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Miscellaneous - Inland Revenue

Paramedics using marked vehicles to respond to 999 calls from home are facing tax bills for hundreds of pounds. The paramedics, who cover Norfolk and Suffolk, take their cars home after work so that they can be available to answer emergencies both en route, and at home. This "first community responder" scheme is designed to cut the time it takes to get a trained lifesaver to a patient in remote, rural areas. However, the Inland Revenue has ruled that use of the marked paramedic vehicles still constitutes a "taxable benefit" similar to a company pool car, and has landed some staff with bill running into hundreds of pounds for the privilege.

East Anglian Ambulance NHS Trust has paid these bills for the last couple of years - but says it cannot carry on doing it forever. It is currently negotiating with the taxman to try to waive the rules where there is a "clear social benefit" from the arrangement. However, the Association of Professional Ambulance Personnel is furious. General Secretary Mark Weatherhead said that staff felt "let down". He said, "East Anglian Ambulance Trust has abandoned its staff and left them to foot the bill, which is unacceptable."

He said that unless the situation improved, staff would simply leave the vehicles at work, and the "first responder" scheme would be hit. Anna Bennett, the finance director of the ambulance trust denied that it had let the paramedics down. She said she was hopeful that the new "Agenda for Change" pay deal coming into force would more than adequately compensate paramedics for their extra duties. She said that negotiations with the Inland Revenue were ongoing. "What we are looking for is for them to recognise the community benefit that this scheme offers."


A mum told how tax staff sent her a letter addressed to: "Mrs Michelle Deserves-Strangling". Michelle Stradling phoned an automated Inland Revenue line, leaving her name and address on the voice bank, to get a children's tax credit pack. Three days later, she was sent a letter with the insulting address. She said, "The more I think about it the more annoyed I become. If that letter had been sent to someone who had got out of a violent relationship this could have really set them back."

Michelle, of Yate, South Gloucestershire, added, "It's not nice to know you are giving personal information to someone who is so flippant about your affairs. When I spoke to the woman in the complaints department she didn't seem very optimistic they could find who sent out the letter. She asked me if the person I gave my details to had an accent - I had to explain it was an automated machine. They don't even know their own system."

Husband Graham was stunned when he saw the letter with the computer printed label. He said, "It's not what you expect from a Government department. It's been sent by somebody with a sad sense of humour." Inland Revenue spokesman Patrick O'Brien said, "This is completely unacceptable, the culprit will be subject to disciplinary proceedings. It's a very serious breach of staff behaviour. We are very, very sorry. The last thing we want to do is distress our customers."

Other insulting letters sent in recent months include one to pharmacist Pravin Patel, from Gloucester. He got a letter from reward points giant Nectar to: "Mr Pravin Fucking Paki". Welsh businessman Hefin Batty was sent a letter from a firm of solicitors in Kent, which began: "Dear Taffy Bastard". Val Billings, from Wolverhampton, got a letter from a bank to her late husband Mel, addressed to: "Mr Billings deceased". And a shop in Liverpool sent a bill to Elizabeth Murray, who had died of a heart attack, which began: "Dear Mrs Dead".


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