This isn't the USPS, and it isn't on the USPS.Default wrote: ↑Fri May 25, 2018 11:47 pmReally depends on when Amazon drops them off at the station. If they get them there early enough for the clerks to sort them out to the routes (say, by 9am, or 930, depending on station management), they go out that day. If Amazon shows up, say 10, we are already out on the street. As I have mentioned before, none of our shipping partners want usps to look good.Blackhawk wrote: ↑Fri May 25, 2018 11:16 am More and more often I see companies (including Amazon) using the USPS intermediary services. I despise them. The usual timeline is:
Day 1: Package is marked as shipped. Tracking number is given. USPS says, "Waiting for package."
Day 2: USPS still waiting for package. I dig deeper and find they used an intermediary.
Day 7 through Day 11 - somewhere in there, a week or more after it was shipped, the intermediary hands the package to the USPS.
Two days later the package is delivered.
These services turn two day shipping into two week shipping with no tracking. Every time.
This is the seller turning it over to an intermediary company who then sits on it for a full week to ten days before giving it to the USPS. Had the seller just given it directly to the USPS, it would show up in three days instead of two weeks.
/edit - one of the companies that is doing this is DHL, by the way. Apparently people hated them so much that they quit doing residential deliveries altogether. Now they just collect the packages and pass them on to the USPS. I forget the names of the others - there are several of these 'shipping partners' that don't bother to actually pass on the packages in a reasonable amount of time.
UPS Mail Innovations and FedEx Smartpost do the same thing, but they typically deliver to the local USPS right away, which is fine.