on 11-22-2024 03:54 PM
Now that the Canada Post strike is dragging its first week (with no resolution in the horizon), I have four orders coming from the US that, unfortunately, didn't make it on time. And they have been left without any updates, over one week now.
Not sure if they are going to leave them there sitting, waiting for things to get back to normal here. But...if they are still in the US, why isn't eBay trying to find alternative carriers for the last mile leg of the delivery? Is it just to save money?
Any other Canadian buyers in the same boat?
Now they have an update:
"
11-25-24
Canada Post advises that the national strike continues. All inbound mail to Canada is still being accepted at the airports but there is no movement of mail in Canada. International items received as of November 15 are being held in secure containers and have not been processed. As such, no scans of any sort are available at this time, including item-level and receptacle scans. Once service resumes, items will be inducted, processed, and delivered in a first-in, first out (FIFO) basis, and as quickly as possible. Customers can expect delays as Canada Post manages volumes and stabilizes its operations. Countries can consult canadapost.ca/update to receive regular updates on any service disruptions."
Now that USPS has provided official word on this, the eIS carriers that use Canada Post for delivery within Canada (such as Asendia or DHL Global Mail) have something to react to.
I've noticed recently that the US listings I've looked at where eIS is the stated forwarding/shipping method only have the "duties and taxes paid at checkout" option, which suggests to me that they're going to be handled by carriers that generally don't use the postal system. Not sure what happens if the item ends up shipping to a remote/rural location that would see a couriered item handed off to Canada Post for the last leg. Changing the postal code for delivery doesn't seem to affect the shipping rate or the item's availability, so I suspect that the sites' coding isn't sophisticated enough to pick up on that for eIS shipments.