About two weeks ago I mislaid my purse. I assumed it had been stolen at Paddington or somewhere.
Today a letter has turned up at my mothers from FGW▸ - my drivers licence was in it and they have written to the address on it in order to let me know that they had it.
Mookiemoo, I'm glad that you've been reunited with your driving licence - I've also heard that FGW do try their best to trace the 'identifiable' owners of missing/lost/stolen property.
IIRC▸ there has been a post (if not on a FGW blog) concerning FGW policy on the immediate destruction of credit cards. I appreciate that a drivers licence isn^t a guarantee of instantaneous cash but is mighty useful in the increasingly popular hobby of identity theft.
I^m only playing devils advocate for a moment as otherwise it would seem on the surface to be wonderful customer service, but say FGW had attempted to return your bank/credit cards by post and they had gone missing en-route.
Just wondering why there is the difference between the two?
Fair question, tramway, but there is a difference:
As soon as
any bank card (whether debit/credit/gold/platinum or whatever!) is reported missing/lost/stolen, the bank cancel it - and ask that it is destroyed if it is found. This is because there is the magnetic strip on the back of the card that could still be misused, potentially, by those with the appropriate technology, for example.
However,
UK▸ driving licences do not have any magnetic strip, and contain no electronic details, so it's not such an issue.
Also, I didn't get the impression FGW were actually sending Mookiemoo's bank/credit cards - or driving licence - by post anywhere: as she says, she will collect her driving licence from them, having been notified that they are looking after it for her?