Trick of the Tail wrote: » It's not, since the emergency services have said they will not be using it, at least in the short term.
delahuntv wrote: » My eircode is now on the wall in kitchen and at door - if there is an emergency I now know that whoever calls emergency services, the location of my house is known immediately. For that alone it is worth it.
Carawaystick wrote: » You can make a data protection act request to ask crapita/eircode about your data source, and force them to correct it. It costs six euros 35 cents tops.
Maidhci wrote: » Thanks for your input! I would have thought that the Eircode postal code should have been sufficient to get the letter to its intended destination, after all, that appears to me to have the rationale for the Eircode postal codes in the first instance?
my3cents wrote: » I accept you must be on a database somewhere but at some stage there must have been some human intervention to check any addresses that were non unique and didn't check out across all the databases used. In that case an operator may have just used what they thought was the best name to get the eircode letter to the correct address.The purpose of the name was only to get the correct eircode to the correct address and its done that.
Maidhci wrote: » If you read or had read my original post you would appreaciate that it had a name and surname ( an incorrect anglicised version of my name and surname ) which does not belong to me, as householder and property owner.
my3cents wrote: » Probably means you were one of the 30% of addresses in Ireland that were until your eircode arrived non unique. All the none unique eircode letters I've seen had the surname of the householder on them. How else could An Post deliver them?
Maidhci wrote: » If that is the case, why is it addressed to a person at all?
MBSnr wrote: » I live in a rural location and mine said Occupier My Surname The rest of my address I found that strange as how did they link my name with the house if the database only supposedly has the house address in it.
Maidhci wrote: » I accept it is the eircode for the property BUT it states that it is addressed to a named householder - I am simply trying to ascertain where Eircode got the householder names for their database.
PK2008 wrote: » Might be worth asking your postman? Either way though, I guess its the eircode fir the property so not much point in returning it.
Maidhci wrote: » Any registrations undertaken by me have always contained my correct name, as registered on my Birth Certificate, Passport, Driver's licence, Property Registration Authority etc. etc.
PK2008 wrote: » Strange alright, would you ever have registered as a sole trader?
Maidhci wrote: » It was the Eircode letter, delivered this afternoon. I live in a rural part of the country with no house numbers etc. etc. - that is why I am puzzled by this.
PK2008 wrote: » Was it the eircode letter that had your name or a different letter?
Maidhci wrote: » Does anyone know what database or other source is employed by Eircode to determine the householder name to which their notification is sent? I see from their website that "Eircode use source data supplied by An Post GeoDirectory Limited, which sources information from Ordnance Survey Ireland, The Placenames Branch (Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht) and the Universal Service Provider for postal services in Ireland, An Post. Based on the information provided, Eircodes are generated, assigned and disseminated to the corresponding postal addresses." This however obviously refers to addresses not householder names - in my case, a letter was delivered into my letterbox this afternoon, with an anglicised version of my name which I have never used for correspondencen or any other purpose, is not registered at any agency such as Property Registration Authority, Revenue Commissioners etc. etc. In fact, I have never received any mail with this incorrect version of my name before. I have however verified from the Eircode that it relates to my property - obviously, I will be returning this unopened notification to the post office tomorrow for return to source, but I am curious nonetheless as to where the name may have originated? Any suggestions or similar occurrences?
my3cents wrote: » It might be addressed to Micky Mouse but if its the right address with the correct eircode then its pointless returning it unopened.
my3cents wrote: » I forgot to ask did you also get you correct eircode mailing?
GerardKeating wrote: » Our company moved last year, but the db eircode have still show us at the old location, but the "eircode" letter still arrived at the new place today.
GerardKeating wrote: » Yeah, that's how we notice the issue. In fact, the same postperson would deliver to both locations, they close to each other, so he just looked at the company name I assume.
threeiron wrote: » That Eircode is for your old address, it is not actually for your company or any company or person. You should use the Eircode Finder to get your correct Eircode and return the original Eircode notification to An Post stating that it was delivered to the wrong letter box.
The_Conductor wrote: » Its not a failure on the part of the postman- if anything it highlights that the postman had the good sense to follow the address on the letter- and not the Eircode- which pointed to an entirely different (and no longer valid) address for the company........ An Post won that round.
bee06 wrote: » My house doesn't seem to have an eircode at all. All the neighbours got their letter already but nothing for us and the house isn't on the map on their website either.