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singalto Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I wanted to do a Sainsburys online shop but all

> slots were booked up until the 8th April so, as I

> have problems sleeping, I decided to read until

> midnight and watched the 9th April appear in the

> delivery calendar: there were no available slots!

> How is that possible?


Priority to those registered as in need.


"our online customers who are over 70 years of age or have a disability will have priority access to online delivery slots"

And quite expensive - https://www.spierssalads.com/fruit-n-veg-boxes/free-range-eggs-2l-milk-and-250g-butter-staples-box, should be no more that ?6max


JohnL Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Signed up for a weekly box with

> https://www.spierssalads.com/

>

> Not sure how good it'll be but I'm exploring at

> the moment.

>

> Really want a nice fish delivery :)

JohnL Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> singalto Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > I wanted to do a Sainsburys online shop but all

> > slots were booked up until the 8th April so, as

> I

> > have problems sleeping, I decided to read until

> > midnight and watched the 9th April appear in

> the

> > delivery calendar: there were no available

> slots!

> > How is that possible?

>

> Priority to those registered as in need.

>

> "our online customers who are over 70 years of age

> or have a disability will have priority access to

> online delivery slots"



Problem is making sure you can register as such. I haven't got through on phone and last time I looked there was no way of making sure registered through my online account.

dbboy Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> And quite expensive -

> https://www.spierssalads.com/fruit-n-veg-boxes/fre

> e-range-eggs-2l-milk-and-250g-butter-staples-box,

> should be no more that ?6max

>

> JohnL Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > Signed up for a weekly box with

> > https://www.spierssalads.com/

> >

> > Not sure how good it'll be but I'm exploring at

> > the moment.

> >

> > Really want a nice fish delivery :)



Yes could be - looking at meat and fish and bread/milk too but willing to try a few for now and see what I get - noticed some sites are beginning to refuse customers not registered.


Will we begin to have to pay more and what if some can't :(

This is what is on the Sainsburys Groceries website this morning:



Working to feed the nation


We are working round-the-clock to provide customers with more information around how we plan to continue serving our customers in the current climate, especially those who are elderly and vulnerable.

How we?re responding to COVID-19 (coronavirus)


We have listened to your feedback and taken further steps to make sure everyone has access to food and essential items, and to keep supporting our colleagues


From Monday 23 March, we are consolidating our opening hours and all our supermarkets will be open from 8am to 8pm Monday-Saturday. Sunday opening, Sainsbury?s Local and petrol station hours will stay the same. This means we can focus our store colleagues? time on keeping shelves stocked and serving our customers well.


Many of you have told us how much you appreciated the hour we set aside for elderly and vulnerable customers on Thursday 19 March, and that you would like this to become a regular event. Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, all our supermarkets will dedicate 8am to 9am to serving elderly, disabled and vulnerable customers, as well as NHS and Social Care workers.


Helping elderly, disabled and vulnerable customers access food online (from Monday 23 March)


Adding more Click & Collect locations (from Monday 23 March)


Putting limits on certain products (from Wednesday 18 March)


Closing our cafes and counters (from Thursday 19 March).


You can read the latest from our CEO Mike Coupe at the bottom of this page.

How we?re helping our customers


From Monday 23 March, our existing online customers who are over 70 years of age, vulnerable or who have a disability will get priority access to online home delivery and access to click & collect slots.


We?ve already been able to identify some existing customers who are elderly, vulnerable and disabled through the information that we have about them and we will be emailing these customers over the course of the weekend, but we know that we haven?t been able to identify all of our vulnerable customers. We?re working hard, alongside the government and retail industry, to identify more of them.


We are also working hard to make further home delivery and click & collect slots available for our delivery pass customers and will be contacting these customers over the coming days. As we have shared, we are increasing access to our click & collect service and we hope to make that available to more customers very soon.

Identifying our elderly, disabled and vulnerable customers


From Monday 23 March, our existing online customers who are over 70 years of age, vulnerable or who have a disability will get priority access to online home delivery and click & collect slots.


We?ve already been able to identify some existing customers who are elderly, vulnerable and disabled through the information that we have about them and we will be emailing these customers over the course of the weekend, but we know that we haven?t been able to identify all of our vulnerable customers. We?re working hard, alongside the government and retail industry, to identify more of them.


There?ll soon be a process in place so you can tell us that you?re elderly, disabled or vulnerable and get added to our vulnerable list and we?ll let you know how to do this through our website.

Delivering to self-isolating customers


If you are self-isolating, please let us know using the delivery instructions box ? this can be done when you are placing or amending your order at checkout. Otherwise this can be found in My Account > My addresses > Add your delivery instructions.


