The Columbus Dispatch

Time has come for indoor delivery

- — Chicago Tribune

You’re waiting for an important package to be delivered. Or for the furnace repairman to arrive. Or the cable guy. Their companies can’t tell you exactly when they’ll be there. So you pace. And you peer out the window. And you hope you’re not in the bathroom when someone rings the bell.

Because a serviceper­son won’t linger or circle back, you’ll have to call and make another appointmen­t.

Delivery drivers won’t leave the package without a signature. Or they will leave it, increasing the risk that it will be swiped by porch pirates patrolling neighborho­ods around the holiday season.

If you step away, if you get distracted, if you don’t hear the bell, you’re out of luck.

But what if these package deliverers and others had a way to unlock your door (legally and with your permission), set the package inside or do the repair, and then leave your house as secure as when they entered? And what if you could monitor the action via a video camera? And what if there were real-time notificati­on to watch the delivery as it happens?

That’s the idea behind Amazon’s new Amazon Key service rolling out this month in Chicago and 36 other cities. Sounds great to those of us who’ve encountere­d the frustratio­ns chronicled above. “Amazon Key gives customers peace of mind knowing their orders have been safely delivered to their homes and are waiting for them when they walk through their doors,” Peter Larsen, vice president of delivery technology for Amazon, says in a news release.

We imagine some people will balk at allowing any stranger into their homes while they’re away — even with the aforementi­oned video monitoring and realtime notificati­on to watch the delivery as it happens. Amazon says its delivery people will be “thoroughly vetted.” But we all know that’s not a foolproof guarantee.

Still, we applaud Amazon for seeking to fill what we’ve always considered a huge, inexplicab­le void in the whole delivery biz. That is: Deliveries generally happen during the day, when many people aren’t home. Finding that door tag dangling and then being obliged to make the pilgrimage to a local delivery center is annoyingly inefficien­t. In the ideal world, delivery would take place when people are available. If Fed Ex and its ilk can track a package every step of the way from Beijing, how come they don’t know that you’re not home?

We’ve waited for an innovative tech guru to one-up Fed Ex and UPS by offering exclusive nighttime service. Say, Fed Ex After Hours — from apres dinner to 10 p.m.? When people are home to sign for important packages.

Yes, we’d pay extra for that.

Amazon plans to eventually expand its keyless-entry program so that others — from dog walkers to repairmen — can enter your home, do their jobs and leave. Walmart is testing a similar program that will allow drivers not just to deliver, but stash groceries in the refrigerat­or, if a customer requests.

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