by Jenise » Sun Nov 21, 2021 2:46 pm
A friend and I were expecting wine deliveries from different sources this week--mine on Tuesday from California, hers on Tuesday from Walla Walla. It was not only understandable but expected that the chaos from flooding would make the promised ETAs undoable. The problem is what FedEx did, or didn't do, about the changes.
We both got our ETAs moved to Wednesday, which didn't seem likely either so again no big deal when hers moved to Thursday, and mine oddly just changed to the word "DELAYED" where the ETA would normally be indicated but still showed "On truck out for delivery" as it had since Tuesday. I think we can presume the latter also means "on truck for delivery when we can get it out of the parking lot" and should not be taken literally. In our case, the station is in the next county, and there's a big landslide in the hilly pass between us and the rest of my county is Water World. Although we both have FedEx accounts, neither of us received emails about any changes in status.
On Thursday night my friend, who had been home all day, left her porch lights on until after 8:00. No delivery. On Friday, she checked the status online for an update and found "Delivery attempted 7:32 p.m" the night before. Well, NO WAY. They were home, and no door tag was left. Oddly, another attempt was not scheduled for Friday.
On Friday my status was unchanged, still "DELAYED". Then around 5 p.m. I received an email from FedEx notifying me of an attempted delivery around 3 p.m. Again, NO WAY. We were here, and no door tag.
So on the one hand, no problem with the delay. I'm not in a hurry for this wine and it honestly couldn't be better weather (33-40F) for sitting outside in a parking lot or riding around in a truck that can't get to me. I'm totally okay with all that. We're in a disaster zone; there are medicines and a host of other things I don't know about that should get priority handling in these circumstances. What I'm not okay with is the claims of attempted delivery that obviously didn't in fact happen and the inconsistent and inadequate communication from FedEx. It's all electronic, right? They know where the packages are, they know where the trucks are, weather's fine and we're being patient.
So why the fake delivery attempts? Does it satisfy contractual obligations with the shipper irrespective of local conditions? Does it tick some box for performance measurement by the Burlington station? There must be something. If any of you know anyone who works at FedEx, I'd love to know the reasoning behind this.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov