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Postal News - February 2006 |
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February 28, 2006 -
USPS release January 2006 Financial & Operating
Statements -
For January,
February 28, 2006 - Eight Counterfeit Postal Keys Found in Man's Car
"Police investigators said they are trying to figure
out how a man ended up with eight copies of mail carrier keys, which gave him
access to people's private information. The postal inspector said a thief had
counterfeit mail carrier keys used to get into locked community mailboxes, such
as those found at apartment complexes."
February 28, 2006 APWU Members Win 5-Year Contract at Detroit MTESC Interview with Honolulu USPS District Manager Daryl A. Ishizaki Explosive Scare at Sunrise Post Office PRC to host briefings on International Mail, Financial Reporting
Opinion:
United States Postal Junk Mail Service
Australia Post aiming for stamp
record
February 27, 2006 -
USPS, DOL Reach $6.5 Million Back Wage Agreement -The
U.S. Department of Labor has announced an agreement with the U.S. Postal Service
(USPS) that will result in payment of more than $6.5 million in back wages to
almost 900 pilots, co-pilots and flight engineers. The employees worked
on several USPS contracts and subcontracts to transport mail by air between
January 1996 and August 2001. The USPS contractors and subcontractors affected
by this settlement are Ryan International Airlines, Express One International
Inc. and Evergreen International Airlines Inc.
February 27, 2006 -
USPS finds six ways to cut costs, not services
February 27, 2006 - Plan to Relocate 200 Postal Workers Put on Hold
- A plan to reassign 200 postal workers to different
branches out of town has been put on hold, according to the Postmaster of New
Orleans. Eyewitness News had previously obtained a document detailing those
plans, but the postal service said that no employee would be forced to leave
or return to the city. However, the Postmaster added that the post office was
in need of more mail carriers to handle the mail load for Orleans Parish.
- Postal Workers Asked to Relocate Out of Town, say not enough time given
February 27, 2006 'Dilbert,' 'Cathy' Help Postal Service Talk With Customers
Mailers
Look to Sidestep Sales Tax on Postage Mailers Question Response If Flats Address Shifts
Postmaster, wife known for stamps
Mail won't be same without retiring postm When not to be in that number - 701 ZIP codes spell annoyance
February
27, 2006 -
USPS finds six ways to cut costs, not services
Mailers Look to Sidestep Sales
Tax on Postage Mailers Question Response If Flats Address Shifts
Postmaster, wife known for stamps
"The Collins-Carper
[postal reform] bill is a culmination of years of work and has broad support
among the mailing industry including the Coalition for a 21st Century Postal
Service -- which represents hundreds of large and small mailers, the Financial
Services Roundtable, United Parcel Service, FedEx, R.R. Donnelley, the city
and rural letter carrier unions, the postmasters and postal supervisor associations,
and numerous non-profit organizations such as AARP, the Disabled Veterans of
America, and the American Institute for Cancer Research."
Residents Deliver Postal Complaints
Postal Service Tracks Evacuees' Ebb and Flow
Residents offer a love letter to mail carrier Even child's scrawl proves no obstacle for USPS
(Apple Valley, Ca.) A Postal Service
truck caught fire, fueled by bundles of correspondence that will never be delivered.
Although the unnamed female mail carrier driving the truck had already made
418 deliveries by Wednesday afternoon, there were 182 bundles of mail left for
residents when the truck suddenly caught fire according to USPS representative
Mike Cannone. Cannone said that the fire will remain under investigation by
private USPS investigators, but he believes it happened as a result of an engine
malfunction.
Last week, a LLV caught fire in New Jersey which was reportedly caused
by a
mechanical problem.
Probation, fine for ex-postal worker who open fake letter - Edward Cramer
is unlikely to open other people's mail ever again. Especially if it's addressed
to "Playboy Girl Next Door Contest" and marked "Photos, Do Not Bend." New NAPUS leader to take on short staffing USPS Selects Company to Provide Gift Certificate Award Postal Service completes Aberdeen study
PRC Files Order For Network Realignment Steps
"The U.S.
