| | |||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| Business & Financial Career, work, money, income generation, personal finance, investing, debt, wealth, abundance, entrepreneurship, sales, marketing, SEO, commerce, economics, blogging, podcasting |
|
Welcome to the Personal Development for Smart People Forums, the place for lively, intelligent discussion of all personal growth issues -- physical, mental, financial, social, emotional, spiritual, and more. You're currently viewing as a guest, which gives you limited read-only access. By joining our free community, you'll be able to post your own messages, access many members-only features, see the new messages posted since your last visit, and of course remove this header message. Registration is fast, simple, and free, so please join today. If you arrived here from a search engine, you may want to explore the main site first, which includes hundreds of deep and insightful articles on a variety of personal development topics. |
| | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| |||
| Today I received a letter from my bank. Nothing particularly unusual about that. We are all used to the monthly bank statements and attractive offers to invest our hard earned cash. When we first start out on the corporate ladder it’s all very exciting that we have this facility. Particularly when we are young and we receive our first pay cheque we feel like we’ve arrived. Unfortunately many of us soon get into the habit of blowing it all on booze and partying on the Friday night and then we find we are living on beans and stale bread for the next five days before repeating the process. You see your bank and arrange an overdraught facility and that gives you temporary relief before you start drifting over the limit so you get hammered by bank charges. In time you will be offered a consolidation loan to ’sort it all out’ plus a little extra spending money. You’re back to one easy payment and yet you don’t use that spare money for savings you blow it all again on something you don’t need and you’re back to square one. You may recognise the picture I’m painting. I’ve had problems not dissimilar to these over the years and one thing that bothered me about the charges was that they were making it increasingly difficult to catch up. I didn’t so much resent the charge because I was spending money that wasn’t mine. It was level of charges that I objected to. What did I do about it? Absolutely nothing. I continued to let the banks take, take, take and all the while my financial situation got ever more perilous. Then, someone stood up and said ‘No!’ and that man was Stephen Hone, father of three and law student, from Plymouth. When Stephen’s bank, Abbey, removed £64 from his account with two £32 charges he asked for them to be refunded. Abbey initially refused as they were fair under the terms of the contract. Mr Hone countered that under the Unfair Terms and Contracts Regulation (1999) all penalty charges have to reflect the cost of administrating them. As such fees are not permitted to be profit-making if they do not reflect that true cost they are therefore illegal. A BBC survey later revealed that the true cost of administrating a £30.00 charge was as little as £4.50. Following legal procedure Stephen compiled a list of all the charges made over the previous six years (the maximum period) and filed a claim at the small claims court. Shortly after Abbey paid up the £840 owed which was later used to set up his Penalty Charges UK website which aims to help others similarly affected. At the time of writing (27/06/2007) a total of £3,909,113.00 has been so far reclaimed! So what does all this have to do with my letter from the bank? Well, my bank has responded to my claim made back in the spring and agreed to pay back the full total claimed. I won’t say how much it was but it was comfortably into four figures. Justice has been done! You can read an extended version of this article on my blog
__________________ A completely blank notebook is an analogy for the future: it is not written and there are no rules For another view of the world, view a random Crusty Nomad blog post today. |
| |||
| The thing to do is analyse what the bank / penalty charges are over there. To compare with the UK may be misleading as the system maybe totally different. However, If you are charged say $60 for going overdrawn of beyond an overdraught limit you may have a case as it probably only cost $10 to administer. Maybe ask on a money saver website / forum in the US, posting this thread if needs be, and see if an expert believes if the same applies over there. Gotta be worth a shot.
__________________ A completely blank notebook is an analogy for the future: it is not written and there are no rules For another view of the world, view a random Crusty Nomad blog post today. |
« Previous Thread
|
Next Thread »
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| A Creative Contribution - And not just to the bank? | Designer M | Character & Contribution | 4 | 04-29-2007 07:12 PM |
| Saving money? Rounding your bank card purhcases | Radek Pilich | Business & Financial | 6 | 12-05-2006 03:27 PM |
All times are GMT. The time now is 11:14 AM.


