A shrinking number of people wanting to work for the PO means lowering the hiring bar in terms of qualification & background checks... which inevitably leads to crap like this:
I would not be surprised. When I called to report my stolen items it was someone in an international call center, far removed from having a reason to care. They didn't seem to care either way about solving it, just focused on checking the box of filing an insurance claim so they could move on to the next call and collect their paycheck. It would probably cost more than the $2100 lost to complete an investigation at of that scale at a hub like Chicago. Business wise they just pay the insurance claim and save the money, and it happens again and again.There’s no limit to stupidity, greed or short sightedness.
Frankly I’d be surprised if the USPS actually did anything even if the perps are proven to have been stealing.
Some years ago our carrier was repeatedly videotaped stealing items going to several different people. The evidence was presented to the USPS. He was reassigned to another route, not fired.
There’s no limit to stupidity, greed or short sightedness.
Frankly I’d be surprised if the USPS actually did anything even if the perps are proven to have been stealing.
Some years ago our carrier was repeatedly videotaped stealing items going to several different people. The evidence was presented to the USPS. He was reassigned to another route, not fired.
Briar Lee, I understand the small town life, I own a house I am retiring to in two years in a town of 700. There are three workers at the post office, they are known by all more than just by name. I'm sure I won't have these problems with my local post office. Kansas City like the OP and other cities have tens of thousands (or more) inhabitants and sometimes thousands of USPS employees. They have lost their ability to manage that size of work force. What happens when your local small town post office sends something off to a big city hub and your stuff gets stolen there instead? You are still in the same boat, regardless of how great your local postal workers are or that you went to high school with them. That is the USPS of today. Sorry to be so glum, but I've had several bad experiences with USPS over the years and it was never my local office.
I assume that order was wholesale/ for resale?I recently had an $8000 package from Benchmade Knives "damaged" and repackaged... $2100 worth of knives were mysteriously missing. It clearly happened in their custody in Chicago as indicated by labelling and relabelling package weights. Will not be using USPS for anything valuable again. Yes the insurance covered it... But why am I paying them even more money for insurance, just so I don't lose what I ship to theft of their own employees? Well, I don't anymore.