Some people are in for a nasty surprise regarding ULEZ, CAZ, C40 cities, etc., which are part of a much greater enforcement framework.
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Driver who racked up almost £3,000 in Clean Air Zone fines claims she 'thought she had six days to pay' after receiving enforcement letters
A businesswoman has admitted she is in a 'complete muddle' after racking up Clean Air Zone fines of almost £3,000.
Cleo Burrows began receiving notices in April after a trip through a Clean Air Zone in Bristol meant she had to pay the required £9 charge for a non-compliant vehicle.
According to the Bristol City Council website, the daily charge can be paid up to six days before travel, on the day of travel, or within six days after travel.
Failure to pay the daily charge results in a penalty charge notice of £120 - reduced to £60 if paid within two weeks.
Ms Burrows mistakenly believed she had six days to pay just the initial charge after each enforcement letter and they quickly began piling up.
Now, she's learned about the system the hard way after being landed with dozens of fines totalling £2,900.
Ms Burrows said: 'I'm a really fair person and I own a diesel car which is not compliant so I have to pay the diesel charge to travel into Bristol.
'I don't have an issue with that at all. I have a small business and I'm really busy so when CAZ started, I thought I had a safety net of getting a letter and having six days to pay.
READ MORE: Why millions of Londoners will ignore ULEZ and continue using their cars despite massive expansion of the daily £12.50 fee in August
'I had been working a lot and was shocked when I got this letter saying I would have to pay £60. I started getting a whole bunch of letters coming almost every day from April up until June,' she said.
'I called them and was really shocked to hear that I have fines of over £2,900. It was such a massive shock. I thought the letter gave you six days to pay.
'I find it all a bit complicated and I have so many letters now that I feel so confused.
'It's got me in a complete muddle,' she said.
Ms Burrows added that the council had offered to set up a payment plan for her to settle the fines, but even that was unaffordable for her.
She said: 'I also go into London regularly but you can open an account with ULEZ and put your card details.
'Every time I go to London the charge is automatically debited which makes it much easier. I have a hectic schedule and often work from 7am to 7pm, but now I'm being vigilant and trying not to go through town. It's been so stressful
When Bristol's CAZ was implemented in November 2022, there were temporary exemptions for local vehicles to give residents time to prepare.
These included private passenger cars, vans or LGVs not registered with a business, which had a temporary exemption until 1 April 2023.
Bristol City Council has been approached for comment.
READ MORE: TfL has issued £400million in Ulez fines within 16 months
In November last year, it was revealed the city's CAZ scheme was plagued with faulty cameras, resulting in drivers hundreds of miles away receiving letters.
One motorist from Liverpool believed his car's number plate had been cloned and quickly informed the police after receiving a letter from Bristol City Council.
The City Council admitted its Clean Air Zone cameras, which monitor which cars pass through the designated area, may be misreading registrations.
The council sent letters to drivers using vehicles that had been triggered by the new cameras on the edge of the Clean Air Zone during a three-week period in September.
The letters warned them that, while they weren't being fined for that trip, they would be if they make the same journey into the Clean Air Zone after the scheme starts on November 28.
But a number of motorists have complained to Bristol City Council over the stress caused despite never having visited the city before.
One motorist from West Wales said she visited her local police station because she was worried her vehicle had been cloned, while another driver from Merseyside said he would be demanding £300 compensation for the time and stress involved after receiving the letter.
Bristol City Council said their advice to anyone who appears to have been sent a letter in error is to just ignore it, but the council has admitted there is a problem with the cameras not being able to correctly identify some letters on vehicle registration plates.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...t-letters.html
Some people are in for a nasty surprise regarding ULEZ, CAZ, C40 cities, etc., which are part of a much greater enforcement framework.
My mate was visiting from Dallas last week and told me that they tried to push the zero emissions malarkey on them and the Texans just fkd them off.....We could do the same if we weren't such a divided society.
Yes they are trying to drive us off the road.
This 20mph malarky is almost impossible to do.
I know four people who've had speeding tickets in the last three weeks, by the nine giants, Whitchurch and Weston Avenue seem to be the main culprits.
Has anyone else had a speeding ticket in the last month if so where?
That's exactly what they are doing in Cardiff, close off part of Llanishen so all cars have to go down the one street which will get more congested, the same by the Castle for ages, sending traffic down Cathedral Road and the same by the old AA building make everyone pile around the prison, it's getting ridiculous.
This air theft charge will be the death knell for Bristol city centre. For instance, I used to visit Bristol city centre on average three times a year to visit the Record Fair at the Colston Hall and the wonderful 2nd hand record shops that Bristol has in the centre. I could spend well over £100 on vinyl plus on top of that a meal and a drinks. Thus spending approximately £150 per visit. If the cretins that run Bristol council think I am going to spend another £9 on top of this, just to enter their 'great' city, they can think again.
As well as conning motorists out of money for this air theft charge, for entering the centre of Bristol, the cunning sneaky thieving gits have also introduced it for drivers who use the Portway (the road that goes under the Clifton Suspension Bridge) knowing that tens of thousands of motorists use this road from south and west Wales, Gloucestershire and the Midlands to get to and from Bristol airport. Thankfully, there are other routes that can be used other than using the Portway to avoid this charge. Adds a bit of time to your journey, but hey-ho, you aren't giving into these dipsticks.
Many people will think like you
But many more will be apathetic and just pay it.
It’s here to stay unless protested.
I’m all for a carrot and stick approach but there doesn’t seem a lot of carrot. Why can’t all bus and train fares be merged and significantly lowered.
To get to cardiff from Caerphilly by train it’s £8.30
If you need a bus to the train station it’s another £4.
There are cheaper ways but it’s not ideal when you could jump in your car a lot easier.
Sadly, there are way too many sheeple in society who will pay for this air theft charge.
As for Caerphilly to Cardiff by train I don't begrudge the £8.30 return cost at all. I live very close to one of the 3 stations in Caerphilly and I can be in Cardiff Queen Street in just 21 minutes. Perfect! Saves all the hassle of driving and parking
Hopefully she pays closer attention to any business rules she needs to follow or her business could go under due to mismanagement
.