Our drivers will call ahead to let you know when they will be dropping your shopping in bags on the doorstep.


If you have identified as being in self-isolation our drivers will ask you to wait inside before bagging up your order, placing it on your doorstep and letting you know that it is ready for you to pick up.


We are unable to accept any returns on the doorstep from self-isolating customers however, customers can receive a refund for any substitutes by getting in touch with our Contact Centre.


Finally, our colleagues will not ask you to sign for your delivery.

Doorstep deliveries


In order to protect the safety and wellbeing of our customers and colleagues we are taking a number of steps to ensure that we are able to deliver to you as safely as possible.


We have taken the decision to deliver your shopping to your front door rather than taking it inside. If you live in a flat, we will still bring your shopping to your own front door.


A handy tip can be to keep some shopping bags, cardboard boxes or even your laundry basket close by when your delivery is due to help bring your shopping into your house.


Drivers will use alcohol based hand sanitiser regularly throughout their deliveries.

Delivery slot availability


From Monday 23 March, our existing online customers who are over 70 years of age, vulnerable or who have a disability will get priority access to online home delivery slots and access to Click & Collect services.


We?re working to identify more vulnerable customers and hope to be able to open this service to new customers soon. We are also working hard to make further home delivery and click & collect slots available for our delivery pass customers and will be contacting these customers over the coming days.


As we have shared, we are increasing access to our Click & Collect service and we hope to make that available to more customers very soon.

Product availability


We want to acknowledge that are we are experiencing extremely high demand for certain products currently and as such have introduced some quantity restrictions.


Customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk.


We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers. 

Substitutions


We want to acknowledge that are we are experiencing extremely high demand for certain products currently and as such have introduced some quantity restrictions.


Customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk.


We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers.


We are unable to accept any returns on the doorstep from self-isolating customers however, customers can receive a refund for any substitutes by getting in touch with our Contact Centre.

Customers without a Delivery Pass


If you fall into the definition of a vulnerable customer then we are working through how to identify you and give you access to priority home delivery.


If you do not fall into this category then you can still access grocery online through our expanded click and collect offer. At the moment we?re focussing on customers that need our help the most.

Click & Collect


For our Click and Collect online customers who can travel to our stores, from Monday 23 March, we will operate an expanded ?click and collect? service.


We are significantly increasing the number of collection sites across the country over the coming days in preparation for this.


Customers can place their order online as usual and pick it up from a collection point in the store car park.

Further email update from Sainsburys CEO this morning: priority shopping instore & online:


'Dear [],


We are continuing to work around the clock to feed the nation in these challenging times.


Many of you have written to me in the past 24 hours to tell me that you like the idea of priority shopping for NHS workers and for elderly and disabled customers, but that these should be at different times.


We have therefore decided to allow NHS and social care workers to shop in our supermarkets for half an hour before they open each day. So anyone with NHS ID will be able to shop from 07.30-08.00 every day from Monday to Saturday. We're delighted to be able to offer priority shopping to all the hard-working NHS staff across the country who are working so hard to keep us all safe and well.


In addition to this, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, all our supermarkets will dedicate 08.00-09.00 to serving elderly customers, disabled customers and carers.


Many of you have also asked me about priority online delivery slots for elderly, disabled and vulnerable customers.


We have been able to identify a number of customers as elderly and vulnerable based on the information they have given us previously. These details would include date of birth and if you have ever used our vulnerable customer helpline. For all of these customers, we will email you today (Sunday) with information on when slots will become available.


If you do not receive an email and you consider yourself to be vulnerable, please visit our Groceries Online website on Monday for information on how to contact us. We are also working as quickly as possible on an option for people to register themselves as disabled and vulnerable on their online shopping accounts.


Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to get in touch with me and share your feedback - it's because of you that we are making these changes and we will continue to listen, learn and adapt during this uncertain time.


Best wishes


Mike'

Further update from Sainsburys (from website this morning - Mon 23rd):


- Registering as over 70, vulnerable, disabled

- Priority deliveries

etc,



'Working to feed the nation


We are working round-the-clock to provide customers with more information around how we plan to continue serving our customers in the current climate, especially those who are elderly, disabled or vulnerable and NHS and social care workers.

How we?re responding to COVID-19 (coronavirus)


We have listened to your feedback and taken further steps to make sure everyone has access to food and essential items, and to keep supporting our colleagues. These are summarised below. For full detail, please read the latest letter from our CEO Mike Coupe at the bottom of this page.


