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I would be upset because the whole order/delivery process was handled so irresponsibly. Your husband's attitude that - "Haha! Look at all the free cookies I get!" is awful. The neighbors paid money for those cookies. What a terrible lesson to teach your daughter...
You are right to step up and step in to try to correct this. I say this as a former scout parent. You are setting a good example for your daughter that sometimes we all make mistakes and things don't go as planned. We always Do Our Best to make things right in a situation like that. If I could not make those deliveries, I would give those cookies back to the Cookie Mom and explain what happened. No way would I let my family eat them. No way. If your daughter participates in a fundraiser again it is o.k. to stick to a smaller route until she understands how the process works. I think you are doing a good job Op. |
+1000 If you are a family who is sitting around discussing how a cookie mix-up "reflects poorly" on the neighbors down the street, you have much bigger problems than a box of Thin Mints on the counter that should have been two boxes of Tagalongs. |
The neighbors will understand. They'll just be happy it didn't happen to them and their kid, lol. But the lesson that Op's child takes from this is what matters... |
| Anyone who has done scout sales would understand that scouts don't order a little of this and a little of that and then hope it matches what people pre-ordered. The number of boxes received should exactly equal the number of boxes on the sheet. And the scout parent has to deliver the money before taking possession of any cookies. It's a grid, with name on each row and the exact type of cookies each person ordered (and paid for). How could anybody screw this up? I would be livid, knowing that neighbors paid for cookies that my DH was sitting there eating. |
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OP, you chose this man. You don't get to complain.
Why, why, why do people like GS cookies? Beats me. |
Actually, having just done scout sales, if you have preorders for 7 boxes of thin mints, you need to order a case (so 12 boxes). So it's totally possible for "left overs" - this is why people sell them at cookie booths The "left overs" that you paid for (when you put down the deposit for the cookies) your daughter should work with the troop to sell at the cookie booth. As for the way OP talks about her husband. Yikes. |
OP you are just awful. A friend's daughter is a Girl Scout, and they are only allowed to order full cases, no partial ones. So she always has "leftovers". I just bought 5 boxes of leftover Thin Mints from her. Stay out of it OP. |
Wrong. GS National Capital Area isn't fucking Amazon. |
This. Every GS parent knows this. Sounds like OP is pretty clueless about what her child is doing. You owe your husband a serious apology for being a nasty, nasty hag. |
This is completely wrong. Your customers ordered 7 Thin Mints? You pick up 7 Thin Mints. Like the PP above said, ti is a grid with name on each row and the exact type of cookies each person orderd and paid for. You sign off on it when you pick up your cookies from the cookie mom. |
Normally the leftover goes to the troop and they try to sell them at a table at Giant or Safeway. |
With this level of involvement/screwing up by the dh, I'm assuming the daughter is pretty young and doesn't know that anything is amiss. |
Who are you and where have you sold GS cookies? You order x number of boxes of x type of cookies, and you get that many, and that is it. You do not get a whole freaking case of them and then have "leftovers." I call troll. |
Wong. The ones sold later at a table at Giant or Safeway are picked up later. They are under a completely different accounting system. They are not the "leftovers" from the house-to-house cookie sales. |
I know this is not true, because on NO PLANET does any girl scout have thin mints or samoas left over. |