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by hussyinterrupted Posted Wed May 16, 2012 @ 12:51 PM
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You're going to get a lot of "Read the label" responses. There is a warning about the liquid causing damage on the label.
But I actually agree with you. I've seen a ton of complaints about this very issue and I think that if the company is aware that their product is causing damage to a significant amount of customers, it's a smart move to change the formula to make it a little less corrosive. Warning label or not.
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by SuzieCat Posted Wed May 16, 2012 @ 9:48 AM
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There is a VERY exclusive condo community in a downtown neighborhood
here. I am talking 350K for a condo.
One of the local news stations has done at least two reports on
abandoned shopping cart in the neighborhood.
This affluent people are LAZY. They dont want to take their car two
blocks to the grocery, so they take the carts home then just leave
them sit in condo parking spaces and near dumpsters
The two closest stores round up the carts a couple times a week but
the issue is never ending
Some people think the world revolves around them
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by PepperElf Posted Tue May 15, 2012 @ 2:10 PM
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Something the customers tho stole these carts should also follow.
They're the real issue. If they didn't steal the carts in the first place then you wouldn't have this problem.
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I feel your pain. Guests at my motel like to bring over shopping carts from the store across the street (and sometimes from the store a mile up the road!). When I call, they cheerfully say they'll pick them up within a few days. I'll gather all the carts from around our property into one location to make it easy, but they never pick them up. Ever. Eventually, the collection gets large enough that I'll load them into Hubby's truck and drive them back. We then get weird looks when we're in their parking lot unloading shopping carts from the back of a pick-up...
It'd be nice if they had someone on cart retrieval once a week, and if they gave them a truck. I've spoken with employees who've had to walk 2-3 miles to get a cart, and then had to push it back by hand. It made them grumpy, and it doesn't seem cost-effective to pay for that much labor for one cart. If that's how they do it every time, I can see why they don't like sending people out to pick up the carts.
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How about YOU be a good neighbor and return them?
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by tali Posted Fri May 11, 2012 @ 6:46 PM
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That happened at our local grocery store. We were missing about 30 carts. That translates into about $9000. A crew was gotten together, with the districts truck and did a neighborhood round up. The offenders were spoken to and asked to bring them back on their returning trip. You know what? It worked.
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by Peggy T. Posted Wed May 16, 2012 @ 4:04 PM
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Yes, I'm aware of the "citizen's arrest" option, but I don't want to end up on the evening news bulletin.
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