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Pacers to be replaced by old London Underground trains?
On Thu, 19 Feb 2015 20:59:00 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , Christopher A. Lee writes When I was a computer field engineer, we all had company cars - it was a requirement, not just a perk, because we needed to get to places quickly and reliably. Like yours, it was based on leasing cost - and the managers had the most expensive and luxurious cars while we plebs who really needed them had the lesser ones. When I had one, it was tax-deductible, Do you mean the opposite - it was a charge on your personal tax. but most of us did so many miles that was reduced (half AFAIR). Above some threshold of business miles (?5k/yr perhaps) it was decided that you really did need it to do your job. 100 miles less, and you obviously didn't. I thought it was more than that - the last year before I was promoted to the Silly Colne Valley HQ I did more than 40,000 miles across the North of England. In three years I did something 110,000 miles. Out of that, I suppose I did the average private mileage for somebody who lived less than ten miles from the "official" place of work. ISTR it was also lower on a car less than 1800cc. There have been several schemes, many of which placed a greater envy-tax upon drivers of higher-cc models than lower ones. Ye |
Pacers to be replaced by old London Underground trains?
In message , Christopher A.
Lee writes When I was a computer field engineer, we all had company cars - it was a requirement, not just a perk, because we needed to get to places quickly and reliably. Like yours, it was based on leasing cost - and the managers had the most expensive and luxurious cars while we plebs who really needed them had the lesser ones. When I had one, it was tax-deductible, Do you mean the opposite - it was a charge on your personal tax. but most of us did so many miles that was reduced (half AFAIR). Above some threshold of business miles (?5k/yr perhaps) it was decided that you really did need it to do your job. 100 miles less, and you obviously didn't. I thought it was more than that It looks like there were two break-points: scale charge increased by 50% below 2,500 miles and decreased by 50% over 18,000 miles. https://www.gov.uk/government/upload...chment_data/fi le/328668/tc1.pdf - the last year before I was promoted to the Silly Colne Valley HQ I did more than 40,000 miles across the North of England. In three years I did something 110,000 miles. Out of that, I suppose I did the average private mileage for somebody who lived less than ten miles from the "official" place of work. The last company car I had (since then I've funded my own cars) spent most of its life being driven the princely distance of about 200yds from home to office every day. That was because I lived on a main road with only 'off-peak' parking, and the company car park was locked at night. So it had to shuttle backwards and forwards. About the only other regular private mileage I did was a weekly trip to the supermarket. -- Roland Perry |
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