From Monday 23rd March, we are consolidating our opening hours and all our supermarkets will be open from 08.00 to 20.00 Monday ? Saturday. With the exception of some stores in Scotland, Sunday opening hours will stay the same (please check on Store Locator for Sunday opening hours in your store). Sainsbury?s Local and petrol station hours will stay the same


Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, all our supermarkets will dedicate 08.00 to 09.00 to serving elderly customers, disabled customers and carers


NHS and social care workers will be able to shop in our supermarkets for half an hour before they open, from Monday to Saturday. Anyone with NHS ID will be able to shop from 07.30 to 08.00 on these days


We have prioritised online delivery slots for elderly, disabled and vulnerable customers. We?ve already been able to identify some existing customers who are elderly, disabled and vulnerable through the information that we have about them and have emailed these customers. But we know that we haven?t been able to identify all of our vulnerable customers. If you?re elderly, disabled or vulnerable and think you should be on our vulnerable customer list, please get in touch on 0800 328 1700


Adding more Click & Collect locations (from Monday 23 March)


Putting limits on certain products (from Wednesday 18 March)


Closing our cafes and counters (from Thursday 19 March).


How we?re helping our customers


From Monday 23 March, our existing online customers who are over 70 years of age, vulnerable or who have a disability will get priority access to online home delivery and access to click & collect slots.


We?ve already been able to identify some existing customers who are elderly, vulnerable and disabled through the information that we have about them and we will be emailing these customers over the course of the weekend, but we know that we haven?t been able to identify all of our vulnerable customers. We?re working hard, alongside the government and retail industry, to identify more of them.


We are also working hard to make further home delivery and click & collect slots available for our delivery pass customers and will be contacting these customers over the coming days. As we have shared, we are increasing access to our click & collect service and we hope to make that available to more customers very soon.

Identifying our elderly, disabled and vulnerable customers


From Monday 23 March, our existing online customers who are over 70 years of age, vulnerable or who have a disability will get priority access to online home delivery and access to click & collect slots.


We?ve already been able to identify some existing customers who are elderly, vulnerable and disabled through the information that we have about them and have emailed these customers. But we know that we haven?t been able to identify all of our vulnerable customers. We?re working hard, alongside the government and retail industry, to identify more of them.


If you?re elderly, disabled or vulnerable and think you should be on our vulnerable customer list, please get in touch on 0800 328 1700.


Delivering to self-isolating customers


If you are self-isolating, please let us know using the delivery instructions box ? this can be done when you are placing or amending your order at checkout. Otherwise this can be found in My Account > My addresses > Add your delivery instructions.


Our drivers will call ahead to let you know when they will be dropping your shopping in bags on the doorstep.


If you have identified as being in self-isolation our drivers will ask you to wait inside before bagging up your order, placing it on your doorstep and letting you know that it is ready for you to pick up.


We are unable to accept any returns on the doorstep from self-isolating customers however, customers can receive a refund for any substitutes by getting in touch with our Contact Centre.


Finally, our colleagues will not ask you to sign for your delivery.

Doorstep deliveries


In order to protect the safety and wellbeing of our customers and colleagues we are taking a number of steps to ensure that we are able to deliver to you as safely as possible.


We have taken the decision to deliver your shopping to your front door rather than taking it inside. If you live in a flat, we will still bring your shopping to your own front door.


A handy tip can be to keep some shopping bags, cardboard boxes or even your laundry basket close by when your delivery is due to help bring your shopping into your house.


Drivers will use alcohol based hand sanitiser regularly throughout their deliveries.


Delivery slot availability


From Monday 23 March, our existing online customers who are over 70 years of age, vulnerable or who have a disability will get priority access to online home delivery slots and access to Click & Collect services.


We?re working to identify more vulnerable customers and hope to be able to open this service to new customers soon. We are also working hard to make further home delivery and click & collect slots available for our delivery pass customers and will be contacting these customers over the coming days.


As we have shared, we are increasing access to our Click & Collect service and we hope to make that available to more customers very soon.

Product availability


We want to acknowledge that are we are experiencing extremely high demand for certain products currently and as such have introduced some quantity restrictions.


Customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk.


We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers. 

Substitutions


We want to acknowledge that are we are experiencing extremely high demand for certain products currently and as such have introduced some quantity restrictions.


Customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk.


We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers.


We are unable to accept any returns on the doorstep from self-isolating customers however, customers can receive a refund for any substitutes by getting in touch with our Contact Centre.

Customers without a Delivery Pass


If you fall into the definition of a vulnerable customer then we are working through how to identify you and give you access to priority home delivery.


