Posted on Mar 5, 2015
CPT Bde Training Oic (S3)
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I have been dealing with a shipping company that delievered my household goods with a lot of damage. One of the issues was my suits and an extra dress uniform I have that showed up with mildew growing on them. The company offered $75 for professional cleaning, but those suits and uniform have been in their box waiting for the moving company to complete the claim before I do anything with them.

Personally I dont want to wear these suits again, regardless if they have been professionally cleaned. What are your thoughts?
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LTC Cavalry Officer
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I've never had mildew, but have damaged goods that the moving company paid for replacement.
My bigger issues have been with erroneous weights. I moved 3x in 2 years so was very familiar with my weight, including Pro-gear. The third move was several thousand pounds heavier (according to the shipper) than my previous ones.
Others who moved at the same time had similar issues, but they didn't have the recent previous moves to compare with.
Seemed that moving company over weighed in order to get more money from the govt (and then me!).
Know your weight, verify the bill of lading, and double check everything!
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Cpl Mark McMiller
Cpl Mark McMiller
>1 y
The moving trucks would have been weighed at mandatory weigh stations along the way. Wouldn't the moving company have records of those weigh ins that you could demand to see?
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LTC Cavalry Officer
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>1 y
Cpl Mark McMiller,
I'm sure it was, however that includes everything on the truck including other people's things and the packing materials used (boxes, furniture mats, etc). Different companies do it differently, either weighing the packing materials separately or using a formula based on the overall weight.
My truck had another load already on it and mine was loaded/unloaded into storage. Between the two houses also.
Since I had the weights from the two previous moves I was able to successfully challenge and not pay for my overage.
I still believe they tried to over charge the govt for the move, hoping that in the busy summer moving season and me not being savvy or experienced enough to challenge would let it slide.
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CPT Company Commander
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I wouldn't. I would rather get a new set at their expense. Even if they clean it mildew decomposes the material. Even if cleaned it had it's impact on them. For that I wouldn't do anything with them. And who is to say that the cleaning is effective enough.

Mold digests whatever material it's growing on so long term mold growth will destroy clothing. As mold grows larger it will also leave a greater stain on your clothing which can be difficult to remove and the clothes will smell.
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SFC Retention and Transition NCO (USAR)
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I would have them attempt to clean them, if has any effects to you after it is done, then they should replace it. But I think they should be allowed to try cleaning it first.
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