Postal Service expects to lose $1.8 billion by the end of its fourth quarter,
in part because of surprisingly weak Standard mail volume. "We see very little
growth in Standard mail volume [right now], [but] we are hoping to get it back
up to the 3 percent growth level that it did last year," Richard J. Strasser
Jr., USPS chief financial officer and executive vice president, said at yesterday's
quarterly Mailers' Technical Advisory Committee meeting. Fuel costs, up 20 percent
to 30 percent, are becoming a big concern for postal officials. The costs affect
the agency's cost-of-living expenses. "This year, we've had the largest increase
in our COLA expenses," Strasser said. "Our costs this year were $800 million
higher than they were last year."
February 23, 2006 - Survey: USPS Trusted on Privacy, But Not Government Overall
The U.S.
Postal Service is the most trusted government agency when it comes to privacy
protection, according to a recent Ponemon Institute LLC survey. Overall, however,
government agencies fared worse in 2005 than the year before, suggesting that
Americans are increasingly wary of breaches of their privacy.
February 23, 2006- | on news below Reform May Be Decided by Summer, Postal Official Says USPS: We're Working on Fixing Service Problems
USPS OIG Internships
-
Justices Curb Postal Service's Immunity From Lawsuits
February 22, 2006 - APWU: Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) Update - The ninth Cost-Of-Living Adjustment will be $457 per year. The adjustment amounts to a 22 cents per hour increase, or $17.60 per pay period. The ninth COLA will take effect March 18, 2006 (pay period 07-2006, pay date April 7, 2006. the 1.6% pay raise — also effective March 18, 2006 — are being prepared for printing in The American Postal Worker magazine
The Valley
Press newspaper in California recently reported in a front page story that shifting
of the guard has taken place at the USPS Van Nuys District office and at the
Lancaster and Palmdale stations. A spokesman for the service says that Virginia
Tovar, the former Van Nuys District manager, is now plant manager. Kerry Wolny
has been reassigned to the position vacated by Tovar. Postmaster Anita Plata
is back in her official position as postmaster at Lancaster. Tony Plante, who
had been serving as officer in charge at Lancaster, has returned as postmaster
in Palmdale.
February
22, 2006 -
February
22, 2006-
Former Postal Worker, Infected with Anthrax in 2001, Still Feels Effects
Jaffer: Study focuses on volume levels of first-class single-piece mail Neither War Nor Bombs Stay These Iraq Couriers Mail Carrier Helps Police Track Down Fugitive Couple Mailbox invention catches eye of television show Arizona: 300 Data-entry jobs open at post office Clerk likes job's variety, working with the public Part-time postal worker keeps mail delivery rolling along
Cary Customers Seek Solutions
For Post Office Crowding Official: Mail is hot property for thieves Japan to stop mail delivery at 1,000 rural post offices - Japan Post is explaining to employees and labor unions that its "objective is to efficiently redeploy collection and delivery bases, and that there will be no adverse impact on services for the public such as mail delivery."