If you do not fall into this category then you can still access grocery online through our expanded click and collect offer. At the moment we?re focussing on customers that need our help the most.

Click & Collect


For our Click and Collect online customers who can travel to our stores, from Monday 23 March, we will operate an expanded ?click and collect? service.


We are significantly increasing the number of collection sites across the country over the coming days in preparation for this.


Customers can place their order online as usual and pick it up from a collection point in the store car park.


Find out more about click and collect.


New Groceries Online and Delivery Pass registrations


We?re focusing on our existing customers for the time being. We are not currently able to support any new website registrations and will no longer be accepting delivery pass applications.


We will continue to review this and hope to be able to open our registrations to new customers who are elderly, disabled or vulnerable soon.


In-store caf?s and counters


To help us get more essential items onto the shelves, from Thursday, 19 March, we will be closing our cafes and our meat, fish and pizza counters in supermarkets. This means we can free up warehouse and lorry capacity for products that customers really need. It will also free up time for our store colleagues to focus on keeping the shelves as well stocked as possible.



A message from our CEO Mike Coupe


Dear Customer,


We are continuing to work around the clock to feed the nation in these challenging times.


Many of you have written to me in the past 24 hours to tell me that you like the idea of priority shopping for NHS workers and for elderly and disabled customers, but that these should be at different times.


We have therefore decided to allow NHS and social care workers to shop in our supermarkets for half an hour before they open each day. So anyone with NHS ID will be able to shop from 07.30-08.00 every day from Monday to Saturday. We?re delighted to be able to offer priority shopping to all the hard-working NHS staff across the country who are working so hard to keep us all safe and well.


In addition to this, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, all our supermarkets will dedicate 08.00-09.00 to serving elderly customers, disabled customers and carers.


Many of you have also asked me about priority online delivery slots for elderly, disabled and vulnerable customers.


We have been able to identify a number of customers as elderly and vulnerable based on the information they have given us previously. These details would include date of birth and if you have ever used our vulnerable customer helpline. For all of these customers, we will email you today (Sunday) with information on when slots will become available.


If you do not receive an email and you consider yourself to be vulnerable, please visit our Groceries Online website on Monday for information on how to contact us. We are also working as quickly as possible on an option for people to register themselves as disabled and vulnerable on their online shopping accounts.


Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to get in touch with me and share your feedback ? it?s because of you that we are making these changes and we will continue to listen, learn and adapt during this uncertain time.


Best wishes,


Mike'

JohnL Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I read yesterday supermarkets will move to selling

> emergency "boxes" of standard essentials making

> delivery, stocking etc. easier.

>

> The large selection of food usually available will

> be removed.



Do you know what will be in those boxes?


It's a great idea, but not everybody has the same essentials.


Will they have a vegan version, for example?


ETA: Or a gentrified version, with sourdough and prosecco :))

Alan Medic Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I wanted to send someone, who can't go out for

> fear of getting the virus, some shopping. I tried

> Waitrose, Ocado, Sainsburys, Morrisons and

> Iceland. No delivery slots available. Any others I

> could try? The person lives in SE25.


I eventually got a booking with the Co-op near the address in SE25. It was limited to 20 items and due to be delivered yesterday. When it was several hours late I contacted them, only to be told the order had been cancelled. No communication whatsoever. They didn't have the stock in store to fulfil the order.

I had a CO-Op delivery - not delivered - I'll make sure they don't take the money which was still pending - suspect they never fully intended to deliver :) - it's obvious in store gets priority - is that right when we should stay at home ?.


Had to order from Smith & Brock for some essentials and the rest I'll have to go out to Tesco next door which I didn't want to for a couple of the rest.


Managed to order 6 bottles of wine from Amazon and 24 beers from Camden Brewery (where lots of beer is going sold out - will it come back or is that it anyone know ?).

dbboy Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Asda & Sainsbury's still no delivery slots, if

> we're suppossed to stay at home when are they

> going to get on top of this??


I'm not sure they will get on top of it. The worry is it will encourage more people to stockpile in future.


Vulnerable people will have access to the government/Military run food hubs being set-up now.

It's only the "extrenely vulnerable" that will be helped by the government hubs, that's the 1.5 million very sickest people. The link to apply for that is here: https://www.gov.uk/coronavirus-extremely-vulnerable


The NHS 111 service that is deciding who gets on that list. They are doing it by matching codes on the NHS spine, that is the central NHS version of your medical records. The problem with that, is that although clinicins are supposed to enter codes on the database to record what medical conditions you have, it very often does not happen. They are often too busy, or were never properly trained on the databse.

