US. POSTAL Shops

I got simmilar issues with them last year. I tried to explain them that ship something that not like going to buy food at supermarket. When I need to ship something I can pick it up without their assistance. As soon as I ended call with scheduiuler, another one called me with the same offer again. (calls, texts and emails). After third one called I started block their numbers. I posted on FB with attention to owner of such MSC to stop such calls.

Shopping Eastern Pennsylvania since 2009

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" My college student thought it was HILARIOUS that he got a care package with hazmat labeling." yes I have warned recipients not to be concerned about the stickers.
@Capurato wrote:

My hazmats always get mailed. I use the shipping for mom, I don’t know what’s inside. Most of the time the clerk shakes it, sends it ground and calls it a day. One time the clerk sent it priority.

I give very minimal effort. I usually give them high marks and only really time the wait.
I avoid that scenario because I feel foolish saying that I have no clue what I am shipping. They are supposed to refuse to ship unknown contents and I am alarmed to hear that you found a PO where they consistently ignore safety protocols.
@Deedeezthoughts wrote:

@Capurato wrote:

My hazmats always get mailed. I use the shipping for mom, I don’t know what’s inside. Most of the time the clerk shakes it, sends it ground and calls it a day. One time the clerk sent it priority.

I give very minimal effort. I usually give them high marks and only really time the wait.
I avoid that scenario because I feel foolish saying that I have no clue what I am shipping. They are supposed to refuse to ship unknown contents and I am alarmed to hear that you found a PO where they consistently ignore safety protocols.

They don’t get disciplined or coached individually so there is no real incentive to care.

I think the idk scenario is the easiest. I’m just the drop off person. I did have a clerk open it once. Smh.

Are they supposed to reject all the shipment scenarios?
@Capurato wrote:


They don’t get disciplined or coached individually so there is no real incentive to care.

I think the idk scenario is the easiest. I’m just the drop off person. I did have a clerk open it once. Smh.

Are they supposed to reject all the shipment scenarios?
They don't tell us the "correct" outcome so my educated guess is that ground service is acceptable for some of them because they mostly focus on what questions were asked and what services were offered.
I did the battery a few times but the last time the clerk was asking me all sorts of very technical questions about the battery...Not Q about lithium vs other or size. I got the impression she would have sent it ground if I knew any of what she wanted but I am not a computer genius and did not even understand the questions.
@sandyf wrote:

I did the battery a few times but the last time the clerk was asking me all sorts of very technical questions about the battery...Not Q about lithium vs other or size. I got the impression she would have sent it ground if I knew any of what she wanted but I am not a computer genius and did not even understand the questions.
Mine didn't go that route. Yet. I have watched them clearly reading something lengthy on their screen and there will be a long pause while they do. The questions they asked have been pretty consistent so I thought their messaging must be clear enough but maybe not? The ones I have encountered just verified it was for a laptop (presumably judging size based on that?). They wanted to know that it was new, in the original packaging, and not in a device (the last one I chuckle and say, "Nah, I didn't buy him a new laptop, just the battery to fix his old one."

I've only had one where I was sure they didn't do what they should. It was a packing and shipping place and they skipped asking the hazmat question altogether. They asked how big a hurry I was in to get it there, I said it's Christmas presents but there are a couple weeks yet. They selected everything for me and sent it ground with no questions and no warning labels.
looking up what to know about buying batteries reminded me the clerk wanted to know how many cells the battery had and the voltage. Evidently if it fit into the ground rules she would have sent it that way. My response was i was sending it to my son who forgot to pack it when visiting me so i had no idea. I tried to get her to reveal what numbers were shippable but she refused to tell me thinking I would just come back and tell her the correct information to get it shipped.
@Deedeezthoughts wrote:

@sandyf wrote:

I did the battery a few times but the last time the clerk was asking me all sorts of very technical questions about the battery...Not Q about lithium vs other or size. I got the impression she would have sent it ground if I knew any of what she wanted but I am not a computer genius and did not even understand the questions.
Mine didn't go that route. Yet. I have watched them clearly reading something lengthy on their screen and there will be a long pause while they do. The questions they asked have been pretty consistent so I thought their messaging must be clear enough but maybe not? The ones I have encountered just verified it was for a laptop (presumably judging size based on that?). They wanted to know that it was new, in the original packaging, and not in a device (the last one I chuckle and say, "Nah, I didn't buy him a new laptop, just the battery to fix his old one."

I've only had one where I was sure they didn't do what they should. It was a packing and shipping place and they skipped asking the hazmat question altogether. They asked how big a hurry I was in to get it there, I said it's Christmas presents but there are a couple weeks yet. They selected everything for me and sent it ground with no questions and no warning labels.
I didn't have any trouble finding the page on USPS detailing the regulations. I now know they messed up on one other, they let me ship a box where the overall package weight exceeded 5 pounds.

Most of the ones I sent, they got it right.
$15 for shipping is worth $15 to me. Last week I shipped 4 packages which would have cost me $52. I picked convenient locations. I made the minimum fee. Worked for me!
its not just that, the shipping prices have exploded. Also they inserted a few questions in the app that makes no sense. It just there to be an inconvenience. They also have a screening system that looks at the image quality of your receipt and sends you an automatic rejection, request to reupload photo.
@emm2131 wrote:

$15 for shipping is worth $15 to me. Last week I shipped 4 packages which would have cost me $52. I picked convenient locations. I made the minimum fee. Worked for me!

This would be the most likely scenario for me but since I am not running a business where I need to pay for shipping items it is only useful to send holiday or bday gifts when I cannot purchase the items online and ship for free.
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