johncons

Måned: februar 2013

  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Asda


    Gmail – Response from ASDA (Ref #000000036974146)

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Response from ASDA (Ref #000000036974146)



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 12:20 PM

    To:
    Katie Pyle <Katie.Pyle@asda.co.uk>

    Hi,

    this wasn’t about being watched.
    I think I learned at school that people have an intimate-zone.

    That woman stands in the way of people, and doesn’t ‘make herself small’, when people wants to walk past her.

    That’s inpolite I think.
    I shopped at Asda Bootle yesterday, and they didn’t stand in peoples way like that.

    And also there were bags in all the self-service check-outs.


    You should also follow the business-manners and call me Mr. Ribsskog, I think.

    It’s like you are a bunch of hippies if you use the first-name I think.

    And you are obviously making wrong conclutions purpously.

    You should be sincere, towards your customers, I think.

    You and your collegues feed people with more lies than the Soviet newspapers used to do during the cold war, I think.
    Please escalate this as a complaint to your line-manager, and start treating your customers with respect.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 11:46 AM, Katie Pyle <Katie.Pyle@asda.co.uk> wrote:

    Hi Erik

    Thanks for letting me know about your experience at our Walton store.

    I’m sorry my colleagues at the self service checkouts stood to close to you and the carrier bags were in a box on the floor. I can understand why this made you feel uncomfortable as you wouldn’t want to feel like your being watched when doing your shopping.

    I’ve now contacted Carl Davies, the General Store Manager, at Walton. I’ve passed on all your feedback to Carl and asked him to address all the points you’ve raised. I’m confident through further coaching and training with my colleagues, the necessary improvements will be made.

    My colleagues are expected to provide a warm and friendly service and to be available to assist at all times. Customers should find it easy to ask a colleague for help however colleagues need to be mindful of our customers needs whilst using our self service checkouts. Your experience is concerning to me, however customer feedback is vitally important to us, so I’m pleased you’ve got in touch.

    Kind regards

    Katie Pyle
    Asda Service Team

    Tel: 0800 952 0101

    Take the Asda Price Guarantee 10% challenge – http://www.asdapriceguarantee.co.uk/

    Please do not reply to this email. This is not a monitored inbox and you may not receive a reply. In order to receive a quick response, please contact us using this link, http://your.asda.com/contact-us Could you please quote the reference number which is in the ‘subject field.’. This will help us to deal with your response quickly and efficiently.

    —-Your Original Comments Were—-

    From: Erik Ribsskog [mailto:eribsskog@gmail.com]
    Sent: 12 February 2013 00:29
    To: Noel Wood
    Subject: Update/Fwd: Response from ASDA (Ref #000000036930314)

    Hi,

    today in this shop, a big shop-woman obstructed the passage, to the self-service check-outs.

    She was acompanied by a security-guard, (it seemed), and another staff.

    It was a bit intimidating, I think.

    I’ve been shopping at other Saintsbury’s, Tesco and Asda superstores, and the staff there don’t stand in the gate to the self-service check-outs.

    I actually lived in London some months, in 2005, and started using the self-service check-outs at Sainsbury’s in Kensington.

    (The one with a Starbucks inside).

    So I think they do it wrong at Asda Walton.

    They stand to close to people when they go to the check-out, I think.

    I don’t go to the shop to have sex with a big shop-woman almost, but to buy food.

    Maybe they stand that close to were people walk in Russia, but this is in the western world, isn’t it?

    Also these ‘Russians’ hadn’t put up the carriers, today.

    There were no carriers, at the self-service check-out.

    Just a couple of boxes, with carriers, on the floor, for people to grap carriers from.

    It’s a bit like you train your staff in Russia I think, when I go to the self-service check-out, in this shop.

    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog <eribsskog@gmail.com>
    Date: Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 3:30 PM
    Subject: Re: Response from ASDA (Ref #000000036930314)
    To: Noel Wood <Noel.Wood@asda.co.uk>

    Hi,

    this doesn’t make sense to me.

    I’ve worked in retail, in Norway, from 1988 to 2004, that’s for sixteen years.

    I’ve even worked in a big hyper-market, named OBS Triaden, in Lørenskog, in Norway.

