
The UK seaside town with no banks where locals told ‘don't use cash'
A local business owner has spoken of how she has had to urge customers not to use cash after all banks disappeared from her town. Monica Hardman, the owner of Shoreham Knitting and Needlecraft in Shoreham, West Sussex, that all branches had now gone, and it would be too hazardous to continue non-card payments. The town does, however, still have a Post Office and a banking hub.
'Originally, we had six banks in our town, and our own HSBC closed over eight years ago,' she told BBC Radio 4's Today programme this morning.
'I opened three bank accounts, one after the other trying desperately to operate cash, and gradually all these banks closed, until last year we had none. So a banking hub opened at the end of our high street in March of last year. I looked at the situation again, but decided that it was too dangerous. One of the reasons was that it was too dangerous for a member of staff to walk down the road on a regular basis, five minute walk, carrying large amounts of cash.'
Ms Hardman added: 'Our last bank that closed early last year was actually next door to us.'
When asked if she felt like she was missing out on income by paying charges for card transactions, she replied: 'No. Our debit cards are 1.37%, we're charged, and most people use debit cards. Credit cards are under 1%.
'Cash, if it's paid in, is 1.5% of total money paid in.'
The programme had another business owner, Katie Jones, of Katie's Cakes in Wolverhampton, who was championing cash payments.
She described how she used the cash she earned in her shop to purchse goods from other local businesses, and that some of her customers simply did not want to use digital payments.
These include low-income individuals who find it easier to keep track of their finances if they have physical change or notes.
Ms Hardman said that only about 25% of her total take was cash, adding: 'If someone is actually stuck, we do actually help them, and we have paid ourselves with a credit card, or a debit card, and they've given us the cash.'
It comes as a Treasury Committee of MPs warns that businesses could need to be forced to accept coins and banknotes in order to make sure that the UK does not drift into a loss of cash acceptance for those who rely on it.
A report said: 'There may come a time in the future where it becomes necessary for HM Treasury to mandate cash acceptance if appropriate safeguards have not been implemented for those who need physical cash, and the level of cash acceptance begins to lead to widespread detriment.
'To ensure that HM Treasury has the information it needs to make this decision, cash acceptance levels in the UK must be monitored to ensure we do not sleepwalk into a loss of cash acceptance for those who need it.
'HM Treasury must provide the Treasury Committee with annual reporting on cash acceptance levels and provide an analysis of HM Treasury's view of the tolerable level of cash acceptance in society.' Read More Households urged to take meter readings as Ofgem price cap drops
READ SOURCE
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Home Office plans to spend £2.2bn of foreign aid on asylum support this year
The Home Office plans to spend about £2.2 billion of foreign aid to support asylum seekers this financial year, according to new figures. The amount of overseas development assistance (ODA) budgeted by the Home Office – which is largely used to cover accommodation costs such as hotels for asylum seekers – is slightly less than the £2.3 billion it spent in 2024/25. International rules allow countries to count first-year costs of supporting refugees as overseas development assistance (ODA). The figures, first reported by the BBC, were published in recent days on the Home Office website. The Home Office said it is 'urgently taking action to restore order and reduce costs' which will cut the amount spent to support asylum seekers and refugees in the UK. It also said it was expected to have saved £500 million in asylum support costs in the last financial year, and that this had saved £200 million in ODA which had been passed back to the Treasury. A total of 32,345 asylum seekers were being housed temporarily in UK hotels at the end of March this year. This figure is down 15% from the end of December, when the total was 38,079, and 6% lower than the 34,530 at the same point a year earlier. Asylum seekers and their families are housed in temporary accommodation if they are waiting for the outcome of a claim or an appeal and have been assessed as not being able to support themselves independently. They are housed in hotels if there is not enough space in accommodation provided by local authorities or other organisations. Labour has previously said it is 'committed to end the use of asylum hotels over time', adding that under the previous Conservative government at one stage 'more than 400 hotels were in use and almost £9 million per day was being spent'. Jo White, chairwoman of the Red Wall group of Labour MPs, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Saturday: 'We need to be looking at things like ECHR article eight. I don't think anything's off the table … including looking at new options such as processing abroad. 'So, we have to be open to see how we can move move that backlog as quickly as possible. I'm getting impatient. 'I know my colleagues in parliament are getting impatient and we're pressing the Government as hard as we can on this.' A Home Office spokesperson said: 'We inherited an asylum system under exceptional pressure and are urgently taking action to restore order and reduce costs. 'This will ultimately reduce the amount of official development assistance spent to support asylum seekers and refugees in the UK. 'We are immediately speeding up decisions and increasing returns so that we can end the use of hotels and save the taxpayer £4 billion by 2026. 'The Rwanda scheme also wasted £700 million to remove just four volunteers – instead, we have surged removals to nearly 30,000 since the election, are giving law enforcement new counter-terror style powers, and increasing intelligence sharing through our Border Security Command to tackle the heart of the issue, vile people-smuggling gangs.'

