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UK
Selling Personal Information About Motorists
Private parking lot owners are making millions from confidential
information on motorists sold by the UK government.
Some
157 companies have purchased access to the government database
containing personal information on the UK's thirty million drivers. The
UK Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency sells each file for £2.50 to
parking lot operators who just need to supply a license plate number
with their payment. An unnoticed provision in a bill that passed through
parliament in 2002 legalized the practice.
One parking lot company, Creative Car Park Management, uses the
information to generate automated photo parking tickets. Anyone the
company claims has overstayed in a lot is mailed, weeks later, a letter
demanding triple the amount of an ordinary parking ticket -- £170 (US
$290). The letters threaten court action if payment is not made.
Creative Car Park Management is managed by one man, Gary Wayne, who
doesn't charge shopping centers and other businesses for his parking lot
services. Instead, the hefty fines issued to motorists ensures a steady
stream of profit for the company.
"To impose an excess stay charge of £170 seems to me to be wildly
excessive," said Member of Parliament Norman Baker. "To then
charge people this fee when they appear not to have fallen foul of the
two-and-a-half hour rule suggests incompetence at best. Because of the
concern that has been expressed to me from a number of quarters...
particularly in relation to the improper use of penalty charges, I am
asking the police to investigate this matter."
Source: Your
details are sold to car park extortionists (Mail on Sunday (UK),
11/20/2005)
I-Cube. All rights reserved.
Revised: January 05, 2008
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