@MW wrote:
Where I live, this $5 bonus hasn't yet made a difference. There are still 100 locations still available.
I honestly don't know. The guidelines say you can use:@sandyf wrote:
Just looked over the "insider info" once you actually accept a job. There is nothing there about the type of box to use. Can i now use a box with some markings on them or even a shipping vinyl envelope I used to use as the cost of those is 29 cents each where I buy them. So can i just cross thru markings left over from whoever sent the box out last> I bet many just left some of those arrows and other markings on the old boxes if they were not on the side of the photo anyway.
With the prior MSC, I used boxes that had markings/labels and just blacked them out with a marker. If I felt they were too "recycled", I'd wrap the box in brown paper and reuse it that way. I never had any issues with it, but again that was the old. All bets are off the table as far as what will fly with the new shops.@sandyf wrote:
Sounds like it is similar to the last msc rules for boxes. A CD mailer is very small. All you can fit into it is a cd and unless it is made of lead I cannot figure out how you would have a pound.
I guess i will use my poly mailers then. Thanks.
I used to turn the USPS priority boxes inside out and ship them ground for non-shops. They eventually started printing "Thank you for using Priority Mail services" all over the inside, so that was the end of that. Without knowing how picky they'll be now, I'd be afraid a brown patch would be considered a sticker and, therefore, rejected. So many unknowns.@Rho* wrote:
Boxes can be turned inside out to hide printing. OR brown paper bags can be cut into patches and glued over markings.
I don't see how they could deny a box that's wrapped in brown paper when they sell brown paper at the post office.@Okie wrote:
When I used to sell products on eBay, I would cover the the USPS Priority Box with a brown paper bag. One post office didn't care, but another post office denied my package and sent it back to me.
Also, I don't know what I was thinking, but on the regional rate boxes, I would cover the "regional" with a USPS Priority Mail Sticker. Same result as above.
All of them I've checked have the same $5 bonus. metro looked at some out in BFE, Texas that used to get high bonuses....they're all $5.@myst4au wrote:
I can't easily determine how many have the $5 bonus.
-laughing- Sorry, Service. I sold my oversized shoes and rainbow-colored wig in a garage sale, but I kept my water-squirting lapel flower! -smiling while squeezing the bulb and spritzing you in the face- Happy Monday!@ServiceAward wrote:
@drdoggie00, want to make some money?
My point exactly! But I'm waiting for somebody to say they also sell wrapping paper during the holidays, which you obviously wouldn't use to wrap a package you'd mail, so.....@sandyf wrote:
So then I ask, if you are not allowed to wrap your boxes with brown paper, why do they sell it in the post office?
-just stares at you- I'm going to start calling you Encyclopedia Awardica.@ServiceAward wrote:
You got it. Zero.
I believe the paper you are referring to is brown Kraft paper that is meant to be void filler in boxes. My local USPS offices do not carry it, but I have seen it at other USPS locations when I lived in another state. It isn't supposed to be used to wrap boxes. USPS does not ban the brown paper from being used, but their official rules discourage it and give the clerks discretion whether or not to accept the packages. They are definitely not supposed to go via Priority because that mail goes via air and 3rd party carriers (formerly FedEx, now UPS and some passenger carriers) handle air transport for USPS. That doesn't mean you won't have the occasional clerk who accepts it. Last week I shipped a single Li-Ion battery I sold and forgot to put the proper DOT label on the package. I'm legally supposed to do this. I did not realize it until I was dropping my stuff off at USPS and I handed the package over. I was going to take it back home and put the label on, but the clerk told me it was fine. She scanned my package, and I went on my way. My shipping label did state it was HazMat and ground surface transport only, but those things alone don't comply with Dept. of Transportation rules. My point is clerks tend to venture outside the rules from time to time, then there are some who are too strict. I'm lucky as where I live now I have good clerks that work with me. One messed me up a few months ago, but that issue got resolved.