Thursday, 15 March 2012

Rogue traders warning ahead of digital switchover!

Poole residents are being warned to be on their guard against opportunist thieves and rogue traders taking advantage of the digital TV switchover.
 
The first stage of the switchover comes to Poole and Bournemouth on Wednesday when the old analogue television signal is switched off and replaced with digital.
 
Any TV set that’s not ready to receive a digital signal after the switchover takes place will no longer receive TV programmes.
 
Andy Shimmen, Borough of Poole trading standards officer, said: “During the switchover process we’ve seen reports from trading standards services elsewhere in the country of rogue traders targeting vulnerable householders and charging well over the odds for replacement aerials or set top boxes.
 
“They might also try selling them equipment that is totally unnecessary or tell customers they need to buy a digital aerial from them – something which doesn’t even exist.”
 
Residents are also warned to be wary that bogus callers don’t use the switchover as an opportunity to gain access.
 
“There are known links between rogue traders and distraction burglars and we know that they’ve used the switchover as a tactic elsewhere,” said Cllr Xena Dion, cabinet portfolio holder for the environment.
 
“Our advice is not to deal with anyone who knocks on your door without a prior appointment trying to sell you a new aerial or television equipment or offering to check out your old one.”

Spring home rogue traders alert!

Lincolnshire Trading Standards has issued advice to help residents avoid rogue traders hoping to exploit the springtime push for home improvements.
 
Officials are urging people to choose carefully when taking on workmen and to only select those who are well known to do a good job.
 
The advice comes ahead of one of the year’s most popular times for home revamps. It’s hoped that the tips will help Lincolnshire residents avoid getting conned this spring.
 
Common tactics used by rogue traders have included professional-looking advertising, cold-calling and high-pressure selling.
 
They’re all easy to avoid, if you stick to three golden rules:
 
Get at least three quotes to compare.
Use reputable companies that have been recommended by friends or family, are part of an approved trader scheme, or where you’ve seen examples of their work first-hand.
Keep in control and don’t feel pressured. If in doubt, just say ‘no’. 
Lisa Foster, principal Trading Standards officer, said: “Everyone likes to think they’re safe in their home and fortunately, in the main they are. But each year thousands of unsuspecting people find themselves targeted by criminals at their own front door.
 
“It’s usually the vulnerable and elderly who fall victim to these confidence tricksters, who then persuade them to hand over money, carry out shoddy work, or steal from them. Please follow our advice to avoid it happening to you.”

Trading standards office warning on bogus crime callers!

House holders in Dudley borough are being warned to be on their guard against bogus crime prevention callers.
 
Trading standards officers say people contacted by crime prevention or home safety campaigners, who often say they are working with the police, may in fact be talking to unscrupulous sales workers.
 
The callers are likely to be from companies selling monitored burglar alarm systems with free alarms but a whopping fee of up to £5,000 to monitor them.
 
Rogue callers may also try to con people by falsely claiming police will no longer attend a domestic burglary.
 
Councillor David Stanley, Dudley cabinet member responsible for trading standards, said: “These traders often contact vulnerable or elderly members of our communities. Its important residents remain cautious about cold callers and warn family, friends and neighbours to do the same.”
 
Trading standards advise people never to make an appointment and anyone receiving a call from someone making these claims should inform them.

Thursday, 8 March 2012

Checkatrade.com - Where Reputation Matters!

Checkatrade.com the consumers champion is fast becoming the No 1 free information website to use when looking for a Tradesperson/Service Provider. Taking the time to check out a Company or a Sole Trader prior to employing them is extremely important. Do they have the correct and up to date Public Liability Insurance, the right qualifications, where are they based, how much work have they carried out in and around your area, do they have a good history of customer satisfaction. Checkatrade.com, have checked and display all this information and more. A few minutes spent at the beginning could save hours of heartache for you at the end. So make sure that you are not the victim of a Rogue Trader and visit Checkatrade.com.  
 
National Award Winner, Checkatrade.com is a business tool for honest, reliable and accountable trades and service providers to effectively prove the level of their reputation. The benefits of membership include
 
• To build your reputation, gain credibility & consumer confidence
• Increased success with quotations
• Free website
• A saving on money and time
• Checkatrade advertising
• Dedicated customer services
• Unlimited amounts of marketing materials
• Members area (take a guided tour below)
• Having your say on how Checkatrade develops
• Discounted services
• Trade chat forum
 
Checkatrade.com is transparent and fair in the way that we operate. Every trade or service that applies to join Checkatrade.com is rigorously vetted and the results are made available to the public. From 1998, our dedication to tackling dishonesty among tradesmen allows only the best to join us. Our retention rate for member businesses is 97% .Businesses agrees to be monitored by their customers and have the results published for all to see.

Police arrest six in rogue traders probe!

