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 Originally Posted by hallmarktex
Call the postmaster at your local post office. Those guys are typically very good about helping solve the problems.
 Originally Posted by Caradoc
Um, no. No, they are not.
I would suggest that is hard to generalize about an organization so vast. I have never once had a problem and have always found the Postal employees I have dealt with to be friendly, polite, and helpful. I don't disbelieve Caradoc's experience, which was very unfortunate and wrong. People are like eggs, most are good but the bad ones can really taint things for you.
I'd rather try to have some faith and hope for the best, rather than assume the worse.
Cheers
Jamie
-See it there, a white plume
Over the battle - A diamond in the ash
Of the ultimate combustion-My panache
Edmond Rostand
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 Originally Posted by Panache
I would suggest that is hard to generalize about an organization so vast. I have never once had a problem and have always found the Postal employees I have dealt with to be friendly, polite, and helpful. I don't disbelieve Caradoc's experience, which was very unfortunate and wrong. People are like eggs, most are good but the bad ones can really taint things for you.
I'd rather try to have some faith and hope for the best, rather than assume the worse.
Cheers
Jamie
Not in Chicago.. they've proved over and over again that the batch is rotten. 
UHG,, I just want my freaking Kilt..
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 Originally Posted by Panache
People are like eggs, most are good but the bad ones can really taint things for you.
My own experience with the United States Postal Service indicated to me that while there may be good people working for them, the organization itself is corrupt beyond redemption.
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 Originally Posted by Panache
I would suggest that is hard to generalize about an organization so vast. I have never once had a problem and have always found the Postal employees I have dealt with to be friendly, polite, and helpful. I don't disbelieve Caradoc's experience, which was very unfortunate and wrong. People are like eggs, most are good but the bad ones can really taint things for you.
I'd rather try to have some faith and hope for the best, rather than assume the worse.
Cheers
Jamie
Exactly, Jamie. My grandfather was the Director of Customer Service for the USPS here in Springfield before he retired. He always prided himself on listening to people -- carriers, clerks and customers -- and trying to resolve any problems as much as he was able. He insisted that his employees remembered that they were public servants and professionals. I tried to remember his mantra when I was a public servant myself with USNPS.
After working as a public servant, I am inclined to believe that some folks will never be be satisfied with what we do, simply because we are public servants. Thankfully, those folks are not as common as the thousands of visitors I met each summer. Sure there are jerks in the civil service -- but I've met quite a few in the private sector as well.
Regards,
Todd
Last edited by macwilkin; 5th July 07 at 02:43 PM.
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 Originally Posted by cajunscot
Any man who judges by the group is a pea-wit.
I see. So, the Nazi party under Hitler was just a bunch of really cool people hanging out together, but they had a few bad eggs?
I'm sorry, but when a member of a particular group behaves badly, and the group takes no action whatsoever to distance themselves from that poor behavior, it's going to reflect badly on the group.
In the public sector, an employee who did something awful would be fired.
In the USPS, they're not fired. From all evidence, they're not even reprimanded.
Anyway, the letter carrier who pepper-sprayed my dog isn't the only problem with the local PO. We regularly find other people's mail in our box, packages are delivered with severe damage, and occasionally we find our mail (or our neighbor's mail) scattered across the lawn.
And the good old boys down at L'Enfant Plaza don't even reply to mail.
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 Originally Posted by Caradoc
I see. So, the Nazi party under Hitler was just a bunch of really cool people hanging out together, but they had a few bad eggs?
I'm sorry, but when a member of a particular group behaves badly, and the group takes no action whatsoever to distance themselves from that poor behavior, it's going to reflect badly on the group.
In the public sector, an employee who did something awful would be fired.
In the USPS, they're not fired. From all evidence, they're not even reprimanded.
Anyway, the letter carrier who pepper-sprayed my dog isn't the only problem with the local PO. We regularly find other people's mail in our box, packages are delivered with severe damage, and occasionally we find our mail (or our neighbor's mail) scattered across the lawn.
And the good old boys down at L'Enfant Plaza don't even reply to mail.
Sir,
Your analogy of the Nazi party is way out-of-line. I removed my quote because in hindsight, it might offend. My apologies.
I'm sorry about your dog; that wasn't right. I agree, people should take responsibility for their actions, regardless of where they work.
Regards,
Todd
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 Originally Posted by cajunscot
I'm sorry about your dog; that wasn't right. I agree, people should take responsibility for their actions, regardless of where they work.
