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"We Care" - USPS - My surprise yesterday...
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It was around a hundred dollar baseball card and super scarce..The heart break was much more about losing the card than any monies (the seller and I are chatting, no need to discuss it too much here)...I blacked out contact info to protect the innocent :).
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Wow
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Maybe it would have been better to just have put a stamp on the card and sent it as a postcard.
Sorry for your bad luck. |
When using the manilla folders instead of bubble mailers you have to tape the the top and bottom. The bottom seal will easily come undone in those sorting machines i.e. just like seen in the scans. Sorry for your loss Leon.
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USPS needs to go away and just let the private sector run the show.
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That's awful :(
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Perhaps the mail-man knows what you get in your bubble wraps now and thought it would be nice to take a souvenir for himself. That really sucks.
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I feel your pain Leon.
Same situation happened to me recently. Jantz |
That sucks. My last We Care package looked like it had been run over by a truck several times and was soaked in hydraulic fluid but because the seller always super packages his stuff the card was ok.
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I guess we see how well our stamping of USPS items as "Fragile" and "Do Not Bend" work? :eek:
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Usps
Words like fragile and do not bend are interpreted as throw around and stomp on. Very unfortunate, but fairly common. Sorry Leon
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Not to diminish the horrible condition the piece of mail was in when received, but the responsibility for secure packaging lies with the mailer. All mail delivery services use more and more automation processes and fewer and fewer humans in the sorting of packages. Unfortunately, machines can not read "fragile" endorsements on packages or smaller mailing envelopes. To be safe, it is always best to prepare packages with the thinking that they may be dropped, bent, crushed, etc. It's just the reality of automation vs manual sorting methods.
Sorry this happened to your package, Leon. |
Man, that stinks!
Looks like a steamroller hit it |
Sorry Leon. Of course, you can always hope that the fragile and do not bend warnings were observed until the contents was removed and stolen, and then the envelope was stomped and pummeled for effect. I'd rather think that my nice old card might surface someday, even if for somebody else, than to picture it in my head as destroyed. :(
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Sorry Leon. The "we care" almost adds insult to injury. They might as well put a plastic bag with a picture of a middle finger on it to show how they really feel.
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As others have stated...this is the fault of the person sending the package. For a $100 card, they could have sprung for a small box that would have cost maybe .50¢ more in mailing cost. A real shame....sorry Leon.
Jeff |
Yeah that really sucks! Sorry Leon! I was recently sweating a baseball bat tube package that was plastered with "Received in damaged condition". Somehow the tube was cut in half although the bat survived without damage.
Was "Received in damaged condition" and "Received without contents" two different incidences down the assembly line? Is there any surveillance in sorting areas that perhaps reduce theft of package contents do you suppose? |
Insurance, insurance, insurance. Never pass on insurance.
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Sorry that happened to you, Leon.
For the past year or so, I ship everything in a box, well-secured. No more bubble envelopes. |
I've seen that black before on items I have sent and received it means it got caught in a sorting machine and ground until it looks like it caught fire . Hate to see a valued item treated like that .
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that
SUCKS!:eek:
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I can relate to a lesser degree. My SI Baseball Preview issue showed up and it looked like someone's dog played with it.
I agree with other posters. The mailing package is as just as important as the card. I have had so many people mail cards in regular envelopes that were sent through a machine and damaged. |
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The rest was mostly bills so I don't really care if those are all soaked. |
Agree with what others have said about the packaging. I've shipped hundreds of cards over the years and nothing more than like a $5.00 or $10.00 sale would go in a manila envelope.
I'm surprised you can even put tracking on that. I tried it once and my post office said they would only add tracking to a 'package' (i.e. bubble mailer as a minimum). Didn't know if the person I got just didn't know what they were talking about but that's what I was told. |
In my opinion it is 100% USPS's fault. Period, end of story.
