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Rogue trader fined £4,000 for scamming Skipton customer
Rogue trader fined £4,000 for scamming Skipton customer

BBC News

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • BBC News

Rogue trader fined £4,000 for scamming Skipton customer

A businessman has been ordered to pay almost £4,000 after taking money for work he failed to carry Keith Piner was paid £1,880 to provide a summerhouse and gate for a customer in Skipton, North Yorkshire, but never completed the Magistrates' Court heard he later agreed to provide a full refund, but did not return the from Clitheroe, in Lancashire, pleaded guilty to an unfair trading offence and was ordered to pay a fine, costs and court surcharge totalling £3,885. 'Rogue trader' Passing sentence, District Judge Adrian Lower, said: "It is not the first time that you have been in trouble with the Trading Standards."When people pay for work, people expect work to be done."He added: "The reality of all of this frankly is if you don't amend your ways, and you keep promising the earth and don't deliver, then you will become known as a rogue trader, and nobody will want to employ you."North Yorkshire Council's executive member for trading standards, Greg White, said Piner's actions had caused "a great deal of stress" to the customer."He left him out of pocket and having to instruct a solicitor at his own cost to make a claim in the county court," he said."It is completely unacceptable for a trader to act in this way, and I am pleased that the court has recognised that in sentencing Piner." Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Agri-Food Regulator ‘concerned' at level of unfair trade practices
Agri-Food Regulator ‘concerned' at level of unfair trade practices

Irish Times

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

Agri-Food Regulator ‘concerned' at level of unfair trade practices

The head of the Agri-Food Regulator is 'concerned' by the level of unfair trading practices reported by suppliers in the industry, following the authority's inaugural supplier survey. The survey, which focused on compliance with the unfair trading regulations and general trading issues, found that the biggest issue facing suppliers was cost increases at inflation, with 70 per cent of respondents citing the problem. 'Costs are continuing to rise and we are struggling to keep pace with these cost increases,' one supplier said. Retailer and buyer challenges (24 per cent), raw material and ingredient availability (22 per cent), and labour market and wage pressures (18 per cent) were also cited frequently by suppliers as the issues facing the industry. READ MORE While Agri-Food Regulator chief executive Niamh Lenehan said there is 'a lot to be positive about' within the survey's findings, she said, 'I am concerned that 14 per cent of respondents reported experiences that they characterised as unfair trading practices.' 'In particular, it is concerning that some suppliers reported that they may not raise a potential breach of [Unfair Trade] Regulations with either their buyer or with the regulator itself.' The most common issues faced by suppliers were being forced to pay for loss or product deterioration and delayed payments. Respondents noted fears that the buyer would 'retaliate in the future' if they reported unfair trade practices, and concerns they could be 'blacklisted'. Ms Lenehan said less than half of respondents were aware that the regulator has a confidential complaint process, which she said indicates it has 'a significant amount of work to do'. The chief executive said the results of the survey will inform its work going forward and will be used in the 'development of guidelines for buyers and the conducting of further risk-based inspections with respect to compliance with unfair trading law'.

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