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Taking found change from the automatic checkout
When I go to the grocery store, I do the automatic checkout so I don't have to have human interaction. Often, when I reach my checkout stand, there'll be some change in the little change receptacle. Usually it's 10 cents or so, with some combination of pennies and nickels and dimes. Today it was thirty cents - three dimes.
I always surreptitiously scoop it up and pocket it. I doubt that the shopper before me will come back looking for it, and if I don't take it someone else behind me will. The only time I've not taken it was when there was six dollars in it, and in that case I gave it to the employee who monitors the self-checkout. I figure someone may come back in for six dollars, though I suspect mostly likely the employee ended up with it in the end. So what's your rule when you see loose change in the change bin? Do you take it or leave it or write a note and turn it in? |
I stopped for donuts one morning because I was going be late to work. Checked out and requested 20 back and walked off and left the 20 hanging
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I feel soiled just knowing someone will keep that money.
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I guess my general rule is that I'll keep change, but I might turn in any paper money. I turned in the $6 that I found without hesitation, but I'm not sure what I'd do if it was $1 or $2. Maybe my limit for keeping it is $4.99. |
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I've never had any paper bills that somebody left, only coins.
If I happen to pay with exact change, I won't take the leftover change. But if the coins get mixed in with my change, then I'll take it. |
It's called a stupid tax. Take it and give it to someone walking in.
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I try as much as possible not to use self checkout. I'm not gonna volunteer my labor to a grocery chain just so they can employ fewer people.
I did use it once and got $40 cash back, left it in the dispenser, started to walk out. A kid chased me down to give back it to me. I told him to keep a $20. |
It's theft. Give it to the nearest cashier or ignore it and walk away.
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Thief Man?
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I take it no matter what. I most likely break even from times I left some.
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I always keep money I find.
#1: If you lost it, you're dumb. You don't deserve it. #2: If I turn it in, someone who works there will probably steal it anyway. |
If it is small. Mine.....But I rarely use cash.
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Pirate booty. I seem to always find money on top the hand car wash. I can say that i've ever looked in the self checkout. Id be willing to bet at Walmart if cash isnt taken in a set time it retracts back inside.
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daru write-in for my vote -
'quick strike profit made' |
People have compared my job to picking up pennies in front of a bulldozer, so I make a point of picking up coins found on the street (exceptions are subway platforms and restrooms).
But when it comes to change that’s left on the counter at a store, I’m ambivalent. I end up leaving it hoping that it ends up with someone who needs it just a bit more. |
Wal-Mart's auto checkout gave me back $300 on a $65 purchace one time. I turned it i customer service. Lady said there were hundreds mixed in with the $10's.
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I leave it. I'm hopelessly honest. Dammit.
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But it's more complex than that. If everyone is following the rules, then the person with an income in the 49th percentile will know that a higher-income person arriving next will NOT take it. So therefore, if the 49th percentile person leaves the change untouched, there's a 100 percent chance that the person who does take it will have greater need. So they should leave it. Then the same becomes true for a person in the 48th percentile, then the 47th, and so on. In a perfect theoretical world, the change then remains in place until eventually the lowest-income person in the area comes to buy something, and then that person can rightfully take it. But will they know that they're eligible? Probably not. So then they follow the same rules and nobody claims the money. Eventually, the change slot overflows, and customers have to pick their way through ever-growing mounds of change to even reach the self-checkout. I'm not sure what the endgame is. |
I bet I haven't paid cash at a grocery store for over a decade.
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rain man, you monster!
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(Or buy barbecue. The plans aren't finalized yet.) |
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The store found where I left it on video and where the looked around when he found it. They ID'ed the customer by shopper card, and when the customer returned to check out on next visit, the register locked up. Management and loss prevention had a conversation with the customer and I guess he agreed to returning it:D:D:D It was explained to me was: We prefer that this customer shop at Wal-Mart so we gave him the option of returning the money or being the only customer to banned permanently from the store. I told them to donate the money to the food pantry they donate to. |
On a side note. I found a wallet laying in the middle of an intersection last week. It was loaded with money. I don't know how much but it had $50 bills in it. I took it by the address on the drivers license but nobody was home so I dropped it off at the police station. Two days later the daughter of the owner of the wallet called me to thank me and offered a reward. I refused the reward and told her that knowing the owner got his stuff back was reward enough.
