03-04-2026, 09:28 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-04-2026, 12:12 PM by TheParkingmeister.)
Thanks for your detailed response.
Unfortunately, as soon as the debt collection letters start coming, people within the Company want it paid and filed away ASAP. Despite my best efforts over the last year, this hasn't changed. As annoying as it is, I guess to them the costs are so small in the totality of the operational costs thay they just pay it.......... and try and pass it on to the driver. But I do manage to prevent that with parking charges that are legitimately disputed like this one.
That being said, on a personal level I do not want anyone paying these parking companies anything if I can help it.
In this instance there's not a lot I can do to avoid it being paid by the company. Unless I can pull a miracle from somewhere and get a successful IAS appeal decision. As you say the assessors are most likely not even legally trained, and it certainly appears so from my experience too, technical legal arguments are usually dismissed or looked over.
So, what is a winning IAS strategy, to focus on PPSSCoP arguments perhaps?
This is a picture of the site signage: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11q_6V-Q...p=drivesdk
Unfortunately, as soon as the debt collection letters start coming, people within the Company want it paid and filed away ASAP. Despite my best efforts over the last year, this hasn't changed. As annoying as it is, I guess to them the costs are so small in the totality of the operational costs thay they just pay it.......... and try and pass it on to the driver. But I do manage to prevent that with parking charges that are legitimately disputed like this one.
That being said, on a personal level I do not want anyone paying these parking companies anything if I can help it.
In this instance there's not a lot I can do to avoid it being paid by the company. Unless I can pull a miracle from somewhere and get a successful IAS appeal decision. As you say the assessors are most likely not even legally trained, and it certainly appears so from my experience too, technical legal arguments are usually dismissed or looked over.
So, what is a winning IAS strategy, to focus on PPSSCoP arguments perhaps?
This is a picture of the site signage: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11q_6V-Q...p=drivesdk