It's difficult getting anything via delivery at the moment - if you order something (say a case of beer for example) and you see "unfulfilled" on the order (meaning probable out of stock even though it said in stock when you ordered) - you then order something similar from somewhere else in the hope of getting one of them before the weekend.


Many sitting on "pending" on my bank account meaning it's not taken out and will be automatically refunded a week later.


Amazon is still most reliable by far.

lameduck Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I emailed Mike Coupe this morning

> Re Sainsburys feeding the nation no reply email

> rubbish

> Asking him why can we not register

> I still have received no answer

> this is his email address maybe we should bombard

> him with emails

> vic

> [email protected]



Thank you for this. I have been trying to register by phone since Monday (and earlier) but just get a 'this is BT. The Network is busy. Try again later' message every time. No option via online account. Ended up putting a request in my delivery instructions but doubtful that will work!

ETA: Have just sent an email requesting a way to register as OAP, disabled, vulnerable etc. online as not able to get through by phone.

Not sure we should be using the supermarkets distribution networks - the vulnerable should have a separate distribution network and it should have been planned for before the outbreak (easy to say I know).


It seems they have failed a stress test in terms of online.


Edit - Sky India Reporter "there was a bit of panic buying but now it's petered out"

singalto Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I emailed Mike Coupe yesterday as it is impossible

> to get through on the phone. No response, of

> course!



I think it might be better to be emailing the minister in charge of food, Theresa Villiers. This is a problem that requires central government co-ordination. Email below.


[email protected]

lameduck Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I emailed Mike Coupe this morning

> Re Sainsburys feeding the nation no reply email

> rubbish

> Asking him why can we not register

> I still have received no answer

> this is his email address maybe we should bombard

> him with emails

> vic

> [email protected]



Bombarding him with emails will mean even less likelihood of an answer!He must be inundated as it is!


It won't be him reading them anyway. It will be some minion in his office, probably working from home :)


And if you do ever get a reply, it will just be a standard response.

Update from Sainsburys website:


- Sainsburys deliveries working with the Government extremely vulnerable list to identify priority customers and

offering access to slots by email

- Seemingly no provision at the moment, other than trying to get through by phone, to register as disabled, OAP etc.



'How we?re responding to COVID-19 (coronavirus)


We have listened to your feedback and taken further steps to make sure everyone has access to food and essential items, and to keep supporting our colleagues. These are summarised below. For full detail, please read the latest letter from our CEO Mike Coupe at the bottom of this page.


We?ve prioritised online delivery slots for vulnerable customers. We?ve already been able to identify some existing customers through the information that we have about them and have emailed these customers. We?re now working with the government to identify more, and you can register as vulnerable to coronavirus on GOV.UK to get added to our list in the coming days.


We?re taking all the necessary precautions to make sure our stores are safe. And we?re asking customers who can shop in stores to do so, and offer support to friends and neighbours who need it.


From Monday 23rd March, we are consolidating our opening hours and all our supermarkets will be open from 08.00 to 20.00 Monday ? Saturday. With the exception of some stores in Scotland, Sunday opening hours will stay the same (please check on Store Locator for Sunday opening hours in your store). Sainsbury?s Local and petrol station hours will stay the same


Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, all our supermarkets will dedicate 08.00 to 09.00 to serving elderly customers, disabled customers and carers


NHS and social care workers will be able to shop in our supermarkets for half an hour before they open, from Monday to Saturday. Anyone with NHS ID will be able to shop from 07.30 to 08.00 on these days


Adding more Click & Collect locations (from Monday 23 March)


Putting limits on certain products (from Wednesday 18 March)


Closing our cafes and counters (from Thursday 19 March).


How we?re helping our customers (updated 25 March)


Since Monday 23 March, we?ve been giving our existing online customers who are vulnerable priority access to online home delivery.


But we know that we haven?t been able to identify all of our vulnerable customers. So we?re now working with the government to identify those who are most in need.


As we have shared, we?re also increasing access to our Click & Collect service.

Identifying our vulnerable customers (Updated 25 March)


We?re pleased to say that since Monday 23 March, we?ve been able to serve many vulnerable customers with online home delivery. These customers will continue to get access to home delivery slots each week.


But we?ve recognised the need for the government to help us identify more people, and help those who are most vulnerable first.


That?s why going forward, the government is going to help us identify people who are extremely vulnerable to coronavirus. We will then prioritise these people so they can access home delivery slots.


To get access to home delivery slots in the coming days, please register as extremely vulnerable to coronavirus on GOV.UK. If you know it, it?s useful to have your NHS number to hand before you start the registration process. You can find it on any letter the NHS has sent you or on a prescription.


