....the guy saying that all boxes should sustain a 3 foot drop on CONCRETE is totally wrong....sometimes we get hub employees that find the handling to be a joke although they are repeatedly taught to use "hand to surface" handling....the workers get lazy and then drop , like the comment from the Lenexa guy, this is a testimony as to why some workers hurt the UPS reputation....maybe this poster was the guy that handled your wheel ??? There is a definite problem getting young people to follow procedures, they always think they know more than the people that have done it for years !!! Hope all works out, I find it not for this venue to vent your problems for a company, in fact I thought we had rules that you could not "bash" someone on this forum...BUT....
Denny,
I think you misinterpreted what the guy from Lenexa(Jerry Dobson) meant.
I beleive he was saying that the boxes used in shipping should have the burst rating to sustain a 3 foot fall. I don't think he meant that UPS was giving the thumbs up to drop the package from 3 feet high!! If I am not mistaken...boxes are tested with a certain predetermined and uniform weight to withstand different height drops....some boxes can withstand higher drops than others....some up to 6' to 10' and are given that rating.
Yes, I know all about the "hand to surface" handling methods all too well..It was drilled into our heads and also posted all over the walls.
I had done the loading part for 5 years before becoming a driver and that is one hell of a demanding job.
There are always bad apples with every company but %99 do the job the way they are instructed. Another reason for some of the damages is in the equipment itself and not employee related at all. If some dork tapes up a package with duct tape(which is not allowed.....must use packing tape) and the bigger dork(the driver) accepts and picks up that package, that can create problems with jams on the conveyors and chutes. The duct tape package sticks to the chute and creates jams. The volume of packages builds up quickly and starts to overflow on the floor like Niagara Falls during the rainy season and some of these conveyors are very high......20 plus feet. Not too many pkgs can survive a fall like that. It is possible that might be what happened to that rim even though rims should be treated as an irregular and not sorted on the conveyor.....it may have gotten by, especially if it was in a box.
We are no worse than any other carrier and I think you might hear about more damages through UPS simply because we are number one and our volume is so much more than the competition but if you were to break it down pkg to pkg it would be very close with all carriers in amount of damage claims.
The funny thing is,when a customer becomes angry with us and decides to try what he thinks are "greener" pastures with Fedex or DHL.....they almost always return to UPS. I see this all the time as a driver. We offer the broadest range of services from international to domestic ground and are very good with time sensitive packages. I may not be management(had plenty of opportunities to do so but have no desire) but I still bleed brown.
I love the driving aspect...great people on my route....pretty much my own boss and UPS treats me real well.
JOE117-- Slowing down the workload would mean decreased volume,difficulties in meeting time commitments on packages and lost business to our competitors....that is not an option for UPS in todays more competitive market.
Volume, high revenue packages such as international pkgs, and fast paced stops per hour is what is making UPS profit and with that fast pace and volume damages are inevitable. It is just part of the business unfortunately but all carriers suffer from it.
JOE....I promise not to use your pkgs. as a seat cushion while I drive and will try to refrain from kicking and running them over in the future. Man...it is gonna be hard to break old habits!!!
UPS is obviously doing something right to be able to remain in business and florish for almost 100 years now.
As far as the rim incident, it is even more unfortunate as this is a hard to replace/repair item and I hope it gets settled quickly.
Sorry for rambling..this topic is getting a little long in the tooth now.
If anyone is wondering......NO...the Viper does not sound like a UPS truck...well.....at least not a modified one!!!