Latest news with #TheJVSShow


Scottish Sun
a day ago
- Automotive
- Scottish Sun
I was charged £4.5k for 2-hour stay in shopping centre car park after payment machine glitch… would YOU spot the error?
The error was only spotted after the mum got a text from her bank PARKED OFF I was charged £4.5k for 2-hour stay in shopping centre car park after payment machine glitch… would YOU spot the error? Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A MUM was left "shocked" after a shopping centre car park charged her more than £4,500 for a two-hour stay. Yaditi Kava, 39, visited Queensmere Observatory Shopping Centre in Slough with her two young daughters to pick up some dinner after work on Friday May 16. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 Mum Yaditi Kava was left 'shocked" after beng charged almost £5,000 for car parking 5 The offending machine that charged her £4,586, which is situated at the exit barriers Credit: Supplied 5 Yaditi with her two daughters who were with her when she incurred the giant charge Credit: Supplied As she returned to the multi-storey car park, the area with the payment machines was closed. Instead the mum used her contactless card to pay at the exit barrier as she left. After she tapped, a message told her she needed to enter her pin - a step not normally needed for purchases of £100 or under. However, bank security protocols do require customers enter their numeric passcode from time-to-time even for transactions under that amount. Regardless, Yaditi was in a rush and failed to spot that she was being charged a colossal £4,586 for her brief stay. "I was in a rush, the girls were getting tired, and I did not see the number on the small card machine," she told the BBC. She saw the display said '4,5' and mistakenly believed the fee was going to be £4.50. Instead, she was horrified after receiving a text notification from her bank showing the size of the charge. "To my shock, I saw that they had deducted not £4.50 but £4,586 from my account," she said. "It was surreal - I just couldn't fathom that they had taken that money." Car owners face instant driving ban under new registration law plan – it's all based on '$500 rule' Yaditi her to wait until Monday May 19 to try and reclaim the money, eventually speaking to a manager who she says blamed a "faulty machine". The manager provided her with a receipt and told her the money would be repaid within 2-3 working days. But three weeks on, the money had still not materialised. The accidental charge was repaid shortly after an intervention by the BBC's consumer rights programme The JVS Show, hosted by Jonathan Vernon-Smith on Three Counties Radio. Yaditi received her full refund on Saturday June 7 - a whole 22 days after the money was first taken. Real state company Savills, who manage the shopping centre, called it an "isolated incident" and said it was investigating to avoid other customers being inconvenienced by similar problems in the future. Yaditi is currently in the midst of a divorce and claims the money that was taken by the car park was cash she had set aside to cover legal fees. She also considered calling off her daughter's birthday party over the stress. A spokesperson for Savills said: "As the appointed managing agent at Queensmere Observatory Shopping Centre, Savills can confirm that it is aware of an isolated incident concerning an anomaly parking charge at the scheme. "The matter has now been rectified with a full refund issued. "This was a very unusual occurrence, and we are investigating the car park system to prevent this from happening in the future." 5 Yaditi couldn't access the payment machines inside (pictured) as the mall shut at 8pm Credit: Supplied


