Desperate times call for desperate measures. Many stores aren't taking returns currently, either.@Bena wrote:
I'd be hesitant to support/shop at a store that would not accept cash. That doesn't mean I'd want to use cash but there are many people who, for a variety of reasons, do not have credit cards, never mind things like Apple Pay. I don't believe a business should be allowed to refuse cash (COVID or no COVID).
@MisterBill wrote:
Many stores aren't taking returns currently, either.
@Bena wrote:
I'd be hesitant to support/shop at a store that would not accept cash. That doesn't mean I'd want to use cash but there are many people who, for a variety of reasons, do not have credit cards, never mind things like Apple Pay. I don't believe a business should be allowed to refuse cash (COVID or no COVID).
@SoCalMama wrote:
@Bena wrote:
I'd be hesitant to support/shop at a store that would not accept cash. That doesn't mean I'd want to use cash but there are many people who, for a variety of reasons, do not have credit cards, never mind things like Apple Pay. I don't believe a business should be allowed to refuse cash (COVID or no COVID).
They can't stop accepting cash forever. It discriminates against the poor and homeless (or as Los Angeles calls these people, "Angelenos temporarily unsheltered."![]()
@guysmom wrote:
I've been using cash directly because years ago someone somehow got my debit card number from a Walmart. Had to file a police report and everything. So now, I get the cash I need from the ATM and shop with that. Mainly for groceries.
@SteveSoCal wrote:
@SoCalMama wrote:
@Bena wrote:
I'd be hesitant to support/shop at a store that would not accept cash. That doesn't mean I'd want to use cash but there are many people who, for a variety of reasons, do not have credit cards, never mind things like Apple Pay. I don't believe a business should be allowed to refuse cash (COVID or no COVID).
They can't stop accepting cash forever. It discriminates against the poor and homeless (or as Los Angeles calls these people, "Angelenos temporarily unsheltered."![]()
Most of the "temporarily unsheltered" and those with "questionable immigration status" in L.A. have been issued VISA debit cards with around $600 credit....so they are OK with contactless pay in many cases.
I am all about not having deal with cash and much happier to do business where cash is not being handled around my food. Few are changing gloves between cash handling and food service....
I left my home overnight for the second time since the onset of the pandemic this week and the experience was wildly different from last time. Safety practices have been put into place almost everywhere in CA and people seem to be doing their part to help the spread. Apple Pay is now standard in national parks!
@SteveSoCal wrote:
I am all about not having deal with cash and much happier to do business where cash is not being handled around my food. Few are changing gloves between cash handling and food service....
@HonnyBrown wrote:
Prior to COVID, I had a shop at a gas station convenience store. I had to buy a sandwich. The dude who made my sandwich also worked the register. He went from the sandwich line to the register to handle a cash transaction. He then returned to the sandwich line and continued to make sandwiches. Not once did he change gloves.
That couldn't go in the report fast enough.
@SteveSoCal wrote:
I am all about not having deal with cash and much happier to do business where cash is not being handled around my food. Few are changing gloves between cash handling and food service....
@HonnyBrown wrote:
Yes, it was gross. I'm happy I got to see it first hand.
I used to go running at Venice Beach on Sunday mornings. I would park on the side streets and walk the short distance to the water. There was a homeless camp set up in the empty parking lot of a business. By the time I finished my run, they were camped out on the beach. One Dude lived in his Rolls Royce.
@Bena wrote:
I never thought of washing money but why not?
If I have to handle cash these days I do it with gloves on and place the money in a separate envelope where it remains for a 4-5 days. I figured that after that time anything deadly that might have been on it has probably died.
@Dandydew wrote:
In China, all monetary transactions are processed through a cell phone. Every person is required to have a cell phone. No currency, except maybe in the far remote places.
@Bena wrote:
@Dandydew wrote:
In China, all monetary transactions are processed through a cell phone. Every person is required to have a cell phone. No currency, except maybe in the far remote places.
Unless this is a recent occurrence it does not reflect my experiences. I have been in China twice in recent years, including Beijing and Shanghai and other large cities. In none of them was I required to use a cellphone to make purchases. I have always been able to use cash everywhere.
@HonnyBrown wrote:
I don't know here the phrase originates, but it certainly applies:
"It's a brave, new world"