Advertisement

UPS Strike Really Bugs Customer

Share
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

The Teamsters strike against United Parcel Service is really starting to bug Jan Dietrick.

You see, Dietrick is general manager of Rincon-Vitova Insectaries Inc., which supplies growers around the country with ladybugs, green lacewings and other “beneficial insects” to help eradicate crop-munching pests.

The problem is Dietrick’s company uses UPS to ship its bugs. If Dietrick’s insects don’t absolutely, positively get where they’re supposed to go overnight or soon thereafter, they, well, keel over and die. Or else they hatch and begin to eat each other.

Picture this: A package promising thousands of voracious predatory insects, delayed too long, could arrive carrying a few fat satiated bugs.

Advertisement

So Dietrick is getting creative, scrambling to find new ways to unload the creepy crawlers. She is negotiating with an armored truck firm--which usually delivers nothing but cold hard cash to and from banks--to transport her bugs.

“I was walking by and saw their sign and decided I’d at least ask,” she said. “They’re considering doing a couple dozen boxes per week.”

Dietrick is scouting other options as well.

“I dashed down to Kinko’s with a few boxes of our predatory mites yesterday because I know they have a regular FedEx pickup time,” she said. “They took a few.

“We’ve also found a local flower delivery company that’s helping us out with some of our California deliveries,” she added.

Some companies, though, are squeamish about ferrying cargo with six legs.

Cute little ladybugs are one thing, she said. “But some people don’t love the idea of delivering live insects, like predatory mites, even though they’re important in Ventura County. They attack the persea mite, which defoliates avocado trees.”

* UPS STRIKERS RALLY: B2

Advertisement