We?ll be in touch to let you know when you?ve been added and can book home delivery slots.



Delivering to self-isolating customers


If you are self-isolating, please let us know using the delivery instructions box ? this can be done when you are placing or amending your order at checkout. Otherwise this can be found in My Account > My addresses > Add your delivery instructions.


Our drivers will call ahead to let you know when they will be dropping your shopping in bags on the doorstep.


If you have identified as being in self-isolation our drivers will ask you to wait inside before bagging up your order, placing it on your doorstep and letting you know that it is ready for you to pick up.


We are unable to accept any returns on the doorstep from self-isolating customers however, customers can receive a refund for any substitutes by getting in touch with our Contact Centre.


Finally, our colleagues will not ask you to sign for your delivery.


Doorstep deliveries


In order to protect the safety and wellbeing of our customers and colleagues we are taking a number of steps to ensure that we are able to deliver to you as safely as possible.


We have taken the decision to deliver your shopping to your front door rather than taking it inside. If you live in a flat, we will still bring your shopping to your own front door.


A handy tip can be to keep some shopping bags, cardboard boxes or even your laundry basket close by when your delivery is due to help bring your shopping into your house.


Drivers will use alcohol based hand sanitiser regularly throughout their deliveries.


Delivery slot availability


From Monday 23 March, our existing online customers who are over 70 years of age, vulnerable or who have a disability will get priority access to online home delivery slots and access to Click & Collect services.


We?re working to identify more vulnerable customers and hope to be able to open this service to new customers soon. We are also working hard to make further home delivery and click & collect slots available for our delivery pass customers and will be contacting these customers over the coming days.


As we have shared, we are increasing access to our Click & Collect service and we hope to make that available to more customers very soon.


Product availability


We want to acknowledge that are we are experiencing extremely high demand for certain products currently and as such have introduced some quantity restrictions.


Customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk.


We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers. 

Substitutions


We want to acknowledge that are we are experiencing extremely high demand for certain products currently and as such have introduced some quantity restrictions.


Customers will be able to buy a maximum of three of any grocery product and a maximum of two on the most popular products including toilet paper, soap and UHT milk.


We have enough food coming into the system, but are limiting sales so that it stays on shelves for longer and can be bought by a larger numbers of customers.


We are unable to accept any returns on the doorstep from self-isolating customers however, customers can receive a refund for any substitutes by getting in touch with our Contact Centre.


Customers without a Delivery Pass


If you fall into the definition of a vulnerable customer then we are working through how to identify you and give you access to priority home delivery.


If you do not fall into this category then you can still access grocery online through our expanded click and collect offer. At the moment we?re focussing on customers that need our help the most.

Click & Collect


For our Click and Collect online customers who can travel to our stores, from Monday 23 March, we will operate an expanded ?click and collect? service.


We are significantly increasing the number of collection sites across the country over the coming days in preparation for this.


Customers can place their order online as usual and pick it up from a collection point in the store car park.


Find out more about click and collect.


New Groceries Online and Delivery Pass registrations


We?re focusing on our existing customers for the time being. We are not currently able to support any new website registrations and will no longer be accepting delivery pass applications.


We will continue to review this and hope to be able to open our registrations to new customers who are elderly, disabled or vulnerable soon.


In-store caf?s and counters


To help us get more essential items onto the shelves, from Thursday, 19 March, we will be closing our cafes and our meat, fish and pizza counters in supermarkets. This means we can free up warehouse and lorry capacity for products that customers really need. It will also free up time for our store colleagues to focus on keeping the shelves as well stocked as possible.




A message from our CEO Mike Coupe


Dear Customer,


We are continuing to work around the clock to feed the nation in these challenging times.


Many of you have written to me in the past 24 hours to tell me that you like the idea of priority shopping for NHS workers and for elderly and disabled customers, but that these should be at different times.


We have therefore decided to allow NHS and social care workers to shop in our supermarkets for half an hour before they open each day. So anyone with NHS ID will be able to shop from 07.30-08.00 every day from Monday to Saturday. We?re delighted to be able to offer priority shopping to all the hard-working NHS staff across the country who are working so hard to keep us all safe and well.


In addition to this, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, all our supermarkets will dedicate 08.00-09.00 to serving elderly customers, disabled customers and carers.


Many of you have also asked me about priority online delivery slots for elderly, disabled and vulnerable customers.


We have been able to identify a number of customers as elderly and vulnerable based on the information they have given us previously. These details would include date of birth and if you have ever used our vulnerable customer helpline. For all of these customers, we will email you today (Sunday) with information on when slots will become available.