February 21, 2006 Postal Service Request for Advisory Opinion from PRC Some Holiday Postal Workers Aren't Getting Paid Report Cards sent in student's name to PO Boxes returned as undeliverable (link corrected)
New Orleans main post office to reopen today
February
20, 2006 -
Debate
Heats Up Over Mail Processing Study
February 20, 2006 - Demand Tipped for Cardboard Mail Scales A few weeks ago, in a story about the U.S. Postal Service, we briefly mentioned the tiny cardboard scales the post office was offering so customers could easily weigh their letters. It turns out the Postal Service didn't distribute the nifty little scales in all post offices. But after a limited giveaway last fall, it will distribute 200,000 "in early summer" to 18,000 post offices nationwide, according to Gerald J. McKiernan, a Postal Service spokesman. The post office will sell them for a "modest cost," McKiernan said. They shouldn't cost much, because the post office is paying the manufacturer "much less than the cost of a first-class stamp" for each one, according to the Dutch co-inventor of the scale, which is given away by many major postal services, including Royal Mail and Deutsche Post, he said." |
"The Senate on Feb. 8 unanimously approved a bill that would turn the independent Postal Rate Commission into a new regulatory board and limit rate hikes to the inflation rate. The bill, which passed the House last summer on a 410-20 vote, is now in a conference committee to work out differences between the two versions. Postal Service officials say the new board overseeing many internal business practices is unworkable. "We have no control over the decisions that are being made, and yet we're supposed to implement them," said Jerry McKiernan, spokesman for the Postal Service. |
February 20, 2006 Substitute mail carrier saves day
Native son reflects on 20 years as Dravosburg postmaster
Postal worker suspended for Playboy
mag theft retires with full benefits
February 18, 2006 - Postal Service a no-show as Mayor, reps meet to discuss Waterbury pullout - As part of its ongoing efforts to regionalize postal services, the quasi-public agency decided in October 2005 to stop using the city's main post office as a regional processing facility based on conclusions of efficiency studies. Legislators and a representative of the postal union argue that the move doesn't make economic sense given the cost of transporting mail to the new regional processing center in Wallingford and back each day, saying that it leads to a reduction in service and a loss of business traffic downtown. APWU local President James Conway, who lobbied for the meeting, was the sole postal employee at the session. |
February 18, 2006 Former Postal Worker gets probation in embezzling scheme
Stamping out of post office upsets Brooklandville
February 17, 2006- Postal Service to study US mail facilities -USPS plans to study mail facilities throughout the country and might shut down some, partially because people are sending less first-class mail. Paul Vogel, USPS VP for network-operations management briefed reporters yesterday about the studies during a conference call Thursday. While it used to take employees one hour to sort 500 pieces of mail by hand, the Postal Service's bar-coding system can sort 30,000 pieces of mail in an hour, Vogel said. Postal Service Outlines Plans for New Network Vogel said that new mailing patterns demand these changes. For example, "single-piece First-Class mail is eroding. Over the past six or seven years, it's gone down almost 20 percent ... and that's where our labor intensity is in our system network -- collecting and sorting and canceling all of that type of mail. | - Springfield bulk mail center may be moved | Consolidating doesn't mean loss of jobs | Still not known if postal work moving to Memphis | New mail-sorting system draws criticism | Rockford: Mail study moves ahead; residents will have a say
February 17, 2006- Postal Service Launches College Contest to Promote NetPost, Click-N-Ship and Direct Mail - USPS announced the launch of the “P.R. Professional Experience,” last month, a contest in which student teams from colleges and universities in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut compete to see who can devise the best public relations campaign for the Postal Service’s online products NetPost, Click-N-Ship and Direct Mail . Participating students could win over $2500 in prizes sponsored by Microsoft, JetBlue Airways and Travel Pro, and the chance to have their Grand Prize winning campaign featured in a future Postal Service Public Relations promotion.
February 17, 2006 - Former Postal Clerk arrested for stealing from Collection Boxes -Postal authorities arrested Debra Debra L. Sheffield, in December after an investigation led postal officials to the clerk, who had been working in Benbrook. Sheffield is accused of using a postal key to take mail from collection boxes. from August until mid-December. Sheffield was indicted last month on a federal charge of possession of stolen mail.. "We believe there are over 5,000 victims at this time and climbing," she said. Two months ago, investigators said they watched Sheffield empty a collection box and followed her to a motel. "Basically we knocked on the door and the jig was up," McMurrey said. |
