Lost-and-found offices at large organizations can handle a large and varied collection of articles.
Transport for London's lost property offices (which handle items lost on the city's
Tube,
buses and
taxis) handles over 130,000 items a year, including 24,000 bags and 10,000
mobile phones. Among the more peculiar items that have been handed in include a
wedding dress, ashes in an
urn, a
longcase clock, a
kitchen sink, and several
wheelchairs. In Japan, a combination of infrastructure, laws, and cultural norms result in a very strong lost-and-found system; Tokyo's lost-and-found system processes over 4 million items annually. Other large organizations may lack a central lost-and-found office but have several offices attached to different administrative units. This is the case, for instance, at the
University of Illinois, where different campus units have both distinct offices and different unofficial retention and resolution policies (rules for how long to keep items and what to do with them once that period has expired). In addition to such distributed offices, a cross-unit office might also exist; again referring to the University of Illinois, this cross-functional unit rests in the Campus Police (Division of Public Safety).{{cite news |author=Sharita Forest |title=Mom, Where's My Shoe? ==Computing==