If you do not receive an email and you consider yourself to be vulnerable, please visit our Groceries Online website on Monday for information on how to contact us. We are also working as quickly as possible on an option for people to register themselves as disabled and vulnerable on their online shopping accounts.


Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to get in touch with me and share your feedback ? it?s because of you that we are making these changes and we will continue to listen, learn and adapt during this uncertain time.


Best wishes,


Mike'

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    • BBC Homepage Skip to content Accessibility Help EFor you Notifications More menu Search BBC                     BBC News Menu   UK England N. Ireland Scotland Alba Wales Cymru Isle of Man Guernsey Jersey Local News Vets under corporate pressure to increase revenue, BBC told   Image source,Getty Images ByRichard Bilton, BBC Panorama and Ben Milne, BBC News Published 2 hours ago Vets have told BBC Panorama they feel under increasing pressure to make money for the big companies that employ them - and worry about the costly financial impact on pet owners. Prices charged by UK vets rose by 63% between 2016 and 2023, external, and the government's competition regulator has questioned whether the pet-care market - as it stands - is giving customers value for money. One anonymous vet, who works for the UK's largest vet care provider, IVC Evidensia, said that the company has introduced a new monitoring system that could encourage vets to offer pet owners costly tests and treatment options. A spokesperson for IVC told Panorama: "The group's vets and vet nurses never prioritise revenue or transaction value over and above the welfare of the animal in their care." More than half of all UK households are thought to own a pet, external. Over the past few months, hundreds of pet owners have contacted BBC Your Voice with concerns about vet bills. One person said they had paid £5,600 for 18 hours of vet-care for their pet: "I would have paid anything to save him but felt afterwards we had been taken advantage of." Another described how their dog had undergone numerous blood tests and scans: "At the end of the treatment we were none the wiser about her illness and we were presented with a bill of £13,000."   Image caption, UK pet owners spent £6.3bn on vet and other pet-care services in 2024, according to the CMA Mounting concerns over whether pet owners are receiving a fair deal prompted a formal investigation by government watchdog, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA). In a provisional report, external at the end of last year, it identified several issues: Whether vet companies are being transparent about the ownership of individual practices and whether pet owners have enough information about pricing The concentration of vet practices and clinics in the hands of six companies - these now control 60% of the UK's pet-care market Whether this concentration has led to less market competition and allowed some vet care companies to make excess profits 'Hitting targets' A vet, who leads one of IVC's surgeries (and who does not want to be identified because they fear they could lose their job), has shared a new internal document with Panorama. The document uses a colour code to compare the company's UK-wide tests and treatment options and states that it is intended to help staff improve clinical care. It lists key performance indicators in categories that include average sales per patient, X-rays, ultrasound and lab tests. The vet is worried about the new policy: "We will have meetings every month, where one of the area teams will ask you how many blood tests, X-rays and ultrasounds you're doing." If a category is marked in green on the chart, the clinic would be judged to be among the company's top 25% of achievers in the UK. A red mark, on the other hand, would mean the clinic was in the bottom 25%. If this happens, the vet says, it might be asked to come up with a plan of action. The vet says this would create pressure to "upsell" services. Panorama: Why are vet bills so high? Are people being priced out of pet ownership by soaring bills? Watch on BBC iPlayer now or BBC One at 20:00 on Monday 12 January (22:40 in Northern Ireland) Watch on iPlayer For instance, the vet says, under the new model, IVC would prefer any animal with suspected osteoarthritis to potentially be X-rayed. With sedation, that could add £700 to a bill. While X-rays are sometimes necessary, the vet says, the signs of osteoarthritis - the thickening of joints, for instance - could be obvious to an experienced vet, who might prefer to prescribe a less expensive anti-inflammatory treatment. "Vets shouldn't have pressure to do an X-ray because it would play into whether they are getting green on the care framework for their clinic." IVC has told Panorama it is extremely proud of the work its clinical teams do and the data it collects is to "identify and close gaps in care for our patients". It says its vets have "clinical independence", and that prioritising revenue over care would be against the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons' (RCVS) code and IVC policy. Vets say they are under pressure to bring in more money per pet   Published 15 April 2025 Vets should be made to publish prices, watchdog says   Published 15 October 2025 The vet says a drive to increase revenue is undermining his profession. Panorama spoke to more than 30 vets in total who are currently working, or have worked, for some of the large veterinary groups. One recalls being told that not enough blood tests were being taken: "We were pushed to do more. I hated opening emails." Another says that when their small practice was sold to a large company, "it was crazy... It was all about hitting targets". Not