I encountered an absurd amount of supreme stupidity yesterday. While Paul and I were at Wal-Mart to pick up a few things (namely the shirts and headphones), I realized I'd forgotten my reusable grocery bags. Wal-Mart had some for sale by the register, and, hey... they're only a buck, and I only have 5, anyway. I can stock up. So I hand it to the clerk, she rings it up... and bags it and my purchases in a plastic grocery bag.
Yes, she bagged my reusable bag. In a disposable bag.
The cashier must not have realized what the bags were for. I always ask explicitly (when i manage to remember my canvas bags)... You can't always expect people to be up to par on environmental issues That's pretty silly though. Sometimes when I go grocery shopping with my canvas bags and I tell the cashier I don't need their plastic bags, they just kind of.... stare..... at me until I start putting things in my bags, then they get the point. It's just an unfamiliar concept to some people.
I saw those the last time I was there and laughed. The idea of walmart pushing sustainability just strikes me as, um, sorta funny. Actually now that I think about it, maybe I should get one - a way to poignantly remind myself of why I am not buying everything I see anymore.
Putting the bag IN A BAG - too funny! Thanks for sharing!
You have to think about it. That is what they are used to doing. It's a habit. Ring the item, bag it and do it again and again. The cashier probably wasn't really thinking about it. Can't say I may not have done it myself. I know for a fact that there needs to be more emphasis on customer service.
And... WalMart is making strides in sustainability. They are doing all kinds of things to become greener and encouraging their employees to do things too.
This is so funny, especially since I'm working on crocheting market bags from some hideous shiny cord I bought at a liquidator store a while back. Some are green and some are yellow, and they were super cheap. They obviously were left over ends from some industrial purpose. I couldn't imagine what they had been used for.
This stuff is horrible to crochet with, because it seems supple, but is really rather stiff and hard on the fingers. It's making great market bags (finished one and am working on another). They're so strong I could probably carry bowling balls in them, but my hands hurt after crocheting for about ten minutes, so they are taking forever.
I have the bag that my great-grandmother used in Romania and Germany pre-WWII. It's great, it looks like a dark red leather wallet until you open it up and there comes this bag. I don't use it, but I love having it.
And I thought that this thread was going to be about the evils of Wal-Mart. I'm still glad I haven't shopped there in years.
I've gotten the "evil's of Walmart and Sam's Club" lecture from friends, but when they pay all of my bills they can tell me where to shop.
My husband and I are on a very tight budget as we're both on disability.
Whenever possible, we buy from charity thrift stores, yard sales... We start our reguluar grocery and household shopping at a Mom & Pop liquidation store (they get healthfood and gourmet shop as well as typical grocery store overruns, and sell at about 1/5 - 1/10 of retail). An oriental grocery is another stop, as they sell some local produce at a great price. Aldi a discount grocery is often a stop, but for many things we do shop Walmart and Sam's club, because there isn't an affordable alternative.
When I went on Medicare, I found that my prescription costs for one month was nearly Medicare's allottment for the entire year. I went to the local pharmacies (big franchises and privately owned) with a list of my prescriptions and asked the pharmacists to give me a price list and suggestions for cheaper alternatives that I could request my doctor to prescribe instead. Every pharmacist told me it would take a few days and promised to mail me the results (except for the Sam's club pharmacist, she told me she could do it right away if I could wait a few minutes). Of the rest, only Walmart followed through and mailed me the results, and of the private pharmacies, two "lost" my list. Our current pharmacy, I found out charged a "cash" price that was half what they charged insurances, but since it had to be submitted to the Part D insurance there was no way to give me the "cash" price until after I had exceeded the Medicare maximum. Sam's Club was the cheapest (by FAR), and that's what we went with. By buying the Sam's Club $100 membership, I was able to cut my prescription costs by 70% right off the top. The pharmacist was amazingly helpful and would find ways to get me even larger discounts (such as coupons and rebates from the drug reps), and helped me discover that my NSAID was causing my asthma (allowing me to cut another $450 from my monthly drug costs). She also suggested buying several of my medications at double doses and cutting the pills in half (it's crazy that most drugs are the same, or nearly the same price regardless of the dose).
As a result, I went from a reluctant Walmart/Sam's Club shopper to a vocal advocate, especially in regard to their pharmacies and customer service.
As a result, I went from a reluctant Walmart/Sam's Club shopper to a vocal advocate, especially in regard to their pharmacies and customer service.
It's so nice to hear someone tell the goods of the company. So many people think the company is bad because all they hear is negative. I'm glad you have had such a positive experience.
I always ask explicitly (when i manage to remember my canvas bags)... You can't always expect people to be up to par on environmental issues That's pretty silly though. Sometimes when I go grocery shopping with my canvas bags and I tell the cashier I don't need their plastic bags, they just kind of.... stare..... at me until I start putting things in my bags, then they get the point. It's just an unfamiliar concept to some people.
It think it would be very bad if this was an "unfamiliar concept" to some people - especially to cashiers. Yes, I can imagine that part of is probably habit because they have been using the disposable plastic bags for years and years .... but these days, when so many customers bring their own canvas bags (and pretty much every chain sells these adorned with their logo) it is not inexcusable for a cashier not to realize what the bag is for.
I have to admit I still sometimes forget to bring the canvas bag with me when I go grocery shopping, but for the most part, I bring it with me. However, I still have to tell the bagger to put "as much as possible" into the canvas bag, they tend to put too few items in there and then they proceed to shove the rest into the disposable ones. My neverending beef is that they do not utilize the plastic bags to their own potential and leave them half empty. After all,who CARRIES the groceries home these days? Pretty much everybody comes in a car.