That being said , leaving change for someone else to pocket is just dumb. |
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About 40 years ago I was going to try on jeans at David’s in Wichita. It was a great place to
shop. The toy section was top notch. But anyways, when I went into the dressing room I found a wallet. It was stacked with cash. I tried my jeans on to see if they fit and when I walked out to show my mom the jeans I gave her the wallet. I went back and changed into my original clothes and then when I was done we went to the service desk. There was an little old farmer and his wife and she was crying. They were old probably mid 60s. When we showed up with the wallet they were so happy. They hugged me and praised me for not taking anything. (Which I was fortunate because growing up we were very well off) she told my mom it was the money they had for the year because they just harvested their crops. I want to say she said there was like $13k there. It was a fat ass stack of cash. Well anyway they bought my pair of jeans and gave me $20 bucks. (They kept insisting and my mom saying no that just knowing they were okay was good enough) I went straight back and bought some shit in the toy section. About 40 years ago that was shopping cash. |
I didn't see an appropriate option for me. I only use the self checkout when I'm in the rare hurry. To be honest, I wouldn't count the change unless paper money was involved, so I guess I'd pick it up figuring it was mine. If paper money was involved and it was more than I expected, I'd hunt down a manager or customer service and turn in the excess.
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This is going to sound like a fish story but... in the summer of 2003.
I had laid a leather portfolio on the roof of my truck (105 and Medcalf) when I took a phone call (I left it there like a dumb ****) and when I turned left going south, onto Antioch from 103rd st,, it slid off the roof, I heard something but over engine noise and radio, I thought nothing of it. When I reached my Atty's office (College and Antioch) I reached for it and suddenly that noise I heard made total sense. I flew down there as I had about $6K in cash, don't ask, in a zippered pocket. When I got there NADA, ****ing NADA! I get in the truck. pounding the dash and steering wheel and head for the atty's kicking myself for losing $6K without anything to show for it. I get to the atty, I tell him what just happened and he suggested a call to the cops was in order and looked at me funny (like WTF are you doing with $6K in cash) and that an ad in a local newspaper would be senseless. My phone rings and a guy tells me that he was behind me and saw it come off my truck, stopped, and grabbed it up. He called the store as he saw the receipt in the mesh pocket, and they gave him my cell #. I asked the guy if he could bring it to me, or I could meet him and he said he was headed home in a bit and that he had plans with the family and could meet me afterwards. I found out where he was, where he was going and arranged for my GF to meet him on their ways home, The stars aligned on this one as she was on his route home She called me when she got there, I told her to open the zippered pocket and if there are lots of $100 dollar bills in there, there was, to give him $400 and thank him for doing the right thing and walk away, no taking it back. I looked at my attorney who had stepped out momentarily and gave him the thumbs up. I met the GF at what is now Tanners on College Blvd, she was sitting at the bar, a bottle of Johnnie Walker Blue was on the counter, counting the money. She started in on calling me the stupidest MF, then the luckiest MF, then started sounding like my mother, my accountant. Then we both busted out laughing, bought the bar a round, knocked back a couple more JWB's and as we left, I asked her what she thought about exchanging sex for money. Then the negotiations began. I now use binder clips and produce bands for cash. That bing said, I never find cash but I bought brats and hanging out of the coupon printer was a $5 off brats coupon. I snatched it up. Quote:
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I’m in the keep it up to some dollar amount and beyond that turn it in, but I’m not sure what that amount is. Maybe $10?
I think it might make a difference how crowded the store is. If there are very few customers around during off hour shopping I’m more likely to keep a larger amount on the theory whoever lost it is probably long gone. In a crowded store where the person ahead of me just left as I stepped up to the auto-cashier, I might just leave it even if it was just a pile of change because they could easily return. |
I literally hate coin based change, I would not burden myself with it for pretty much any amount. The very few times I ever pay cash I am tempted just to leave the coins.
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I pay with cash up to about $25 because I tend to over spend if I don't. That said, I just stick the coins in my pocket or the cup holder if I'm in the car. Oldwoman is a farm girl so she digs them out and throws them in a change jar. The last time she counted, it was over $175. Yeah, I didn't get any of that.
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I take all my change from my day and put it in a rectangular Ziplock plastic container when I get home. Unless I'm going through a drive thru, then I put it in a cup in my truck.
It was full last month so I took it to the bank. $357.87 was in there. Paid for the fishing trip I was going on. I have an absolutely full coors light party ball that I have been filling since the early 90's off and on. Going to have to piece that out and take that to the bank in trips. |
Years ago, I was waiting in my car behind a guy at the ATM. He was taking forever. He finally threw up his hands and took off. I pulled up and saw a wad of twenties. I thought for a second then decided to chase him down. It took a few miles, but I finally got him to pull over. He was scared.
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I take it every single time.
Then I drop it in the first available charity bucket I find. FAX |
The one I struggle with is at one of our local grocery stores. Even in the regular lanes (they don't have self-check), they have machines on the counter that give you back the coins part of your change if you pay cash. Frequently, people just leave their coins in there. I almost never take it unless I happen to pay cash (which is rare) and my change gets mixed in because, well - it isn't mine. Someone will take it though. I doubt the customers come back for a few coins.
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I’m a cheap ass who picks up coins whenever I see them so yeah I’m taking it. Coins can add up quick. When my change jar is full I cash it in and add it to my emergency fund. I’m paranoid about not having enough money stashed away for emergencies.
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