all the big companies set targets or monitor staff in this way. The high cost of treatment UK pet owners spent £6.3bn on vet and other pet-care services in 2024 - equal to just over £365 per pet-owning household, according to the CMA. However, most pet owners in the UK do not have insurance, and bills can leave less-well-off families feeling helpless when treatment is needed. Many vets used not to display prices and pet owners often had no clear idea of what treatment would cost, but in the past two years that has improved, according to the CMA. Rob Jones has told Panorama that when his family dog, Betty, fell ill during the autumn of 2024 they took her to an emergency treatment centre, Vets Now, and she underwent an operation that cost almost £5,000. Twelve days later, Betty was still unwell, and Rob says he was advised that she could have a serious infection. He was told a diagnosis - and another operation - would cost between £5,000-£8,000.   Image caption, Betty's owners were told an operation on her would cost £12,000 However, on the morning of the operation, Rob was told this price had risen to £12,000. When he complained, he was quoted a new figure - £10,000. "That was the absolute point where I lost faith in them," he says. "It was like, I don't believe that you've got our interests or Betty's interests at heart." The family decided to put Betty to sleep. Rob did not know at the time that both his local vet, and the emergency centre, branded Vets Now, where Betty was treated, were both owned by the same company - IVC. He was happy with the treatment but complained about the sudden price increase and later received an apology from Vets Now. It offered him £3,755.59 as a "goodwill gesture".   Image caption, Rob Jones says he lost faith in the vets treating his pet dog Betty Vets Now told us its staff care passionately for the animals they treat: "In complex cases, prices can vary depending on what the vet discovers during a consultation, during the treatment, and depending on how the patient responds. "We have reviewed our processes and implemented a number of changes to ensure that conversations about pricing are as clear as possible." Value for money? Independent vet practices have been a popular acquisition for corporate investors in recent years, according to Dr David Reader from the University of Glasgow. He has made a detailed study of the industry. Pet care has been seen as attractive, he says, because of the opportunities "to find efficiencies, to consolidate, set up regional hubs, but also to maximise profits". Six large veterinary groups (sometimes referred to as LVGs) now control 60% of the UK pet care market - up from 10% a decade ago, according to the CMA, external. They are: Linnaeus, which owns 180 practices Medivet, which has 363 Vet Partners with 375 practices CVS Group, which has 387 practices Pets at Home, which has 445 practices under the name Vets for Pets IVC Evidensia, which has 900 practices When the CMA announced its provisional findings last autumn, it said there was not enough competition or informed choice in the market. It estimated the combined cost of this to UK pet owners amounted to £900m between 2020-2024. Corporate vets dispute the £900m figure. They say their prices are competitive and made freely available, and reflect their huge investment in the industry, not to mention rising costs, particularly of drugs. The corporate vets also say customers value their services highly and that they comply with the RCVS guidelines.   Image caption, A CMA survey suggests pet owners are happy with the service they receive from vets A CMA survey suggests pet owners are happy with their vets - both corporate and independent - when it comes to quality of service. But, with the exception of Pets at Home, customer satisfaction on cost is much lower for the big companies. "I think that large veterinary corporations, particularly where they're owned by private equity companies, are more concerned about profits than professionals who own veterinary businesses," says Suzy Hudson-Cooke from the British Veterinary Union, which is part of Unite. Proposals for change The CMA's final report on the vet industry is expected by the spring but no date has been set for publication. In its provisional report, it proposed improved transparency on pricing and vet ownership. Companies would have to reveal if vet practices were part of a chain, and whether they had business connections with hospitals, out-of-hours surgeries, online pharmacies and even crematoria. IVC, CVS and Vet Partners all have connected businesses and would have to be more transparent about their services in the future. Pets at Home does not buy practices - it works in partnership with individual vets, as does Medivet. These companies have consistently made clear in their branding who owns their practices. The big companies say they support moves to make the industry more transparent so long as they don't put too high a burden on vets. David Reader says the CMA proposals could have gone further. "There's good reason to think that once this investigation is concluded, some of the larger veterinary groups will continue with their acquisition strategies." The CMA says its proposals would "improve competition by helping pet owners choose the right vet, the right treatment, and the right way to buy medicine - without confusion or unnecessary cost". For Rob Jones, however, it is probably too late. "I honestly wouldn't get another pet," he says. "I think it's so expensive now and the risk financially is so great.             Food Terms of Use About the BBC Privacy Policy Cookies Accessibility Help Parental Guidance Contact the BBC Make an editorial complaint BBC emails for you Copyright © 2026 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.
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