Town Demands Debt Recovery: Pay Up Or Ship Out
Aug.29, 2010 Categories: Mortgages
In the village of Stamford, Connecticut, the town is threatening to sue a car dealership, Carriage House in order to get it to pay $7,450 in fines for forty five false burglar alarms over six years. There was in total thirty one property owners that received notices on January the fifteenth that were demanded payment for false alarm fines. They were ordered to pay the money within thirty days or face legal ramifications.
The town is owed $74,375 in fines and this is the first time it has gotten so tough about collecting the money that is owed to them. Out of the thirty one people that received a notice, thirteen have resolved their cases.
Businesses and residences are allowed to get one false alarm per year without being fined. Fines start at fifty dollars for a second false alarm, one hundred for the third, one hundred and fifty for the fourth and two hundred dollars for each false alarm after.
The town does not use a collection agency, or charge interest on unpaid fines, which might be why they are having trouble cutting down on the problem with false alarms. The owner of the car dealership fingered a faulty alarm system as the source of the problem and alleged that he would get to the bottom of the problem within a week, but this hasn’t happened.
The owner plans to schedule a March hearing before the appeals board in order to fight the fines. Claiming that it was the fault of the alarm company, he stated that he is trying to get the alarm company to pay for the debt. However, he was not able to identify the alarm company, stating that it had changed ownership so he was not clear on the name.
For the sake of being fair, the town discounts false alarms that took place that might have been the fault of the alarm company. But for now, the owner of the car dealership remains in arrears.
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