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    San Gregorio Environmental Resource Ctr

    5.0 (2 reviews)

    Services - San Gregorio Environmental Resource Ctr

    Community Service/Non-Profit

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    7 years ago

    Great Place, not bad. I lost cell reception . This is a great place to start hitchhiking too

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    16 years ago

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    The UPS Store

    The UPS Store

    (81 reviews)

    I never got to thank the wonderful team at this store…read more It happened around July, and I was shipping a UPS package from a different city, which contained an inexpensive but very sentimental gift for an infant that recently underwent a major medical surgery. It was supposed to arrive near the San Francisco area, but somehow ended up all the way out at a UPS drop off point in Half Moon Bay. I thought to myself, "Not again." This wasn't UPS's first time losing one of my packages, and dealing with the UPS call center can be a total headache where you're treated as another number. Out of desperation, I called the UPS Store in Half Moon Bay for assistance to help me find my package, which was not even at their location. With the help of two employees (I believe it was David and the owner Carlos), David was able to retrieve my missing package and Carlos re-shipped it to the right address. Words couldn't express how thankful and grateful I was, and I couldn't even hold back my tears because of how important that package was as well as the child that received it. All I can say is, they really went above and beyond. Thank you so much, UPS Half Moon Bay team!

    If you are looking for good service and help with shipping, notary etc, then DO NOT go to the ups…read morestore in HMB. Keep going to Redwood City or another town They will always find something wrong with your package or document to force you to buy a new box or bring in extra documents etc Customer service and quality are very poor here at this location

    Mission Hospice & Home Care

    Mission Hospice & Home Care

    (50 reviews)

    We just selected Mission Hospice & Home care 3 weeks ago. They have not even met any of the…read moreservices they promised. They are all talk no action. If you are looking for a service that requires lifting from bed to wheelchair - their aides refuse this service. Our mom should be given bath or shower 2x a week. Nurse should show up 3x/week but only showed up 2x in the 3 week period. Our mom was only given bed bath only 2x during the 3-week period. DO NOT EVEN THINK of contracting their services. Very poor customers service. NOT GOOD!

    If your dying loved one is, or is likely to be, in pain, DO NOT use Mission Hospice's services…read more Prior to my family's experience with Mission Hospice, I'd always understood that the main benefit of entering hospice was that the patient receives, above all else, palliative care. That is, since there is no longer any hope of recovery, the patient is made as comfortable as possible in his or her final days or weeks. I guess one thing I am grateful for re: our experience is that I learned that "hospice" does NOT equal "pain relief," so at least I can warn others. My father was dying of a cancer which is known to be especially painful. He'd been admitted to Mills Peninsula hospital a few weeks earlier, and while his oncologists were initially optimistic he might recover, it quickly became apparent he would not. So, we were asked if we wanted to consider hospice services. My siblings and I, when we met with the official liaison for Mission, as well as two Mission volunteers, stated several times that all we cared about was that our dad would suffer as little pain as possible in his final days. The volunteers were nice, but the liaison was a bit cold, which should perhaps have been a warning. Still, "hospice" sounded like a blessing, and when we were told that Mission is one of the very few not-for-profit hospices around, well, that sounded even better. THANK GOD we decided to keep our dad in Mills Peninsula as opposed to having him transferred to Mission's hospice home, which I believe is in Redwood City. To make a long story short, a physician whom I'll refer to as "Dr. S" of Mission Hospice did not want to increase our father's dose of morphine--when he had less than a week to live. (All of his doctors and nurses at Mills by that point were in agreement that the end was within days.) We could not get a hold of anyone else at Mission to ask why Dr. S would not increase his pain meds. Finally, after more than a day of pleading with the nurses and doctors at Mills Peninsula (who were excellent and very compassionate), my brother managed to get a physician at Mills to override Dr. S's orders. I do not recall all of the ins and outs involved, but it was a nightmare, especially, obviously, for our poor dad who was in excruciating pain. I might add that my brother later shared with me that the Mills physician who finally overrode Dr. S's orders and increased my father's morphine dose told him, "I have to say, I'm very surprised at how low this dose is for someone in your father's condition." Here's the clincher, though: The day before our dad died, my brother and I were talking with a nurse at Mills who mentioned that she had previously worked for Mission Hospice. She was a nurse we started talking to in the corridor, not a nurse who was assigned to our dad's care, so we had never interacted with her previously, and she had no idea our dad was in hospice until we mentioned it. When my brother started to talk about the ordeal to get our father's dose of morphine increased, the nurse suddenly became very quiet. Then she said, "Oh, that must be Dr. S....she, uh, doesn't believe in a lot of pain meds." I can only describe the look on her face, and her tone, as she said this, as "uncomfortable." A HOSPICE PHYSICIAN "doesn't believe in a lot of pain meds"?! I thought that was the entire point of hospice--to make a dying person as comfortable as possible, whether spiritually, emotionally, and yes, PHYSICALLY. Apparently not. Also the day before our dad died, we were visited by a Mission volunteer who asked if we'd like her to pray with us. Our mom is very religious, so I appreciated that and felt it might comfort her. The volunteer was of a different faith than our family, but she read from a book of traditional prayers of our religion, and she did it very reverently. That was very nice. The problem was that when she'd finished praying, and said some kind words, she wouldn't leave my dad's hospital room. This was despite the fact that I kept saying things like, "Thank you so much for the prayers. That was very kind, but we have other family coming soon to say goodbye," etc. She would just nod and say, "Okay"... and sit there, staring at my father. I'm not sure how I could have given any more obvious hints; I was also making comments like, "It's so kind of you to volunteer--I'm sure you must have other people you need to check in on now." She would say, "No, I don't." Another of my siblings was starting to get VERY upset that this woman would not take the hint (hints) and was even starting to raise his voice, saying things like, "It's kind of crowded in here--I hope there'll be someplace for A and B to sit when they get here." The volunteer still just sat there. I finally got up and left our dad's hospital room, in tears. I don't know if my other sibling finally said something to the volunteer or not, but she finally left shortly after that. You, and your loved one, don't need this extra pain.

    San Gregorio Environmental Resource Ctr - nonprofit - Updated May 2026

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