Why do people leave shopping carts in the parking lot?

I think I've only not returned a cart twice (I'm pretty sure it was twice, it may have only been once, but I'll go with twice). Both were lack of coral and weather related.

It's really not a problem around me. I rarely see carts left out, and I figure it's mostly from people with children, mobility issues, etc. I used to work retail and they guys that got the carts never complained about strays, it was part of their job.
 
So what about people like me that have stores where you have to insert a quarter for a cart and you cannot get it back until you return you cart to the corral or front of the store?

I have managed successfuly for 20 years to return my cart each and every time. I have managed to do it when I was alone, when I had 1 (who is a child with special needs), 2 and all 3 children with me. I have returned it in the rain, heat and snow.

My children have not melted in the rain, passed out in the heat, been run over, kidnapped or traumatized because I return my cart :lmao: :lmao: :lmao:

And I say you have NOT returned your cart each and every time because no one does something always and never. I never said children would melt in the rain or be traumatized, do not put words in my mouth. If you want to feel superior over cart returns, more power to you. Must be a very sad life to be sanctimonious over cart returns for gawd sake. People on occassion do not return carts and it is being made out to be up there with murder and torture. So many Jesus Christs running around the DIS board.:sad2:
 
I can't believe that this thread is still active. But here I go adding another comment. :)

I think that we get the picture now. Most people return carts, some don't. It's too dangerous for kids to help return a cart but it's safe for kids when you first arrive at the store. Bad weather is a factor. People in pain have a justifiable reason for not returning them. Damage caused by carts is considered no big deal to some people.

I did go to our local Target yesterday and saw no carts loose with several in the corrals. Does anyone besides me actually look around for rogue carts now? ;)
 
The only snowflakes I see are the kids too delicate to walk the cart back with their mother. To leave a cart in the parking lot is lazy. If you are capable of getting the cart, you are capable of putting it back. There is no excuse.


And it is over the top sanctimonious and ludicrous to equate an occassional leaving of a cart out of a corral as laziness. Entering a store in a comfortable building and grabbing a cart is not the same as coming out a couple of hours later to thunder and lighting and a downpour and trying to get your child and groceries in a car and return a cart at a good distance is completely different. There is no excuse for the sad pitiful few on this board who feel the need to insult and denigrate people over stupid cart parking, cause hey, someone's car getting a ding is so much more important. I have a new car and I am not worried about it. I know, let us collect names and addresses of us that have not on rare occassions put up their carts and you can come and take us out execution style and do the church lady dance. :rolleyes:
 

I return my cart if it is convenient for me. Meaning the corral is close. Otherwise I push it up and out of the way. The supermarkets here employ "cart boys." Their job is to round up the carts. I don't really see myriads of carts all over the lots here. So I don't think it is a problem. As for the quarter for the cart, some stores used to have that here and some still do. If the weather is awful etc. or the corral is too far away I would leave the quarter and just consider it rent or a raok.;)

Grocery stores have raised their prices, tell you to check out your own groceries (at no discount), bag it yourself, bring it to the car yourself and bring the cart back. Not for nothing but the prices keep going up and up and up and customer service keeps getting worse. When I was a kid the checker bagged your groceries and in some places they would put it in your car. Now you can barely get the cashier to pay attention to your order when they are ringing it up.
Sorry, it just annoys me.
 
I can't believe that this thread is still active. But here I go adding another comment. :)

I think that we get the picture now. Most people return carts, some don't. It's too dangerous for kids to help return a cart but it's safe for kids when you first arrive at the store. Bad weather is a factor. People in pain have a justifiable reason for not returning them.

I did go to our local Target yesterday and saw no carts loose with several in the corrals. Does anyone besides me actually look around for rogue carts now? ;)


Carts are mainly in the store when you get them for goodness sake and who said it was too dangerous at all times? Carts are returned, sometimes it is better because of various conditions and factors to not. No one said if one had kids they never returned carts, just that there where times when somethng trumped returning a cart (although a couple did say they just did not return carts). I have to say we mainly have the opposite problem at our SW, the corrals for the carts are so full they are spilling out into the road.
 
And it is over the top sanctimonious and ludicrous to equate an occassional leaving of a cart out of a corral as laziness. Entering a store in a comfortable building and grabbing a cart is not the same as coming out a couple of hours later to thunder and lighting and a downpour and trying to get your child and groceries in a car and return a cart at a good distance is completely different. There is no excuse for the sad pitiful few on this board who feel the need to insult and denigrate people over stupid cart parking, cause hey, someone's car getting a ding is so much more important. I have a new car and I am not worried about it. I know, let us collect names and addresses of us that have not on rare occassions put up their carts and you can come and take us out execution style and do the church lady dance. :rolleyes:

:lmao:
I do have to agree. When I saw that someone posted that those that don't return carts are lazy and stupid I just shook my head. :sad2:
 
Carts are mainly in the store when you get them for goodness sake and who said it was too dangerous at all times? Carts are returned, sometimes it is better because of various conditions and factors to not. No one said if one had kids they never returned carts, just that there where times when somethng trumped returning a cart (although a couple did say they just did not return carts). I have to say we mainly have the opposite problem at our SW, the corrals for the carts are so full they are spilling out into the road.
I was only referencing a few in my comment about kids.

