Author Topic: Bay Sentry Solutions charge  (Read 216 times)

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Bay Sentry Solutions charge
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My daughter paid for parking to attend a concert in Leeds on 29th September. She booked through the citipark website and paid for parking from 18:30 until 23:00. She entered the car park at 18:41 and returned to the car at around 22:30, inputting her reg into the machine. The machine confirmed her parking and she then went straight to her car. The car park was gridlocked, and not well managed at all by the parking attendants. After sitting in the traffic to exit for almost an hour, she finally exited the car park at 23:31. We have text messages showing the times, including one from my daughter saying “ Is the parking going to let us out we’ve booked till 11. And we aren’t going to be out in six minutes.” By this point she was becoming very concerned, having been stuck in her car for over twenty minutes, with no sign of being able to move.
From there she travelled straight to university.
She has just returned home for Christmas and opened the mail that was waiting for her (yes, we realised now that this was stupid and that we should have been monitoring her mail. She has now given us permission to open everything that arrives in future!), only to find a parking charge and debt collector’s letters threatening court action. The letters state that it is now too late to appeal.
The letter states “Parked with no valid permit” but my daughter has a screenshot of the parking invoice from 6:30 - 11:00 pm and email booking confirmation from citipark.
Any advice on the best course of action would be appreciated.
The parking charge is from Bay Sentry Solutions and and the debt collector’s letter is from DCBL.
« Last Edit: December 20, 2025, 04:10:10 pm by brooke68 »

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Re: Bay Sentry Solutions charge
« Reply #1 on: »
What you have described is a very common scenario following large events, and it is one that is entirely defendable.

Your daughter paid for parking for a defined period and complied with the system requirements. She entered the site after the paid session began, parked lawfully, attended the concert, returned to the car well before the expiry time, and correctly entered her registration into the machine before leaving. At that point, her contractual obligations were complete.

The fact that she was then physically prevented from exiting the car park due to internal congestion, poor traffic control, or inadequate site management is not her fault and cannot reasonably be characterised as “parking with no valid permit.” She was not choosing to remain parked. She was trapped within the site by circumstances entirely within the operator’s control.

The allegation itself already appears flawed. “Parked with no valid permit” is contradicted by the booking confirmation, invoice, and payment evidence. Even if the operator attempts to reframe this later as an overstay, that overstay was caused by the car park’s own failure to allow vehicles to exit in a timely manner after a known busy event. Courts are well used to this argument, and it does not assist parking operators.

The delay in seeing the correspondence does not create liability. It only affects the operator’s internal appeal window, which has no bearing on the court process. Debt letters claiming that it is “too late to appeal” are designed to pressure payment and should not be taken as having any legal significance.

DCBL and any other useless debt collector can be safely ignored. Debt collector are powerless to do anything except to try and intimidate the low-hanging fruit on the gullible tree into paying out of ignorance and fear. I can assure you that if the advice given here is followed, you (or your daughter) will not be paying a penny to anyone over this.

What matters now is the original Notice to Keeper. That document determines whether the operator has even attempted to create keeper liability and whether they have complied with the statutory requirements they rely on. Debt collector letters are irrelevant and should not be posted or analysed.

Your daughter should keep all evidence safe, including the booking confirmation, invoice or screenshot showing the paid parking period, any payment references, and the text messages showing she was stuck attempting to exit before the paid time expired. These clearly demonstrate that she was trying to leave and was unable to do so.

Bay Sentry’s usual route, if they persist, is to pass the matter to DCB Legal. I can assure you with greater than 99.9% certainty that any claim issued will, if the advice you receive here is followed and defended using our template defence, end up either struck out or discontinued due to poor particulars, incorrect allegations, and an inability to rebut evidence showing paid parking and no actionable breach.

The next step is simply to post the original Notice to Keeper, both sides, and confirm the dates on it. From there, it will be clear exactly how this is dealt with if they attempt to progress it further. We do not need to see any reminders or useless debt recovery letters.

READ THIS FIRST - Private Parking Charges Forum guide

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Re: Bay Sentry Solutions charge
« Reply #2 on: »
Thank you and sorry for the delay. Christmas rather took over. I am trying to post the front and back of the letter here but having issues with uploading. If anyone can advise, I would be really grateful.
She has also recently received a final notice threatening bailiffs/debt collection.
« Last Edit: January 07, 2026, 05:54:07 pm by brooke68 »

Re: Bay Sentry Solutions charge
« Reply #3 on: »
Assuming you've read both of the guides linked to above, if you let us know which of the recommended image hosting websites you're trying to use, and which stage you're experiencing issues with, we can advise.

Re: Bay Sentry Solutions charge
« Reply #4 on: »
Thank you, I think my daughter has managed to work it out 🤞
https://postimg.cc/gallery/X3ZDR9w

Re: Bay Sentry Solutions charge
« Reply #5 on: »
If someone could let me know if the link to the images works, I’d be really grateful. Thank you.

Re: Bay Sentry Solutions charge
« Reply #6 on: »
The links work, the resolution on the images isn't very good though, just about readable.