February
17, 2006 Mail carrier bitten by dog wins $25,000 Ronald Reagan Stamp to be Reissued
USPS completes investigation of Postal Workers
Authorities said a crooked postal worker helped herself to huge amounts of mail from August of last year through December. Postal inspector Amanda McMurrey said the female employee had a key to the boxes. "We believe there are over 5,000 victims at this time and climbing," she said. Two months ago, investigators said they watched Sheffield empty a collection box and followed her to a motel. "Basically we knocked on the door and the jig was up," McMurrey said. |
USPS ponders national E-recycling,
solicits industry partner
Lives on the line, postal heroes
deliver Rally under way for 39 cent Jack Benny stamp
- Graphics: USPS Current Network and Network Simplification (PDF)
February 15, 2006 - White House Veto Threat Looms Over Postal Bill Negotiations Now that sweeping postal legislation has cleared the Senate, the bill's champions are gearing up for what will likely be a contentious conference. Aides in both chambers say it will be relatively easy to reconcile House and Senate differences, but resolving issues dealing with the White House's looming veto threat is another matter. The administration opposes language to transfer the agency's $27 billion military pensions obligation from the Postal Service to the Treasury and give the agency access to money slated for an escrow account. The American Postal Workers Union prefers the worker's compensation provisions in the House measure. In a statement, the union said the Senate bill "would shift a significant portion of the cost of on-the-job injuries from the USPS to postal workers." Lobbyists close to the negotiations say the Senate's approach will likely prevail on most differences |
USPS Celebrates Black History Month and Milestones of Civil Rights MovementAPWU: USPS Assigns Jurisdiction For ‘Enhanced’ AFSM-100 Machines Postal workers worry about jobs going to Akron Postal worker marks 40 yearsNew Chairman, Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee Jaffer: Council doesn’t serve postal customers No decision in Aberdeen postal study University Park Post Office to replace 'Don the Mail Guy' University mail room workers charged with stealing gift cards, certificates
February
14, 2006
February 13, 2006 - League of Postmasters President Clarifies Statement Regarding NALC and APWU Members - Let me make it clear that I have great respect for our carriers and clerks. They are our front line with our customers. I never intended the article to sound as if members of NALC or APWU were not doing their jobs and were therefore responsible for all the productivity losses we are currently experiencing. |
February
13, 2006 -
February
13, 2006 -
Letter: Columnist's misguided potshots give Postal Service a black eye
New Fruitland postmaster touts
USPS technology
Postal Foes Join Forces In Sioux City Postal Center Debate
Fresh air and people made it a good 33 years for retiring mailman
APWU: Bush Budget Proposal Addresses Postal Reform
Retiring postmaster will miss people, not stress
Bill could stop movement of Sioux City postal center
February 09, 2006 - Senate Passes Postal Reform Bill (S. 662) -The two versions will now go to conference committee to work out differences. Once that has occurred, the bill will be sent to President Bush. Postcom reports: The Mailers Council has reported that "Following are the Senate conferees for the postal reform bills: DEMOCRATS Lieberman (CT) Akaka (HI) Carper (DE) REPUBLICANS Collins (ME) Bennett (UT) Coleman (MN) Stevens (AK) Voinovich (OH). |
Postal Point Person? "The White House point person on legislation to overhaul the U.S. Postal Service, Claude A. Allen , head of the domestic policy council, resigned Wednesday, leaving the Bush administration to look for a presidential adviser to help broker a compromise bill." - APWU: Our struggle now moves to a new stage - NALC: Young Praises Senate Passage of Postal Reform Legislation - Postal overhaul bill finally passes Senate, heads to conference
- Mailers React :
DMA
|
February 09, 2006 - Bush buried detailed Social Security privatization proposals in 2007 budget -.."with no fanfare whatsoever, Bush stuck a big Social Security privatization plan in the federal budget proposal, which he sent to Congress on Monday. On page 321 of the budget proposal, you see the privatization costs: $24.182 billion in fiscal 2010, $57.429 billion in fiscal 2011 and another $630.533 billion for the five years after that, for a seven-year total of $712.144 billion." |
