Drago
Legendary Member
- Location
- Suburban Poshshire
It could work, but I'd have to change my name to "The Occupier"![]()
I told the tv licence people my name is Lee Gul Occupier. He was still puzzling that as I slammed the door in his face.
It could work, but I'd have to change my name to "The Occupier"![]()
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This whole debate is precisely back to front, ID cards don't need to be compulsory to own, they need to be compulsory to accept. ...
Opening accounts is a nightmare, one set of documents to prove who you are (passport, driving license, etc.) and another set to prove your address eg utilitry bill but driving licence only if that is not used for proving who you are).If they don't accept photocopies I don't see why they would accept a scan on a screen. If I'm applying for a passport I've got the problem of finding someone who's known me for two years to sign the photo.
I've never had the problem but always assumed a credit card should suffice as it has your signature and if the bank don't believe you are the owner of the card they should be calling the police as you are trying to use a stolen card meaning a) you've stolen somebody elses credit card and b) that you are trying to steal their ID.A tax notification and a utility bill will do, but I don't want to have to carry them (or a passport) around everywhere just on the off chance that I need them once a tall time. It's about access to services at the point of need, not after it's too late. On this occasion I could make do with the £50 they would give me instead of the £100 the cheque was for, but that won't necessarily be the case.
I'm already a full licence holder, but if they won't renew it on medical grounds I can't get a another one for the same reason.
It's not about debit cards, it's about a car-centric society that makes the driving licence a surrogate ID card to humour the wingnuts who won't have a proper one, and is wilfully blind to the way that non-licence holders are disadvantaged and marginalised by it.@presta has your new card arrived yet?
You still misread it. I got the money first time, without a cheque, and not the second time with all the same information as the first, plus a cheque in addition, even though the second time was for less money.I misread, you attempted to get cash using a cheque the second time, not paying it in the first time. I'd have declined you anything the second time. You were lucky on your second attempt.
I didn't. Lloyds bank did. They're the ones demanding a driving licence, not a traffic cop.So if you don't require, or even want, the driving licence, why bring it into the equation
My cards never last until the expiry date, they always crack. The card in question is only two years old, and my credit card is also cracked, but that managed four years. I've had cracked loyalty cards replaced a few times too.In close to 5 years, itheyself nor my wife have EVER had a credit or debit card fail in the way yours has.
What should I tell the YHA when they demand a driving licence? Then there was Plymouth Globe independent hostel that required a driving licence, but their other hostel in Exeter didn't. Guess who's going to demand ID next.It isn't worth carrying around those documents for such rare occurrences.
That's what the banks tell you, but the Post Office refuse on the grounds they haven't known you for two years, I banged my head on that wall years ago. It's OK to get copies certified by a solicitor who doesn't know you though, because they charge for that.Main Post Offices will certify copies
Nope, I had two credit cards and a photo bus pass, none of which were good enough (on the second occasion).always assumed a credit card should suffice as it has your signature
No expired documents of any kind are valid as ID.An expired licence card is still valid as ID
So simple, innit. Just create the ID equivalent of Legal Tender: nobody's forced to offer it, but you can't legally reject it. Then make sure it's available to anyone who needs it.Can't disagree with that.
but the Post Office refuse on the grounds they haven't known you for two years,
I've been using YHA hostels for decades and never once had anyone ask for my driving licence or any other ID except my membership card. That only proves I'm a member so they know which rate to charge me. Using independent hostels I've not even needed that, never been asked to prove my ident. I really don't understand this.What should I tell the YHA when they demand a driving licence? Then there was Plymouth Globe independent hostel that required a driving licence, but their other hostel in Exeter didn't. Guess who's going to demand ID next.
I believe it's card, singular, but i could be wrongOP if you are cracking cards that often then maybe you want to review how you store them when not in use. That will reduce the frequency of future hassle.
I’ve never had a card crack or fail in any way.
It's not about debit cards, it's about a car-centric society that makes the driving licence a surrogate ID card to humour the wingnuts who won't have a proper one, and is wilfully blind to the way that non-licence holders are disadvantaged and marginalised by it.
Main Post Offices will certify copies but charge for the service
See https://www.postoffice.co.uk/identity/document-certificationThat's what the banks tell you, but the Post Office refuse on the grounds they haven't known you for two years,
IanCertified copies of your important documents
Need to provide photocopies of documents? Get them certified as a true likeness of their originals at selected Post Office branches.
Pay a fee for the copies you need and keep the originals. The organisation that requested them gets copies certified by a trusted brand.
Please note we can’t certify copies of UK birth, marriage or death certificates due to Crown copyright regulations.
We certify most forms of documents, including:
![]()
Passport![]()
Driving licence![]()
Recent utility bills![]()
Bank statements
Where's you're passport in all of this? Why don't you carry that around for the one time you need it, for other than travel?It's not about debit cards, it's about a car-centric society that makes the driving licence a surrogate ID card to humour the wingnuts who won't have a proper one, and is wilfully blind to the way that non-licence holders are disadvantaged and marginalised by it.
You still misread it. I got the money first time, without a cheque, and not the second time with all the same information as the first, plus a cheque in addition, even though the second time was for less money.
I didn't. Lloyds bank did. They're the ones demanding a driving licence, not a traffic cop.
My cards never last until the expiry date, they always crack. The card in question is only two years old, and my credit card is also cracked, but that managed four years. I've had cracked loyalty cards replaced a few times too.
None of which is relevant, when my other credit card failed last summer it was brand new and undamaged. The bank (HSBC this time) had changed the PIN number after sending me a letter that explicitly said the PIN wasn't changing, then continued insisting that I try one alternative machine after another for about a fortnight.
What should I tell the YHA when they demand a driving licence? Then there was Plymouth Globe independent hostel that required a driving licence, but their other hostel in Exeter didn't. Guess who's going to demand ID next.
That's what the banks tell you, but the Post Office refuse on the grounds they haven't known you for two years, I banged my head on that wall years ago. It's OK to get copies certified by a solicitor who doesn't know you though, because they charge for that.
Nope, I had two credit cards and a photo bus pass, none of which were good enough (on the second occasion).
No expired documents of any kind are valid as ID.
So simple, innit. Just create the ID equivalent of Legal Tender: nobody's forced to offer it, but you can't legally reject it. Then make sure it's available to anyone who needs it.
Nobody has any suggestions what you can carry around everywhere that'll come up top trumps in a game of guess what the jobsworth's are going to demand next, because nobody's much bothered by it when they have a driving licence, and because there's no legally standardised form of ID.
Interestingly, the Lloyds list includes a tax notification but not a birth certificate, and the government list contains a birth certificate but not a tax notification. It has to be an original certificate though, which begs the question what's the difference between an original and a "Certified copy of an Entry of Birth". The answer to that depends on who you ask.
HMG will accept an NHS Medical Card as proof of address. I don't know what they'd make of mine, it's got a 65 year old temporary address crossed out, and the permanent one written in by my father.
Assuming Lloyds haven't changed the PIN number on the new card, it's sorted for now. Until the next time, then it all starts all over again....
I believe it's card, singular, but i could be wrong
I've only ever had a card crack once and i'm not sure how. I don't use a wallet and carry my card in a pocket; front or back depending on what pants I'm wearing so they're frequently getting bent. They're usually very resilient, until they're not.![]()