stoliohranj
Well-Known Member
Packages for the walmart portrait studio are specifically driver release.
Uh....no.
Packages for the walmart portrait studio are specifically driver release.
um.....Yes. I want to think I read somewhere official (methods or it was a lovely diad training) which said that a shipper release to a business is to be signed for if they are open, and if they are closed than you just drop them
Uh....no.
Description | Have UPS deliver your package without requiring the recipient's signature. |
Terms of Service | These terms of service apply to Shipper Release:
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LOL. But UPS is so much more professional! Is MFE catching this?
if you work for fedx then worry about fedxI drive for FedEx so we go to the same stops. I asked the driver at one business and he told me that he just leaves them by the door because the customer asked him to.
At the post office I was 10 minutes early from when they return from lunch. The boxes were sitting by the back door and when they got there to accept what I had for them I asked why they were left there and if I could get her to sign a driver release authorization form so I could do the same. She said she figures one of the other workers told him to leave them. She didn't know anything about it.
Any other questions or insults? I don't care if he does it. It doesn't effect me. I was just curious if you guys could do that. I thought it wasn't allowed...
Not according to the DIAD "training".We can DR to churches.
I've got a Methodist Church that gets pkgs that the release alert comes up when you scan, when no one is there I leave them by the office door.
We can DR to churches.
I wonder if any of your friends shop at Walmart. I wonder if they are "riff-raff".It's one thing to DR to a closed business within an open retail establishment. It's another to DR packages outside the front door of a closed business with a lot of foot traffic. I deliver to Walmart and DR portrait studio packages all the time if they have not opened yet. They position chairs to block the entry when they are closed---I simply move one of the chairs, make the delivery and put the chair back. I put the packages behind the cash register table so that the riff-raff that shops at Walmart won't see them. Now, if they had one of those pull-down gates, like the vision center or nail salon, I would not leave the packages, shipper release or not. I would indirect them to the vision center.
Looks like another idiot who I get to represent in a hearing.I drive for FedEx so we go to the same stops. I asked the driver at one business and he told me that he just leaves them by the door because the customer asked him to.
At the post office I was 10 minutes early from when they return from lunch. The boxes were sitting by the back door and when they got there to accept what I had for them I asked why they were left there and if I could get her to sign a driver release authorization form so I could do the same. She said she figures one of the other workers told him to leave them. She didn't know anything about it.
Any other questions or insults? I don't care if he does it. It doesn't effect me. I was just curious if you guys could do that. I thought it wasn't allowed...
If the pkgs are shipper release pkgs, they are to be left.
Uh....no.
If I had a shipper release package for a closed business that I could not indirect and did not feel comfortable leaving by their locked front door I would not leave it.
Yes they do have rules for that. One time is a warning. Second time is termination (for contractors). I've seen the safety guy following drivers maybe a handful of times in the last ten years. And it's usually when they are trying to get rid of someone.
At least that used to be the rule... I honestly don't even remember the last time he was around.
Uh yes apparently you have never read the prompt that comes up on a shipper release.