February 09, 2006 | on any of today's news below Three Illinois Libraries Test Home Delivery Service Editorial: Rural Carrier's Border Patrol drama doesn't sit well $12K Reward Offered after theft of three postal vehicles Letter carrier held up in Dayton Mail carrier delivers for ailing woman Postal Service considers processing Helena mail in Great Falls McCausland (Iowa), Postal Service reach tentative agreement After 50 years, Connecticut postman's route starts and ends on memory lane Pennsylvania grand jury indicts two former postal workers
Workers give postmaster top marks
February
08, 2006 -
USPS Board
Approves Development of Flats Sequencing System (FSS) - First-Class mail volume down, Standard, Express Mail and Priority Mail Up - Also, The board also approved funding to develop and test a Remote Encoding System program, which will replace the Image Processing Subsystem (USPS: Three more RECs will close in 2006). | - Comprehensive Statement on Postal Operations for FY 2005
February
08, 2006 -
Senators lift holds on postal reform bill, paving way for vote
Senators Withdraw Hold on Postal Reform Bill, Legislation Could Pass Today
February 08, 2006 - Postal Service: Delving into delivery delays - ".... postal management across this nation spend 95 percent of their time avoiding the real issues that are brought to them. They have only one goal, achieve the artificial numbers that determine if they are meeting the goals set at headquarters." Another said, "I am a mail carrier in the northeast and can sympathize with all the horror stories I hear from patrons. We as mail carriers are just as dismayed with the direction the service is taking. There is a fanatical push to reduce costs at the expense of service. We all understand the importance of cost cutting and agree it is necessary to be efficient and competitive. Staff is being reduced to bare minimums so there are not enough employees to complete all the rounds." | - Watsonville, CA: Nighttime deliveries highlight postal woes
February 08, 2006 - NY: 10 accused in postage stamp scam - Some local stores got a big bargain on postage stamps last year. And 10 Buffalo residents could wind up in federal prison for giving it to them. The U.S. Postal Inspection Service arrested 10 men and women on Monday, accusing them of buying postage stamps with $35,750 in checks that turned out to be fraudulent. Authorities believe the defendants then sold the stamps, at bargain rates, to local stores. The stores, in turn, sold them to the public at a nice profit.
February 08, 2006
Pawn shop includes drive-up contract postal unit Mourners recall woman's passion for diversity FedEx agrees to penalize companies that ship cigarettes
February
07, 2006 -A
Billion A Week Paid Out On Postal Payroll
February 07, 2006 - Postmaster Suspended -(AP) Postal officials won't say why the postmaster in Great Falls was placed on administrative leave. Bruce Gruver has been Great Falls postmaster since December 2004. He was placed on administrative leave in mid-January of this year. Al DeSarro is western regional spokesman for the Postal Service in Denver. He says there is an internal investigation, which may conclude in a month or so. But that's all DeSarro would say. Postmaster Gruver was placed on leave January 24th. Yesterday Dave Wheeler, an experienced postmaster from Miles City, began work as the acting postmaster in Great Falls. Before taking the Great Falls job, Gruver was postmaster in Fort Dodge, Iowa
February
07, 2006 -Ex-postal
worker facing charges after allegedly making threats Survey Finds Offers in Envelopes Receive More Attention
February
07, 2006 -
Survey Finds Offers in Envelopes Receive More Attention
February 07, 2006 APWU Wins Important Ruling for Private-Sector Truck Drivers Brentwood Anthrax Survivors Take Case to US Supreme Court Bloomington-area Leaders Oppose Plan to Move Mail Processing Man Crashes into Nassau Post Office, No One Hurt Brentwood Anthrax Survivors Take Case to US Supreme Court
Whether rain nor snow ...:
Mail carriers carry on through weather
February
06, 2006 -
fFebruary 06, 2006 - Late Deliveries in West, Southwest Trouble Mailers- Mailers and printers are watching a recent spate of late mail deliveries in the Southwest and West, as well as reports of mail being delivered at night. Reports surfaced last month that areas in California and New Mexico were having regular delays of one or two days, and in some cases four. In other cases, mail was being delivered to residences as late as 10 p.m. Steve LeNoir, president of the National League of Postmasters, said service has taken a beating in the two states because of hiring issues. LeNoir said the league has been working on these problems at the local and national level and met with officials at postal headquarters last week. A representative from another large printer who requested anonymity said the West Coast delivery problem has arisen in "nearly every industry meeting over the past few months, and it is becoming problematic. One publisher says it takes two weeks for a magazine to get delivered in California.". Rep. Henry Waxman, D-CA, ranking minority member on the House Committee on Government Reform, and chairman Tom Davis, R-VA, cited problems in the Los Angeles area in a Jan. 31 letter to Postmaster General John E. Potter. |