Epoch Times
a day ago
- Epoch Times
HMRC Loses £47 Million in Phishing Attack on 100,000 Taxpayer Accounts
HMRC has lost £47 million after a phishing scam hit 100,000 pay-as-you-earn (PAYE) tax accounts in an organised crime incident which began last year. The UK's tax authority sought to assure taxpayers in their Following the exposure of the breach, HMRC said it has taken action to protect those accounts by locking them down, deleting login credentials to prevent further unauthorised access, and removing any incorrect information from tax records. The authority said that the attack affected 0.22 percent of the PAYE population. An HMRC spokesperson told The Epoch Times on Thursday: 'We've acted to protect customers after identifying attempts to access a very small minority of tax accounts, and we're working with other law enforcement agencies both in the UK and overseas to bring those responsible to justice. 'This was not a cyberattack—it involved criminals using personal information from phishing activity or data obtained elsewhere to try to claim money from HMRC. Related Stories 5/21/2025 5/9/2025 'We're writing to those customers affected to reassure them we've secured their accounts and that they haven't lost any money.' HMRC added that while it is not in a position to give further details for operational reasons, they confirmed that arrests have been made. Information 'Not Taken From HMRC' 'Phishing' is when cyber criminals use scam emails, text messages, or phone calls which appear to be from trusted organisations to trick victims into taking a specific action, such as clicking on a link taking them to a website containing malware, or handing over personal information. According to the The revelations were made public on Wednesday via the HMRC website, at the same time senior figures from the tax agency were giving evidence to the Treasury Committee. John Paul Marks, the chief executive of HMRC, told MPs that criminals had used personal data they had obtained through phishing to masquerade as legitimate customers 'to create PAYE accounts to pay themselves a repayment and/or access an existing account.' Angela MacDonald, HMRC's deputy chief executive and second permanent secretary, further clarified that information had been taken from other environments and that 'it had not been taken from HMRC.' File photo of a woman using a laptop as she holds a bank card, dated March 30, 2020. Tim Goode/PA Wire MacDonald told the committee: 'Lots of people who would just 'Pay As You Earn' haven't got an online account because they have no reason to go in to one. So for many instances, the customers were not realising that somebody else was in their account.' However, she added that there were instances of live accounts 'where the criminals had managed to get their details and were logging in as the customer.' Asked to confirm how much money was taken, MacDonald replied: 'They have managed to extract free payments to the tune of £47 million. That is a lot of money, and it's very unacceptable. We have in the last tax year protected £1.9 billion worth of money which sought to be taken from us by attacks.' 'Social Engineering Attack' HMRC officials reiterated during the committee meeting that what occurred was not a cyberattack, with MacDonald saying: 'We have not been hacked. We have not had data extracted from us.' Penetration tester Shaun Webber, who simulates cyberattacks to identify vulnerabilities in systems, told The Epoch Times that generally phishing is classed as a 'social engineering attack,' because it relies on attacking the person rather than a system. 'However, there is overlap, because during phishing, someone might be delivering a payload which would exploit a particular vulnerability,' he said. 'It's definitely one of the most effective ways of getting that initial access,' the cybersecurity professional said, and went on to explain how phishing might be used to penetrate a business. 'Companies spend a lot of time and effort securing their external, internet-facing presence, so there's often no real way of gaining access to the network from an external perspective' because it is 'segmented away from the internal network.' He said that when a criminal sends an employee a phishing email, that employee is already in the internal network, giving the criminal an effective way of getting an initial foothold into a company's internal network. Webber said: 'This is why we have things like zero trust architecture, where even if someone does get into the internal network, it's not just wide open. You still have to reauthenticate for each service you access.' 'For example, if you're suddenly logging in from a different IP address than what you normally log in from, the account would automatically be asked for additional authentication, or be blocked,' the cybersecurity professional said. UK's Cybersecurity Resilience The phishing attack on HMRC comes at a time of broader scrutiny over the cybersecurity resilience of British institutions and businesses. In May, a That same month, the head of the NCSC also
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Fact check: More people leave than arrive on current youth mobility schemes
On the BBC's Today programme on May 19, from around two hours and 21 minutes, Business and Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said the UK's youth mobility arrangements with other countries reduce net migration. Asked 'how do you know there will be fewer people coming here than leaving?' Mr Reynolds said: 'Well, I've got 13 schemes in action already and that's the evidence of them.' He later added: 'I tell you the evidence of the current schemes just so you know is that they're a net negative on immigration.' Around 24,400 youth mobility visas were issued to people wanting to come to the UK in 2024. Although figures are patchy for how many Britons go abroad, data from just three countries – Australia, New Zealand and Canada – suggests that 68,495 British citizens travelled to those countries in 2024 (the Australian data is for the 12 months to the end of June 2024). That would suggest that Mr Reynolds is right. However it does not take into account that Britons going abroad on these temporary visas will sooner or later come back, as will those who come to the UK. It is also not clear that this pattern