As has been my point throughout - not only did the individual carrier fail to take responsibility for his actions, so did his supervisor, the local Postmaster, and every person in the chain of command all the way up to L'Enfant Plaza.
Which group would have been a more appropriate analogy, by the way? I'll grant that the Nazi party was an extreme case, but there are and always will be groups of people who will be judged by the actions of their own members, and their failure to curtail the problem.
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 Originally Posted by Caradoc
As has been my point throughout - not only did the individual carrier fail to take responsibility for his actions, so did his supervisor, the local Postmaster, and every person in the chain of command all the way up to L'Enfant Plaza.
Let me share a little something with you. Just my personal observation, after witnessing your behavior on this forum for several months.
If you approached the USPS carrier, his supervisor, the local Postmaster and every person in the chain of command all the way up to L'Enfant Plaza with the same degree of charm and tact that you demonstrate to others on this forum, I'm surprised someone didn't laugh in your face and toss you out on your ear.
I've been in sales and customer service for 34 years this very week. I absolutely hate it when a customer gets less than the very best in service. I hate having to be the ear that gets bent over someone else's failures and shortcomings.
Unfortunately, that is part of my job responsibility. So, if something goes wrong, tell me what went wrong and let me do my best to make it right. If something goes wrong and you want to b*tch for the sake of b*tching, then there's nothing in this world that will make you smile. And I'm certainly not going to waste my time trying. People like that aren't really looking for the problem to be rectified, they're just looking for someone that is willing to listen to them howl.
My employer has the opinion that there are 20% of the people we deal with that we are not going to be able to please, not matter how hard we try and no matter what we offer them.
Did you ever stop to think you just might be in that 20% category?
And I will stand by my earlier comment - my job for the last 22+ years has involved dealing on a daily basis with USPS, FedEx, UPS and DHL. Of those companies, USPS has the best service record. Are they perfect? Nope, but who amongst us is perfect?
If this thread continues to deteriorate, it will be closed.
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Hear, hear, Mike! As a letter carrier for 27 years, I've refrained from posting in this thread, other than to offer the technical info above.
Personally, I care most about good service to my customers, even if that has at times run contrary to management's positions and desires (their numbers crunching occasionally does not jive with "service first"). The vast majority of my fellow carriers share this dedication to their customers, though there are always "bad eggs", especially in a work force that numbers into the hundreds of thousands.
The USPS is the highest rated postal service in the world in terms of customer satisfaction, and on time/accurate delivery, over 95% or higher. But, as much as a I try, I still have customers who will always be pissed off about something. It's part of dealing with the public....
Brian
"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." ~ Benjamin Franklin
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5th July 07, 05:29 PM
#10
 Originally Posted by Mike1
If you approached the USPS carrier, his supervisor, the local Postmaster and every person in the chain of command all the way up to L'Enfant Plaza with the same degree of charm and tact that you demonstrate to others on this forum, I'm surprised someone didn't laugh in your face and toss you out on your ear.
It took over a month of trying to get any answers at all from the USPS before I reached critical mass on my issues with them.
Will letters occasionally be misplaced or misdelivered? Certainly. Once a week? That's a bit much.
Will letters occasionally be dropped along a route while a carrier is walking? Certainly. Three times just this month. That's a bit much.
Will letter carriers need to pepper-spray loose animals? Absolutely. Pepper-spraying a dog that's in a locked back yard, well away from the route? Inexcusable.
Check this out: The Summit City Mailbag - a publication of a National Association of Letter Carriers branch (Summit City, #116). The cartoons on page four and on the back page seem to be fairly indicative of their general attitude toward their customers.
That particular branch is in your neck of the woods, Mike.
I do find it just a little odd that an organization that represents employees of an ostensibly customer-service-based service like the USPS would post such things in public.
Granted, I've only been in sales, customer service, et cetera for about eighteen years, and I only have awards from three different employers for the levels of customer service that I've demonstrated.
I *do* know customer service. It appears that our local USPS representatives don't. So, whenever I possibly can, I choose FedEx over UPS or the USPS - I've had many, many poor experiences with the latter two, and very few poor experiences with FedEx. Your own mileage may vary, of course.
I also make an effort to publicize those vendors and providers who've done right by me. If you care to check my posting history, I am pretty sure I've defended more vendors than I've said anything bad about.
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