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Postal News - January 2006

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TOP POSTAL STORY OF THE MONTH
Jennifer Sanmarco

January 31, 2006 - Ex-Postal Worker Kills Five, Commits Suicide at Mail Plant

"A female ex-postal worker opened fire at a mail processing plant, killing five people and critically wounding another before committing suicide in what's believed to be the deadliest workplace shooting ever carried out by a woman, authorities said Tuesday. Official reports initially said six employees had been killed along with the shooter. The total was revised Tuesday at mid-morning .The woman had not worked at the plant for more than two years but managed to get inside the fenced and guarded Santa Barbara Processing and Distribution Center shortly after 9 p.m" |

 

Statements from:  PMG John Potter  | APWU President Burrus | Joint Statement of USPS Union and Management Association Leadership | Victim In Critical Condition At Hospital l Mail Service Delayed by Shooting Spree| Lack of security guards or metal detectors at facility under review| Six Dead in Postal Shooting | Former employee goes on shooting rampage at postal station Calif. Postal Shooting Toll Up to 6 | List of some deadly post office shootings

 

Shooter in postal rampage had retired in 2003 with psychological problem - The 44-year-old woman, identified as Jennifer Sanmarco of Grants, N.M., , had worked at the Santa Barbara Processing and Distribution Center more than two years ago  (Sanmarco worked as part-time clerk) but was given a disability retirement in 2003 for an unspecified psychological reason, postal authorities said. According to witnesses from the scene, she had a 9mm pistol and reloaded at least once during her rampage. She drove past the perimeter fence by following another car, and got into the front door of the building by taking an employee's electronic identification badge at gunpoint. The employee was not hurt." In July 2004, she applied for a business license to start a publication called 'The Racist Press'. A town in New Mexico filed complaint against suspect  last year for harassing worker.  Former postal worker may have killed neighbor before killing five others - Sheriff's officials in Santa Barbara County say they found a bullet casing in the neighbor's apartment that matches those found at the postal facility |

 

 

January 30, 2006- Three Killed, One Wounded in Shooting at Calif. Postal Facility "Three people were killed and at least one other was wounded Monday evening in a shooting inside a U.S. Postal Service facility in Goleta, Calif., officials said. The suspect, who was still at large late Monday night, is believed to be a female ex-employee of the facility, said Sgt. Erik Raney of the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department. All of the victims were employees of the facility, sheriff's officials said. One of the dead died at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, according to authorities, and two were pronounced dead at the scene. The suspect was still at-large early this morning.  Police warned that she may have a semi-automatic handgun."   Three Killed In California Postal Facility Shooting

 

January 31, 2006 - Post office copes with overflow - sorts mail under a tent - post office employees sort mail under the white tent and trailer outside the brown brick post office, their means, at the moment, of keeping up with the growth in Parrish. |

 

January 30, 2006 - Postal overhaul sponsors optimistic about Senate action
Sponsors of sweeping postal overhaul legislation are optimistic the Senate will approve the measure by unanimous consent in the coming days, said a spokesman for Sen. Thomas Carper, D-Del. the bill's lead Democratic sponsor. 
NALC President Young Vows to Fight for Enactment of S. 662 -"Postal reform legislation was on the brink of Senate passage January 25 when postal management unleashed a mind-boggling, and frankly embarrassing, attack on the bill." - Day defends USPS position on Reform bill in letter to Senator Frist (PDF) - USPS Senior VP for Government Relations Tom Day  says that USPS opposition to the pending reform bills was expressed in letters to the relevant committees as late as  September 2005, and was not a 'last-minute reversal of position' - Postcom |

 

January 30, 2006 - Mail Volume Up, Postal Workers Down:

Technological Change and (Un) Sustainability in the Postal Industry. "This paper will describe the automation process, its impact on workers, and some steps their unions can take to regain their lost leverage. We focus on the American Postal Workers’ Union, whose members sort mail, but our conclusions also apply to the three other unions in the industry. Our sources include interviews with APWU leaders and members in New England, public testimony by postal union and industry leaders, Postal Service documents, a tour of USPS facilities, and USPS videotapes on automation.  Postal workers are working unsustainable schedules, speedups, repetitive stress injuries, with less job security.. New technologies have allowed postal managers to reorganize the work process, decreasing workers’ control over the pace and flow of work. This undercuts their unions’ bargaining power and allows management to introduce still farther-reaching changes.  Postal unions’ power is also shrinking as outsourcing grows and more non-union workers enter the postal labor market" |

 

January 30, 2006- Ask President Burrus: Why hasn’t night differential pay been increased?

When will it change?  I remember at one time it was 10 percent more than regular pay.   |

 

January 30, 2006  - DoD may outsource mail delivery
The Defense Department is starting to move forward on a plan to outsource its billion-dollar-plus mail operation, which would be one of the government’s biggest privatization projects in recent years. An influential advisory group concluded doing so would save money, improve mail service and free up troops badly needed for war-fighting. The U.S. Postal Service, which already handles portions of military mail delivery, declined to discuss how a privatized military mail operation would affect it or whether it would have an interest in pursuing more of that business if it were put up for bid. |

 

January 30, 2006 - Editorial: War of Words - So what the blazes happened last week? I don’t know what officials at the U.S. Postal Service hoped to accomplish when they came out full throttle against postal reform legislation that the Senate was about to pass. If they wanted to completely and utterly alienate the lawmakers with direct oversight over their agency, then they succeeded. To say the least, bill sponsors Sens. Susan Collins and Thomas Carper are not pleased with the interference....

 

January 30, 2006 - Postal clerk praised for saving baby's life -  A post office clerk in Altus (Okla.) is credited this week with saving a 2-week-old baby who had stopped breathing. Shirley Worrell responded when the mother of Robert Estraca brought the infant into the office. The infant wasn't breathing and was turning blue. Worrell administered CPR, and the baby was breathing again by the time an ambulance arrived. Worrell credited a Red Cross CPR class she took 15 years ago. |

 

January 30, 2006

Manzullo, postal service at odds over Rockford center

National Postal Forum Just Around the Corner

Post offices planned for Rio Rancho, New Mexico
Hold for Pickup Goes on Hold to Study Test Results
Study Opens Eyes About Who Opens Envelopes

New postmaster bids farewell to veteran clerk

Letter to the Editor: Privatization will hurt postal workers, consumers

 

January 29, 2006

Personalized Postage Is Big Business

Valpak Joins USPS in Opposition to Postal Reform Bill (PDF)
Hey Hottie! What's Your Zip Code
The Art of the Stamp

NAPS President Keating's Statement on Postal Reform

e-NAPUS Newsletter: Postal Smack Down - How deep a grave did [the USPS] dig for itself, regarding its relationship with Congress?" It doesn't take a rocket scientist to realize that the Postal Service misfired, and misfired badly, in sending a 59-cent stamp aboard a heat-seeking missile aimed at the Senate."

 

January 28, 2006 - Deeper Investigation Sought Into Late Mail
With Southern California residents continuing to complain about mail that is delivered late at night or not at all, Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Los Angeles) wants the nation's postmaster general to provide extensive data about staffing levels, plant closures and delivery schedules. The veteran legislator said that he wants to delve more deeply into delivery problems to prepare for a hearing about the U.S. Postal Service, to be held Feb. 16 by the House Committee on Government Reform, Congress' primary oversight panel.  Harkin bill forces postal service review -"[On 1/27/06] Sen. Tom Harkin successfully included language in the Postal Reform Bill that would force the U.S. Postal Service to review the concerns of businesses and communities affected by mail facilities consolidations."  |

- Florida: Neighborhood complains of sporadic mail delivery

 

January 28, 2006

USPS to update automated forms

Congressman to challenge postal leaders on Rockford move

Postal Service's distaste for fractional addresses leads to headache
Postal mix-up equates to unwanted mail

California Postmaster dies 
New Mexico: Postal complaints rolling in to hotline

 

January 27, 2006 -Senators, Mailers Council and NALC Respond to USPS Media Briefing - From Postcom:" Mailers Council executive director Robert McLean has told his members: For those who missed it, today's Postal Service media event with Dick Strasser and Tom Day was a collection of confusing, circular comments and more than a few misstatements."  "Senators Susan Collins (R-ME) and Thomas Carper (D-DE), reacted to postal letters, news releases and media statements . As you'll see, they are not happy. The Postal Service has damaged its relations on the Hill in a way that may be impossible to repair.. With their latest release, the Postal Service appears to have sunk to a new low."  From Postal Reporter: NALC sent out the following message to its members... "....when word spread yesterday that passage of the bill was imminent, the Board of Governors, led by Chairman James Miller III, went to work trying to kill the bill. They knew they had one willing ally, the APWU, and true to form that organization did not fail them. "  |

- Postal overhaul bill held up in Senate (Govexec)

 

January 27, 2006 - Gas thieves suspected as postal vans catch fire - Three U.S. Postal Service vans caught fire Thursday night in Land Park following a series of gas thefts, Sacramento Fire Battalion Chief Niko King said. In recent weeks, someone has been drilling holes in the plastic gas caps of the postal Dodge Caravans to steal gas, King said. Fire investigators have not determined if the fire was started on purpose, but they are calling it arson. The fire began with the middle van and spread to vans to the left and right. Damage to the vans, which did not have any mail in them at the time, is estimated at about $30,000, King said. The vans were parked in an unsecured area of a shopping center where a post office is located at 5930 South Land Park Drive. Someone had tapped the vans for gas prior to them igniting at about 10:35 p.m., King said.

 

January 27, 2006

Sioux City: Postal Study Prompts Delegation To Lobby DC Lawmakers

Postal Supervisor defends service

Santa Fe NM: City’s cost of living to blame, USPS says
Houston mail carrier attacked by pit bull

Pony Express mail rides again

Postal carrier seeks medical attention for ailing customer
Lost Military Medals Found In Connecticut Post Office

Traffic, Automation Blamed For Late Mail Deliveries in Southern Calif.
Austin mailman accused of keeping mail
Otho residents want their post office
Businessman accused of mail fraud
Advo 4Q Earnings of $12 Million Top Estimates

 

January 26, 2006 - Postal Service Goes on Offensive in Fight With Senators Over System to Set Mail Rates - USPS headquarters launched a media blitz yesterday to block a Senate bill, contending that the legislation, in combination with White House demands, could trigger a 20 percent increase in stamp prices in the near future" The bill's sponsors, Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Thomas R. Carper (D-Del.), said they were "outraged that the Postal Service would mislead senators." In a statement, they said, "Nothing in the bill would lead to rate increases." According to Postcom.org: U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions (R- Al.) has placed a hold on S. 662, ostensibly over concerns expressed by the Postal Service Board of Governors.  Postal overhaul bill held up in Senate  |

- USPS summary of all the news links below

- USPS Board Opposes Changes to Postal Reform Bill | USPS Letter to Sen. Collins 

- Burrus: Positions Change as Postal "Reform" Evolves

- Postal Service Lobbies Against Reform Bill |

- Mailer Groups Pleased at Reported Senate Postal Bill Action

- Postal Reform Legislation Could Dramatically Boost Stamp Prices

- USPS “Officially” Opposes Senate Reform Bill--but Does That Matter?

 

January 26, 2006 - Postal Service Goes on Offensive in Fight With Senators Over System to Set Mail Rates - "The bill's sponsors, Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Thomas R. Carper (D-Del.), said they were "outraged that the Postal Service would mislead senators." In a statement, they said, "Nothing in the bill would lead to rate increases." According to Postcom.org: U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions (R- Alabama) has placed a hold on S. 662, ostensibly over concerns expressed by the Postal Service Board of Governors" |

- USPS has provided a summary of all the news links below

- Postal Service Lobbies Against Reform Bill | Postal Service Goes on Offensive

- Mailer Groups Pleased at Reported Senate Postal Bill Action

 

January 26, 2006

Reasons for New Mexico Postal Service Changes Disputed  |

Postal Clerk: Blame Congress, not workers, for increase in postal rates

2-cent increase for stamps not the solution; deliver mail 3 days

Paying for mail a sore subject in Mackinaw

80 new Southern NY Postmasters to take oaths Friday

Missouri Introduces Do-Not-Mail Bill
Opinion: Putting pressure on Postal Service may deliver some reforms

 

January 25, 2006- USPS Board Opposes Changes to Postal Reform Bill

"The Board of Governors of the U.S. Postal Service sent a letter to Sen. Susan Collins, R-ME, yesterday opposing a Senate bill and new amendments to reform the USPS. Collins and other senators are rumored to have worked out a compromise that would allow the bill to be considered by the full Senate. The amendments are being circulated through the Senate, and the intent is to move the bill for unanimous consent, which could happen as early as today. The USPS, however, is hoping that at least one Senator will not agree to unanimous consent.   |

- USPS Letter to Sen. Collins Burrus: Positions Change as Postal "Reform" Evolves

- Postal Reform Legislation Could Dramatically Boost Stamp Prices

- USPS “Officially” Opposes Senate Reform Bill--but Does That Matter?

 

APWU: USPS ‘Network Realignment’ Update
Public Supports Workers’ Efforts To Preserve Service, Postmarks, Jobs

"From Waterbury to Waco, from western Pennsylvania to Pacific Palisades, public officials, consumers, and local businesses are expressing alarm at wide-ranging plans to consolidate “some operations” at postal facilities around the country." |

 

January 25, 2006 - National League of Postmasters President Speaks Out  on Service Issues -

From Postcom.org - "Here at LEAGUE Headquarters frustrated Postmasters are flooding me with calls from all around the country. These are good Postmasters but they are upset for several reasons. The number one reason is not being able to fill authorized positions due to lack of hiring. We are working our employees six days a week, 10-12 hours a day. That can only go on for so long. We are encountering not only poor morale but also increased sick leave and safety issues."  |

 

"Another issue is Postmasters are being micromanaged to death. The Areas blame the Districts, the Districts blame the Areas, and Postmasters are left with the work and aggravation. We are aware that many Postmasters are not being treated with dignity and respect. The same dignity and respect that we are expected to give our employees.

 

"Service is also taking a beating in a number of areas throughout the country because of hiring issues. Box sections are not up on time and there are long lines at the windows. Many carriers are out until 9:00 p.m. or even past 10:00 p.m. delivering mail and in many areas of the country Postmasters are being required to be present to open their office as well as be present when the last carrier returns."

 

January 25, 2006

First African American Oscar Winner Featured on New Stamp

PRC Broadens Authority to Approve Services

Woman follows postal workers, steals mail

Larger cities have more postal service problems
Federal workers should worry less, be thankful

Postal Worker delivers for troubled youths

McCausland fights for its post office

FTC: Post Office Job Offers From Classified Ads Bogus

Stumpy Point losing post office
Henderson to keep Acxiom position after accepting Netflix post
Ex-postal workers face theft charges

 

January 24, 2006 - Letter Carriers Given 6 p.m. Delivery Deadline - After a barrage of complaints about late mail delivery, Southern California postal officials issued a directive Friday telling carriers and post office managers that mail must be delivered no later than 6 p.m. A story in The San Diego Union-Tribune last month disclosed that many of the approximately 3,000 full-time and 100 temporary carriers in San Diego County routinely work past 5 p.m. Union officials have filed grievances on behalf of haggard letter carriers forced to work overtime shifts. One grievance involved a letter carrier who was confronted by a homeowner with a gun. He was delivering mail at nearly 10 p.m. when his footsteps startled the homeowner, who burst from the house and pointed a gun at the letter carrier's head.