will repeat in any similar deal with the EU. The UK population is much larger than those of Australia, New Zealand and Canada, so there are more Britons who can go to those countries than can come here. With the EU that is reversed. How many people come to the UK on a youth mobility visa? Government data shows there were 24,437 people who were handed a youth mobility visa last year. Most of these were from one of the 13 countries with which the UK has a reciprocal arrangement. A small handful of visas – 131 in total – were for people from countries other than the 13. The Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford has suggested that these are the result of errors in data recording, or due to people having dual nationalities. The top three countries that sent people to the UK on youth mobility visas between January and December 2024 were Australia (9,754 visas), New Zealand (4,304 visas) and Canada (3,060 visas). How many Britons go abroad on youth mobility type schemes? Figures are patchy on how many British people have gone abroad on a youth mobility scheme. The Department for Business and Trade was unable to share data. Australia publishes a twice-yearly report into what it calls its working holiday visa programme. That is the Australian equivalent to the UK's youth mobility scheme. The latest such report covered the 12 months to the end of June 2024. That report showed that Australia issued 48,973 working holiday visas to UK citizens. Data from New Zealand is available on the website of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment. Using its migration data explorer produces a spreadsheet which shows that there were 9,486 working holiday visas granted by New Zealand to UK citizens in between January and December 2024. Canadian data does not appear to be publicly available, but the figures were provided to the PA news agency by the Canadian Department for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship. The data shows that in 2024 there were 9,972 work permits issued to UK and UK overseas territories citizens under the country's working holiday scheme, and a further 64 people had their permits extended. How do incoming youth mobility visas compare to outgoing? Net migration is a figure which subtracts the number of people coming into the country from the number of people leaving. The data cited above suggests that while 9,754 Australians came to the UK on youth mobility visas, 48,973 Britons went in the opposite direction. It must be noted that the time periods measured here are different, the Australian data is for the 12 months ending June 2024, while the UK data is for the 12 months ending December 2024. Meanwhile the data suggests that 4,304 New Zealanders came to the UK while 9,486 Britons went in the other direction. Data further shows that 3,060 Canadians came to the UK in 2024, while 9,972 Britons went in the other direction. This suggests that for each of these three countries the youth mobility schemes are – as Mr Reynolds suggested – reducing net migration. In fact Australia alone appears to receive twice as many Britons (48,973) as all people who the UK receives from all 13 countries added together (24,437). However, it should be noted that because youth mobility schemes are time-limited, Britons going abroad and people who have come to the UK on such visas will eventually be forced to return. This means the UK's inbound migration figures should take into account not just Australians and Canadians – for example – coming to the UK, but also Britons returning from Australia and Canada after their youth mobility visas expire. If it is assumed that everyone returns then over a longer time frame the youth mobility programmes will have a neutral impact on net immigration because every Briton who leaves the UK will come back and every non-Briton who comes to the UK will leave. This does not take into account the people – both Britons abroad and non-Britons in the UK – who apply for a different visa to stay in their adopted country. Do these conclusions also apply to the EU scheme? The impact on net migration of the potential EU scheme will depend on the details of the agreement between London and Brussels. Madeleine Sumption, director at the Migration Observatory, told the PA news agency that the size of the cap on the programme would be vital for the impact on net migration. She said the fact the UK sends more people to Australia, Canada and New Zealand than it receives from them 'probably results from the fact that the UK has a much larger population than they do, so we just have more young people potentially interested in moving'. With the EU scheme, Ms Sumption said, the population sizes are flipped – that is to say the EU's population is much bigger than the UK, leaving more young people who might be willing to come here. Therefore the smaller the cap on the number of visas is, the more likely both the EU and UK will fill their quotas. If both fill their quotas – and the quotas going both ways are the same – then the impact on net migration will be zero. However if the cap is large then it is more likely that there will not be as many Britons going to Europe as are coming in the opposite direction, which will bring up net migration. But, as with the existing schemes, both Britons in Europe and Europeans in the UK will eventually have to leave unless they find another visa, which over the long run should mean that the programme has a neutral impact on net migration. BBC – Today, 19/05/2025 Migration Observatory – What is the Youth Mobility Scheme and how does it work? (archived) – Entry clearance visas granted outside the UK (archived page and spreadsheet, using tab Data_Vis_D02) Australian Department of Home Affairs – Visitor visa statistics (archived) Australian Department of Home Affairs – Working Holiday Maker visa program report (archived) New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment – Migration data explorer (archived page and downloaded spreadsheet. To download the correct spreadsheet, instructions can be found at (archived): In dataset select 'W1 work decisions', in time period select 'calendar year' and in variables select 'application substream', 'application criteria' and 'decision type') Canadian data provided to PA news agency (archived) Madeleine Sumption profile (archived)