Disclaimer: RANT follows ...
Preface: It takes a lot to piss me off ...
So this is weird ... twice. A couple of weeks ago I sold a rifle, and had it packed and labeled for UPS-Ground using my own customer account. Took it to the UPS Store here in Bend, Oregon and the person behind the counter says "What is it?". I respond "A well-packed and unloaded rifle". She then says ... "You have to take that to a UPS Company Hub, we're a franchise and can't ship firearms of any kind". After a lengthy debate, all very polite, I realized I should have said "Dog Food" or maybe "A Tent" because she'd have no way to verify or confirm. I walked away, drove to the UPS Hub, and said "You can ship this firearm, right?". The answer was "Of course - not a problem".
Fast forward to yesterday ... I had an Amazon shipment of three electric horse stall water heaters that were the wrong type and I needed to return them. I did the Amazon return authorization, and packed them in exactly the same box they arrived in. When I went to the UPS Store, the same lady said "We can't take that package." I asked "Why not?". The answer was "Because that symbol is on the box."
Here's the symbol she was pointing at ... and she said it was a code for "Hazardous Material".
I explained what was in the box, and that there was nothing even remotely hazardous about it, and that was the same box it arrived in two days earlier. I got the same schtick ... "You'll have to go to the UPS Hub and see if they'll take it. Another polite argument, with the same justification that they were a "franchise" and had rules about what they could accept.
Again, I drove to the UPS Hub and dropped the package with no issues. I asked the desk clerk that accepted the package why the UPS Store can't take this ... and she had some choice words for the local UPS store.
My guess is that they don't make any money on packages dropped there that are pre-labeled, and they're consciously discouraging that wherever possible.
So don't believe the commercials ... the reality is the UPS Store's "...ing..." marketing campaign, along with packING, shippING, faxING, copyING, etc. ... needs to add "refusING" to their list.
Lessons Learned
Preface: It takes a lot to piss me off ...
So this is weird ... twice. A couple of weeks ago I sold a rifle, and had it packed and labeled for UPS-Ground using my own customer account. Took it to the UPS Store here in Bend, Oregon and the person behind the counter says "What is it?". I respond "A well-packed and unloaded rifle". She then says ... "You have to take that to a UPS Company Hub, we're a franchise and can't ship firearms of any kind". After a lengthy debate, all very polite, I realized I should have said "Dog Food" or maybe "A Tent" because she'd have no way to verify or confirm. I walked away, drove to the UPS Hub, and said "You can ship this firearm, right?". The answer was "Of course - not a problem".
Fast forward to yesterday ... I had an Amazon shipment of three electric horse stall water heaters that were the wrong type and I needed to return them. I did the Amazon return authorization, and packed them in exactly the same box they arrived in. When I went to the UPS Store, the same lady said "We can't take that package." I asked "Why not?". The answer was "Because that symbol is on the box."
Here's the symbol she was pointing at ... and she said it was a code for "Hazardous Material".
I explained what was in the box, and that there was nothing even remotely hazardous about it, and that was the same box it arrived in two days earlier. I got the same schtick ... "You'll have to go to the UPS Hub and see if they'll take it. Another polite argument, with the same justification that they were a "franchise" and had rules about what they could accept.
Again, I drove to the UPS Hub and dropped the package with no issues. I asked the desk clerk that accepted the package why the UPS Store can't take this ... and she had some choice words for the local UPS store.
My guess is that they don't make any money on packages dropped there that are pre-labeled, and they're consciously discouraging that wherever possible.
So don't believe the commercials ... the reality is the UPS Store's "...ing..." marketing campaign, along with packING, shippING, faxING, copyING, etc. ... needs to add "refusING" to their list.
Lessons Learned
- Lie about what's in the box if you're shipping firearms from a UPS Store
- If that symbol is on the box, use a different box if you're shipping from a UPS Store
- Just drive straight to the UPS Hub since the UPS Store is stocked with douchebags