If your book is not marked received by the 26th day (the 35th day if the sender or requestor is outside the contiguous US) after you marked it mailed, it will be declared lost in the mail at PBS. This does not mean that the book is actually lost; it may simply be delayed en route. Also, the requestor may be away from home and unaware if the book has arrived. If so, he or she can mark it received from his or her Transaction Archive when he or she returns home, and credit will be granted when she or he does that.
A book sent to an active member at PBS will not earn credit until the requestor marks it received, unless PBS Printable Postage is used to send the book (and the sender has a good sending record).
If a book you sent is declared Lost in the Mail at PBS:
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First, contact the requestor (using the PM button on the "lost" transaction in your Transaction Archive) to confirm that the book was not received.
- Sometimes the requestor just forgot to mark it received
- Sometimes the requestor was away from home when the book arrived
- If you don't hear back from the requestor within a week of sending a PM asking about the book, you should contact us to look into the situation.
- You can contact the requestor using the PM button on the "lost" transaction in your transaction archive.
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If the requestor confirms that the book was not received:
- As the sender (information from the USPS site): "...you should obtain information by calling 1-800-222-1811. If fourteen (14) or more postal business days have passed since the date of mailing, and the recipient has confirmed that the item has not arrived, you may call 1-800-ASK-USPS (1-800-275-8777) to request documentation of your issue."
- You can submit a request for a USPS search for your parcel on the USPS.com site at
https://www.usps.com/help/missing-mail.htm
- We used to give the Postal Inspection Service's website URL here, with a link to the Mail Theft/loss form, but that link is not reliable! Google United States Postal Inspection Services and try to follow the links, or go to https://postalinspectors.uspis.gov/
- If it is working, the direct link to the Mail Theft form online is http://postalinspectors.uspis.gov/forms/MLNtRcvd.aspx (the Postal Inspection Service's website) - you can input the information online there . This will help USPS try to recover your book if it truly has been lost in the mail. If the link above does not work, here are directions to find the proper page: go to the website www.postalinspectors.uspis.gov or https://postalinspectors.uspis.gov/ and then select "Investigations > Mail Theft > File a Mail Theft Complaint" from the menus.
- This form at USPS is titled "Mail Theft"
- This does not mean only theft of mail. USPS categorizes any mail that does not arrive or that is tampered with as "mail theft".
- The choice that should be made under "Class" if Media Mail was used is "Parcel Post"
- You can get the information about the transaction from the Transaction Archive:
- Click "Transaction Archive" in the menu under My Account in the toolbar at the top of the site
- Click the Request Details link on the right of the "lost in mail" transaction
- If you need more information (such as requestor address) you can ask the requestor in a Personal Message for that information.
- If USPS does return your book to you, and it is undamaged:
If you sent the book with Printable Postage and the tracking shows it has been recorded as delivered by USPS but hasn't been marked received yet:
If you sent the book with tracking purchased elsewhere (not from PaperBackSwap) and it has been recorded as delivered by USPS but hasn't been marked received yet:
- First, contact the requestor from the active transaction (in the Books I've Mailed tab in My Account), or from the "lost" transaction in your Transaction Archive if the book has been declared Lost in the Mail by PBS.
- GIve the tracking number and ask the other member if the book was received
- If the book was NOT received, s/he needs to go to the PO with the tracking number and inquire -- this should happen as soon as possible while memories are fresh.
- The requestor can also check with neighbors if any have received his/ her mail by mistake in the past.
- The sender can contact the PO too -- look up the Post Office by ZIP code using Google, to find contact information.
- If the book is found, the recipient can mark it received from "lost" in the Transaction Archive, easily, following the instructions in I received a book that was 'lost in the mail'.
- If the requestor does not respond to your PM within a few days, contact us and we will look into it.
- We cannot grant Book Credit for tracking or postage purchased outside PBS, but we can check if this requestor has become inactive.
- If this requestor is inactive, your book should be marked received by the system.
If you want to minimize your risk of a package you send being lost or misdelivered OR if you have a high proportion of outgoing loss, here are some steps to take:
The most common causes of a high outgoing loss rate are: late mailing, inadequate Wrapping, and non-sending.
- If you are mailing late, you can easily correct this.
- If your wrapping is inadequate, the books could be getting lost en route, and you should read the Help items about wrapping books in All Help documents about bookwrapping - in short, the book(s) need to be entirely enclosed, use shipping tape (NOT Scotch, or duct tape, or masking tape), tape the corners and seams, and don't have any loose flaps on your package.
- If you are hand-copying the addresses onto your packages, be sure that you copy accurately.
- Note that in damp weather, printer ink can run and make printed addresses illegible. It is a good idea to put a single layer of clear shipping tape over the addresses on the label, to make sure the ink does not run en route.
- Check Current Postal Rates to be sure you are using enough postage for the weight of your package.
- If there is some other issue affecting your sending (for example, if you are trusting someone else to mail and they are not mailing) this needs to be identified and addressed.
If a high loss rate persists on any account after we have discussed this with a member, this will jeopardize membership. Books need to get where they are going on PBS, and the USPS rate of package loss is really low--a high outgoing (or incoming) loss rate can almost never be blamed solely on USPS. If a sender wraps well, uses the correct address and amount of postage and mails promptly, more than 99% of her packages will arrive at their destinations.
Related Links:
USPS lost the book I sent! (including: USPS notice/empty wrapping received, Dead Mail scan)
How to Wrap Your Book Shipment
I received a book that was 'lost in the mail'
How to Use the Transaction Archive