Originally Posted By: DannoBooneI MAY stand corrected but know this....the manager at the local
UPS terminal who was on duty the day of shipment knew exactly
what was being shipped, and he himself attached the ORM-D label
to the package.
After checking the UPS site just now, all this is probably mute
for they are discontinuing ORM-D.
https://www.ups.com/us/en/help-center/pa...ound-orm-d.page
"All ORM-D classifications (Consumer Commodity; Cartridges,
small arms; and Cartridges power device) are being eliminated
and may no longer be used after December 31, 2020."
Heretofore, I understood "cartridges power device" to be
primers. Is that an incorrect understanding? Was the UPS
manager's understanding incorrect?
with the package load they're currently under... all the shipping folks are obviously way overworked during this holiday season.
just because you physically told them what was in the box, doesnt mean they understood what you were describing or the law as it applies to primers/powder and didnt (unintentionally) assist you in breaking federal HAZMAT law. clearly if they had... we wouldnt be having this discussion.
generally speaking - accepting a UPS counter jockey's actions as valid legal advise is about like asking the counter guy at mcdonalds for medical advise when you're experiencing a medical emergency. neither of which is probably a sound idea.
"cartridge powder device" is NOT individual primers (or packages of them). its a whole loaded cartridge (hence the word cartridge), or a primer already inserted into a piece of brass. thats not very vague, and if you do get hemmed up... i'd probably leave that part out of your defense (IANAL, so take that advise for what i charged you for it)
here's to hoping that you dont end up paying a penalty over your ignorance. which the folks who enforce these kinds of things care absolutely nothing for.
even if you end up without a fine, unless you're independently wealthy with a silver spoon trust fund, the costs of the lawyer alone are going to be painful at best.