Dollar Tree carts with pole attached and senior citizens

your coin goes into a slot in the trolley handle which releases the trolley. To get your coin back you insert the trolley back into the corral, where a small chain link device is inserted which pushes your coin back out, but locks the trolley into the Corral
Thank you and video too great to see, here in the states people would be breaking into them stealing the money. The few stores I know of in the states that do make you pay a quarter for a buggy makes you come in and pay for one and bring your buggy back in to get your quarter too.
 
What keeps people from stealing them out of the corrals like that? If you have to pay a quarter to get a cart who do you pay to get your quarter back? I guess my question is if the purpose is to pay to get a cart to get you to bring it back to the store or corrals and people don't bring it back to store what is purpose of paying the quarter, people can still steal them.
Oh I love that y'all call them trolleys, over here they are carts or buggies, a trolley over here is something you catch on a street corner downtown to tour the town.
Here is how it works....Each cart has a coin slot on the handle bar. It also has a short chain that attaches to the next cart in the corral, when you return it. Put a 25 cent coin in the handle bar slot, and it releases the short chain. Go do your shopping. When you have loaded your stuff into your car, return the shopping cart to the corral, push the chain thingy into the next cart in the line, then remove your 25 cent coin. NO human attendant required.

The cost of finding and returning shopping carts is a big expense, so the supermarket companies, in conjunction with the municipalities, have introduced cart control systems, such as carts that have wheels that lock up, if you try to push them past the electronic barriers in the parking lot. The City of Mississauga ( population 850,000 people ) has a by law enforcement team that patrols the city, and if they find a shopping cart on city property, the store that owns the cart is fined $400 per cart. That encourages the retailers to make sure their carts are not leaving their property. JimB.
 

Thank you and video too great to see, here in the states people would be breaking into them stealing the money. The few stores I know of in the states that do make you pay a quarter for a buggy makes you come in and pay for one and bring your buggy back in to get your quarter too.
Just to point out.....The 25 cents that the customer inserts into the cart, is NOT staying there. So no one is going to break into a cart to get a 25 cent reward. Each customer puts in a coin, and later gets the same coin back. Its not like a piggy bank. Grin. JimB.
 
Remember when a nice young grocery bagger would take the groceries out to the car for you?
I think some of the nicer grocery stores still do. Maybe Publix or Harris Teeter?
yes I do remember that, we have local stores(3) that still have a person help the ones that need it take bags to their car which is unheard of in this day and time. I hear "carry out" a lot when we go to this one store.
 
Just to point out.....The 25 cents that the customer inserts into the cart, is NOT staying there. So no one is going to break into a cart to get a 25 cent reward. Each customer puts in a coin, and later gets the same coin back. Its not like a piggy bank. Grin. JimB.
it's not a quarter here in the UK..it's a whole pound coin....
 
Your a very nice person and I thank you for helping others. I do understand profit and loss I just find it odd they are losing a ton of money by keeping us out too but I guess that is their money.
Stores are not "keeping you out ". No one is standing at the door telling you that you can't come in the store. Your complaint is about their practice of controlling their valuable shopping carts. JimB.
 
Just to point out.....The 25 cents that the customer inserts into the cart, is NOT staying there. So no one is going to break into a cart to get a 25 cent reward. Each customer puts in a coin, and later gets the same coin back. Its not like a piggy bank. Grin. JimB.
Well it is staying there as long as the person is shopping and you would be surprised at what some people would do for 25Ā¢ lol lol . They are still spending tons of money on those coin things and electronic barriers and upkeep etc it just seems to me not to be cost effective to me and keeps a lot of people from shopping in their stores just my opinion.Thank you!
 
Stores are not "keeping you out ". No one is standing at the door telling you that you can't come in the store. Your complaint is about their practice of controlling their valuable shopping carts. JimB.
LOL and the value of there customers and the money they would be getting means nothing? Well we must agree to disagree. They are keeping me out, we both have walking issues and my husband uses a walker , my point is if there were a buggy in their lot I could get to or ask someone to get for me I could get it around to my husband and we could hold it and walk in and spend money in their store and there are many many many people just like us but like I said we will agree to disagree thank you.
 