I don't always return carts. If I don't I make sure that they're hooked over a curb or in some out of the way secure spot. I only get a bit annoyed when one is in the middle of a parking space or behind a car.

But seriously, is a rogue shopping cart really this controversial?
 
25 pages for a shopping cart thread?

Perhaps the toilet seat thread. Could that go 25 pages? :rotfl2:

Do stem cell threads get this long even after someone calls the use of embryonic stem cells murder?:scared1:
 
How many kids do you have Daisy?

Here's my excuse for not returning my cart: I don't feel like it.

People really, none of us has to explain ourselves to a bunch of strangers. There is not 1 person on this thread that at one time or another has not returned a cart for whatever reason. 1x not returning invalidates all the superiority because as some have pointed out-there's no excuse.

I have 3 kids. I used to haul all of them to the store with me. Two were walking age and one was a baby. Somehow I still managed to get that cart back where it belonged. To not do so is rude and lazy. I have always returned the cart. Always. Whether rain, slush, kids. If I borrow something I put it back. You use it, you put it back when you are done with it. That is the way my parents raised me. Nothing to do with superiority. Everything to do with what is right.
 
People who don't return carts = child molesters, and Osama:sad2: Who knew?
Who said that? :confused3

I did NOT say it was incredibly dangerous. I said that endangering children over anally returning a cart because that makes you a special snowflake is stupid.

Should people do there best to return a cart to the corral? Yes, but stuff happens and it does not make someone lazy or immoral not to.
I don't think anyone here has said they return their carts because that makes them a "special snowflake". Nor have they said they endanger their children by doing so. They have said they return them because they get in the way of parking spots and can roll away and damage cars. Seriously, I can't imagine taking my kids shopping with me if the parking lots in my area were that dangerous. I would get a sitter or do it when their dad was home, even if I had to shop at midnight (which I used to do sometimes when they were small, not because of any danger, but because it was easier on my sanity!;) )
The only snowflakes I see are the kids too delicate to walk the cart back with their mother. To leave a cart in the parking lot is lazy. If you are capable of getting the cart, you are capable of putting it back. There is no excuse.
:thumbsup2 to the first part of your post. But I do think there are good excuses occasionally.

How many kids do you have Daisy?

Here's my excuse for not returning my cart: I don't feel like it.

People really, none of us has to explain ourselves to a bunch of strangers. There is not 1 person on this thread that at one time or another has not returned a cart for whatever reason. 1x not returning invalidates all the superiority because as some have pointed out-there's no excuse.
Then why do so many people keep doing so? ;)
 
I have 3 kids. I used to haul all of them to the store with me. Two were walking age and one was a baby. Somehow I still managed to get that cart back where it belonged. To not do so is rude and lazy. I have always returned the cart. Always. Whether rain, slush, kids. If I borrow something I put it back. You use it, you put it back when you are done with it. That is the way my parents raised me. Nothing to do with superiority. Everything to do with what is right.

You are my hero. :worship: ;)
 
Mouse House Mama said:
Grocery stores have raised their prices, tell you to check out your own groceries (at no discount), bag it yourself, bring it to the car yourself and bring the cart back.
Forty five years ago, ONE supermarket here had an arrangement where, after you paid for your groceries and rolled your cart to the inside front of the store, and drove up to the outside, employees put your bags on a conveyor belt and sent them outside. My parents never shopped there. Too expensive - and this is, and was, an average suburban community with oretty average incomes.

Stores - all stores, with and without carts, grocery and not - have raised prices. There's inflation, there's the cost of transporting goods (which should have gone down, but hasn't), there's the cost of transporting the goods to make the goods... increased pay via minimum wage laws (and, sure, merit pay, annual COL increases...); there are higher property taxes, higher rents... those higher grocery prices have to cover a LOT, and still remain competitive enough to draw customers.

No store I know tells customers to check out their own purchases, although many do have a few registers that allow customers to do this - vast difference. Bag it yourself? At the self-check counters, yeah; at the cashier-operated registers - never, except by my choice (in, granted, my experience - I tend not to stick around and bag other customers' items).

Bring it to the car yourself? Again, I've never known a store that provided employees to transport customers' carts/purchases to the vehicles on a regular basis, in many, many years of shopping. Some will offer under certain circumstances, and most will comply if asked.

So, really, in forty-five years, the only thing that's changed in my experience is that many stores now provide relatively convenient cart drop-off areas, hoping that customers will stop leaving carts at random throughout the lot.

SO much emphasis is placed on do-it-yourself - heck, there's an entire television network dedicated to that POF - why is returning a shopping cart to a safe area so controversial?
 
