Hi all, long time lurker on this forum and a massive rail enthusiast myself. Never had any real issues of my own in years of regular rail travel, but unfortunately my little sister has been a bit stupid and got herself into some trouble.
On 1st June, she attempted to travel from Leeds to Doncaster, and had a valid ticket with the 16-25 railcard discount applied. She has a valid & in date digital railcard, and tells me she couldn't find it on her phone during this journey, so RPIs must have been involved afterwards. She is autistic and struggles with communication, and I don't know if she failed to effectively communicate the situation to the guard or RPIs, as what Northern are asking for feels like a disproportionate response to the genuine mistake of a vulnerable individual who did in fact have both a valid ticket and railcard, but didn't have the mental capacity to find the latter.
A letter was received the other day asking her to pay a FPN of £114 by next week or it will go to court. I don't know if she was given the option of a penalty fare before this, communicating with her is not easy and she hadn't even mentioned the situation until the letter was received - in fact, I don't think she would have told us if I didn't have the good fortune to be stood behind her as she opened the letter. Is it normal to go straight to a FPN for the situation she described to us? I've seen plenty of people make genuine mistakes such as getting on the wrong train or forgetting their railcard, and have never witnessed a railway employee take a passenger's details for anything that wasn't an obvious attempt at evading a fare.
From reading previous threads, I expect that the consensus will be that she really ought to pay the fine as other options aren't worth it, but it really irks me that this is happening to her when she made no attempt to fare evade. Would anyone suggest it is worth fighting? I want to advise her to always buy from a staffed ticket office in future but unfortunately with the recent proposals it seems the DfT/RDG want to make the railway even less accessible to disabled people & probably increase the chance of incidents like this.
On 1st June, she attempted to travel from Leeds to Doncaster, and had a valid ticket with the 16-25 railcard discount applied. She has a valid & in date digital railcard, and tells me she couldn't find it on her phone during this journey, so RPIs must have been involved afterwards. She is autistic and struggles with communication, and I don't know if she failed to effectively communicate the situation to the guard or RPIs, as what Northern are asking for feels like a disproportionate response to the genuine mistake of a vulnerable individual who did in fact have both a valid ticket and railcard, but didn't have the mental capacity to find the latter.
A letter was received the other day asking her to pay a FPN of £114 by next week or it will go to court. I don't know if she was given the option of a penalty fare before this, communicating with her is not easy and she hadn't even mentioned the situation until the letter was received - in fact, I don't think she would have told us if I didn't have the good fortune to be stood behind her as she opened the letter. Is it normal to go straight to a FPN for the situation she described to us? I've seen plenty of people make genuine mistakes such as getting on the wrong train or forgetting their railcard, and have never witnessed a railway employee take a passenger's details for anything that wasn't an obvious attempt at evading a fare.
From reading previous threads, I expect that the consensus will be that she really ought to pay the fine as other options aren't worth it, but it really irks me that this is happening to her when she made no attempt to fare evade. Would anyone suggest it is worth fighting? I want to advise her to always buy from a staffed ticket office in future but unfortunately with the recent proposals it seems the DfT/RDG want to make the railway even less accessible to disabled people & probably increase the chance of incidents like this.