All attempts to use those coin operated carts in NYC have met with dismal failure. Doesn't work here, the people soundly reject it.
 
LOL and the value of there customers and the money they would be getting means nothing? Well we must agree to disagree. They are keeping me out, we both have walking issues and my husband uses a walker , my point is if there were a buggy in their lot I could get to or ask someone to get for me I could get it around to my husband and we could hold it and walk in and spend money in their store and there are many many many people just like us but like I said we will agree to disagree thank you.
we have these disability scooters in UK supermarkets... hire them instore for free...

1200px-MotorCart.jpg
 
we have these disability scooters in UK supermarkets... hire them instore for free...

1200px-MotorCart.jpg
yes here in bigger stores like walmart but that does not get you "IN" the store from your car understand? How do people struggling to walk get "in" to get the scooter is my point. I guess they don't and with more people aging they are losing money.
 
yes here in bigger stores like walmart but that does not get you "IN" the store from your car understand? How do people struggling to walk get "in" to get the scooter is my point. I guess they don't and with more people aging they are losing money.
so lots of people with disabilities carry their own fold up mobility scooter in their car...

..and tbh with you, if you're too disabled to get from the car into the supermarket with an aid.. a scooter or some other help... it would be wiser to order online groceries and have them delivered.
 
You Brits are too tough on each other. 😁

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nope.. we're independent..lol... plus we've always used bags with handles to carry shopping, no need for flimsy paper bags to carry in our arms , so that another person has to do it for us.

Just a thought.. so if you have 50 people with bags at the checkout at the same time.. did they have to have 50 bag carriers ?:D
 
Remember when a nice young grocery bagger would take the groceries out to the car for you?
I think some of the nicer grocery stores still do. Maybe Publix or Harris Teeter?
When I lived in the Pacific Northwest there was a grocery chain, Rosauers, that was really good about this, at least at my Rosaurers, in my small Montana town where all the check out lines had busy baggers that carried or carted your groceries to your car, and it didn't matter if you were elderly or young and in prime physical condition. Baggers were coming and going, and at busy times, an assistant manager or even store manger, would bag and carry my groceries.

And they all seemed happy to do it. It was kind of an odd store policy, and there was never a loose cart left in the parking lot. The store must have had some kind of personality test employees needed to pass. I never shopped in the other stores. That was 20 years ago. I don't know if it has changed.
 
When I lived in the Pacific Northwest there was a grocery chain, Rosauers, that was really good about this, at least at my Rosaurers, in my small Montana town where all the check out lines had busy baggers that carried or carted your groceries to your car, and it didn't matter if you were elderly or young and in prime physical condition. Baggers were coming and going, and at busy times, an assistant manager or even store manger, would bag and carry my groceries.

And they all seemed happy to do it. It was kind of an odd store policy, and there was never a loose cart left in the parking lot. The store must have had some kind of personality test employees need to pass. I never shopped in the other stores. That was 20 years ago. I don't know if it has changed.
Blast from the past!
 
Aldis' business model seems to be low prices. They don't bag, but you can buy bags and bag your own at special counters on the way out, or you just end up with a shopping cart full of assorted items, but they seem to be intent on passing the savings onto customers. It's not as convenient, so there is a compromise.

I bought a foldable Car Caddy (from Aldis of course) that stays in my trunk at all times, which keeps items from rolling around on the way home. When I get home I finally bag my items from the caddy using old Aldis bags in a container next to my car's trunk so I can make the final trip to my house from the garage in at most two separate trips. I don't seem to mind it much.
 
Keeping the parking lots clear of grocery carts is not the stores only reason. Theft of carts. Thatā€˜s big money for the stores. The homeless feel free to take them. They use them for their home base but also will push extras back there and then abandon them. We see it all the time. One city was considering a bylaw to fine the stores when carts left their properties.

@perplexed do you use a rollator? You could use it to get into the store, set a basket on the seat, and take it back to your car. I’ve seen people with large piles on them.
 


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