 

January 24, 2006 - Postal Inspector's car stolen, used in crimes - An official government jacket, hat and stolen car decked with flashing blue lights became the tools of a group of robbers Monday. The unmarked U.S. Postal Inspection Service car was reported stolen near Charlotte/Douglas International Airport in western Charlotte, police said. The car later appeared in northern, then eastern Charlotte as the thieves tried to wield their newfound symbols of authority around town.  |

 

January 24, 2006  - New Links: Bloomington, Indiana APWU Local fighting to Save Postmark.   "... The Postal Service is studying whether or not to move the canceling and sorting of collection mail out of Bloomington. This plan if enacted, will effectively eliminate the Bloomington postmark. ...".

APWU High Desert Area Local: The 'move' of Mojave's mail processing operations is now on hold.

 

January 24, 2006

Postal cutbacks in Miami

Post Office back to normal after bomb scare
Stamps.com Applauds Bush and Congress for Postal Law Change

 

January 23, 2006 -OPM Ousts Postmasters Benefit Plan From Health Insurance Program -The Postmasters Benefit Plan has been dropped from the federal employee health insurance program, the Office of Personnel Management announced yesterday. Last month, OPM launched an inquiry into the Postmasters plan because of concerns about its solvency and its handling of insurance claims. OPM said steps are underway to move Postmasters enrollees into Blue Cross and Blue Shield's standard option. OPM inspector general, in a report last month, contended that the league's contract with Medicure had not been approved by OPM. As a result, the federal benefits program was inappropriately charged about $6.4 million for the contract from 2000 to 2003. |

 

January 23, 2006 - Postal Service Complement Committee Guidelines for Handling Staffing, Hiring Issues (PDF) -(NAPUS) "The PC Complement Committee will be responsible for providing guidance and recommendations to Senior Management in all matters related to the use of employees within the PC. These responsibilities include: Filling Vacancies: The accession (new hires) of career employees to satisfy complement needs must be a last resort consideration. The present outlook for the Postal Service indicates that workload will continue to decrease for the immediate future. Therefore, we have to plan for this decrease by utilizing casual and transitional employees to the maximum extent we can contractually."  |

- NAPUS Executive Committee Discusses Staffing Issues

 

January 23, 2006- Mail Troubles Prompt New Promotions- In response to statewide complaints about poor service, the U.S. Postal Service has promoted two managers from the Albuquerque office. Paul Nistler was transferred to the East Coast and replaced as plant manager by George Lasica two weeks ago, and Steve Harden was transferred to the Great Lakes area and replaced as customer-service manager by Daniel Reyes, Margaret Romero, Postal Service spokeswoman in Albuquerque, said Friday. When asked why the Postal Service promoted the men after receiving complaints about the state's mail service, Romero said, "I can't answer that question right now."  |

- Malibu experiences late mail deliveries 

- Marina del Rey  P & DC closure center of mail delivery firestorm

 

January 23, 2006

Ten-Year-Old Arrested for shooting Letter Carrier with BB gun  |

Postal plan could result in job losses for Aberdeen

Letter: USPS Still a First-Class Service

 

January 23, 2006 - Senate May Act on Postal Reform This Week

Senators may have worked out a compromise on postal reform legislation stuck in limbo for the past six months, DM News has learned. Sources said the bill may reach the Senate floor for a vote as early as this week.  |

- Editorial: Our two cents' worth on Postal Reform

 

January 23, 2006 - Commission struggles to define 'postal service'
Members of the Postal Rate Commission said they hoped that their new ruling on the definition of the term "postal service" would make it easier for the commission to settle complaints that the U.S. Postal Service competes unfairly when offering new services. But the commission's final rule might not be the last word. USPS may appeal the commission's final rule to the federal district court to protest the commission's authority. However, postal officials would not comment.
 |

 

January 23, 2006

Report: USPS Top other Federal Agencies in  Hiring Veterans

Congressman working to keep postal center in Rockford

Senator goes to bat for New Fowlerville Post Office

Post Office being evicted from property

Postal truck robbed, suspect on the loose

Darrington enforces mail rules

Japan sets up company for postal privatization

 

January 21, 2006

APWU, Serco Open Talks Over Detroit MTESC Agreement
APWU purchases home for Southern Region - other new offices planned
 |

Postal worker bids farewell to job
Dead man's ride: Postal worker sat hours on subway
Federal health plans overcharged government, audit says
U.S. will issue 39 cent Purple Heart stamp

Postal official: Better service coming to NM

Postal News Brief: "Gary Sawtelle, spokesman for the U.S. Postal Service's Suncoast District (Florida) , said 465 proposed new post offices across the country are being put on hold. Sawtelle said post office officials are reviewing the different projects because new package sorting technology on the verge of being launched may minimize the amount of space needed for each building. "For right now, we're in a holding pattern because of potential new size requirements," Sawtelle said."

 

January 20, 2006 - USPS: New Team Tackles New Mexico Mail Woes -"The U.S. Postal Service has replaced New Mexico's management team in an effort to improve the state's mail-delivery service. Potter told Sen. Pete Domenici he was aware of the problems and recently had replaced the state's management team at the Postal Service's southwest-area operations center in Texas. It was unclear if the Postal Service had fired New Mexico's management team or reassigned them." |

- Letter carriers trying to keep up with demand

- Albuquerque APWU President: Staffing levels are at the root of the problem.

- Postal worker pins hopes on new hires, long-term changes

- Rio Rancho (NM): No Money for new PO, Contract postal facility planned

 

January 20, 2006 - Postal Worker Honored For Saving Kids From Burning Home - Wayne Swisher was delivering mail Jan. 4 when he saw smoke coming from a house at 1024 Vinal St. Mr. Swisher coaxed two boys, ages 8 and 13, out of the home and made sure no one else was inside before firefighters arrived.

 

January 20, 2006

Co-workers celebrate postman’s return to work after being shot

New postal rates won't be used for increased operational costs
Nashville to close all-night window; APCs will replace clerks

Retiring postal workers are recognized for service

USPS Wants Label Moved on Flats Mail
Suspect in mail carrier robbery gets 7 years
USPS Seeks to Extend Repositionable Note Test

 

January 19, 2006 - NAPUS Executive Committee Discusses Staffing Issues

NAPUS National Vice Presidents and other committee members participated in the teleconference to discuss the current complement review process, which they described as being too cumbersome and inefficient to handle current hiring needs. Committee members said “unofficial” hiring freezes and other delays in the complement process have contributed to the delivery of mail late into the evening, as well as long lines in retail lobbies and high overtime rates  |

 

January 19, 2006 - Mail Handler Found Dead on NY Subway

 

January 19, 2006- Council Eyes Postal Woes, Adopts Guiding Principles

"There is no functioning management that I can identify," said Community Council chairman Kurt Toppel last Thursday night as he described his ongoing frustrations dealing with the U.S. Postal Service here and in downtown Los Angeles. These problems started last summer with the closure of the Marina del Rey processing facility, which served some 12 postal areas. Since that time we have had three different postmasters or managers in charge, the latest of whom started Monday (January 9)." (Rep. Henry) Waxman has started an official inquiry into the matter in Washington."  |

 

January 19, 2006 - Oregon Postmaster faces DUI case after wreck
Corvallis Postmaster John Herrington has been charged with reckless driving and driving under the influence of alcohol after he flipped his car on a rural road early Sunday morning. Doug Batchelor, the human resources manager for the Portland district of the U.S. Postal Service, said he was not familiar with Herrington’s case. But, he said, the charges probably won’t jeopardize Herrington’s position. “We would not necessarily terminate someone’s livelihood because of something like this,” Batchelor said. Rather, he said, officials will “try to work with this individual ... to get control of whatever it is that led up to this.” |

 

January 19, 2006- Frontrunner in Race to replace Rep. DeLay allegedly has 'done favors for UPS' - The front-runner now in the race to replace DeLay is Republican congressman Roy Blunt of Missouri. Blunt has done favors for UPS, another of his son's clients, by sticking a proviso into the Iraq emergency appropriations bill to require that military cargo be carried by majority-owned U.S. firms. That was meant to block foreign competitors of UPS and FedEx from getting a toehold in the profitable wartime postal business. UPS and FedEx together have contributed more than $125,000 to Blunt since 2001.

