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Letters: French cycling rules are rarely enforced
Connexion reader says he takes special precautions to stay safe
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Letters: French banking practices are commercial nonsense
Connexion reader says that spending limits force him to turn to foreign banks
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Letter: It takes too long to get a disabled parking badge in France
Connexion reader says delays due to French bureaucracy meant the card came after his recovery
In the right but still out of pocket
It seems that poor customer service in France is widespread – why not have a wooden spoon award for the worst examples?
Here is my offering: After 27 years of holding insurance policies with Allianz (and its precursors), their poor customer service drove me to move on. My new insurer, who offered a substantial saving on Allianz, cancelled all my policies but Allianz continued to debit my account for one policy – in excess of €500.
I sent copies of the new insurer’s cancellation letter to both the head office and the local agent demanding a refund and got a message promising one within 14 days. There was no apology – it was as if their plundering my account was entirely my fault.
After a fortnight I put a stop on the direct debit and my refund appeared after an irate phone call. It had taken so long that they over-refunded me two months. More or less simultaneously I received a letter because the two standing orders had been refused. Rather laughably, they threatened to cancel my policy!
I refunded the overpayment, but explained in writing that I had deducted €20 for expenses. I ignored threatening demands for the outstanding €20, to my cost. Over a year after the contract was legally and correctly cancelled, I receiveda pre-avis d’assignation threatening me with une instance judiciaire if I didn’t immediately pay up the €20 plus a debt recovery fee of €46.
Now that is what I call abysmal, brutal customer service – their mistake and I’m the one over €100 out of pocket. Can anyone find a better wooden spoon candidate or suggest a just retribution?
Margaret Lawrence, Dordogne