Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Council Tax... Help!
39 Answers
Hi, I have received a letter from my local council, saying my council tax payments are not up to date.
I usually wait for the letter to come through, and then take it to the town hall and make the payment via the kiosk. I do this each month, because they don't accept direct debits - which is ridiculous and totally inconvenient.
Anyway, I have received this red letter saying that my "facility to pay monthly has been withdrawn" and the "remainder of the years charge is NOW DUE AND PAYABLE" (it's in caps, I'm not shouting)
It then goes on to say that if the amount is not paid as required, "a magistrates court summons would be issued".
The thing is, this is the first I've heard of it and had no 'white' letter prior to this one. If I had, I would have paid it.
I have just called them to inform them of this and have been told that "people say they don't receive the letters all the time". Ok, so I get this and can imagine it's very true, but you can't tar everyone with the same brush! I have explained that I wait for the letters to come through, as I can't remember everything, and offered to make the payment over the phone (just one month!) but she said there is no option but to pay the full amount and, if I don't, it will be passed to the courts with further costs added!?!
Is there any way around this? I can't afford to pay what they are asking, so do I have any other option but to let it go to court? Then what?
I can't believe they won't budge for a payment that is a couple of weeks late.
I am now stressed to the max! :-(
I usually wait for the letter to come through, and then take it to the town hall and make the payment via the kiosk. I do this each month, because they don't accept direct debits - which is ridiculous and totally inconvenient.
Anyway, I have received this red letter saying that my "facility to pay monthly has been withdrawn" and the "remainder of the years charge is NOW DUE AND PAYABLE" (it's in caps, I'm not shouting)
It then goes on to say that if the amount is not paid as required, "a magistrates court summons would be issued".
The thing is, this is the first I've heard of it and had no 'white' letter prior to this one. If I had, I would have paid it.
I have just called them to inform them of this and have been told that "people say they don't receive the letters all the time". Ok, so I get this and can imagine it's very true, but you can't tar everyone with the same brush! I have explained that I wait for the letters to come through, as I can't remember everything, and offered to make the payment over the phone (just one month!) but she said there is no option but to pay the full amount and, if I don't, it will be passed to the courts with further costs added!?!
Is there any way around this? I can't afford to pay what they are asking, so do I have any other option but to let it go to court? Then what?
I can't believe they won't budge for a payment that is a couple of weeks late.
I am now stressed to the max! :-(
Answers
Firstly, do you accept that you have missed a month (or more)? It is your responsibili ty to make the monthly payments, so writing it on a calendar would be a better way to remind yourself, rather than waiting for the letter. "Not remembering" isn't a good enough excuse if you have to make a monthly payment.
However, if you have missed one, go now and pay it -...
10:33 Mon 26th Nov 2012
What is amazing is that a Council in this day and age has only just started allowing people to pay by DD - asked my daughter who worked in that department. Her reply was that if they say no DD, is tantamount to saying they have no bank account. I would strongly point out to them that this may be the cause of many late payers, not only yourself.
Elvis, yeah, that's what I would have thought they'd have done - just added the amount on to each monthly payment. £208 per month? Ouch!!
Mamyalyne, sorry, you will have to re-type that. I honestly don't understand a word of what you just said...? It didn't read very well...
Actually, don't worry about it. As *already* stated, it's all sorted now. I'm sorry you didn't understand :-)
Thanks Elvis and all the others that did :-))
Mamyalyne, sorry, you will have to re-type that. I honestly don't understand a word of what you just said...? It didn't read very well...
Actually, don't worry about it. As *already* stated, it's all sorted now. I'm sorry you didn't understand :-)
Thanks Elvis and all the others that did :-))
Again, I don't think you quite understood. I mean this in the nicest way possible, but the fact they would "not accept the payment" actually has nothing to do with my question.
I don't think you've quite understood my exact question. That's ok, it's late - I understand.
Thanks to those that have answered and given great advice :-)
I don't think you've quite understood my exact question. That's ok, it's late - I understand.
Thanks to those that have answered and given great advice :-)
Bluestone
If you read buildersmate's posts he explained the council tax procedure. The monthly payment is a concession which relies on the tax payer paying each month on time without having a reminder each month.
My council, & all others I know about, work on that principle. The first letter that is sent is therefore the first reminder that the payment date has been missed & is therefore late.
You said "I usually wait for the letter to come through". Unless your council operates a procedure which is entirely different from the norm - which I assumed would not be the case - that means that what I posted was correct, & your payments have all been late. Just in case your council does operate differently I said "You seem to be saying...." - a qualified statement - rather than "You are saying..."
I can only add that if your council is sending out an invoice letter each month (presumably to each council tax payer) they are in the dark ages, wasting a lot of council taxpayers money doing it & should come into the 21st century.
If you read buildersmate's posts he explained the council tax procedure. The monthly payment is a concession which relies on the tax payer paying each month on time without having a reminder each month.
My council, & all others I know about, work on that principle. The first letter that is sent is therefore the first reminder that the payment date has been missed & is therefore late.
You said "I usually wait for the letter to come through". Unless your council operates a procedure which is entirely different from the norm - which I assumed would not be the case - that means that what I posted was correct, & your payments have all been late. Just in case your council does operate differently I said "You seem to be saying...." - a qualified statement - rather than "You are saying..."
I can only add that if your council is sending out an invoice letter each month (presumably to each council tax payer) they are in the dark ages, wasting a lot of council taxpayers money doing it & should come into the 21st century.
I'm glad it's sorted but "I don't have a calendar" is a really poor excuse. calendars and diaries are really cheap in January, plan to get one you can write on. How do you remember other important dates? Our calendar every month is full of reminders of due dates for payments etc. (I know that sounds as if we've cracked it, but if I didn't do that, I'd never remember anything)