 

January 19, 2006- Rural Letter Carrier detained by Border Patrol- Arizona Rural Letter Carrier Rick Encinas wants an apology after being pulled over by Border Patrol agents last month while delivering mail. Encinas told the Range News that he has a sign on the dashboard of his Nissan Pathfinder that says "U.S. Mail." |

 

January 19, 2006

Some mailboxes in Detroit to be removed around Super Bowl

Retiring mail carrier is nothing short of...First Class

Cleveland postal worker admits to identity theft

Masked Man Robs Kansas City Post Office

Rural community takes on USPS

Rogersville Post Office gets the lead out

Duo charged with post office holdup

The Best Value in 2006
Iowa Senate backs keeping mail processing in Sioux City
USPS Sets Meeting Date to Address Las Cruces (NM) Mail,  Staffing Problems -Senator to ask review of consolidation plans

 

January 18, 2006 -Ask Burrus: Can APWU Sue USPS Over Consolidations?
Question:
Why was the national APWU caught off guard by the USPS consolidation plans? The only time I know of that the APWU protested management’s refusal to provide the consolidation plan was during the first year of the contract extension. Answer (in part): We are continuing to review the options for filing a lawsuit, and are reaching out to appropriate congressional representatives and requesting their assistance. |

 

January 18, 2006 - Burrus: Postal workers' pay did not cause stamp rate increase -

APWU President Burrus responds to Sam Ryan's op-ed in the Christian Science Monitor. "In his Jan. 6 Opinion piece, "Instead of raising stamp rates, the USPS should cut costs," Sam Ryan claims that postal workers earn "substantially more than their private sector counterparts..,"  Though many postal clerks, truck drivers, mechanics, and computer and electronic technicians are highly skilled, on average they earn far less than the $65,000 Mr. Ryan implied. Editor: PostCom has posted a different version of this letter (doc)  - "Sam Ryan of the Lexington Institute, a conservative "think tank," claimed the Postal Service should cut postal workers' pay and benefits instead of increasing postage rates, and "outsource" more of its operations to corporate mailers. Ryan is entitled to his views, but his byline should have disclosed that he runs a PR firm, Keybridge Communications, that ghostwrites and places op-ed pieces for right-wing, anti-labor organizations.. |

 

January 18, 2006- USPS Delivers High-Tech Communications Alternative for Deaf and Hard- of Hearing Postal Employees-  Two types of video interpreting services are being installed at postal facilities across the country, allowing approximately 4,000 postal employees who are deaf or hard-of-hearing to communicate with supervisors, co-workers and others in real-time without having to bring in on-site interpreters or rely on text-based telephone systems. The new services use two forms of web-based sign language interpreting technology: Sorenson Video Remote Interpreting® (VRI) -- for communication when participants are in the same location and Sorenson Video Relay Service® (VRS) -- for communication when participants are in different locations.

USPS launched pilot programs of VRS/VRI Sign Language Services last year (1/15)

 

January 18, 2006 - Netflix Names Former PMG William J. Henderson as Chief Operations Officer -

William J. Henderson was chief operating officer of USPS from 1994-98 and postmaster general and USPS CEO from 1998 until his retirement in 2001. Bill Henderson is about the only person on the planet who looks at our volume of mail as a trickle," said Mr. Hastings. "We'll look for him to extend our current competitive advantages in this area, particularly as our mail volume increases with our forecasted growth to at least 5.65 million subscribers this year and 20 million by 2010-2012."  |

 

January 18, 2006 - Study Could Result in Waco Mail Centers Moving - Waco, TX's city leaders expressed surprise after learning about a U.S. Postal Service study that could lead to relocating the city's mail processing and distribution facilities to Austin and Fort Worth.  Postal service officials are conducting a mail processing survey on the efficiency of the distribution centers in Waco.  The feasibility study analyzes whether postal service officials will keep the center open or split processing and distribution tasks between Austin and Fort Worth centers.  Approximately 250 people are employed in distribution centers on State Highway 6 in Waco and in Woodway, postal officials said.  Postal officials are looking at Waco's distribution centers, which process approximately 326,000 pieces of mail per day, to see whether the current method of handling Waco's mail is the most efficient and cost-effective plan available, U.S. Postal Service communications program specialist Jim Coultress said.

 

January 18, 2006 - Management Assures NALC Of Supervisors’ Restrictions In Making Changes to DOIS -Postal management, in a recent meeting with NALC officials at USPS Headquarters, asserted that they had restricted the ability of local supervisors to access the Delivery Operations Information System (DOIS) and alter the base times that had been entered. Only DOIS administrators now possess the capability of making such changes and NALC received repeated assurances that, absent a new PS Form 1840 from a new route count and inspection, no such changes would be made.|

 

January 18, 2006

Post Office to close due to shortage of qualified people to replace postmaster

Postmaster delivers top quality

Pistol found in mailbox

Future in doubt for UPS workers dislocated by Katrina
Royal Mail to raise stamp prices by 2p

 

January 17, 2006 - Postal Workers Work Overtime to Prepare for Top USPS Official's Visit - "Santa Fe postal workers said they had to work overtime Sunday and Monday in preparation for a top postal official's visit, which they expected this week. The workers, who declined to be identified, said the visit is the result of numerous complaints about Santa Fe's postal system in recent weeks. They said they had to work overtime Sunday and Monday to clear up a backlog of mail for the visit." |

 

January 17, 2006- USPS Cancels Bid to Award Contract For  'Generation 3' Carrier Route Vehicles - "Due, in part, to recent inflationary pressures driven by higher fuel costs and higher cost-of-living-adjustments (COLA) linked to the change in the Consumer Price Index paid to our over 600,000 bargaining employees, our projected financial situation is deteriorating. In addition, recent operational technology enhancements, such as the upcoming Flat Sequencing System (FSS), may significantly change future carrier route vehicle requirements.  |

 

January 17, 2006- Additional Window Clerk Assigned to Berkeley Post Office - Less than a week after a Daily Planet story appeared concerning long lines and inadequate staffing at the Adeline Street Post Office in Berkeley, a post office spokesperson called to say that the problem has been solved." We have made adjustments to the situation at the South Berkeley Post Office,” Berkeley U.S. Postal Service Customer Service Coordinator Mercer W. Jones said in a telephone message. “We have assigned another employee to cover lunches and breaks as well as for some additional time. Hopefully you’ll have a more pleasant experience if you go there again."  |

 

January 17, 2006 - After cancer forces her to Retire, Postal Worker uses her talent to make cards - After cancer forces her out of promising career, Connie Russ uses her talent to make cards. When a doctor told Connie Russ she had to leave the high-pressure job that had her traveling the country for the United Postal Service, she was devastated. She was forced to leave the job that had found her rising from the ranks of loading a postal truck to writing speeches for the postmaster general of the United States

 

January 17, 2006- Company wins $35 million contract for mail trays - Minnesota Diversified Industries Inc, The St. Paul-based nonprofit said Monday it has won new contracts to produce 6 million bulk-mail trays and 4 million letter-mail trays for the Postal Service's mail-handling operations. The contracts are valued at more than $35 million, a 40 percent increase over the previous year's pact

 

January 17, 2006- Fowlerville PO expansion on hold — Funds Diverted to Hurricane facilities- In an interview last week, Senator Debbie Stabenow said Fowlerville was at or near the top of the list until the postal service put a moratorium on construction due to budget constraints. When the moratorium was lifted, she said, Fowlerville had been dropped off the list. The explanation she received, she said, was because of all the post offices in the Gulf Coast region that have to be rebuilt after the hurricanes last year. Space is so tight that a custodial closet was converted to a postmaster's office, and officials have estimated they need four times the current space to adequately serve the community

 

January 17, 2006- Letter: Routing mail to Rochester has hurt service - On Dec. 29, Elmira postmaster Bernard Czechowski wrote of a postal utopia in Elmira. In his dreams. Since our sectional center was moved to Rochester, we have had one big mess. I have had more lost mail and received someone else's mail every time the same substitute has been on for the past 24-plus months. If I reiterated every problem this household has had since the mail has gone "to the highly automated Rochester Processing and Distribution Center," this letter would fill this page. It may have saved the United States Postal Service a few dollars, but the cost to the people that depend on this service far outweigh any savings to the Postal Service. Give us back our local service.