Police have arrested six men in connection to reports of rogue traders operating in Beaconsfield.
 
Police say the men knocked on the door of a property in Reynolds Road yesterday and told the elderly occupant that his home needed new guttering and fascias which would cost about £25,000.
 
The men started removing the guttering and said they would come back this morning to finish the job – where they were picked up by police and Trading Standards.
 
Deputy Inspector Mark Lynch said: “The man was correct to alert a neighbour as he didn’t feel comfortable with the situation.
 
As soon as the neighbour phoned the police we informed Trading Standards and assisted them in arresting the men when they came to finish off the work this morning.”
 
The arrested men are 21, 26, 26, 34, 40 and 45 years old. They are currently in police custody.
 
Martin Woodley from Oxfordshire County Council’s Trading Standards added: “There has been fantastic co-operation between Thames Valley Police, and the trading standards teams at Oxfordshire County Council and Buckinghamshire County Council to get us to this stage in what is an ongoing investigation.
 
This is proof to the general public that agencies that aim to set out to safeguard them are working together in a co-ordinated way.

Rogue trader: Victim wants longer sentence for Anthony Mander!

The 56-year-old from Biddulph, Staffordshire, was tricked out of over £1,000 for windows and doors he never received.
 
The man responsible was Stoke-on-Trent builder Anthony Mander. The 50-year-old from Burslem has now been jailed for three years and nine months after pleading guilty of obtaining money by deception.
 
In total, he tricked 17 people in north Staffordshire out of tens of thousands of pounds after cold-calling his victims and getting cash up front for work he never completed."When he first came round, he was offering water seal treatments on the outside of houses for £40," said Mr Burnham.
 
We were in the process of having new windows put in and he said he did windows and doors, and that he could get them at a special rate. Obviously we were quite interested in saving money, but he wanted cash up front to buy them, so we gave him just over a thousand pounds. We got receipts and everything, but after we paid him the money the windows never materialised.
 
We were on the phone to him on numerous occasions but he kept on blaming the weather at first - it was a really bad winter. After a few months, I asked him for the windows and doors and said that I'd find my own builder to fit them.
 
I would like to have seen a longer sentence - he'll be out in 18 months or so - and it's not going to help people get their money back. But as long as it's stopped other people being conned by him, and he never trades again, that's the most we can hope for.
 
"What I've learnt, and what I would say to other people, is never have any work done by someone who just comes to the door."

Suffolk/Essex: Rogue trader gets 30-month jail term!

A rogue trader who was part of a gang which “ruthlessly exploited” vulnerable householders in Suffolk and Essex and conned them out of £40,000 for poor-quality work has been jailed for 30 months.
 
Victims of the gang, some of whom were in their 80s, were “bullied and cajoled” into handing over large sums of money and on two occasions 27-year-old Mark Bundock even gave them a lift to withdraw money, Ipswich Crown Court heard.
 
Sentencing Bundock, of Berkley Close, Highwoods, Colchester, Judge Peter Thompson said the gang had “ruthlessly exploited” elderly and vulnerable householders and one man had become so anxious as a result of what happened to him that he had fallen into a decline and had died.
 
The court heard that another couple were forced to take out a bank loan and equity release after the gang threatened to take action against them if they didn’t pay the money they claimed they were owed.
 
Bundock admitted five offences of participating in a fraudulent business, money laundering and possession of a small quantity of drugs and was jailed for a total of 30 months.
 
Also before the court was Stephen Vandervord, 53, of Victoria Chase, Colchester who admitted one offence of fraud by false representation.
 
The court heard that Vandervord, who was jailed for six months, had not been part of the gang of rogue traders, but had helped a couple targeted by the gang to get equity release in their home when they couldn’t meet the gang’s demands for payment and had committed an offence by failing to tell them he wasn’t registered with the Financial Services Authority.
 
Andrew Shaw, prosecuting, said the offences the court had heard about had been committed over a five- to six-month period between May and October 2010 in Suffolk and Essex.
 
He said gang members had turned up at victims’ homes and said they had noticed a problem with their roof while working at a nearby property. On one occasion a woman heard a loud crash at her property during the night and the following day two men called at the house saying they had noticed tiles had come off and she needed a new roof which would cost £18,000.
 
Mr Shaw said there was clear inference damage to the roof had been caused deliberately by the gang. He said surveyors who examined work done by the gang described it as “poor quality” and said that in some cases the work had been unnecessary.
 
Matthew Pardoe, for Bundock, said his client was at the bottom of the chain and had been exploited by other members of the gang who he had refused to name. He said Bundock had been paid a flat daily rate and was a “bit part player.” He had given his real name and bank account details to customers and felt genuine remorse for the offences.
 
David Howell for Vandervord said his client had financial problems and had been declared bankrupt, He said had made about £1,700 from the equity release work for the couple.