Kindness Ranch in Hartville, Wyoming, has long relied on speedy delivery, thanks to services like Amazon Prime and its partner UPS, to help with its mission to care for hundreds of rescue animals.
But those deliveries wonât be as speedy going forward for Kindness Ranch and others who live in remote areas of southeastern Wyoming.
Kindness Ranch Executive Director John Ramer told Cowboy State Daily he has recently discovered that United Parcel Service (UPS) is no longer making daily deliveries to the region.
âWe watch tracking and shipping times because thatâs how we gauge when we last ordered stuff,â Ramer said. âSuddenly we noticed it seemed like deliveries were being sparse.â
With a hundred or so animals at any given time, Kindness Ranch depends on timely deliveries of food and other supplies like medication to care for its rescues.
Ramer said UPS never mentioned the changes in service to him at all. He found out about it on the fly when a laptop suddenly quit working right before a trip he was taking to New York to get some dogs rescued from the West Bank.
UPS was contacted about its general delivery policy for southeast Wyoming, but said it would not comment on that without âspecific tracking numbers.â
No Refunds, Plan Better
Ramer ordered a replacement laptop from Apple, then selected overnight shipping with Appleâs partner, UPS.
âThey guaranteed delivery on Monday,â Ramer said.
Then he kept tabs on the tracking information a bit anxiously. He relaxed when he saw that the laptop arrived in Cheyenne on Saturday.
âI was like cool, it will be here Monday,â Ramer said. âI can get to the airport and hop on my flight.â
But Monday, Ramer waited around all day for the laptop to arrive, but it never did.
When he went back to check the tracking information again, it showed only the word âdelayed.â
So, he went to the UPS website, and a little AI chat robot claimed that delivery had been attempted, but no one was home.
That made Ramer a little bit mad. He knew that wasnât true. Heâd been anxiously waiting all day at home for the laptop, and nobody had attempted to deliver it at all.
âI was like, âNo you didnât,â and I called their 800 number,â Ramer said. âThe guy was like, âWell, no, it will be delivered tomorrow.ââ
Ramer told the guy heâd paid extra for overnight shipping, and was then put on hold.
âWhen the guy came back, he was like, âYouâre not gonna like my answer,ââ Ramer said. âAnd I was like, âWell, what is your answer?ââ
Only then was Ramer told that UPS is now only delivering to the Hartville area where Kindness Ranch is located three days a week.
âWell, thatâs news to me,â Ramer told the UPS customer service rep. âWhen did that happen?â
The man answered that there just werenât enough parcels going to that area to justify daily deliveries.
Ramer pointed out that people are relying on UPS for medications and things like that, and urged the man to tell his bosses to reconsider that decision. Not to mention paying for overnight deliveries that theyâre not getting overnight.
âThe guy said he would pass it on up the chain to see what they could do,â Ramer said. âWhich just means thereâs nothing he can do, and he just wants to appease me.â
When Ramer asked about a refund on the shipping fees heâd paid for a premium delivery, he said UPS refused.
âThey just told me to plan better,â Ramer said.

Not Just Kindness Ranch
Ramer had a chat with a couple other UPS drivers later on and learned heâs not the only one aggravated by the situation.
âThereâs ranchers down the road who, you know, are sending in blood samples and whatnot that are supposed to be picked up and overnighted to labs,â Ramer said. âAnd theyâre waiting for medications for their cattle.â
Despite that, Ramer said he was told UPS drivers arenât being allowed to go out to the area, even if they happen to forget a package.
The situation is likely to get worse, too.
Ramer said he was also told that UPS is working on a shipping center in Guernsey for packages headed to his area. Once that happens, it means UPS will no longer be delivering directly to Kindness or any other ranch or home.
The situation has Ramer switching as many products as he can to Walmart, which uses FedEx and still does daily deliveries to the area.
Failing that, he tries for shipping through the U.S. Postal Service, if thatâs an option â but with the Postal Service deciding to move most of Cheyenneâs mail processing to Denver and most of Casperâs mail processing to Billings, that may soon not be as timely as it once was.
Meanwhile, Ramer has tried to work his way up the food chain at UPS to complain to someone who is higher up.
So far, the only luck heâs had is going through Twitter, where he said the company has been a little more responsive than it is through other channels.
âI just wish that the advertised services were accurate,â Ramer said. âThatâs my biggest complaint. Itâs really, really frustrating, especially for getting an item for a business trip that I was counting on having timely before I had to fly to New York.â
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.