The Irish Sun
a day ago
- Automotive
- The Irish Sun
I was charged £4.5k for 2-hour stay in shopping centre car park after payment machine glitch… would YOU spot the error?
A MUM was left "shocked" after a shopping centre car park charged her more than £4,500 for a two-hour stay. Yaditi Kava, 39, visited Queensmere Observatory Shopping Centre in Slough with her two young daughters to pick up some dinner after work on Friday May 16. 5 Mum Yaditi Kava was left 'shocked" after beng charged almost £5,000 for car parking 5 The offending machine that charged her £4,586, which is situated at the exit barriers Credit: Supplied 5 Yaditi with her two daughters who were with her when she incurred the giant charge Credit: Supplied As she returned to Instead the mum used her contactless card to pay at the exit barrier as she left. After she tapped, a message told her she needed to enter her pin - a step not normally needed for purchases of £100 or under. However, bank security protocols do require customers enter their numeric passcode from time-to-time even for transactions under that amount. Read more on Motors Regardless, Yaditi was in a rush and failed to spot that she was being charged a colossal £4,586 for her brief stay. "I was in a rush, the girls were getting tired, and I did not see the number on the small card machine," she told the BBC. She saw the display said '4,5' and mistakenly believed the fee was going to be £4.50. Instead, she was horrified after receiving a text notification from her bank showing the size of the charge. Most read in Motors "To my shock, I saw that they had deducted not £4.50 but £4,586 from my account," she said. "It was surreal - I just couldn't fathom that they had taken that money." Car owners face instant driving ban under new registration law plan – it's all based on '$500 rule' Yaditi her to wait until Monday May 19 to try and reclaim the money, eventually speaking to a manager who she says blamed a "faulty machine". The manager provided her with a receipt and told her the money would be repaid within 2-3 working days. But three weeks on, the money had still not materialised. The accidental charge was repaid shortly after an intervention by the BBC's consumer rights programme The JVS Show, hosted by Jonathan Vernon-Smith on Three Counties Radio. Yaditi received her full refund on Saturday June 7 - a whole 22 days after the money was first taken. Real state company Savills, who manage the shopping centre, called it an "isolated incident" and said it was investigating to avoid other customers being inconvenienced by similar problems in the future. Yaditi is currently in the midst of a divorce and claims the money that was taken by the car park was cash she had set aside to cover legal fees. She also considered calling off her daughter's A spokesperson for Savills said: "As the appointed managing agent at Queensmere Observatory Shopping Centre, Savills can confirm that it is aware of an isolated incident concerning an anomaly parking charge at the scheme. "The matter has now been rectified with a full refund issued. "This was a very unusual occurrence, and we are investigating the car park system to prevent this from happening in the future." 5 Yaditi couldn't access the payment machines inside (pictured) as the mall shut at 8pm Credit: Supplied 5 "I was in a rush, the girls were getting tired, and I did not see the number," Yaditi said


Hindustan Times
a day ago
- Hindustan Times
Indian-origin woman charged £4,586 for parking error in UK: 'It was surreal'
An Indian-origin woman was left 'in shock' after she was wrongly charged £4,586 for just two hours of parking at a multi-storey car park in Slough, UK, as reported by the BBC. (Also read: UK woman dismisses symptoms as food poisoning, ends up losing 13 organs to rare cancer) Yaditi Kava, 39, had taken her two daughters shopping at the Queensmere Observatory Shopping Centre on Friday, May 16. After the outing, she decided to grab dinner before heading home. Upon returning to the car park, she found the payment machines inaccessible, prompting her to pay at the exit barrier. 'I tapped my contactless card, then a message displayed saying I needed to enter my PIN,' she explained. 'I was in a rush, the girls were getting tired, and I did not see the number on the small card machine. The big display showed '4,5', so I thought it was £4.50.' The barrier lifted, but moments later, she received a bank notification confirming a deduction of £4,586. 'To my shock, I saw that they had deducted not £4.50 but £4,586 from my account,' Kava said. 'It was surreal – I just couldn't fathom that they had taken that money.' Kava said she had to wait until the following Monday to contact the shopping centre's manager, who acknowledged it was a fault with the payment machine. He issued a receipt on 19 May and assured her that the refund would be processed within 2–3 working days. However, three weeks passed and the money still had not been returned. According to the outlet, Kava reached out to the BBC Three Counties consumer rights programme, The JVS Show, hosted by Jonathan Vernon-Smith. 'It was a godsend – just one call from Jonathan, and the very next day, the money was back in my account,' she said. The full refund was successfully processed on Saturday, June 7. (Also read: UK woman catches cheating husband through electric toothbrush: 'Data doesn't lie') Kava, who is currently going through a divorce, revealed that she had been saving the money for legal expenses and had even considered cancelling her daughter's birthday party due to the ordeal. Savills, the company managing the shopping centre, acknowledged the incident in a statement to the BBC, calling it 'an isolated incident' and confirming that a full refund had been processed.