    Never once did we close early, due to that we had to get the customers out before closing-time.

    Why this focus on getting the custommers out before closing-time?

    At OBS Triaden we would just work untill all the custommers were out of the shop.

    We put the custommers first.

    You at Asda seem to put yourselves first then, I think, from your explanation.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 3:17 PM, Noel Wood <Noel.Wood@asda.co.uk> wrote:

    Hi Erik

    Thanks for letting me know about your experience at our Walton store.

    I’m sorry the store security guard would not allow you in at 11.45pm when the store was closing at midnight. I can appreciate this is an inconvenience, given it was Christmas and shopping times are limited.

    Due to how busy our stores were around Christmas, we had to stop letting customers in so we could get the customers instore through the tills before we closed. It was a decision not taken lightly as we want to keep all our customers happy.

    We do advertise some of our stores as 24 hours as they are open from 7am on a Monday morning until midnight on a Saturday. Due to government legislation and holidays, we have to close the stores on Saturday at midnight and early on a Sunday due to trading law.

    I copied a link to our store opening times for you to look at.

    http://storelocator.asda.com/#!/

    I trust this answers your questions. If I can be of any further help, please feel free to contact either me or one of my colleagues on 0800 952 0101.

    Kind regards

    Noel

    Noel Wood
    Asda Service Team
    0800 952 0101

    Take the Asda Price Guarantee 10% challenge –
    http://www.asdapriceguarantee.co.uk/
    Please do not reply to this email. This is not a monitored inbox and you may
    not receive a reply. In order to receive a quick response, please contact us
    using this link, http://your.asda.com/contact-us Could you please quote the
    reference number which is in the ‘subject field.’. This will help us to deal with your response quickly and efficiently.

    —-Your Original Comments Were—-

    Your Asda email contact form submission

    Submitted: 2013-02-10 14:33:24 +0000

    From: Erik  Ribsskog

    Email: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Telephone: 1234

    Subject: customer_service

    Store Name: Asda Walton

    Enquiry:
    Hi,

    right before Christmas, I went to Asda Walton.

    You closed at midnight that day, and I was there at around a quarter to midnight.

    Still a security-guard refused me to shop there, since it was only about fifteen minutes to the shops closing-time.

    I’ve worked as a shop manager in Norway, (and was at an Asda information-meeting at Kensington jobcentre in August 2005).

    When I closed the (Rimi)-shops in Norway, I waited untill closing-time, before I refused custommers to enter the store.

    How do you at Asda practise this, I was wondering?

    Also, why does it say ’24 hours’ on a sign, on the shop, when the shop isn’t open 24 hours, in the weekends and holidays, etc.

    Best regards,

    Erik Ribsskog

    This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. If you have received this email in error please accept our apologies & destroy it immediately. *** Walmart Stores, Inc. Confidential *** ————————————————————————————————— Asda Stores Ltd, Registered in England No. 464777. Registered Office: Asda House, Southbank, Great Wilson Street, Leeds LS11 5AD. —————————————————————————————————

    Ok,

    so this is only on Saturdays when you close at midnight then, I guess.

    Due to the trade-laws.

    You should perhaps write that you are open untill 11.45 PM then.

    Since I don’t know if everybody knows these trade-laws in their head.

    In Norway we also have trade-laws.

    But we are a bit more flexible, (as I remember it from working in Norway).

    There’s a similar law in Norway, but we have a different culture regarding this, I guess.

    In Norway we would have said that if one sold some goods after midnight, then it would be ok if it was just a few minutes.

    Besides, I explained to the security-guard, that I was buying much, so I would be out of the shop, before midnight, anyway.

    (I used to work in a big hyper-market, so I don’t need to walk around the shop for half an hour neceserelly, to buy some dinner, etc).

    But thanks for your reply anyway.

    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 9:54 AM, Rachel Nicholson <Rachel.Nicholson@asda.co.uk> wrote:

    Hi Erik

    Thanks for taking the time to respond to my colleagues email. I’m replying on Noel’s behalf.

    I’m sorry you feel that we don’t put our customers first. We pride ourselves on our excellent customer service and I have shared your feedback with Carl Davies, the General Store Manager, at our Walton store as this is vital in order for us to improve the service we offer.

