Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Another glass lid shatters on a customer’s Kenmore washer

- By Christophe­r Elliott King Features Syndicate

Sears about this, the company told me it was “cosmetic” and there was nothing it could do. I then called back and spoke to someone else who set up a service call for a tech to look at the washer. When the service person looked, he was shocked. I asked him how he could get all of the glass out of the machine since the glass shards were small enough to fit into the little holes in the middle of the machine, and he said someone would “take the machine apart and vacuum it out” when Sears replaced the lid.

I was tentativel­y OK with this solution, since at least the company was trying to fix it. We were supposed to have it fixed in early September. But then I received a call from Sears, saying that the replacemen­t lid is back-ordered with no estimated shipment date. So we are without a washing machine indefinite­ly.

I’m at a loss as to what to do at this point. I really would just like my money back, since I don’t trust Kenmore’s machines anymore. Can you help?

A: Oh no, not another Kenmore shattered-glass case! I’ve been receiving quite a few of these lately. Obviously, Kenmore shouldn’t have sold a washer that spontaneou­sly breaks. But if it did, it should own up to the problem and either recall the appliance or fix it.

These Kenmore shattered-glass cases have a few common threads. Customers purchased their Kenmore appliances months after the first warnings about shattered glass lids appeared online. A little research would have prevented this error. Consumers would have bought a different appliance.

Sears and Kenmore also consistent­ly downplay the issue. Why didn’t Kenmore recall this washer? I don’t know, but based on the number of complaints I’ve received, I would say it should have done that at least a year ago.

And finally, Sears drags its feet on the resolution. A back-ordered part is not the customer’s problem. It’s the manufactur­er’s problem. I don’t want to hear a company’s excuses when my appliance blows up. I want a working washing machine.

You could have appealed your case to a Sears executive. I list the names, numbers and email addresses of the Sears customer-service managers on my consumer-advocacy site: elliott.org/companycon­tacts/sears.

But I also think that, given the number of complaints, you should have taken pictures of the broken washer as a public service.

I contacted Sears on your behalf. A representa­tive contacted you immediatel­y, apologized and agreed to exchange your broken Kenmore Elite top-load washer. “We regret the delay,” the representa­tive told me.

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