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Why do we fail to follow proper driver release methods?
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<blockquote data-quote="gman042" data-source="post: 905088" data-attributes="member: 36560"><p>It is true. If there is a damage reported by a customer from a package that you delivered, your name is attached to the damage. Though it may be that the damage occurred somewhere in transit but you made the final delivery. You should have caught it.</p><p>If there is a questionable package you are to take it to the clerk and have it examined. </p><p></p><p>Despite the advocated use of DR bags(and we are trained in this method) they do not keep moisture from condensing on the inside of the bag. If left unattended long enough the package will become soaked anyway. Case in point.....a pair of expensive cowboy boots were bagged and left at a customers location.......over the winter. The customer had moved back home from his summer home in the mountains. When UPS went to recover the boots in the spring the box was soaked, the boots ruined. Not a hole in the bag anywhere. Though the boots were left for a few months in this case, I have seen condensation form on the inside of bags soaking the package within the space of a day.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gman042, post: 905088, member: 36560"] It is true. If there is a damage reported by a customer from a package that you delivered, your name is attached to the damage. Though it may be that the damage occurred somewhere in transit but you made the final delivery. You should have caught it. If there is a questionable package you are to take it to the clerk and have it examined. Despite the advocated use of DR bags(and we are trained in this method) they do not keep moisture from condensing on the inside of the bag. If left unattended long enough the package will become soaked anyway. Case in point.....a pair of expensive cowboy boots were bagged and left at a customers location.......over the winter. The customer had moved back home from his summer home in the mountains. When UPS went to recover the boots in the spring the box was soaked, the boots ruined. Not a hole in the bag anywhere. Though the boots were left for a few months in this case, I have seen condensation form on the inside of bags soaking the package within the space of a day. [/QUOTE]
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Why do we fail to follow proper driver release methods?
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