Goldiegoldfish
New Member
Hi
My son has received a Fixed Penalty Notice for £100 plus cost of ticket £3.70. (Northern Trains)
Background is:
My son is 19 and at college, no income. He is on a bursary from college which includes a bus pass. Unfortunately the buses are not convenient so he uses the train when he cannot be taken/picked up. I am a single parent, working but entitled to and claim UC. He uses the train to mainly come home from college once/twice a week where I am not able to pick him up.
A few weeks ago the member of staff checking the tickets questioned him about his ticket. It turns out that when he booked his ticket online the fare was more than the money he had in his bank and he knew I didn't have any money to transfer him that day so he bought a child ticket instead in order to get home. It turns out that his app was on open return fares (from a journey he had made a few weeks prior to Manchester) which he didn't realise and he had been buying return tickets for his journeys rather than singles for weeks and that is why the fare seemed so much. His ticket for this particular journey cost him £2.05 which was the child open return. An adult single should have been £1.80. So of course he realises his mistake and that he had been caught and the member of staff asked him his name, address etc which he gave. He wasn't given a penalty fare notice at the time but then received a letter saying there was an alleged contravention of Railway Regulations (it didn't specify) and that an evidential report had been prepared but they were giving him the opportunity to put his side forward. Which we did and they have taken no notice of course and he has now received the Fixed Penalty Notice giving him 14 days to pay the £103.70 or they will take him to court.
I know he travelled on a child ticket when he shouldn't have but in fact he paid more than what the correct ticket should have cost and has also paid much more for his tickets than he should have for weeks so this is frustrating. They haven't offered him the option of paying £50 in 21 days which is stated on nationalrail.co.uk and they are wanting £3.70 for the ticket when it was only £1.80 and in fact he had already paid £2.05 return (so about £1.10 for single) so why do they want £3.70?
Additional background:
Back in October he was meeting a friend in the city centre for a meal. Two of their close friends had died in an awful car crash a few weeks earlier and another left in intensive care (also a relative of my son's friend - now recovering well thank goodness) so they were both in a state and needed to meet up. My son had already missed a train and we were short on time for him to catch the next one (the trains run about every half an hour), he didn't want to keep his friend waiting any longer than he already had by missing the next train as well. At the station the ticket machine is in the car park, not on the platform so if the train was pulling in you would miss it, rather than the driver/guard being able to see you at the ticket machine on the platform and - hopefully - waiting for you). So he ran to the platform and attempted to buy a ticket online instead of at the machine so he didn't miss that train as well. However, the app would not let him buy the ticket as it was too close to the train time and he rang me in a panic. I said don't worry just buy a ticket on the train or at the station when you arrive (there are barriers so you can't get out without a ticket anyway) as this is always what you have been able to do and I have done numerous times myself in the past. However, not any more. A ticket inspector came round and would not let him buy a ticket on the train, instead gave him a penalty fare ticket to pay online. We appealed but didn't get anywhere and had to pay £55. So of course his name is in their 'system' and the member of staff for the one the other week when checking my son's name saw this and made some comment about 'being caught before'. Which I really object to given the circumstances, he wasn't fare dodging at all.
Anyway, just wanted some advice to see if there was any way I can argue against this recent one or at least why can't we pay £50 and the correct fare difference?
TIA
My son has received a Fixed Penalty Notice for £100 plus cost of ticket £3.70. (Northern Trains)
Background is:
My son is 19 and at college, no income. He is on a bursary from college which includes a bus pass. Unfortunately the buses are not convenient so he uses the train when he cannot be taken/picked up. I am a single parent, working but entitled to and claim UC. He uses the train to mainly come home from college once/twice a week where I am not able to pick him up.
A few weeks ago the member of staff checking the tickets questioned him about his ticket. It turns out that when he booked his ticket online the fare was more than the money he had in his bank and he knew I didn't have any money to transfer him that day so he bought a child ticket instead in order to get home. It turns out that his app was on open return fares (from a journey he had made a few weeks prior to Manchester) which he didn't realise and he had been buying return tickets for his journeys rather than singles for weeks and that is why the fare seemed so much. His ticket for this particular journey cost him £2.05 which was the child open return. An adult single should have been £1.80. So of course he realises his mistake and that he had been caught and the member of staff asked him his name, address etc which he gave. He wasn't given a penalty fare notice at the time but then received a letter saying there was an alleged contravention of Railway Regulations (it didn't specify) and that an evidential report had been prepared but they were giving him the opportunity to put his side forward. Which we did and they have taken no notice of course and he has now received the Fixed Penalty Notice giving him 14 days to pay the £103.70 or they will take him to court.
I know he travelled on a child ticket when he shouldn't have but in fact he paid more than what the correct ticket should have cost and has also paid much more for his tickets than he should have for weeks so this is frustrating. They haven't offered him the option of paying £50 in 21 days which is stated on nationalrail.co.uk and they are wanting £3.70 for the ticket when it was only £1.80 and in fact he had already paid £2.05 return (so about £1.10 for single) so why do they want £3.70?
Additional background:
Back in October he was meeting a friend in the city centre for a meal. Two of their close friends had died in an awful car crash a few weeks earlier and another left in intensive care (also a relative of my son's friend - now recovering well thank goodness) so they were both in a state and needed to meet up. My son had already missed a train and we were short on time for him to catch the next one (the trains run about every half an hour), he didn't want to keep his friend waiting any longer than he already had by missing the next train as well. At the station the ticket machine is in the car park, not on the platform so if the train was pulling in you would miss it, rather than the driver/guard being able to see you at the ticket machine on the platform and - hopefully - waiting for you). So he ran to the platform and attempted to buy a ticket online instead of at the machine so he didn't miss that train as well. However, the app would not let him buy the ticket as it was too close to the train time and he rang me in a panic. I said don't worry just buy a ticket on the train or at the station when you arrive (there are barriers so you can't get out without a ticket anyway) as this is always what you have been able to do and I have done numerous times myself in the past. However, not any more. A ticket inspector came round and would not let him buy a ticket on the train, instead gave him a penalty fare ticket to pay online. We appealed but didn't get anywhere and had to pay £55. So of course his name is in their 'system' and the member of staff for the one the other week when checking my son's name saw this and made some comment about 'being caught before'. Which I really object to given the circumstances, he wasn't fare dodging at all.
Anyway, just wanted some advice to see if there was any way I can argue against this recent one or at least why can't we pay £50 and the correct fare difference?
TIA
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