Forty five years ago, ONE supermarket here had an arrangement where, after you paid for your groceries and rolled your cart to the inside front of the store, and drove up to the outside, employees put your bags on a conveyor belt and sent them outside. My parents never shopped there. Too expensive - and this is, and was, an average suburban community with oretty average incomes.

Stores - all stores, with and without carts, grocery and not - have raised prices. There's inflation, there's the cost of transporting goods (which should have gone down, but hasn't), there's the cost of transporting the goods to make the goods... increased pay via minimum wage laws (and, sure, merit pay, annual COL increases...); there are higher property taxes, higher rents... those higher grocery prices have to cover a LOT, and still remain competitive enough to draw customers.

No store I know tells customers to check out their own purchases, although many do have a few registers that allow customers to do this - vast difference. Bag it yourself? At the self-check counters, yeah; at the cashier-operated registers - never, except by my choice (in, granted, my experience - I tend not to stick around and bag other customers' items).

Bring it to the car yourself? Again, I've never known a store that provided employees to transport customers' carts/purchases to the vehicles on a regular basis, in many, many years of shopping. Some will offer under certain circumstances, and most will comply if asked.

So, really, in forty-five years, the only thing that's changed in my experience is that many stores now provide relatively convenient cart drop-off areas, hoping that customers will stop leaving carts at random throughout the lot.

SO much emphasis is placed on do-it-yourself - heck, there's an entire television network dedicated to that POF - why is returning a shopping cart to a safe area so controversial?

I remember when I was younger that the store my mom always shopped at someone would come and bag the groceries. Often, they would ask if she needed help to her car. The store I shop at, someone will bag your groceries and if I need help to my car, I ask that person if they would help me to my car. They don't ask me. I have never been turned down when I ask, and one time on a very busy day, the manager of the store was bagging and helped me to my car.

I agree why so controversial about a shopping cart...we all have our ways of dealing with things. I do understand though why the stores that do have the cart corrals here have the big signs that say they are not responsible for damage to cars from carts left in the parking lot though. They would need an employee just to handle car damage done from errant shopping carts!

Kelly
 
My mother has a bad back, so when were out we have to drive around until we find a parking space with a cart. she needs to lean on it to get into the store, where she transfers to one of those electric ones.
 
Heck, if I paid a quarter, I wouldn't even feel the least bit guilty for leaving my cart! And if it wasn't close by, there's no way I'l bringing the cart back for just a quarter! :lmao:

Really, post this on the Budget Board as a way to save money for a Disney trip. 2-3 quarters/week really add up!:lmao:

Then why do so many people keep doing so? ;)

Guilt I guess because some posters are all about judging others. Me-no guilt because I'm not about to allow a bunch of strangers to dictate to me.:thumbsup2
 
No store I know tells customers to check out their own purchases, although many do have a few registers that allow customers to do this - vast difference. Bag it yourself? At the self-check counters, yeah; at the cashier-operated registers - never, except by my choice (in, granted, my experience - I tend not to stick around and bag other customers' items).

Bring it to the car yourself? Again, I've never known a store that provided employees to transport customers' carts/purchases to the vehicles on a regular basis, in many, many years of shopping. Some will offer under certain circumstances, and most will comply if asked.

So, really, in forty-five years, the only thing that's changed in my experience is that many stores now provide relatively convenient cart drop-off areas, hoping that customers will stop leaving carts at random throughout the lot.

SO much emphasis is placed on do-it-yourself - heck, there's an entire television network dedicated to that POF - why is returning a shopping cart to a safe area so controversial?

Intestering how stores differ - our store has baggers at every checkout - I've never seen anyone bag their own groceries, and usually about 15 lines are open at a time. If you need help, there are guys there specifically for carry-out - there's announcements every 5 minutes or so. I've used this service many times, since I have a large family, and usually require more than one cart. It's an old store that has expanded - 3 parking lots, one across the street, and the corrals are few and far between. That is why there are several guys out there, all day, gathering up the carts.
 
Here's my excuse for not returning my cart: I don't feel like it.
15 posts on the subject in 24 pages and we finally know the real reason! You know ... I am surprisingly more satisfied with that explanation than the "my child will be endangered" or "they have people to collect the abandoned carts" reasoning.
 
15 posts on the subject in 24 pages and we finally know the real reason! You know ... I am surprisingly more satisfied with that explanation than the "my child will be endangered" or "they have people to collect the abandoned carts" reasoning.

I'm not minimizing other people's reasons. My daughter is 15, so that excuse is not valid for me. In our town there are people whose job is to collect carts in parking lots. I like to help so because I'm lazy AND stupid and because I just don't feel like bringing it to the cart corral, I leave my cart.:thumbsup2
 
I just push the cart to anyone passing by and say.. "Here you go. It's yours now" with a smile. They say.. "Oh.. thanks." :rotfl:
 





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