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#1
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Posted By: ramram
I know these questions keep coming up regularly but.... |
#2
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
priroity, insured, signature. the cheker i was dealing with asked what it was, and i said, " a baseball card." "We don't insure baseball cards--do we? (to the checker next to her). |
#3
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Posted By: Joe Jones
I had something damaged and couldnt get insurance money for it because they said USPS does not insure collectibles. |
#4
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Posted By: Josh
the policy has changed in the last couple of months, we send a ton of stuff through the post office, with a lot of it insured. |
#5
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Posted By: T206Collector
I purchased a board with a bunch of T206 cards glued to it on ebay for about $200, if memory serves me. My hope was to remove the cards from the board with a good soaking. Fortunately, the seller put approximately $400 of insurance on it before he sent it to me. Well, the postal service actually tore the board -- Clark Griffith and Miller Huggins both torn in half. I brought the pieces of the cards to the post office with a copy of the insurance forms from the seller, and after filling out some forms, I made a claim for $100, which I felt was the amount I was perhaps damaged by this. Well, about a month later I got a check in the mail for $100 from the USPS. This happened a little over a year ago. |
#6
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Posted By: ramram
I wonder if this is a gray area with the Post Office or if it is something that has changed recently. Strangely, I know the Post Master mentioned that if it were a book it would be covered. I'm confused. |
#7
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Posted By: DJ
My post office people have never asked me what was inside. Not once. They ask me if it's potentially hazardous and stuff but have never inquired about it's contents In saying that, I sent out a Sporting News Premium about a year ago and it was damaged in transit. I had to give proof of it's value and such and the case was rejected stating that I didn't pack it properly. I sandwiched between four pieces of premium cardboard and how it got damaged it is beyond me. The PO didn't even send me my piece back. Who owns that piece now? It was such BS. |
#8
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Posted By: barrysloate
What I find is postal workers don't really know all the fine points of what the rules are at the post office, but that is in Brooklyn where everybody seems to have an attitude. If you insure something and they lose it, it shouldn't matter what it was. You have every right to send a collectable in the mail. If it is delivered damaged, then it gets tricky, because I think you have to determine to what extent you lost money. I would hate to have to go there with the post office. |
#9
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Posted By: sagard
USPS pays out very few claims whether they are legitimate or not. They will not cover your sale, but will cover your costs when you do get them to pay. |
#10
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Posted By: David Vargha
As easy a target as they are, the USPS has come though on the two times I had to file an insurance claim (once for about $400 and another time for about $70). I was just asked last week what was in an insured bubble mailer. They had no problem with it being baseball cards. |
#11
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Posted By: Richard Dwyer
Seems to me if you said it had a Honus Wagner card in it, the employee would steal it right then and there. (?) |
#12
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Posted By: Mark
BB cards are definitely insurable. Anything not listed in the domestic mail manual as ineligilbe is insurable. My claim was honored last year when I took at previously delivered package in to a USPS office, it was taken from me, and it was subsequently "lost." |
#13
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Posted By: Brent Butcher
I almost think its up to the local postmaster and the way they interpret the rules/regulations. I've been told at a po that they don't insure collectibles and then at my local po I was told by the post master they would. I've only had to make a claim one time when a graded card I received came damaged. The holder was broke pretty badly and I explained to the post master that this collectible is almost worthless if the card inside is damaged. I explained to her the grading process a little bit and she agreed to pay to have it reholdered and if it couldn't be reholdered she would pay for the price I paid for the card. It came back reholdered and I received a check for $5. |
#14
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Posted By: Charlie O'Neal
I have had one experince with filing a postal insurance claim. In the fine print if the post office denies a claim they have to provide the All of the contents of the package if you ask for it. If the post office fails to provde the contents for the package (I think within 30days) then your claim is automatically approved by default. If your experience happened fairly recently I would look into this. |
#15
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Posted By: Mark
It's not up to the local postmasters' interpretations of the rules. The claims are all processed through St. Louis. |
#16
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Posted By: damian
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