jimswside wrote:If a clerk wants to see my Drivers Licenese when I use a credit card I have no problem with that & I wish more did. I think it is a good thing, I would hate to lose my wallet & have someone be able to use my cards without ID before I got a chance to cancel them.
Oh, and I haven't written a check in a few years, especially at a store.
stevez wrote:Asses Thwarted
As of 6/1/09, Whole Foods, at least the Schaumburg location, no longer accepts personal checks. The reason given on the posted signs? Checkwriters take too long and hold up the line. At long last, vindication for the ass haters!
ronnie_suburban wrote:stevez wrote:Asses Thwarted
As of 6/1/09, Whole Foods, at least the Schaumburg location, no longer accepts personal checks. The reason given on the posted signs? Checkwriters take too long and hold up the line. At long last, vindication for the ass haters!
*pops open a bottle of champagne*
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Jerry Hirsch at Chicago Tribune wrote:Long before banks started locating branches inside supermarkets, grocery stores acted as informal financial establishments, cashing payroll checks and personal checks to provide ready cash for their customers. That's starting to change.
Whole Foods Market Inc. is considering banning the use of personal checks at its stores and this month stopped accepting checks at two stores in Los Angeles County and one in Arizona as a test.
Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market, the California division of British retailing giant Tesco, won't take personal checks at any of the 70 stores it operates in California.
"Supermarkets used to be a repository of checking, cashing payroll and personal checks, but in an age of direct deposit and debit cards, that's not something that is relevant to their customers anymore," said Mac Brand, a Chicago food industry consultant.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Gotta say, I really hope this catches on.
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JimInLoganSquare wrote:The possibilities for vexatious public behavior are endless, pal. Nature abhors a vacuum. With their check-writing opportunities thwarted, surely these pea pickers will find another outlet for their knavery. For example, they can be the ones needing a price check on dried beans; or arguing over the charge for toothpicks versus the sale price marked on the shelf ... and they'll do it all right in front of you, and me, and other right-thinking folks. It is, simply, inevitable.