The worst Post Office in New York City is on 85th street between 2nd and 3rd avenues. I use them when I need to ship international. I had a 16 x 20 going to England and it had been packaged and waiting to go but given my coughing and now my sore ribcage (muscle pulled from cough) I didn't have the energy or patience to do the Post Office thing. But I went today. It didn't look that bad when I got there. About 10 people on line, and three clerks.
It took over 45 minutes to get to a clerk. By the time I left, people on line were shouting at the clerks to hurry up. The line stretched to the very back of the post office.
What happened was that every single person who arrived in the clerk's presence had either filled out the wrong form, or complex transactions to perform such as getting a passport! So you had your three clerks. One was working on a passport for the whole time. And now the line has about thirty people on it.
But to make it worse - they've never gotten the heating system right - so as you are standing there in your overcoat - the ceiling vents begin spitting out hot air. So now people are taking their coats off and grumbling about the heat.
The manager pokes his nose out to take a look. Sees the line stretching back to the door and then disappears, never to be seen again.
The woman behind me sneezes in my face and then I start to cough. The sound of the deep chest cough backs people away.
And there - ahead of me - is the complete moron of a clerk who always tells me that I've filled out the wrong customs form and why. He's just finished telling someone else they've filled out the wrong form.
He looks at the package and says, "this isn't more than 36 inches around."
Ah, but now I've got him.
Yes - it's 40 inches! I tell him with a tired grin. It's 40 inches and that, I say, means it has to go parcel post air-mail. It also means that this is the correct customs form.
He stops in his tracks.
(Personally, I wish that it wasn't more than 36 inches around since it costs twice as much, but not much you can do with the packaging if the mat is 16 x 20 is there? You've hit 36 around right there unless people in Britain want to get folded mat boards.)
Really - he asks, staring down at the flat package. It doesn't look like it's more than 36 inches.
He has a tape measure and insists on measuring it anyway.
He looks up at me with watery defeated eyes.
You're right, he says. This is 40 inches around. Parcel post air-mail.
I hand him the multi-page form and he begins stamping each copy.
Anything else, he asks - just to annoy me. Any stamps, any envelopes?
He forces me to say, nothing else. If there was something else I would have told him - no?
And he puts the sticker on someone yells from the line: Hey! Put on more clerks! Put on more clerks!
Coat in hand, I turn and walk slowly past the snaking line. That's it for me. I'm coughing and sweaty - but I've done my bit for the day.
9 comments:
the archive links are screwing with the width of the blog...
besides that, every postal office in NYC seems to be like that.
understaffed, overheated and über-crowded
No. This is the worst one.
Let me know if the archives are still messin' with your browser; looks okay in IE and FF on the PC.
FEDERAL EXPRESS IS WAY too expensive for international orders. And I mean WAY TOO EXPENSIVE. I use them for most of my domestic stuff and would love to use them for international.
Dave, it's fine now...
A 16x20, to England; that could be mine! Nice to know Post Office's are just as hopeless in the US as they are in the UK.
allan,
yep. that's yours. i swear, there was almost a riot there today. normally, that place gets on my nerves - but when you aren't feeling well it's a nightmare.
to send the same package to you via Fedex would be about $60. Your postage was $25 and should be there in a week or less.
Now - if the width + length is less than 36 inches - the cost is about $12.
My God, David, Danielle Dube here. . .this just reminds me of our Polk Street PO here in Sf, the problem is that no matter what time of day it is the line is 20 deep--even at odd times of that day, 1:23. . .who in the hell is shipping 19 boxes to Burma at this time of day--and the same 4 clerks one day from walking in front of a bus. Hell. Just hell, we try to use the atm of post offices but of course it does not do international (well, not correctly).
I thought I had it figured out one day when I arrived at 10:25 a.m. and the place was empty. Next day it was hell at 10:25.
The automated machine is great - but it doesn't do international. I suspect that there is a way to have a postal employee come to your house and do a pickup through their web site, but I'm haven't figured out how yet.
I guess it's the same way everywhere. I try to use the experience as a Zen exercise - breathe deeply - and all that but I don't do well on lines and by the time I get to the counter I'm more into slapping someone on the forehead. Maybe someday I will. Nothing hard - just a gentle rap. I believe that is the appropriate zen answer anyway.
Dave,
Sometimes I wonder just how Postal Services come to their prices. Outrageous as far as I'm concerned. I recently purchased some ink cartridges from the US, the postage was $40 and I had to pay another $60 to UPS when it arrived! $100 for postage, wow, unbelievable.
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