Peter Holden’s* nightmare began when he bought a car in 2015. Notices in the car park of his housing association block in Cardiff required residents to display a permit and Holden was issued with a temporary permit by the concierge while he waited for his application to be processed. The temporary permit did not pass muster with Premier Park, the company that managed the car park, and he was issued with three parking charge notices .
However, there’s very few ways a car park owner can handle people who seem to treat a car parking space as their ‘entitlement’, usually to the detriment of genuine users of that car park. Tackling people direct usually leads to aggression and no result.