 

January 17, 2006 - Legislation Aims to Reduce Junk Mail  - Legislation being proposed in the Illinois House would create the equivalent of a do-not-call list for junk mail in Illinois. Exceptions in the proposed legislation include a company’s existing customers, not-for-profit groups, real estate and insurance companies and customers who agree to receive promotions.

 

January 17, 2006

Federal Register: PRC Final Rule on 'Definition of Postal Service'

Editorial: Just two cents

Mail-sorting operation shifted temporarily

Updated: Law Lets Businesses Add Images to Stamps

USPS to Issue Benjamin Franklin Educational Stamps This Spring

Advocates want sickle cell stamp revived- Local and national advocates for increased awareness of sickle cell anemia want the U.S. Postal Service to extend circulation of a stamp that promotes early testing for the debilitating disease

 

January 16, 2006 - Fired Iowa Postal Worker Gets Job Back

Thomas Myers was fired in October from the Denison office. He was fired after he drove a postal truck into a parked car and then finished his mail-delivery route without calling the police or his employer. Earlier that same day, Myers had been given a reprimand for sleeping on the job. Court records indicate Myers has three prior arrests for theft, all of which were later dismissed, and a felony conviction for domestic-abuse assault. |

 

January 16, 2006 - Question: Where's Wichita Falls, Texas on AMP Study List?

My name is Mike Coss. I am a officer and steward at the Wichita Falls APWU Local 754. Our facility in Wichita Falls Texas received an AMP study letter on November 21, 2005, but our facility is not appearing on any of the lists of your web-site or any other sites. Our employees are concerned as to why the USPS has not revealed this study to the public. Do you have any information as to why our facility is being withheld from the lists? Any information you have would help us understand what is going on with our facility  |

 

January 16, 2006 - Postal Worker charged with cheating USPS out of more than $120,000 - A former New Hope area postal worker doctored mileage reimbursement forms, cheating USPS out of more than $120,000. As a contract carrier for the post office, Lawrence used his own vehicle. The reimbursement was to pay him for miles traveled in addition to his normal route.  |

 

January 16, 2006

There's no rain or snow, so what's the problem?  |
Electrician turned postal service job into lasting impact

OSHA: Employers Must Post Injury/Illness Summaries by Feb 1st

Delivery dilemma

New postmaster handles crisis during first week

Noise at Corte Madera Post Office has some considering lawsuit

 

January 15, 2006 - Bill McAllister: Get used to rising stamp prices
If you haven't looked lately, there has been a profound change in what's in your mailbox. It probably means those new 39-cent stamps you just bought won't have a very long life, maybe a year at best. What happened was that for the first time the number of advertising letters carried by USPS outnumbered first-class mail. That's why postal officials already are at work on their next rate increase, one likely to be filed with PRC this spring and become effective early next year. What's likely to happen is a 10-month battle before the rate commission as mailers fight over which class of mail will have to pick up the tab that first-class letters no longer can bear. |

 

January 15, 2006- Saving the Post Office
As Mail Usage Drops, USPS Faces a Whirlwind of Change - There are, in many ways, two U.S. Postal Services. There is the one that people love to hate. Then there is the Postal Service that has made huge strides in on-time delivery, runs one of the most impressively automated operations in the world and, for now, is bringing in a huge profit. The first Postal Service is the one that executives are trying to fix.. the one with the bad rap, the one that delivers mail late, the one that drives people crazy with its long lines and sold-out 2-cent stamps. The other Postal Service is the one they are trying to save. At its most basic level, the Postal Service needs to keep as many customers as it can, and a good place to start is by tackling its legendary customer-service problems. Later this year, the agency will also begin renegotiating contracts with four major unions in hope of winning concessions on some high-cost benefits such as health care. Union leaders are ready for a fierce fight.  |

 

January 15, 2006- USPS to announce deployment of new technologies for Hearing-Impaired  Postal Employees - According to news reports, USPS will hold a news conference on January 18th at 10 a.m to announce the deployment of new technologies to allow its hearing-impaired employees to better communicate. The participants will be I. King Jordan, president of Galludet University; Anthony Vegliante, chief human resources office and executive vice president; and Susan LaChance, vice president of employee development and diversity for the USPS.

USPS launched pilot programs of VRS/VRI Sign Language Services last year

 

January 15, 2006-

Remembering Rosa Parks: Postal Worker pays tribute to her famous aunt

eNapus Newsletter : Lobby Reform and Postal Advocacy {PDF}

Postmaster ends 42-year career

 

January 14, 2006 - LA: Postal Officials Say They'll Sort Out Delivery Problems-

By many accounts, the region's delivery delays and glitches became widely apparent after the postal service closed a large processing center near Marina del Rey last summer, forcing most of the mail from the region's western portions to be sorted through the main Los Angeles P & DC in South Los Angeles. From there it must be trucked back through often busy traffic to outlying communities. The Postal Service has also suggested that staffing shortages and even the effects of Hurricane Katrina are to blame. Whatever the reasons, top postal authorities have now promised to adjust staffing and move up starting times for some carriers so they can hit the streets earlier.  Many must work well past dark to complete their deliveries.  Stephen Breen, a Santa Monica carrier, plans to return to work Tuesday after two months of stress leave after his supervisor ordered him to deliver mail after dark. |

- Connecticut Postal Service needs no-excuses policy for late deliveries

- Late deliveries drive locals batty |  Rep. Waxman (D-CA) to initiate investigation

 

January 14, 2006-

Postal worker having a letter-perfect life

Readers Chime In With Berkeley Post Office Woes  |

 

January 13, 2006- NALC to Closely Scrutinize Bush’s FY 2007 budget due Feb. 6 - After years of ignoring growing budget deficits resulting from tax cuts and increased spending for the war in Iraq and the efforts to combat terrorism, Congress and the White House now appear ready to focus on deficit reduction. In the past, with both Republican and Democratic administrations and leaders in Congress, deficit reduction efforts have often targeted the Postal Service and federal employee benefits. NALC’s officers and staff and the union’s network of grass roots lobbyists will have to be vigilant as the budget debate unfolds to stop any unfair cuts aimed at letter carriers and other federal and postal employees.  |

 

January 13, 2006- Mail carrier attack nets probation -A San Antonio man was sentenced to five years of probation Thursday for assaulting a mail carrier. U.S. District Judge also ordered Michael Anthony Mermea to pay $530 in restitution to USPS and letter carrier Richard J. Cruz. The plea documents said the two knew each other from high school and Mermea tried to engage Cruz in conversation. Cruz told Mermea "we are not friends" tried to walk away, the documents said, and Mermea hit Cruz in the face and split his lip.  |

 