    As Noel explained we are unable to trade into the early hours of Sunday morning and therefore we have to ensure all customers are through the checkouts by midnight. Due to this legislation we will ask for our store colleagues to not allow any more customer sin to the store after a certain time to make sure that all customers are through the checkouts by midnight.

    Our colleagues will stay later than this in the store but we are unable to serve any customers after this as legally we would then be breaking the law.

    I trust I have been able to clarify as to why we can’t allow customers through the checkouts after midnight on a Saturday. If you need any further help, please call me or one of my colleagues on 0800 952 0101. Once again thanks for contacting me and allowing me to help.

    Kind Regards

    Rachel Nicholson
    Asda Service Team

    Tel: 0800 952 0101

    Take the Asda Price Guarantee 10% challenge –
    http://www.asdapriceguarantee.co.uk/

    Please do not reply to this email. This is not a monitored inbox and you may not receive a reply. In order to receive a quick response, please contact us using this link, http://your.asda.com/contact-us
    Could you please quote the reference number which is in the ‘subject field.’ This will help us to deal with your response quickly and efficiently.

    —-Your Original Comments Were—-

    From: Erik Ribsskog [mailto:eribsskog@gmail.com]
    Sent: 11 February 2013 15:30
    To: Noel Wood
    Subject: Re: Response from ASDA (Ref #000000036930314)

    Hi,

    this doesn’t make sense to me.

    I’ve worked in retail, in Norway, from 1988 to 2004, that’s for sixteen years.

    I’ve even worked in a big hyper-market, named OBS Triaden, in Lørenskog, in Norway.

    Never once did we close early, due to that we had to get the customers out before closing-time.

    Why this focus on getting the custommers out before closing-time?

    At OBS Triaden we would just work untill all the custommers were out of the shop.

    We put the custommers first.

    You at Asda seem to put yourselves first then, I think, from your explanation.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 3:17 PM, Noel Wood <Noel.Wood@asda.co.uk> wrote:

    Hi Erik

    Thanks for letting me know about your experience at our Walton store.

    I’m sorry the store security guard would not allow you in at 11.45pm when the store was closing at midnight. I can appreciate this is an inconvenience, given it was Christmas and shopping times are limited.

    Due to how busy our stores were around Christmas, we had to stop letting customers in so we could get the customers instore through the tills before we closed. It was a decision not taken lightly as we want to keep all our customers happy.

    We do advertise some of our stores as 24 hours as they are open from 7am on a Monday morning until midnight on a Saturday. Due to government legislation and holidays, we have to close the stores on Saturday at midnight and early on a Sunday due to trading law.

    I copied a link to our store opening times for you to look at.

    http://storelocator.asda.com/#!/

    I trust this answers your questions. If I can be of any further help, please feel free to contact either me or one of my colleagues on 0800 952 0101.

    Kind regards

    Noel

    Noel Wood
    Asda Service Team
    0800 952 0101

    Take the Asda Price Guarantee 10% challenge –
    http://www.asdapriceguarantee.co.uk/
    Please do not reply to this email. This is not a monitored inbox and you may
    not receive a reply. In order to receive a quick response, please contact us
    using this link, http://your.asda.com/contact-us Could you please quote the
    reference number which is in the ‘subject field.’. This will help us to deal with your response quickly and efficiently.

    —-Your Original Comments Were—-

    Your Asda email contact form submission

    Submitted: 2013-02-10 14:33:24 +0000

    From: Erik  Ribsskog

    Email: eribsskog@gmail.com

    Telephone: 1234

    Subject: customer_service

    Store Name: Asda Walton

    Enquiry:
    Hi,

    right before Christmas, I went to Asda Walton.

    You closed at midnight that day, and I was there at around a quarter to midnight.

    Still a security-guard refused me to shop there, since it was only about fifteen minutes to the shops closing-time.

    I’ve worked as a shop manager in Norway, (and was at an Asda information-meeting at Kensington jobcentre in August 2005).

    When I closed the (Rimi)-shops in Norway, I waited untill closing-time, before I refused custommers to enter the store.

    How do you at Asda practise this, I was wondering?

