clayton
says...
10:28am Wed 12 Sep 12
wobbley-bob says...
8:37am Mon 10 Sep 12
About 6 years ago, I got a court summons from the said incompetent bunch, telling me I owed them for underpayment of my Council tax.... added to that was costs etc, amounting to over £200.
It was all their fault, as they didn't take my final DD payment for that years.
I went to court, to expose them for the numpties that they are.I never received any letters to the fact I 'owed' anything.... because they never sent any. The first I knew about it was the court letter.
The courts found in my favour, & I was awarded costs plus compensation, which paid the next years tax, with some left over.