Pennysaved wrote:Yeah my only worry is that he is drawing attention to himself in the lobby.
How many other people are going to be joining in the half sorting now?
Diggin4copper wrote:Penny,,, here is what I would do..ask the teller if she wants to get rid of the "stroller guy".. arrange for her to give him your dumps.. after a while of getting nothing, he would give up and go elsewhere...
Diggin4copper wrote:Penny,,, here is what I would do..ask the teller if she wants to get rid of the "stroller guy".. arrange for her to give him your dumps.. after a while of getting nothing, he would give up and go elsewhere...
JerrySpringer wrote:I have always found it bad etiquette to comment to people about their business at a bank. Hope I not hijacking this thread, but when I was dumping a few halves the other week, maybe $60 worth or so, a customer who was sitting at a desk near the counter had to ask where I found halves. He was an old timer too. I guess he has not asked banks for halves lately or even thought about half dollars and was amazed someone could have some. Still, I just was not too concerned to tell him that they are everywhere and you buy a box of them without any markup for $500. I am in a bank, minding my own business and not trying to bother anyone. I don't care if people watch me dump coins, but I really don't want people asking me about where I get coins and why I do it and if I "finding any silver" blah, blah,blah. I consider customers strangers who need not know my business. Bank personnel can ask me questions all day long and I will be frank with them all day long because I feel more at ease with them. They see it all. I don't try to be coy with them. If they want to do what I am doing, I can tell them how I do it. No harm in that IMHO.
If you saw someone withdraw, say a few hundred dollars from the teller, or cashed a check for same amount, would you start asking them questions about what they were going to do with the money or where did they get the check, etc? Of course not. Why do people think that bringing coins into a bank is something they need to ask about. Sorry, but it is rude to ask me where I got my coins from. Most people look like deers in a headlight when they see you dumping coins. You could hand over $10,000 in paper dollars at the teller's desk and people would barely notice, but the cling-cling sound and the appearance of some astounding dollar amount, maybe a whole couple hundred dollars, - wow !!! - of coins gets people all attentive. I think it is a sign that we have forgotten what money used to be. Coins seem so foreign to most now.
jacer333 wrote:Great post - really rings a bell with my sorting operation. This is really the only thing I dread about the hobby-having to field nosy questions from other customers or inexperienced/unprofessional tellers. I really don't mind all the footwork that goes into turning the coins over as long as each stop goes along smoothly, but I just can't stand folks that are certain I must be doing something illegal or abnormal and feel the need to butt in and draw attention to my business in the lobby.
JerrySpringer wrote:I have always found it bad etiquette to comment to people about their business at a bank.
DuckTales253 wrote:JerrySpringer wrote:I have always found it bad etiquette to comment to people about their business at a bank.
I feel the same way. I have already been questioned by tellers while picking up a few rolls of coins (never more than $50 at a time, so not suspicious). "What are you doing with these coins?" they ask. I usually just respond that they are for making change, as if I have a business, and say no more. In my opinion, that kind of question is rude and none of their business. If I was withdrawing $500 in cash, would they ask me what I'm doing with the money? Absolutely not. How is it any different for coins, and a much smaller amount at that?
HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Diggin4copper wrote:Penny,,, here is what I would do..ask the teller if she wants to get rid of the "stroller guy".. arrange for her to give him your dumps.. after a while of getting nothing, he would give up and go elsewhere...
I was thinking on the same lines and actually made an offer about a month ago to my favorite branch where they said some guy was both picking up and dumping multiple boxes of halves. I offered to take his dumps.. take them to home to the penny processing center.. machine roll them.. then seal them in a half box for them. Then every time this guy ordered halves from them they could give him a "fresh" box of halves that I had specially prepared for him.
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