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In this case the envelope is bent and completely ripped apart. The object of the USPS is to receive mail IN AN ENVELOPE and deliver it to it's destination. I don't see how you can blame the packaging when it looks like it went through a shredder. |
Usps
Not to defend the post office but if you package cards in something that is thin enough to get sorted it goes thru the sorting machine. History has shown you don't what to risk it. Simple solution put things in bubble mailers or Boxes with card board around them then they are hand sorted. The price to mail that envelope was probably $1.50, standard price for a puffy is 2.32 I think. People need to quit trying to save 80 cents and take it out of the machines hands. This is the senders fault not the post office. Still not a usps fan but we do have to take responsibility for our own actions once in awhile. Rick
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My mistake
I see now they did charge him the standard price for a bubble mailer
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Tracking isn't supposed to be available on anything that's under 3/4 of an inch thick, unless it's priority. Even stuff ridgid enough to be classed as a package can't have tracking under 3/4 inch. There's the letter sorter, flats sorter, package sorter.......Not much human work aside from loading the machines. I'm not sure about the flats and package machines, but the machines that do letters handle as many as 30,000/ hour. Private carriers aren't really any better. Steve B |
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Either way there's really no excuse for an envelope to arrive at it's destination looking like that. |
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Rigids under 3/4 inches can indeed be shipped with tracking. I'm not sure why some Post Offices and others keep disputing this: From USPS regs: 1.0 Basic Information 1.1Description Delivery Confirmation service provides the mailer with information about the date and time an article was delivered and, if delivery was attempted but not successful, the date and time of the delivery attempt. Delivery Confirmation service is available only at the time of mailing. No record is kept at the office of mailing. Delivery Confirmation service does not include insurance, but insurance may be purchased as an additional service (see 1.6). Some statutes and regulations governing the mailing of documents with legal significance may require the use of Certified Mail or Registered Mail rather than Delivery Confirmation. 1.2Eligible Matter Delivery Confirmation is available for First-Class Mail parcels defined in C050 as machinable (with no minimum weight), irregular, or outside parcels; for all Priority Mail pieces; for Standard Mail pieces subject to the residual shape surcharge (electronic option only); and for Package Services parcels defined in C050 as machinable, irregular, or outside parcels. For the purposes of using Delivery Confirmation with a First-Class Mail parcel or a Package Services parcel, the parcel must meet these additional requirements: a. The surface area of the address side of the parcel must be large enough to contain completely and legibly the delivery address, return address, postage, and any applicable markings, endorsements, and special service labels. b. Except as provided in 1.2c for machinable parcels, the parcel must be greater than 3/4 inch thick at its thickest point. c. If the mailpiece is a machinable parcel under C050 and no greater than 3/4 inch thick, the contents must be prepared in a strong and rigid fiberboard or similar container or in a container that becomes rigid after the contents are enclosed and the container is secured. The parcel must be able to maintain its shape, integrity, and rigidity throughout processing and handling without collapsing into a letter-size or flat-size piece. |
Leon, I contacted my source at the post office about your card. He was able to locate footage from the mail delivery truck that might explain what happened.
http://i.imgur.com/8KLOH.gif |
I still maintain that any seller who is concerned with an "EXPENSIVE" item getting to a buyer safely, needs to go the extra mile and package with more care. Perhaps a $100 card to this seller is not significant, then so be it. Anything that I sell for over $50 is given a little bit extra scrutiny before going out. That could mean a thicker cardboard insert (I send most things in a #4 bubble mailer with backing board and cardboard stiffeners), a priority box or extra insurance. I do this for my own peace of mind as well as to make sure that I have a satisfied customer.
Jeff |
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Jeff |
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Pretty sure that I've posted this before, but there is only so much that you can protect against when shipping! :eek:
http://www.cal-lector.com/TimzCollec...Batbroken2.jpg |
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I am not just giving an opinion, I have shipped thousands of packages using the USPS and so far (knock wood) I have not had any problems. Jeff |
Sorry, Leon. Very frustrating. I remember about 15 or 20 years ago I sent a postcard, an SASE, and a one page letter to a member of the basketball HOF for an autograph. About a week later, I got the "sorry/we care" plastic bag, with generic instructions on what not to do when sending something (I did none of them) and my original mailed envelope that was burned down to the top left corner that had my return address on it. (Looked a lot like a mirror image of Oklahoma, with the southern border highlighted in black.) Kept it for a while and showed it to my friends for a laugh. Nothing else I could do...
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The assumption of little packaging is based on that someone deemed this to be a letter not a package. This kind of damage is from the letter sorting machine. No one can argue the point that we should expect better/usps should handle better and all the above mentioned. The bigger issue is if it is a letter it is going to go thru the LETTER sorting machine several times before it gets to you,know that we can't change their system. So adjust accordingly the letter machine is brutal I have seen it in person. It is for letters pwe with paper inside anything else you are putting it at risk to getting jammed in the machine. packages/ puffies are sorted Differently and are much safer. That kind of envelope can be used but you still need to thicken it with cardboard/ bubble wrap/ etc to make it a package. Rick
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ps...gas is about $2.20 in Dallas so it will buy a gallon.....and I will be going back to the seller on this one to see if we can come to a mutually good situation...I paid $5 in shipping... |
I have some USPS good news (somewhat) to report. I sent a sub to SGC on March 26th, it arrived today. I was a bit concerned because, I cheaped out on insurance and it never takes that long for a package to travel up the east coast.
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I almost feel your pain Leon, we probably get one of those a month, although it's usually a catalog or something worthless.
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Here is a quick update that is fortunately not entirely unique. The seller is a stand up guy and said he would make it right and send me another card from the series, which I am/was very appreciative of. I got a snail mail letter with a card in it from him a few days ago. It stated he had originally put the card inside an old envelope that had his pre-printed return address on it. Otherwise it was a blank and unused envelope, with the card in it and stuck inside the, now mauled, mailer above.
Well, he received the blank envelope with the card still in it in his regular mail several (now) days ago. It was delivered with no postage due or anything. Now the original card is back to me and all is well. I had another situation, similar to this, happen many years ago. That incident is recounted here somewhere in the archives. Fact is stranger than fiction. And props go out to whatever postal employees made this recent card retrieval happen.*The card is undamaged too. :) "They did good" on this one. |
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