Please explain. Do they need to be able to read, drive, memorize a route, sort mail by zipcode, street address, pass the bar?... I will let the last one slide.trouble said:
The biggest issue right now is qualified candidates applying.
Please explain. Do they need to be able to read, drive, memorize a route, sort mail by zipcode, street address, pass the bar?... I will let the last one slide.trouble said:
The biggest issue right now is qualified candidates applying.
MsDoubleD81 said:
This has been going on for me way before students returned. More like after Beryl rolled thru.
doubledog said:Please explain. Do they need to be able to read, drive, memorize a route, sort mail by zipcode, street address, pass the bar?... I will let the last one slide.trouble said:
The biggest issue right now is qualified candidates applying.
LOYAL AG said:threecatcorner said:dallasiteinsa02 said:
The shipping time hasn't been the problem for me. It just takes 4 to 5 days for Amazon to even ship it.
Exactly. If Amazon would actually bother to ship stuff out in a timely manner, Prime would still be fast.
Have you read the whole thread? When Hearne and Caldwell are getting things in two days and BCS in seven Amazon isn't the problem. The agreement between the two orgs is that USPS can ask Amazon to throttle back shipping to certain zip codes during heavy periods. It's absolutely a USPS problem.
Mister Shipwreck said:LOYAL AG said:threecatcorner said:dallasiteinsa02 said:
The shipping time hasn't been the problem for me. It just takes 4 to 5 days for Amazon to even ship it.
Exactly. If Amazon would actually bother to ship stuff out in a timely manner, Prime would still be fast.
Have you read the whole thread? When Hearne and Caldwell are getting things in two days and BCS in seven Amazon isn't the problem. The agreement between the two orgs is that USPS can ask Amazon to throttle back shipping to certain zip codes during heavy periods. It's absolutely a USPS problem.
Yes, when I get something delivered to Caldwell, 2 days is not a problem. College Station... It is not happening.
In fact, when I ship to Caldwell, Amazon usually waits a day, and then they ship it from a TX location. And, it comes next day (still within the 2 days). This is a local issue .
Caldwell gets the mail from our area. How come they can do that, but not deliver locally?
doubledog said:
Is USPS picking up the packages in Houston and delivering them to USPS Bryan/CS or does FedX or UPS handle that delivery?
The local Amazon drops (e.g. Century Square) are 2 day so the fault is locally. This is a reoccurring problem, hiring new USPS personnel seems to be off the table. Why hire personnel for August to December, just let the problem go away...
FYI - I will be opting out of the home delivery and using the Amazon drop.
MsDoubleD81 said:
I placed an order for a dog water bowl on August 21. It still hasn't shipped. But says delivery date is August 27 or 28 by 10 pm. USPS by 10 PM?
All of my orders have taken at least 5 days to ship.
Stupe said:
Amazon needs to partner with UPS and FedEx and completely dump USPS.
I work in Houston several times a month and I can remember every delivery issue that I've had there. It's been that few.
At my house...lost count.
BiochemAg97 said:Mister Shipwreck said:LOYAL AG said:threecatcorner said:dallasiteinsa02 said:
The shipping time hasn't been the problem for me. It just takes 4 to 5 days for Amazon to even ship it.
Exactly. If Amazon would actually bother to ship stuff out in a timely manner, Prime would still be fast.
Have you read the whole thread? When Hearne and Caldwell are getting things in two days and BCS in seven Amazon isn't the problem. The agreement between the two orgs is that USPS can ask Amazon to throttle back shipping to certain zip codes during heavy periods. It's absolutely a USPS problem.
Yes, when I get something delivered to Caldwell, 2 days is not a problem. College Station... It is not happening.
In fact, when I ship to Caldwell, Amazon usually waits a day, and then they ship it from a TX location. And, it comes next day (still within the 2 days). This is a local issue .
Caldwell gets the mail from our area. How come they can do that, but not deliver locally?
I think that has been explained in this thread. USPS doesn't have enough delivery drivers in BCS to handle the normal mail delivery + the influx of students supplying their apartments/dorms from Amazon.
This is why USPS is looking to hire additional drivers and Amazon is looking to franchise local delivery here. But there doesn't seem to be anyone that wants to deliver for USPS or run the franchise for Amazon.
Mister Shipwreck said:BiochemAg97 said:Mister Shipwreck said:LOYAL AG said:threecatcorner said:dallasiteinsa02 said:
The shipping time hasn't been the problem for me. It just takes 4 to 5 days for Amazon to even ship it.
Exactly. If Amazon would actually bother to ship stuff out in a timely manner, Prime would still be fast.
Have you read the whole thread? When Hearne and Caldwell are getting things in two days and BCS in seven Amazon isn't the problem. The agreement between the two orgs is that USPS can ask Amazon to throttle back shipping to certain zip codes during heavy periods. It's absolutely a USPS problem.
