Tevion539
Member
Just so I’m clear on what you’re suggesting.Of course validity can be back dated. Turn up with an out of date railcard: that will be £35 to cover the period up to now. (ie regardless of the actual previous railcard expiry date in the last 12 months). Then charge another £35 for another railcard from that point to 12 months in the future. If you turn up with a railcard 12 to 24 months out of date charge £70 plus £35. In other words put right previous non validity in yearly chunks and enforce a new railcard for the following 12 months. For most people that will cost them a bit more than if they had done things properly, but not an outrageous amount more. If they indulge in more complex and deliberate fraud then prosecute for fraud.
If your railcard expired at any point in the last 12 months it’s £35 plus £35 to cover you for the next 12 months? 70 all in? £105 if your railcard expired in the last 24 months? Where do you cut off that leniency? What if you go 11.5 months without one, is that still £70 all in? Thats a deterrent if your railcard it a month or two out of date, but the longer you go without it being checked it becomes less of a deterrent.