Subj : Cash for coin.. To : AUGUST ABOLINS From : Rob Mccart Date : Tue Oct 21 2025 08:46:42 AA>> First of all, they needed to look up my account even though I was paying >> cash hey said it was to record WHO they were receiving money from. I >> assume they a me the person on the other side of the till is potentially >> giving them counte it? They even asked me to confirm my account on their >> system with my date of th. AA>BTW.. your quote system is cutting out (and cutting off) words. When I do replies I pretty much always hit enter brfore the line gets too long to prevent that, but I find a lot of replies to me that scroll off the screen often cut off word when quoted back too. AA>But still the tendency seems to be that coin diminishes and I >eventually need a top-up supply. WHAT the heck are people >doing with their coin? - my guess, laundry machines and coffee >shops? I know my local laundromat has a machine that takes $10 and $20 bills and gives you coins for the machines. I haven't tried it myself so I don't know if it's all one coin or a mix since you pretty much need both quarters and $1 coins. I hear at the desk they will sell you coins as well if you don't want that many. AA>After the clerk grimaced after my questions for the requirement >of needing a bank account for a simple cash-for-coin exchange, >she apologised if this process will take longer than expected >since "we don't carry much cash anymore". They are in the >*business* of moving cash/coin and they don't have enough to >for a small $400 transaction? That's pathetic. I think that depends on the bank. I've had CIBC insist you call ahead to pick up amounts of cash bigger then $2000 or so and yet one day at RBC I expected to be refused, but I asked to take out $10,000 from my account and they said it was no problem. AA>I already refuse to step into the credit union to make regular >deposits. There is a fee for every deposit - and the physical >cash portion has a supplemental "handling" fee of its own now >too! - so, now I tend to pay my bills in cash where I can. It's decades since I was involved with a Credit Union but I don't recall fees for simple things like that back then. AA>This book is illuminating.. but most of it simply chronicles >the enshittication of the banking system and there is really >nothing we can do about it: AA> Fleeced: Canadians Versus Their Banks | Paperback >Andrew Spence My main bank, I find that even when I do something dumb that generates a fee, they virtually always reverse the fee if I mention it to them. I found that out when a cheque written to me bounced, which caused a payment I had going through to be NSF, which brought about a fee.. That happened right at the end of the month so the next day the regular account user fee came due, and that caused a second NSF charge.. When I stopped in the next time I said that I could see the first one, but I thought that the second one that quickly was unfair, and they reversed both of them. More recently there was a $25 fee for something caused by a misunderstanding of when the fee for a transaction would come through. I expected it at the end of the month but they put it through the same day I set up the service. Again, a polite complaint that their system was not clear and they reversed that charge so, in general, I've gotten off fairly easy.. B) --- * SLMR Rob * Don't drink and write Taglines * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105) .