January 13, 2006

NALC : Joint Contract Administration Manual Updated [JCAM] (PDF)

One man's battle with junk mail

Cumberland Post Office target of consolidation

Stamp out gender bias in Postal Service commemoratives

Pueblo mail makes Denver U-turn

Postal Inspector dressed as mail carrier nabs man using Barry Bonds identity

Post Office lobby to be remodeled after burglaries

USPS poised to close McCausland facility

Warwick Post Office sells 100,000 two-cent stamps in 3 days

Stamps remain a bargain even at 39 cents

 

January 12, 2006- APWU: Clerk Craft Upgrades Will Have Ripple Effect
Upgrades to take place in March that affect Bulk Mail Clerks, Air Records Processors, Time and Attendance Clerks, and Ramp Clerks also may be significant to other APWU-represented workers. Because Sales and Services Associates (SSAs) and Sales, Services and Distribution Associates (SSDAs) who handle bulk mail will be performing higher-level work when they accept and verify business mailings, the union has negotiated an agreement to make sure they are compensated at a higher rate during times when they take on such duties.
|

 

January 12, 2006 - Inquiry Seeks to Stamp Out Mailbox Mishaps
Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) to initiate investigation . Lately, complaints have poured in from Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Calabasas and elsewhere that mail is being delivered as late as 10:30 p.m., far from swiftly and sometimes not at all. Residents also gripe that mail is being dropped off at the wrong address, often miles from the intended recipient. Some residents speculate that the delays and snafus have been caused by the government's decision last year to close a Marina del Rey P & DC. Most of the mail previously processed in that facility is now trucked to the main Los Angeles center . Waxman said, "The postal delivery problems in Los Angeles are unacceptable." |

Letter:  Connecticut Postal Service needs no-excuses policy for late deliveries

 

January 12, 2006- Appeals Court Upholds Firing of Ohio Postmaster for "Improper Conduct (PDF)" - Postmaster Brian Donoghue and a clerk were the only employees working at the Owensville (Oh) Post Office. On May 12, 2003, a Postal Inspector mailed a test letter to a non-existent post office box at Owensville that offered a phony promotion to win Cincinnati Reds Baseball Tickets. The letter itself consisted of a folded card sealed with a sticker containing a detachable portion that could be filled out with the applicant's name and address and returned. Basically, the letter was undeliverable first-class mail. The reply card from the test mailer sent to Owensville was filled out and signed by Donoghue and sent back to the Inspection Service . Ten months later the Postal Service fired Donoghue. |

 

January 12, 2006- Mail Sorting center will stay in Flint - A mail sorting center will stay in Flint after a similar facility opens in Pontiac in about three years, despite reports this week that the 300-plus jobs were destined to leave town, a Postal Service spokeswoman said Wednesday.   |

 

January 12, 2006 - Desmoines Postal facility is safe, air test results show-Officials of the U.S Postal Service said air quality test results show the air inside the Valley Junction post office in West Des Moines is safe and does not contain dangerous levels of asbestos. Some employees at the post office  had said they feared the cancer-causing substance was floating in the air from broken and chipped floor tiles in the back room of the building.

 

January 12, 2006

Direct Mail Rebounds in 2005
Sack Preparation Changes for Periodicals Mail
Clerk accused of gift card theft

2-cent stamps have many licked
Post office robber caught in Wyandanch
Former USPS Governor Rider Reflects on Successful Tenure
Two Detroit postal workers accused of stealing cash and gift cards

Postal Worker Indicted Over 1,256 Netflix, Blockbuster Movie Thefts  

 

January 11, 2006 - USPS High fuel costs spur conservation -Faced with unexpectedly high fuel costs this year, the U.S. Postal Service has been ramping up savings measures, hoping to cut hundreds of millions of dollars from energy bills over the next decade. In the last fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the additional cost to the agency resulting from the summer energy crisis and the post-Katrina natural gas shortage totaled about $400 million, according to Michael Fanning, Postal Service program manager for energy management. That is on top of an already huge energy bill. “Energy is the third-largest cost center in the Postal Service, following salaries and benefits, and automation,” Fanning said. “In fiscal year 2005, facility energy costs were almost $600 million and mobile energy costs were nearly $1.5 billion  |

 

January 11, 2006 - Patrons Petition for Additional Window Clerks -In a letter attached to the petitions and mailed to U.S. Postmaster General John Jack Potter and the Berkeley (CA) Postmaster at the main post office last month, Palmer wrote that “the Postal Service has adequately staffed the post offices in wealthier areas. For instance, there are always plenty of clerks at the Claremont Post Office.  It certainly appears that the postal service doesn’t care about patrons in our lower-income neighborhood.”  The one-person window staffing “has been going on at Adeline Street for years,” Palmer said in an interview. “They used to have multiple staffing, but they cut it back to one person. |

 

January 11, 2006 -

Former Postal worker sentenced for stealing packages
Lack of local (phone) listing hurts post office
Centralia center on USPS list for study
Consolidation worries workers
Lobbyist's Work for Publishers of Magazines Under Scrutiny
Magazines Bribe, Too!
Vendors Personalizing Legal Stamps
New Law Allows Businesses to Use Images on Stamps

US says it can open some private mail in terrorism fight

 

January 10, 2006 - Challenges, Opportunities, Uncertainties in 2006, Says Potter
PMG John E. Potter said today that while 2005 was a good year for the mailing industry and the Postal Service, 2006 will be a complex year filled with challenges, opportunities and uncertainties. Potter also noted a 50 percent change in new supervisory and management level positions as a result of promotions and retirements during the past five years. He said the agency is deploying a "back-to-basics approach" that was used in 2002 that resulted in breakthrough productivity. Starting in April, the Postal Service will install and test a prototype flats sorting sequencer machine at the Indianapolis Mail Processing Annex which is designed to sort non-letter or flat-size mail efficiently into delivery route sequence  |

 

January 10, 2006 -  League of Postmasters Met With USPS to Exchange Ideas on Reducing Delivery and Retail Costs - "We learned that we spend $22 billion a year in delivery and another $8.1 billion in function 4, the clerk craft. That is 60 percent of the total labor costs. The three largest areas of opportunity are being addressed at this time: city delivery, rural delivery and retail operations. It is truly “the year of delivery.” If we were able to get the city carriers to work at just standard office time, that is 18/8, we would save $224 million a year. The last opportunity addressed was retail. The numbers given to us reflect POS terminals only. Using the WOS earned hour program as a staffing guide, we were shown that if offices worked at 100 percent efficiency, we could save another $492 million." |

- December PP 26 On-Rolls and Paid Employee Statistics (PDF)

 

January 10, 2006 -   Pontiac (MI) Lands $224 million Mail Processing Center
USPS will construct a major mail-processing center in Pontiac. The board of governors met today and approved spending $224 million to build the new processing center in Pontiac. It will consolidate operations now being handled in Flint, where 275 people work; and Troy, where 1,207 workers toil. Ultimately, between 1,200 and 1,300 employees will work in Pontiac, although they will be able to process mail more quickly under one roof than they did in the former locations, said postal service spokeswoman Shannon LaBruyere.   |

 

January 10, 2006 - APWU: Even the USPS Doesn’t Blame 5.4% Rate Increase on workers - "This rate increase is the direct result of the actions- or inaction- of Congress and President Bush."
 

