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  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Now a Queensland Island resort. 

Has banned cash .

Credit cards only .

I wonder if it's owned by a bank .

Probably turn away cruising boats now, as they like economy .

spacesailor

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Here's an example of a disadvantage of a cashless society.

 

I picked up my mail today and there was a letter from Telstra. Inside was a cheque for $25 or so. No explanation, just a reference number on the paperwork. No details to use to contact and ask what it was for.

 

Well, $25 in my pocket is $25 that I didn't have yesterday. But here's the problem: my finances are through a Credit Union in Sydney. To access the money, I have to take the cheque to a branch and deposit it over the counter. I wasn't planning to go down to Sydney, but I have just been asked to do an audit, and I have to have a meeting with my kids to settle on a headstone for my wife and my grave. 

 

I don't know how I would be able to deposit the cheque if I wasn't in Sydney. As it is, I'm going to have to juggle my time to get to the branch while it is open.

Posted

Some banks will stop accepting cheques soon, as well.

 

Unless you have the bank account details of anyone you may have to send money to, such as a birthday/Christmas gift to, such as an interstate relative, you'll have to send gift cards, and Australia Post is likely to lose them (have them pinched).

Posted
46 minutes ago, facthunter said:

Can't you cross it and mail it?  Nev

Luckily I can deposit it myself when I go to Sydney. I suppose I coud have mailed it to my son and got him to deposit it, but that would have been an inconvenience for his as he isn't near a branch during the day.

Posted

Businesses use cheques for refunds because a lot of them won't get cashed.  Means they don't actually have to pay the refund.

Posted
2 hours ago, Jerry_Atrick said:

I am guessing you are with Telstra.. Why wouldn't they just credit your account unless you specifically requested a refund - which I guess you hadn't 

No, I had no idea that I was eligible for any refund. This cheque simply arrived.

 

Why not simply credit my account? Probably because I'm on plans for my phone and internet and the payments are direct debit, and paid month in advance. So I don't have the type of account that deals with credits and debits.

 

My point in this post was not the getting of a refund, but to highlight the difficulty of dealing with a physical item such as a cheque if all you other transactions are digital. 

  • 3 months later...
Posted

Mechanic reveals brutal cost of cashless change: ‘$4,000 to $5,000 a year’
A Queensland mechanic said they are paying thousands of dollars on card surcharges each year.

 

Read story here.

  • Sad 1
Posted

The cashless parking meter gets up my nose. The councils claim the cashless parking meters are more reliable long-term, don't get vandalised, don't get coin jams, and are well-accepted by motorists.

 

However, the bottom line to me is more money for councils due to less parking inspectors needed (some systems sense overstaying and automatically send out infringement notices), and a major reduction in costs due to not having to handle coins.

 

If the councils were fair, they would lower the parking costs due to their new and fabulous meter technology. But I find the parking fees are still the same, and I now have to pay a CC fee, and have no option of avoiding that CC fee. I trust someone starts up a class action against this kind of robbery.

  • Agree 1
Posted

I have just started using a parking app on my phone and it is brilliant.   You only pay for the parking you use. On my trip into town I used buy around $6 of parking just in case I took longer than planned. Now when I park the app detects the meter and I dial up the amount of parking on my phone that I think I might need.  If I decide I need longer then I can remotely add time but more importantly, if I get back to my car early I can just press the "stop parking button and I am only charged for the actual time I use. What used to cost me $6 now usually costs me about $1.50

 

 

 

 

 

  • Agree 2
  • Informative 1
Posted

Here is some parking I did recently.   In the past I would pay for an hour or 2 in case I was delayed, now I pay for exactly what I use.parking.thumb.png.452f704d87e34ac3ead458237a6442d6.png

  • Informative 1
Posted

There are very few places where I have to pay for parking, and these are parking stations run by companies like Wilson Parking. Major shopping centres like Eastland and Knox City scan your numberplate as you enter. They have a free period, usually a couple of hours. Head out of the park and the boom gate opens. Box Hill Central requires you to take a ticket on the way in, and pay at a pay station to open the boom gate to leave. It's the parking at hospitals that I find annoying. Knox private gives you half an hour free then charges. Who gets in for a specialist appointment and out again in half an hour? Box Hill Hospital has no free time. A quick visit to my mate cost me $10.

 

Brentford Square and Forest Hill Chase carparks are free.

  • Informative 1
Posted

I do it the cheap way .

Go find a street to park in within walking distance. 

I have a few times , knocked on the house door to ask for their permission. 

One woman insisted I park my car & empty boat-trailer 

On her front lawn for the weekend .

I payed with a couple of fish .

She wouldn't take a $5 note .

For looking after my rig while I sailed the local waters 

spacesailor

  • Like 1
Posted
1 minute ago, spacesailor said:

She wouldn't take a $5 note .

For looking after my rig

It is nice to find a lady who will "look after your rig" for free

  • Haha 3

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