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24th March, 2025
3-1-5 Health Club
Mannin Way
Lancaster
LA1 3PE
Dear Ms Sarah Dack McGuniess,
Thank you for your response dated 18th March 2025. I note its contents and your attempt to deflect responsibility for the discriminatory treatment I experienced as a disabled visitor to 3-1-5 Health Club on 18th December 2024. Unfortunately, your letter only confirms that 3-1-5’s current policies place disabled visitors at a clear disadvantage compared to able-bodied visitors and fails to offer any lawful justification for doing so.
You expressly admit that able-bodied visitors are permitted to park for up to three hours with no registration requirement, while disabled visitors are not permitted to park for up to three hours unless they undertake an additional process involving the manual registration of a Blue Badge.
This process is not only unnecessary but your assertion that the parking terminal is “in reception” is plainly misleading. In reality, it is located behind access-controlled barriers within the members-only area of the building. The fact remains that it is not visible, accessible, or intuitive to anyone not attending the health club facilities themselves.
For visitors parking outside and attending partner services such as Biomed, the terminal is definitely not visible, not accessible, and not reasonably discoverable unless someone happens to inform them. You also accept that signage may be unclear, which reinforces the fact that the system was not designed with the needs of disabled visitors in mind.
Your response also dismisses entirely the need for seating at reception, despite my condition requiring it. Whether or not queues are “rare” is irrelevant. The duty to make reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010 is not conditional on your perception of frequency but triggered by the actual impact on disabled individuals. That is the legal test.
For completeness, I should also note that the original Notice to Keeper (NtK) was never received, and the first correspondence I received was a so-called “Reminder Notice” dated just 15 days after the parking event. Given that the statutory period to make payment is 28 days, this early reminder raises legitimate suspicion that the original NtK may never have been sent at all. When ParkingEye finally sent what they claimed was the original NtK via email attachment (only after my complaint), it attempted to rely on the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. However, under Schedule 4 of PoFA, where no Notice to Driver was issued at the time of the event, a Notice to Keeper must be actually delivered within 14 days of the alleged contravention in order to create Keeper liability. If the original was not served within that period—and I maintain that it was not—then ParkingEye cannot rely on PoFA, and no Keeper liability arises. This further undermines the basis of the PCN and should have been sufficient reason for it to be cancelled outright, even before the Equality Act breach was considered.
Now to your most absurd contention—the suggestion that 3-1-5 is “not legally able” to cancel PCNs issued for disabled bays because ParkingEye, your agent, will not permit it. This is legally nonsensical. You are the principal. ParkingEye acts on your behalf, under your authority, on your land. You are jointly and severally liable for the actions of your agent. If your position is that your own appointed agent has forbidden you from intervening even in cases where a PCN has been issued unlawfully or discriminatorily, then I require strict proof. You will be expected to disclose, in full, the unredacted contract between 3-1-5 Health Club and ParkingEye Ltd, showing where such an extraordinary and preposterous restriction on your authority is stated.
Further, your own letter reveals the discriminatory nature of your current arrangement in plain terms. You state: “We do not have the facility to cancel PCNs for the disabled bays”—a statement which, when read in full context, only serves to embarrass your position. I have already been informed that cancellations are possible for other visitors—namely able-bodied ones—but not for disabled users. If that isn’t direct discrimination under the Equality Act 2010, then what is?
You appear to be operating a two-tier system where one group of visitors can expect discretion and flexibility, while another—disabled people—are subjected to rigid enforcement, without exception or appeal through the principal. This unequal treatment, based solely on disability status, is indefensible in law and will be central to any claim brought against you.
It is astonishing that 3-1-5 Health Club continues to assert that it lacks the authority to cancel PCNs for disabled bays, when in fact your own marketing materials—jointly produced with ParkingEye—state the opposite. In ParkingEye’s published case study for your site, you are quoted as saying: “We like being able to cancel PCNs for genuine mistakes.” You also confirm the club has full control of enforcement measures, including the ability to whitelist vehicles and instruct ParkingEye to suspend monitoring for events. This completely undermines your claim that you have no say in the matter. The reality is that you have simply chosen not to assist disabled visitors, despite having the clear capacity to do so.
This supports the wider evidence that you operate a two-tier enforcement system, one in which able-bodied visitors can expect cancellation for errors, while disabled people are treated with inflexibility and subjected to PCNs based on inaccessible procedures. That is not only discriminatory—it is indefensible.
The idea that you would enter into a contract that strips you of any ability to ensure lawful and non-discriminatory treatment of your disabled visitors is almost too ridiculous to contemplate, and if you were to be so imbecilic as to let this matter reach trial, this excuse will be prised apart in open court. Passing the buck to your agent is not a defence. The Equality Act does not allow a principal to delegate away its legal responsibilities, and any attempt to do so will only reinforce your liability.
Let me be absolutely clear: this is your final opportunity to resolve this matter. If the PCN is not cancelled and written confirmation of this provided within 14 days of this letter, I will issue a claim against both 3-1-5 Health Club and ParkingEye Ltd under the Equality Act 2010. I will seek compensation for unlawful disability discrimination, failure to make reasonable adjustments, and the distress and inconvenience caused. My claim will include an award of damages in the region of £3,000 to £5,000, assessed in line with Vento band guidance.
I expect your next correspondence to be a full and unequivocal confirmation that the PCN has been cancelled and that you are reviewing your policies to ensure no further discrimination occurs against disabled visitors.
Yours sincerely,
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