January 10, 2006 - Supplies of 2-cent stamps strained -

Some post offices exhaust supply of two-cent stamps -Post offices across Delaware reported running out of the 2-cent stamps people need to use with their 37-cent stamps. And those who didn't want to wait in the lines, or didn't want to pay late fees on bills, reportedly were using 74 cents worth of stamps -- or two of the old 37-cent stamps -- to send their mail on its way. A Dover post office supervisor said. "We thought we had enough stamps to accommodate the request, but since the demand is so great, we ran out by noon, and the lines were out the door.  |

Dissatisfied postal customers put in their 2 cents | Some Phoenix-area post offices run out of two-cent stamps | Out of 2-cent stamps | Post Offices run out of 2-cent stamps | Post office runs out of 1-cent, 2-cent stamps | 2-cents hard to get | USPS: Plenty of two-cent stamps will be available for customers

 

January 10, 2006

Letter-carrier publishes novel

Mailman retiring after 40 years

Mailers rail at rate hike
Ease the postal squeeze

Dog attacks Whittier mail carrier

JibJab Presents 2-0-5 George Bush's Year In Review!

 

January 09, 2006 - APWU: After 14 Years of Struggle Use of TEs End - In a major victory for the APWU, the use of Transitional Employees has been terminated in all postal facilities except REC sites, effective Dec. 31, 2005. When an arbitrator, in June 1991, granted the Postal Service the authority to hire TEs, “to fill anticipated impacted positions as a result of automation,” it was a significant blow to the union’s goal of achieving an all-career, all-regular work force. |

 

January 09, 2006 - NAPS: Postal Reform Vote in Senate Could Happen in February -Postal observers believe that the Senate could take up postal legislation next month, clearing the way for floor action on the postal reform measure (the Postal Enhancement and Accountability Act, S. 662) co-authored by Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) and Sen. Tom Carper (D-DE).  A hold on the legislation placed by Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO), creating a lengthy dispute over the sharing of mail costs between small and large mailers, is expected to be dropped, yielding a vote on the bill and potential amendments.  Sen. Bond, according to Kansas City news reports, predicted a Senate vote on the bill as early as February.

 

January 09, 2006 - USPS Beaumont (TX) REC Taking Applications for 300 to 400 jobs
The Postal Encoding Center in Beaumont is now taking applications for 300 to 400 jobs.
Those hired will help process mail for Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and the East Coast.

 

January 09, 2006

USPS Boise P & DC Receives OSHA Safety Recognition Award

Post office customers caught off guard by 2-cent rate boost

FEEA 2006-2007 Scholarship Information - FEEA has awarded over $5.5 million in college scholarships exclusively to federal and postal employees and their family members.

 

January 09, 2006 - 2-Cent Stamp Increase Is Only Temporary Fix for Postal Woes - "We suspect that it's a foregone conclusion that they are going to erode service for a vast segment of the American population," said union President William Burrus. "Some communities will lose the identification of who they are because they will no longer have a postmark. Small business who rely very heavily on the mail for advertising purposes will lose the reliability of overnight [delivery] within the community." |

- Post office risks ending up in dead-mail room

 

January 09, 2006- Post office in Tennessee could close - One of the city’s two post offices could close as the U.S. Postal Service re-evaluates its use of resources. No decision has been made yet about the fate of the Steven Holston branch, the sole tenant in the Southside Shopping Plaza. Dwight Smith, the local postmaster, said the decision would be made at a level above his authority. He has posted signs informing customers about the possibility of closure.

 

January 09, 2006- Bilingual postal service - While the differences in language and culture can be barriers to doing business, they’re not at the West Columbia post office. Five of its 80 employees are bilingual.

 

January 09, 2006

Bank of America unit lands USPS credit card processing contract

Post office in Tennessee could close

Homeland Security opening private mail

Cop car fatally strikes postal supervisor
Town struggles for postal identity
Postage increase follows $1.4 billion USPS profit in 2005

Congress Eyes Postal Reform
Bill-Me Marketers Seek Cost Cuts in Collection

 

January 08, 2006 - Will Abramoff Scandal Rock the Postal World

Under the plea agreement , Abramoff said that he and others sought [former top aide to House GOP Leader Tom Delay] Tony Rudy's agreement to help torpedo the postal rate increase and a prohibition on Internet gambling. "With the intent to influence those official acts," the documents [gif] say, Abramoff provided "things of value, including but not limited to . . . ten equal monthly payments totaling $50,000" to the wife of a congressional aide called "staffer A" but identified elsewhere as Rudy.  On Friday, the Magazine Publishers of America which had hired Abramoff's firm Preston Gates Ellis  in 2000 for a $10 million campaign against the postal rate increase, revealed  that $25,000 of the $50,000 came from them. USPS had proposed a 15 percent increase, triggering a fight from the magazine industry. With a lobbying contract worth millions, Preston Gates put its heavyweights on the team, including Abramoff, and then directed the MPA to make its $25,000 payment to a group headed by a longtime friend of Abramoff's. On May 1,[2000] the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call quoted Rudy as saying "we're planning to do all we can so that the postmaster general [William Henderson] sticks to his word" and reduces the rate increase. By December, the magazine publishers were claiming victory: The rate increase that went into effect in January 2001 was considerably smaller.  |

- Political Scandal Touches DM World- USPS has no comment

- Lobbyist's Work for Publishers of Magazines Under Scrutiny (New York Times)

- Editorial: Jack Abramoff and Postal Rate Increases (DMNews)

 - Abramoff used area foundation as conduit for money

 

January 08, 2006

Postal employees work around the clock to process mail

Letter carrier delivers more than letters
Higher Postage Rate Spurs Creativity

 

January 07, 2006 - Postal Customers Prepare for Higher Rates-

Letters sent after the last mail pickup Saturday -- will require the higher postage, up from the current 37 cents, USPS said. Outside the Church Street post office in lower Manhattan, Shirley Myrie of the Bronx said the raise doesn't amount to much. "I see people throw pennies all over the place. All the time. If pennies meant that much to them, they wouldn't throw it away." |

- USPS: New Rates and Fees | Rate Case rationale

- Increased Postage Rates go into effect Sunday Jan. 8th

- Jaffer responds to Sam Ryan: Raising postal rates was right

- Post offices expect to stamp out shortage Post Offices short on stamps

 

January 07, 2006 - Some Operations Consolidated as 'Network Realignment' Begins -"In a battle that predates the Postal Service's "Transformation Plan" (now four years old), the APWU has repeatedly asked the USPS for advance notice of its intentions to consolidate facilities. The failure to do so has aroused anger at the local level and suspicion at the highest level of the union. In light of management’s determination to disrupt the lives of thousands of postal employees with its plans for “network consolidations,” it is time for workers to examine all the options, including one that is not well known: Discontinued Service Retirement.   |

 

January 07, 2006

New Mexico: Going postal over mail service

e-NAPUS Newsletter: Congress Returns Amid Chaos (PDF)
PMRs Get Pay Increase

 

January 06, 2006

Mileage Rate for Use of Privately Owned Vehicle Drops from 48.5 to 44.5

PRC Ruling Defines 'Postal Service'

Two postal workers accused of stealing Netflix DVDs

Crash of two semis kills one driver, spills mail across highway

Letter carrier accused of stealing mail, fraud

Postal Worker Denies Stealing Checks

Post office services moving?

Supreme Court to Hear Case on Retaliatory Prosecution by USPS

Mail slow, insurers grudging- if you're lucky
Instead of Raising Rates, USPS should cut costs

 

January 05, 2006 - Bush Appoints John S. Gardner to USPS Board of Governors- According to Postcom (and Whitehouse Personnel Announcement): President Bush has 'recess appointed' John S. Gardner, General Counsel of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to the USPS Board of Governors (which now has 4 Republicans,  1 Democrat as members and 4 vacancies).  

