Sunday, June 25, 2017

Honestly getting rid of broken glass



For several weeks, A.L., a reader from Massachusetts, was looking for old-fashioned penny candy containers she could use to hold candy at a summer family event at her house. She checked several independent retail shops in her hometown first, but had no luck. Then she moved on to check some larger chain stores to see what they had to offer. Still nothing.

Nevertheless, she persisted. Finally, she found just what she was looking for from an online store.

A.L. needed five containers, but if she ordered six she would get free shipping. Since the cost of the additional container just about equaled what the shipping cost would have been, she ordered six and, over the next few days, waited for her package to arrive.

When the package did arrive, the containers were exactly what she ordered, except that two of the glass containers were shattered and broken. She called customer service and was assured that two replacement containers would be sent. When she asked if she had to return the broken containers, the customer service representative told her just to dispose of them herself.

"So now I have a box of broken glass that I need to dispose of," writes A.L.

Since rummagers regularly make their way through her recycling and trash looking for returnable bottles and cans, A.L. is concerned that simply tossing out the broken containers might result in a rummager or a sanitation worker getting cut. She wants to keep the large box the containers came in so she can store the containers when they are not in use.

A.L. knows that there are a couple of dumpsters in her neighborhood on sites where houses are being renovated.

"Do I mark the barrel I put the containers in 'broken glass?' " A.L. asks, "or do I use one of my neighbors' dumpsters to dump the glass even though I haven't asked permission?"

Her municipality might have some specific regulation about disposing of broken glass, but since it is not hazardous waste, A.L. should focus on disposing of the glass in the safest way possible.

Placing broken glass directly into her trash barrel doesn't seem the safest route even if she does mark the barrel "broken glass." Better might be to place the broken glass in a paper bag and then securely duct tape the bag shut and perhaps put that bag into another bag for even more safety. She then should be able to put the glass out with her recycling.

If A.L. does decide to put the glass in a neighbors' dumpster, she should ask permission to use the dumpster. While others may freely toss trash into a neighboring dumpster, it still belongs to someone else.

It's good that A.L. is concerned about getting rid of broken glass without causing harm to others. The right thing is both to make sure that she disposes of it safely, but also to make sure to ask and receive permission if she plans to dispose of it on someone else's property. 

Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues.

Do you have ethical questions that you need answered? Send them to rightthing@comcast.net. 

Follow him on Twitter: @jseglin 

(c) 2017 JEFFREY L. SEGLIN. DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC.

Sunday, June 18, 2017

Should a customer eat the cost of not being loyal?



For years, M.R.M. had brought her car in for routine maintenance to a nearby family-owned garage. Whether it was for an oil change or a muffler repair, M.R.M. liked the work the mechanics there did and remained a loyal customer. The family actually ran its operations at two locations -- one five minutes from M.R.M.'s house and the other about a 20-minute drive away.

About a year ago, the family decided to consolidate its operations into the location that was further way from M.R.M.'s house. Still, she persisted in loyally taking her car in for maintenance as she needed it -- until about a week ago.

"I was overdue for an oil change and the weeks just got crazy with commitments and obligations," writes M.R.M. She kept putting off scheduling the oil change at her regular garage. Finally, she decided to schedule an appointment for an oil change at a gas station located about a mile from where she lived.

"I felt guilty for not being loyal, but I just wanted to get the oil change done," she writes. "I planned to take the car into my regular place for anything larger that might come up later."

On a recent morning, M.R.M. drove her car up to the garage, waited while the oil was being changed, paid the $60-something for the service, and left satisfied that she had bought herself about 40 minutes worth of travel time it would have taken to get to her old mechanic's shop.

"The car drove fine when I left the gas station," M.R.M. writes. But then she drove about an hour to keep an appointment. Still, no problem. After her appointment was over, she started her car and noticed that it lurched and sputtered a bit when she started the car up and also when she sat idle at a traffic light. It was fine when she was driving on the open road. Then, the engine light came on -- not blinking, but a solid light on her dashboard.

It was a Thursday afternoon. She called her regular mechanic, told him what was going on, and he agreed to fit her in on Friday morning if she could bring the car in early. He told her he had no way of knowing what was going on until she brought the car in.

When she dropped the car off, she told the mechanic she had had the oil changed at her local gas station, but that she could not think of anything else that she'd done differently.

It turns out that the gas station mechanics had not put the oil cap back on correctly, causing her to lose some oil and to need a new cap. Once her regular mechanic fixed those things and re-set the car's computer, she was all set at a cost of $140.

"Do I eat the cost and learn a lesson to remain loyal?" M.R.M. asks. "Or do I take the bill to the gas station and ask them to reimburse me for the expense?"

The gas station owner should do the right thing and compensate her for the cost of fixing his mistake. While M.R.M. might feel bad about not being loyal, having her oil changed at a new place is no sin, although she's decided that the extra drive time in the future is worth it. 

Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues. 

Do you have ethical questions that you need answered? Send them to rightthing@comcast.net. 

Follow him on Twitter: @jseglin 

(c) 2017 JEFFREY L. SEGLIN. DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC.