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Old 07-20-2022, 03:16 PM
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Larry More.y
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,042
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyCox3 View Post
Tell this guy to escalate all he wants (whatever that means) and ask him to point to any rule or law that prevents you from sending as much mail as you pay to send. Offer to escalate it yourself! Record video of any future in-person exchanges you have with this worker. Report him as high up the chain of command as you can and take your future mailings to a nearby town if you're worried about anything in that regard. It might not do any good, but it's better than doing nothing.

I'd love to meet this &#*@$. I hate this type of USPS employee so much. Finding a decent one is a treasure.

IMO, just a lazy employee who was being overworked due to having to bring two bins instead of one to empty out the blue box I dropped my mail in. Here is the first video from the visit I received regarding dropping too much mail....

https://youtu.be/GFWtp_Jftzs

I don't think I will post the rest of the videos, as the conversation quickly goes downhill as I asked a few too many questions about the concern. I struggled to understand how filling a blue box a third full was "stuffing it".
After 10+ years of dropping in the same blue box, this visit admittedly caught me off guard.

Long story short, my regular carrier agreed to scan my packages after seeing the videos to help me out. I help him out by spreading the thinner packages around to the cluster boxes in my neighborhood and drop not more than 1/8th of a bin into the closest blue box. In other words, to keep the peace and not tick off anyone else (someone who could purposely lose my packages) I spread the 40-50 packages a day out amongst 4-5 drop locations/carriers. Wouldn't want to overwork any one specific employee.
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