Has anyone that had to return the Payment Form in order to get their cheque got their cheque yet? I returned mine last Friday and rang yesterday, they said it would be another 5 business days.
When returning the Payment Form I included a new complaint, well, one I had included in my submission to BDO. The guy I talked to had no visibility of that, there was no new complaint on my file. He said maybe ring back in a week or so if I dont get a letter ackowledging receipt of the complaint.
I returned my payment instruction form last Thursday and called the helpline yesterday for an update. A nice chap advised that they had recieved the form last friday and it would be up to 10 working days (from receipt of form) before a cheque would be issued. He did say that they received a lot of payment instruction forms over the last two days but because mine was one of the first back, it might be processed quicker. I'm really not expecting anything back until the end of next week at the earliest.Has anyone that had to return the Payment Form in order to get their cheque got their cheque yet? I returned mine last Friday and rang yesterday, they said it would be another 5 business days.
When returning the Payment Form I included a new complaint, well, one I had included in my submission to BDO. The guy I talked to had no visibility of that, there was no new complaint on my file. He said maybe ring back in a week or so if I dont get a letter ackowledging receipt of the complaint.
I think precedent applies here. Other banks issued redress settlements in the early days of TME with a deduction for excess TRS but, whether the Central Bank told them to back off or not I do not know, ultimately, TRS is the banks liability, not the mortgage holder's. Besides, banks are primarily responsible for TRS deductions, not the mortgage holder. From what I know you can take it there is an indemnity for the mortgage holder against any TRS implications.Hi all, can anyone advise if there is any tax to be paid on the payment from AIB? From our personal circumstances we also received TRS on our mortgage interest payments, any risk that this would need to be partially refunded due to interest refund on capital write down?
Thanks!
@Shay75 I went to a branch to change my correspondence address, it was the address that I have not lived at in 12 years ago.Not sure if anyone is interested but I got a call back to tell me they couldn't send the letter because of security reasons.
I said that they were sending letters with large cheques out by regular post (to incorrect addresses!) and surely if security was paramount, they would be sent by registered post.
I was told they don't have the encryption software to allow them to do it!
She then dropped the bombshell that it wasn't in fact posted at all, my letter was being sent today.
I told her I was told that Monday, Wednesday and now today and it was totally unacceptable.
Ironically, she said my letter was delayed because the address was corrected to Number 25. I told her that I was asked LAST WEEK if I wanted it corrected and I said "no" as I didn't want it delayed, but they went ahead and did it anyway.
An utter disgrace.
Ironically, she said my letter was delayed because the address was corrected to Number 25. I told her that I was asked LAST WEEK if I wanted it corrected and I said "no" as I didn't want it delayed, but they went ahead and did it anyway.
In fairness they cant really be blamed for not sending a cheque to what they know was an incorrect address.
Data protection requires them to keep customers information up to date, when they knew something was incorrect they were obliged to act on it.
They can only send it to the correct address if the customer keeps their contact details up to date. If they have never been informed of a change of address they can only send it to the address they have on file.In relation to data protection, it seems that they only care about it when it suits. They have fired out letters with cheques to the wrong address for many others