From other news : "...recess appointments usually expire at the end of next congressional session. Since the Senate held a pro forma session Tuesday and then adjourned, the White House contends the second session of the 109th Congress has begun and Bush's recess appointments are valid until the following session concludes at the end of 2007."    |

 

January 05, 2006- APWU: REC Site Dispute Resolved - USPS Agrees to Pay Up to $500,000 - A long-standing dispute between the Postal Service and the APWU regarding the use of Transitional Employees to the detriment of career part-time flexible employees at Remote Encoding Centers (REC) was resolved late last year. The settlement , dated Dec. 21, 2005, requires that the USPS “cease and desist” from the practice, and awarded payment to affected PTFs not to exceed a total of $500,000.  |

 

January 05, 2006 - Man gets life for shooting Georgia mailman - A Snellville man admitted to investigators that he shot his U.S. Postal Service carrier so he could receive free health care in a federal prison and escape mounting medical debts. Apparently, the scheme worked. On Thursday, a federal judge sentenced 60-year-old William Crutchfield to life in prison on three charges related to the shooting of his mailman, Earl “Woody” Lazenby, on June 29. Lazenby started back to work part-time this week and said he will return to his old route full-time next week. A civil suit he filed against Crutchfield in Gwinnett County is still pending, Lazenby said.  |

 

January 05, 2006 - USPS seeks help as it reviews encryption policies -The U.S. Postal Service is reaching out to industry as it undertakes a broad review of its data encryption policies.
In a Jan. 4 sources-sought notice, USPS said it wants vendors to provide information about their encryption products that may help it develop an enterprise-wide program.

 

January 05, 2006 - ‘2006 will be challenging’ for Postal Service, CFO says
Though encouraged by a fiscal year-end balance sheet that was happier than anything seen for decades, the U.S. Postal Service is nonetheless gearing up for a challenging 2006 that will likely see the agency finish $2 billion in the red.  “2006 will be challenging,” according to USPS CFO Richard Strasser. “We will continue to aggressively pursue work-hour reductions...” With the anticipated higher costs, the Postal Service says it will look to cut infrastructure further, continue to add technology to increase productivity, and work to increase mail volume, especially in the promising business mail categories. APWU President William Burrus said the union is determined to fight consolidations that he says will delay mail delivery, inconvenience business customers and require postal workers to relocate. But he concedes the odds of union success are slim.  |

 

January 05, 2006 - Increased Postage Rates go into effect this Sunday (Jan. 8th)
"Beginning Sunday, Jan. 8, postal rates and fees for U.S. mail will go up 5.4 percent across the board, and post office officials warn that some businesses will not accept postage-due mail. The increase for the most common mail, first-class 1-ounce envelopes, will be an additional 2 cents."  |

- Jaffer responds to Sam Ryan: Raising postal rates was right

- Post offices expect to stamp out shortage | Post Offices short on stamps

 

January 05, 2006 - ELM Revision : Acceptable Reasons and Instructions for LWOP
Effective January 5, 2006, Employee and Labor Relations Manual (ELM), Exhibit 514.4, Acceptable Reasons and Instructions for LWOP, is revised to allow employees to request leave without pay (LWOP) without first exhausting sick and annual leave. This revision reflects current practice. |

- Also in the Postal Bulletin:  EMA Schedule for Rural Routes and more...

 

January 05, 2006 - OU Awarded $27 Million Contract For Training At Postal Center
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -- The University of Oklahoma announces it's been awarded a $27 million contract to provide training at the US Postal Service training center in Norman. The new contract provides $13.5-million for two years with three one-year renewal option. If exercised, the total value of the 5-year contract is more than $67-million. That would make it the largest contract award in the history of the OU Norman campus. The contract is with OU's Outreach, which includes the College of Continuing Education and the College of Liberal Studies. The contracts employs more than 200 staff members who provide training at the Postal Service facility.  |

 

January 05, 2006

Dale”Goff, Jr. begins term as 69th NAPUS National President

Leaky roof closes Oregon post office

Postal Concern

Aberdeen postal study doesn't involve public

Postal union urges campaign to save center

City panel wants to keep mail sorting here

Customers protest closing of postal annex

Plans For New Post Office Put On Hold

Postmaster carries on tradition

USPS Net Income Stays Positive YTD Despite Escrow

USPS to Dedicate Favorite Children's Book Animals Postage Stamps

Siouxlanders Crowd City Hall to Talk Mail

How I Closed Down the Falls Church Post Office

83-year-old Westport woman killed while getting mail

 

January 04, 2006- Abramoff Postal Rate Legislation Connection
"On behalf of clients eager to stop internet gambling and postal rate legislation, Abramoff paid $50,000 in 10 equal monthly payments beginning in June 2000 to the wife of a congressional aide identified as Staffer A. Based on other information made public, Staffer A was Tony Rudy , at the time a top aide to [House GOP Leader Tom] DeLay."- Abramoff: The House That Jack Built -may entrap quite a few postal critics, legislators  |

 

January 04, 2006 - Town tackles mail delivery problems -

While neither snow, nor rain, nor gloom of night keep postal carriers from their routes, theft and injury did pose problems for residents awaiting their mail this fall. Selectmen last night discussed the numerous problems residents experienced in the fall involving the alleged theft of mail by a letter carrier, and the U.S. Postal Service’s response. Selectmen wrote to the Upton Post Office last month after several residents complained of missing or delayed mail. John Schoonmaker, the officer in charge, wrote back, citing an arrest, injury and understaffing as the roots of a problem that affected not only Upton, but several neighboring communities. "The Upton Post Office faced many problems in the fall of 2005 which stemmed from the injury of a veteran letter carrier and the arrest of a newly hired replacement carrier," Schoonmaker wrote.   |

 

January 04, 2006

Mail being delivered well, efficiently

Mail carrier "the best in all America"
Thieves steal mail from Phelan households
 

January 03, 2006- USPS Realignment Plans Spark Controversies
Consumers, Postal Workers Express Concerns About 'Consolidation'
Postal Service announcements of plans to consolidate “some operations” at mail processing facilities around the country have generated interest in the press, as well as among elected officials and consumers. The reviews are almost universally unfavorable. The deterioration of customer service, the demise of historical postmarks, and the dislocation of citizens important to local economies are issues that seem to resonate with the media, legislators, and the public.  |

 

January 03, 2006

No stamping of feet over increase

Pssst... The post office's secret rate hike
Postal Worker earns hero reward

Delivery Remains Special

1st-class career ends for postal marketing manager

Yuma's post office ready for rate increase

Special delivery: Letter Carrier retiring after 40-years

Honest junk mailers won't aggravate me ... much

Postal Inspectors investigate collection box break-ins

 

January 02, 2006 - New Orleans Residents Respond to USPS Jaffer's ' Setting the Record Straight' Letter - USPS VP Azeezaly Jaffer's letter to the Editor in response to an article in  The Times- Picayune states: "Every New Orleans resident has access to mail and mail services." Well, some New Orleans residents disagreed with Jaffer's comments: Mail a matter of life or death | "Jaffer has insulted every ZIP Code 70***" | Good thing we have e-mail | Postal disservice | Change of address a mistake 

| Full service? Not even close | Stamp out incompetence |

 

January 02, 2006

Be wary of postal transformation plan

Jeffrey City loses postal services

 

January 01, 2006  Divided and On the Fast Track to Being Conquered -
We Are Our Own Worst Enemies- by Oakland APWU President Fred Jacobs - Many years ago, in a now-defunct comic strip, one of the characters announced, “We have met the enemy, and he is us.” In several significant ways that is true for us as postal workers and Union members as well as the rest of the working class: Time and again we fail to act for the greater good or in our best interests.  Here’s one example: increasing numbers of working people are voting Republican − the anti-labor party. It used to be that you could go to a labor conference or a national APWU event and assume that everyone in attendance would have voted the Democratic ticket. You can’t take that for granted anymore. Moreover, now it is considered “politically incorrect” to even discuss a person’s political party affiliation at union functions. We had better learn to “have each other’s back” and get off of the fast track to our destruction or prepare to suffer. No one can say we weren’t warned.  |

 

January 01, 2006

Hurricane turns mail upside down

Postal annex causing big problems on small street

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