    Also, why does it say ’24 hours’ on a sign, on the shop, when the shop isn’t open 24 hours, in the weekends and holidays, etc.

    Best regards,

    Erik Ribsskog

    This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. If you have received this email in error please accept our apologies & destroy it immediately. *** Walmart Stores, Inc. Confidential *** ————————————————————————————————— Asda Stores Ltd, Registered in England No. 464777. Registered Office: Asda House, Southbank, Great Wilson Street, Leeds LS11 5AD. —————————————————————————————————

    This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. If you have received this email in error please accept our apologies & destroy it immediately. *** Walmart Stores, Inc. Confidential *** ————————————————————————————————— Asda Stores Ltd, Registered in England No. 464777. Registered Office: Asda House, Southbank, Great Wilson Street, Leeds LS11 5AD. —————————————————————————————————

    This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. If you have received this email in error please accept our apologies & destroy it immediately. *** Walmart Stores, Inc. Confidential *** ————————————————————————————————— Asda Stores Ltd, Registered in England No. 464777. Registered Office: Asda House, Southbank, Great Wilson Street, Leeds LS11 5AD. —————————————————————————————————

  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til the Local Government Ombudsman


    Gmail – Case ID – 12019055

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Case ID – 12019055



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 11:48 AM

    To:
    advice@lgo.org.uk

    Hi,

    like I remember it, I complained in 2011.
    So I think it’s a bit silly if I have to complain again now.

    Then you harass the citizens I think.

    I think a complaint is a complaint, even if one call it complaint-procedure or just complaint.
    Regards,

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:37 AM, <advice@lgo.org.uk> wrote:

    Our ref: 12 019 055                                                                                              

    Please quote our reference when contacting us and, if using email, please put the reference number in the email subject header.
    Dear Mr Ribsskog
    Thank you for your further e-mail dated 13 February 2013 regarding your complaint against Liverpool City Council.
    The law says that, before investigating a complaint, the Ombudsman must normally be satisfied that you have made a formal complaint to the Council and that it has been given an opportunity to investigate and to reply.
    From the information I now have, it appears to me that the Council may not yet have had this opportunity. Therefore you must complain directly to the Council in the first instance.
    The complaints process usually has 2 or 3 stages and is initiated by writing a letter of formal complaint to the Chief Executive of the council. The Ombudsman usually allows the Council 12 weeks to complete the complaints process and we do not require any further correspondence from you at this stage. Please only contact us if you have received a final response from the Council or 12 weeks have elapsed without resolution.
    When the Council has completed its investigation of your complaint, and if you are unhappy with the outcome, you can then complain to the Ombudsman. You can also complain to us if you are not satisfied with the way the Council has dealt with your complaint.
    If you require any assistance in making your complaint to the Council then please contact your local Citizens Advice Bureau who may be able to help.
    If you are dissatisfied at the end of the complaints process, you will need to provide us with a copy of the Council’s final response and explanation as to why you remain unhappy. We will then send your complaint to our investigative team for further consideration.
    Yours sincerely  


    Mandy Cashmore
    Customer Service Adviser

    NOTICE - This message contains information intended only for the use of the addressee named above.  If you have received this message in error please advise us at once and do not make any use of the information.

  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til the Local Government Ombudsman


    Gmail – Case ID – 12019055

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Case ID – 12019055



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 3:51 PM

    To:
    advice@lgo.org.uk

    Cc:
    Liverpool Direct <liverpool.direct@liverpool.gov.uk>

    Bcc:
    CONTACT-US <CONTACT-US@dwp.gsi.gov.uk>

    Hi,

    I still have some debt to the Council, from those years, (Council Tax-debt), so I think this is relevant still.
    You just write it’s ‘unlikely’ that a council is going to backdate this now.

    But I’ve contacted the Council about this, years ago, (in 2011, or something, I think it must have been).
    And then they just removed my debt, from Jacobs Bailiffs, and to the Jobcentre, (since I’m unemployed), without this making any sense to me, since I had paid to that bailiff, on time, for years, then.

    Also, later, (after I moved to Sunderland, in 2012), the Liverpool City Council sent me a council-tax-bill, for around £500, that hadn’t been sent to the bailiffs.

