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Club Correos Abolished! Done In By "Misuse" & Commerce-Killing Tariff

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cccmedia

Eagle-eyed VIP member Nards Barley has just discovered that the Ecuador Postal Service's Club Correos has been terminated.

Since EC's October imposition of a $42 tariff -- which I had called a "commerce-killer" on two Expat.com threads -- weekly shipments via Club Correos had dropped from 1,000 down to 10 in Expat-rich Cuenca.

This news was reported in the Spanish-language publication "El Tiempo."  This blog thread has been created to (a) make the news known to a wider readership than the "Correos tariff" thread where Nards posted, and (b) to translate the report into English for Expat.com readers.

Dateline is February 7, 2015.

The translated El Tiempo headline says:

"As of yesterday, Correos del Ecuador has decided to suspend definitively Club Correos service, through which the logistics of delivering internationally-purchased merchandise was accomplished via Internet."

The translated body of the story reads:

"According to Pedro Maldonado, area chief of Correos del Ecuador, the decision was made because the service (Club Correos) was misused by some people to bring in articles including clothing for commercial re-sale purposes, jeopardising the nation's industry.....

"Since the imposition of a $42 tariff last October on Internet purchases, the demand for this service went way down.  Maldonado said that in Cuenca -- where the service had processed an average 1,000 packages per week -- the number of packages plummeted to 10 per week.

"Membership in Club Correos had a basic annual cost of $11.20, which will be refunded on a partial, proportional basis to members' unexpired accounts, based on membership date of expiration.

"To request a refund, send an email to:  servicioalcliente@correosdelecuador.com.ec
or visit www.correosdelecuador.gob.ec"
   (El Tiempo)

Nards Barley

I noticed after reading that article it was reported today in the Gringo Tree as well.

I wonder why Gringo Tree turns comments off on something like this. Maybe because criticism could be expressed that would not be politically correct.  Well, I suppose they got gold to mine and can't afford to tick off anyone in government.

http://cuenca-news.gringotree.com/club- … n-ecuador/

cccmedia

As Nards suggested, there has been no indication spotted of any change in the tariff.  It's possible that the decision on whether to keep the tariff will be revenue-based, determined by the flow of packages into Ecuador going forward.  The 99 percent drop-off in Cuenca package traffic indicates that many Expats have been getting along without importing stuff from overseas.

The use of "abolished" in this thread's name may technically be an exaggeration, and I probably would have softened it except that the Expat.com editing program does not allow an OP to change such, once the headline is submitted.  Abolition usually implies an act of law, and this was a decision that did not necessarily require passage of a law. The original article said "suspendido definativamente," which I would translate as "suspended definatively" or "suspended with prejudice."

So, technically, there is the outside chance that El Supremo or a high postal official could resurrect the "club" someday.  But based on the problems I've chronicled over time and those stated in El Tiempo, such a comeback seems improbable.

cccmedia in Quito

j600rr

Holly molly! 1,000 down to 10. I'm not the smartest bloke around, but am pretty certain that's a significant drop in business. So, let me see if got this right. People aren't going to continue to pay for overpriced, and poor service? There's a shocker.

cccmedia

j600rr wrote:

So, let me see if I got this right. People aren't going to continue to pay for overpriced, and poor service?


Right on the money, J600 ;)

The $11-per-year basic fee only hinted at the real cost of sending a package, which included a shipment fee based on weight, etc., plus the $42 per-shipment tariff.

These are the two most significant highlights -- and by that I mean lowlights -- of my year with Club Correos (I dropped out after 12 months, in November):

1.  A five-month delay on dealing with a package I'd ordered containing vitamins (all vitamin imports were prohibited) during which time the Correos U.S. freight forwarder in Miami repeatedly refused to send a required fax to the U.S. vendor, thereby blocking return of the merchandise.

2. Club Correos consented to forward to me a shipment of family documents sent by my sister from New York last September.  It took the "club" four months to get them to me.

You would think that with a 99 percent reduction in overseas package-handling, they could have gotten the documents to me in a month or two.

On top of that, the dogs of SENAE (customs) required payment of the tariff, even though the documents technically were exempt from such.  Club Correos never notified in advance how to invoke the exemption, and never answered my emails about how to so notify.

cccmedia in Quito

Nards Barley

Although certain times of the years the service was slow and sometimes I had to wait up to two months to get my package, I received everything I ever ordered (close to a 100 shipments)  without damage. So  I was generally happy with the service.

cccmedia

Nards Barley wrote:

Although certain times of the year the service was slow and sometimes I had to wait up to two months to get my package, I received everything I ever ordered (close to 100 shipments) without damage. So  I was generally happy with the service.


That result is a testament to Nards' ability to navigate a user-unfriendly, Spanish-language website...to adhere to arcane, poorly-advertised rules (e.g., no vitamins, overweight shipments may have to be returned to sender)...and to avoid over-exposure to the dogs of SENAE and the ESL crowd that was "operating" the "club" and its customer-service-challenged unit in Miami.

cccmedia in Quito

mugtech

cccmedia wrote:

That result is a testament to Nards' ability to navigate a user-unfriendly, Spanish-language website...to adhere to arcane, poorly-advertised rules (e.g., no vitamins, overweight shipments may have to be returned to sender)...and to avoid over-exposure to the dogs of SENAE and the ESL crowd that was "operating" the "club" and its customer-service-challenged unit in Miami.

cccmedia in Quito


Sounds like presidential material to me

cccmedia

A company called ServiEntrega has stepped up to take over Club Correos' "suspended" service, in collaboration with Correos' old freight-forwarding partner in Miami, Econcargo.

If you want to find out more about this new entrant in the shipping wars, visit servientrega.com ...

Be prepared for nothing but Spanish. 

Econcargo is not recommended. It is now claiming to offer "el mismo servicio como antes" :o (same service as before)

Correos has confirmed at its website that Club Correos is no more.

U.S. Global mail -- a U.S.-based, English-speaking company that has received positive online reviews -- might be a better alternative going forward.

cccmedia in Quito

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