Yes, when I get something delivered to Caldwell, 2 days is not a problem. College Station... It is not happening.
In fact, when I ship to Caldwell, Amazon usually waits a day, and then they ship it from a TX location. And, it comes next day (still within the 2 days). This is a local issue .
Caldwell gets the mail from our area. How come they can do that, but not deliver locally?
I think that has been explained in this thread. USPS doesn't have enough delivery drivers in BCS to handle the normal mail delivery + the influx of students supplying their apartments/dorms from Amazon.
This is why USPS is looking to hire additional drivers and Amazon is looking to franchise local delivery here. But there doesn't seem to be anyone that wants to deliver for USPS or run the franchise for Amazon.
Yes, but Amazon also completely holds off on shipping the item for a few days when you use a B/CS address, on top of the slow delivery process...
BiochemAg97 said:Mister Shipwreck said:BiochemAg97 said:Mister Shipwreck said:LOYAL AG said:threecatcorner said:dallasiteinsa02 said:
The shipping time hasn't been the problem for me. It just takes 4 to 5 days for Amazon to even ship it.
Exactly. If Amazon would actually bother to ship stuff out in a timely manner, Prime would still be fast.
Have you read the whole thread? When Hearne and Caldwell are getting things in two days and BCS in seven Amazon isn't the problem. The agreement between the two orgs is that USPS can ask Amazon to throttle back shipping to certain zip codes during heavy periods. It's absolutely a USPS problem.
Yes, when I get something delivered to Caldwell, 2 days is not a problem. College Station... It is not happening.
In fact, when I ship to Caldwell, Amazon usually waits a day, and then they ship it from a TX location. And, it comes next day (still within the 2 days). This is a local issue .
Caldwell gets the mail from our area. How come they can do that, but not deliver locally?
I think that has been explained in this thread. USPS doesn't have enough delivery drivers in BCS to handle the normal mail delivery + the influx of students supplying their apartments/dorms from Amazon.
This is why USPS is looking to hire additional drivers and Amazon is looking to franchise local delivery here. But there doesn't seem to be anyone that wants to deliver for USPS or run the franchise for Amazon.
Yes, but Amazon also completely holds off on shipping the item for a few days when you use a B/CS address, on top of the slow delivery process...
Amazon doesn't want roll multiple trucks full of packages to USPS Bryan and have them sit at the Bryan post office because Bryan can't deliver them. So they hold them and meter out what Bryan can deliver the next day.
Much better to hold the inventory at Amazon than to lose a bunch of packages.
Considering that I'm paying 139.00 right now and I don't trust delivery...I'm open.Quote:
So, how much more are you willing to pay for prime to have all your packages delivered by UPS/FedEx?
But how much money are you saving by paying $139?Stupe said:Considering that I'm paying 139.00 right now and I don't trust delivery...I'm open.Quote:
So, how much more are you willing to pay for prime to have all your packages delivered by UPS/FedEx?
SlimM said:
This might be a dumb question, but I'll risk it in case it's not...
My Amazon packages all seem to take a week to be delivered. So if this is the case for everyone, how does that delay help USPS? In other words, doesn't it just move the exact same backlog problem one week into the future without actually solving anything?
I understand that too.trouble said:
It only comes through the sorting portion of Bryan though. It's scanned and reloaded on a truck. It never makes it into where the carriers do the final sort and load for delivery.
Mister Shipwreck said:I understand that too.trouble said:
It only comes through the sorting portion of Bryan though. It's scanned and reloaded on a truck. It never makes it into where the carriers do the final sort and load for delivery.
None of that changes the fact that the mail is STILL coming to Bryan, and you can get it in 2 days in Caldwell. But, you can't get it that way here in B/CS. And, that's not right, and it's messed up.
You keep making excuses for the situation. But, we know Amazon drags the process out by taking longer to ship packages to B/CS.
Yet, when asked, no good official reason gets made. Just pointless speculation in the occasional news story that pops up on this issue every few months.
There is no reason for that to be happening.
Until next semester and the holidays... FYI a good chunk of the year.BiochemAg97 said:SlimM said:
This might be a dumb question, but I'll risk it in case it's not...
My Amazon packages all seem to take a week to be delivered. So if this is the case for everyone, how does that delay help USPS? In other words, doesn't it just move the exact same backlog problem one week into the future without actually solving anything?
They are dealing with a temporary increase in capacity. Yes, it is shifting volume to next week, but once the college students are settled and USPS can get caught up, Amazon will work its way back to 2 day.
Also, Amazon has been shifting at least some of the volume to UPS. At least, a larger % of the Amazon packages I have received have been UPS.
I don't see this slow down tied to the fall semester. It seems to happen most of the year from my experience.trouble said:
Spring semester doesn't have as much since most people stay where they were for the fall.