Lisa M said:
I'm not advocating calling a lawyer, but a lawyer could make a case for anything... It could be pain and suffering for embarrassment.
But it does not appear the OP suffered embarrassment (this thread alone - and one would assume there would be at least one CVS associate on the DIS) would be strong evidence for the defendant that if anything, she's angry - not embarrassed.
ShiPooOwner said:
I almost totally disagree with what you are saying. As a loyal CVS customer and cardholder, I must be blind because I have never seen any customers march to the shelves and grab 12 bottles of anything. Yes, they probably exist, but out of all the CVS cardholders, they probably number 1%.
But you wouldn't see it. If there is a limit of four per customer, a customer with three different ECB cards would be more likely to go through the line three separate times, using a different card each time - than to march up to the counter with twelve bottles at one time and attempt/expect the cashier to process the three separate sales.
Disney*Dreamer said:
I would have been REALLY ticked if someone took my keys and cut something off of them. They should have just asked for them, then you could have explained that they were not yours.
Taking the keys, sure. Since CVS can scan the barcode while the customer holds the card (vs. he supermarket, where often the scanner is stationary and not within reach of the customer), there was no actual reason for the cashier to remove the keys from the OP's possession.
But the Extra Care cards belong to CVS. They should have ASKED for the other cards; possibly even refused to accept any ECB card from the OP.
Disneymom3304 said:
That CVS had no right to take her keys from her and cut up her cards.
Again, agreed - store employees had no right to remove the OP's keys from her possession by any kind of force. But the cards are, ultimately, CVS's to do with as they choose.
Disneymom3304 said:
WOW..I feel bad for you. I worked in retail for 9 years and only had a couple of bad experiences.
ShiPooOwner said:
Well, I do work retail as a matter of fact. I work in two hospital gift shops and will be heading to work at one of them today 2-7 P.M. Once again, I think you and your relative are stereotyping and exaggerating because from my personal experience working as a cashier, 99.9% of our customers are honest and fairminded people
Respectfully, it doesn't appear either of the quoted posters works/worked for CVS, and therefore would likely have no ECB experience from the retailer's point of view.
CajunDixie said:
If you want to get technical CVS cheats many of us when they do not give us the full amount of a mfg coupon off of our purchase yet they are reimbursed the full amount of the coupon plus many give an eight cent handling charge also.
When does that happen? The only reasonable time would be when the coupon is worth more than the item - for example, a dollar-off coupon where the item costs the customer only ninety-nine cents. If that's what you mean, it's not limited to CVS - no retailer will give you money back. Coupons have no cash value. If the manufacturer reimburses the retailer more than the item price, that's a bonus for the retailer. It really doesn't happen all that often - plus, companies reserve the right to audit any retailer whom they suspect of coupon fraud. Any fraud.