    And this debt isn’t being deducted any longer.


    Because the Jobcentre have been doing some changes with my jobseekers allowance, due to that I’ve started writing books, and get a bit royalities, from these books, some months, from Amazon/Createspace.

    Aren’t there like rules for the whole country that says when one should apply for Council Tax-benefit?

    It’s a bit strange that it’s to late for me, to claim the benefit.

    But it’s not to late, for the Council, to claim the tax.

    Seems it’s a bit different standards here.

    I would have thought it was fine if I could someone could mention what the laws/rules says about Council Tax benefit, regarding the date for when it has to be claimed.


    I send a copy e-mail to the Council so perhaps they can send this e-mail to the Chief Executive.
    I don’t want to contact Citizens Advice, like you suggest I should, because they tricked me a bit, in 2006, regarding an employment-case, you see.

    Thanks again for the e-mail.

    Best regards,

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 2:31 PM, <advice@lgo.org.uk> wrote:

    Dear Mr Ribsskog

    Thank you for your e-mail dated 10 February 2013.

    Income Support is handled and administered by Job Centre Plus which comes under the umbrella of the Department for Work and Pensions.  Locals councils at the time you are referring had no responsibility for Income Support.

    If at the time you  felt you were entitled to claim Income Support then you would have had the opportunity to do so at your local Job Centre Plus.

    With regards to Council Tax Benefit – it is unlikely that an authority is going to backdate a claim to 2007/2008 especially if you didn’t make a claim at the time.

    If you are unhappy with the Council’s decision to deem your claim as “out of date” then you will need to raise a formal complaint in writing to the Chief Executive of Liverpool City Council.  If they fail to resolve the complaint to your satisfaction you can then refer the matter to the Local Government Ombudsman.

    I hope this is of assistance but should you require further guidance you may wish to speak a benefits adviser at your local Citizens Advice Bureau.

    Best regards

    Mandy Cashmore
    LGO Advice Team

    NOTICE - This message contains information intended only for the use of the addressee named above.  If you have received this message in error please advise us at once and do not make any use of the information.

  • Jeg sendte en ny e-post til Sivilombudsmannen


    Gmail – Sak 2013/391

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Sak 2013/391



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>

    Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 1:21 PM

    To:
    Postmottak Sivilombudsmannen <postmottak@sivilombudsmannen.no>

    Hei,

    takk for Deres e-post.

    Jeg kan også ta med om at andre ting jeg har kontaktet Kunnskapdepartementet om, (men ikke fått svar om).

    Det er problemer med HiO IU, NITH, Sande Videregående, Svelvik Ungdomsskole, mm.

    Så det er snakk om mange henvendelser, fra cirka tre-fire år tilbake og fram til nå vel.
    Bare for å prøve å oppdatere og forklare mer om dette.
    (Som jeg vel også har sendt til dere om tidligere, forresten, uten å få noe respons vel).


    Mvh.

    Erik Ribsskog

    On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 1:16 PM, Postmottak Sivilombudsmannen <postmottak@sivilombudsmannen.no> wrote:

    PS.

    Her er mer om dette:

  • Jeg fortsetter å søke jobber. Denne gang som Store Manager


    Gmail – Store Manager (AIGBURTH)

    Gmail


    Erik Ribsskog
    <eribsskog@gmail.com>



    Store Manager (AIGBURTH)



    Erik Ribsskog

    <eribsskog@gmail.com>


    Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 12:57 PM

    To:
    recruitment@tjmorris.co.uk

    Hi,

    I read about this vacancy on the Directgov website, and I wanted to please apply for this job.
    I’ve worked as a Store Manager, at Rimi Lambertseter, (a grocery-store owned by ICA), in Oslo, in Norway, from 1998 to 2000.

    I’ve also worked as a Store Manager, at Rimi Kalbakken, (this shop was a converted ICA supermarket, and had a turnover of around £90k a week), in Oslo, in Norway, from 2000 to 2001.

    And I’ve also worked as a Store Manager, at Rimi Langhus, in Ski, in Norway, from 2001 to 2002.


    I attach my CV and hope to hear back from you!

    Yours sincerely,


    Erik Ribsskog


    CV – Erik Ribsskog.doc
    37K