February 06, 2006
Huron postal facility honored for employee safety program Bush Seeks to Increase Health Savings Accounts- In his State of the Union speech last week, President Bush gave short shrift -- just 165 words -- to the subject of health care. Still, administration officials say finding an antidote to rising costs will be a priority for the White House this year. Bush's prescription includes promoting health savings accounts (HSAs) and "consumer-driven" health plans that he says will trim expenses by prodding Americans to assume greater responsibility for their health care choices. |
Previous story: On-duty Barron postman arrested for drunk driving
Udall Takes Tough Stance on New Mexico Postal Operations
Iowa delegation keeps pushing to retain Sioux City postal distribution center
Editorial: Help is coming for Las Cruces mail woes
Dougherty residents worried about
future of their post office Postal carriers can walk on lawns if OK with customers
Wilma blows away postal delivery USPS: Mail Military Valentines Early
- New Mexico postal problems headed to Congress
February 03, 2006 - Senate Committee to Hold Hearings on Empty Federal Buildings
February 03, 2006- Postal service threatens lawsuit over traffic trouble at food market -Postal service threatens lawsuit against Delray over traffic trouble at food market The U.S. Postal Service is threatening to sue Delray Beach for failing to enforce code violations against The Boys Farmers Market, a popular grocery store that is the site of traffic confusion in the past several years. In a letter, postal service attorney Mark Dennett characterized a "tortured history" of dealing with code violations, particularly traffic issues, at the store. Dennett suggested the city is "either unable or unwilling" to get the store to comply, putting customers and employees at the post office next door in danger
February 03, 2006
Woman arrested for threatening to shoot postal employee over PO Box Rule Western Union telegram service ends- Western Union sent about 20,000 telegrams through the postal system for next-day delivery last year
February
02, 2006 -
February
02, 2006 -Postal
Service fighting attempt to regulate price of Disney letter sheets
-The
United States Postal Service has renewed its efforts to kill any attempt to
regulate the prices of its Art of Disney letter sheets, which bear an imprinted
stamp. In a Jan. 17 motion filed with the Postal Rate Commission, the Postal
Service argues that its Art of Disney postal stationery is what it calls "a
philatelic item" and therefore not comparable to "a utilitarian stamp envelope."
Douglas F. Carlson, a San Francisco lawyer and self-professed postal watchdog.
charged in a petition with the commission that the $14.95 price charged for
a "pad of 12 sheets" with imprinted stamps is outrageously high and inconsistent
with the rulings requiring stamp rates "to be fair and equitable.
February 02, 2006 - Postal workers caught having sex in mail truck Several residents in a northwest Houston neighborhood say they saw the pair engaging in questionable behavior in the back of a postal truck. A supervisor was called out to the scene to break up the lovebirds, but for some neighbors. it was too late. The postal service says a full investigation is now underway. One neighbor says he taped the escapade for evidence. |
February
02, 2006 -
USPS 2006 - Benjamin Franklin Doubtless Would Be Proud -
February
02, 2006 -
University Partners with USPS to offer Internship Opportunities -
Elon University
February 02, 2006
Postal Service Selling Super Bowl Caches and Memorabilia
Postal Bulletin 2/2/06: Black History Month and More...
February 01, 2006- Saving Dead Letters At The Mail Recovery Center The next time you contemplate sending a letter without a return address, think again. Every year more than 100 million pieces of mail pour into the U.S. Post Office's Mail Recovery Centers (MRC), virtually all of them lacking a valid address and return address. The vast majority of this mail never gets delivered, although it's not for lack of effort. The postal service goes to great lengths, at its own expense, to try to find each piece of mail's intended destination. Currently, the post office operates three MRC's—in Atlanta, St. Paul and San Francisco. Ironically, the term "dead letter office" has become obsolete. The postal service, part of an effort to standardize the mail recovery process, officially ceased using that term in 1992. Still, old habits seem to die hard. |
February
01, 2006 -
February 01, 2006 For Postal Reform, It's Hurry Up and Wait Las Cruces NM postal meeting to be private
ADVO Explores Strategic Opportunities
Related to MailCoups Subsidiary |
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