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by tali Posted Wed February 23, 2011 @ 3:53 PM
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How did this pan out?? Details, please!
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by sarahsmile Posted Wed February 16, 2011 @ 10:01 AM
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You owning the house or Walgreens'?
I'll bet when you first looked at that house you probably thought *cool, right next to a Walgreens' and I can walk over there at time day or night.
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by John W. Posted Tue February 15, 2011 @ 3:59 AM
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Although I work for CVS and not Walgreens I believe I am pretty knowladgable about this issue.
First to adress the landlord issue. If the Walgreens in in a building or strip that they do not own but instead lease then it is the landlords responsiblity to maintain the parkinglots and the landscape, unless it is specifically stated otherwise in the lease.
In this case the first thing that the commentor did was contact the Walgreens manager. This is exactly what they should have done. The amount of time that it took the plow company to come back the first time is understandable considering the storm that they were cleaning up. Although they made it worse. At this point going back to the Walgreens was also the right move but they should have gotten Walgreens corporate number and called and talked to someone there. If possible they should have also gotten the plow companies number and called them as well. No matter how much store personel complain things do not get put into motion quickly unless corporate is involved. I was at my CVS store the night of this same storm and I called to get our parking lot plowed at 3pm and they did not arrive untill 8pm dispited repeated calls, I am sure the same problems plague the managers at Walgreens.
When it comes to people blocking your driveway everyone else is correct, you should have called the police. At another store near where I live there is a driveway that is only accessable through the parking lot. At this location there has been incedents with people parking infront of the driveway the only thing the managers can do is ask the customer to move. In this case the manager could also ask people to move but only the police can make people move.
I hope you do not have any further issues with the store. Good Luck.
Any questions or comments please contact me at jhnsmit@msn.com
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by lilydarling Posted Thu February 10, 2011 @ 8:16 AM
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Please let us know if and how this was resolved. I'm very curious now!
(P.S. I hope you called the police)
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Rowdy, stop making this the "landlord's" problem.
First of all, we don't know that there IS a landlord.
Second, who cares? Walgreen's is the business, they have certain responsibilities to their customers and neighbors. Statutorily.
This manager just either is lying to the LW, or he's too much ofa wimp to talk tough to the plowing company.
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I agree
by Lisa H. Wed February 9, 2011 @ 3:13 PM
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by PepperElf Posted Mon February 7, 2011 @ 1:46 PM
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Oh. and as for the customers blocking your way.
yes, call the police. that IS obstruction of traffic.
Although you are rightfully angry at walgreens for the snow piles... the stupid stuff their customers do is another matter.
since the people aren't parking on walgreen property, the store doesn't have the authority to tell them to move.
this is where the police can step in and have the cars towed - at the expense of the drivers of course. you can't always fix stupid, but sometimes if they get hit in the wallet enough they figure out "o gee we can't park here"
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No, the LW should not have to contact the plowing company at all. That's not her problem. It's Walgreen's problem.
She should inform them that the next time it happens, she will be hiring the local kid to shovel her out, at $50/hour, and then bill Walgreen's. If they refuse to pay, take 'em to small claims court.
I also think that she should enlist some help from friends/neighbors and pile up as much snow in front of the main entrance to Walgreen's while they're closed.
THis Walgreen's manager isn't "nice." He's just ACTING nice to get the LW to go away. If he were nice, he'd call the plowing company and tell them to KNOCK IT THE FRAK OFF.
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although
by PepperElf Mon February 7, 2011 @ 1:55 PM
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by PepperElf Posted Mon February 7, 2011 @ 1:32 PM
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Have you considered calling the police?
I believe blocking a road or someone's driveway like that may fall under "obstruction of traffic".
Perhaps a word from the city might light a fire under their buttocks.
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but
by Lisa H. Mon February 7, 2011 @ 10:07 AM
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Wow!
by jeishere Tue February 8, 2011 @ 9:13 AM
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soooo
by jeishere Wed February 9, 2011 @ 9:53 AM
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by jeishere Posted Mon February 14, 2011 @ 9:45 AM
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We're not talking about liability, we're talking about a little human decency. Even though I'm not required to shovel the sidewalks in front of my house (and never use it in the winter), I do so kids don't have to walk on the street or on icy sidewalks when going to the bus.
Even though your not liable for lots, you'd think you'd at least salt cross walks or handicap stalls. But who cares if someone gets hurt and there was something you could have easily done to prevent it, just as long as you are not liable....
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If I do as you mentioned, and someone slips on it, I am held liable.
And people do slip on the salt.
Its the same story as the good samaritan that helps after an auto accident. He tries to do the right thing by helping the injured person, but ends up doing something wrong, by trying to help, and ends up being sued because it.
Good intentions, yes but put yourself as being liable.
Ive dealt with hundreds of them, I know what I'm liable for and not liable for. I'm not going to voluntarily take on liability, that is why we pay rent.
Good Day
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by Toma H. Posted Sun February 6, 2011 @ 12:47 PM
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We DID ask for the number to contact the plow service and were told they could not give that information to us. The General Manager admitted there was an error in the way the lot was plowed and advised us the issue would be taken care of. So, when someone states they will take care of an issue, I expect them to follow through. It is a city violation to block an entrance to an alley, whether you are a business or a resident, so by Walgreen's not making sure the company THEY EMPLOYED did the job correctly, the issue IS with them.
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Sounds like your beef is with the plow company.
You should have gotten their number.
Regardless of what walgreens said, the plow company is responsible.
Your beef is with them. Walgreens is trying to make you happy by helping, but they can only do so much.
Good Day
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by tali Posted Sun February 6, 2011 @ 11:23 AM
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I think you should make a police report. Just to get this on record. Also, it may speed things up a bit. The folks parking on the right of way may get tickets. Every time someone parks there, call the police. Maybe they could "rope" it off. Keep records of all inconviences. Especially if you are made late to work or miss work altogether due to this circumstance.
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by olie Posted Sun February 6, 2011 @ 12:19 AM
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I'd be extremely, ummmmm, unhappy. What would happen if you called the police and/or fire department to get their take on the situation?
There must be some ordinance violation here, or some fire law that is being broken.
You know darned well that if the situation were reversed--if "your" snow was blocking Walgreen's access--there'd be threats of fines or jail time.
Keep documenting your attempts to correct the problem.
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by Maegan Z. Posted Sat February 5, 2011 @ 9:06 PM
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Oh this would make me so angry!
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This is an issue for the snow plow service - your best bet would be to ask for the name of the company that does the plowing and call them directly with the complaint.
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by Matt M. Posted Sat February 5, 2011 @ 5:51 PM
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Sounds like your issue should be addressed to the plow service, not to Walgreens. I would get the plow service's number and contact them directly.
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