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Updated: Wednesday
August 02, 2006 07:15 AM
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July 31, 2006
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APWU: USPS Lists 139 Facilities As ‘Potential
Candidates’ for Consolidation
- "The Postal Service was
forced to acknowledge in testimony to the Postal Rate Commission
(PRC) in July that nearly a year ago it had compiled a list of
139 facilities that were being considered “potential candidates”
for consolidation. The USPS provided the list to the PRC on July
25.David Williams, who coordinates the Area Mail Processing
program at USPS headquarters, revealed the existence of the list
during cross-examination on July 19. He testified that the list
of facilities was part of the Evolutionary Network Development
(END) initiative, and was generated in September 2005. It
identified facilities that postal headquarters wanted regional
managers to consider for possible inclusion in the program, he
said .” |
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July 31, 2006 -
American Flat Sorter
IDOL
"Sure, you always
thought AFSM stood for Automated Flat Sorting Machine. But a
new competition announced recently will help us find another
kind of AFSM — American Flat Sorter Megastars! The contest is
open to all AFSM 100 Ai / ATHS modified sites and awards will
be given to the first site to reach AFSM “Idol” status. The
highest Ai / ATHS performing site in each area becomes a national
finalist. To earn a chance to compete, you’ll need a 16,500
piece average site throughput per hour. Your site also must
average 200,000 pieces per machine day and has to sustain this
level of performance for three weeks — without exceeding 70
hours average Operation 140 daily per machine. Look for posters
explaining the contest and rules in a processing unit near you.
Contest ends." USPS News Link
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July 31, 2006 -
Postal Clerk finds roots in father
- For the past 50 years, John
Hale has been coming through the back door of the Fort Morgan
Post Office. Hale was honored July 13 for his 35 years of service
with the U.S. Postal Service in Fort Morgan. While Hale has
logged 35 years at the local post office, he has been part of
the operation since his father, Raymond Hale, worked there as
a carrier. Starting when he was about 8 years old, Hale said
he would come in with his father, who worked as a rural carrier
for 27 years, to the office whenever he could and watch him
sort mail.
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July 31, 2006
Rockford: Postal Service Announcement to Come Monday
Postal worker stamps his last letter
Too-light usage leads to vanishing mail dropboxes
Brownsville's new postmaster sees a city on cutting edge of
diversity
Study: Letter carriers take the most steps of any job
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July 29, 2006 -
Ex-Letter Carrier Sentenced for
Postal Supervisor's Murder
"Grant Gallaher
will spend at least the next 35 years of his life in prison
for the April 4 murder of Lori Hayes-Kotter, his supervisor
at the Baker City Post Office where he was employed as a letter
carrier, and the attempted murder of the postmaster. Gallaher,
41, pleaded guilty Friday in Baker County Circuit Court before
Judge Greg Baxter to murder and attempted aggravated murder.
Gallaher admitted shooting Hayes-Kotter to death with a .357-caliber
Magnum handgun and attempting to use the gun to kill Michael
McGuire, Baker City postmaster."
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July 29, 2006 -
Postal Service changes in Yakima (Wash.) put on hold
- The U.S. Postal Service has delayed a decision on cutting
back its Yakima operations in light of congressional skepticism
about the purported savings and effect on mail service, postal
officials said Friday. Last week, Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash.,
included language in an appropriations bill that directs the
postal service not to move outgoing mail operations from Yakima
to Pasco until an independent review is conducted. The bill
has not yet passed the full Senate or House, but Ernie Swanson,
a spokesman for the postal service in Seattle, said it's likely
to. "So we're holding off," he said. A decision has been delayed
indefinitely, he added
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July 29, 2006
Trenton APWU
Excessing Update
Postal worker forced to disrobe settles lawsuit
Maine post offices sell most cancer-research
stamps, win contest
Dog Attacks
Have Postal Carriers on Alert
Woman Held for Trial in Postal Worker Stabbing
Man Gets 22 Years In Post Office-Check Scandal
eNAPUS: UPS Vows to Kill Bill Over Single-Piece Parcels (PDF)
Ex-mailman is convicted in Torrance home
invasion
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July 28, 2006 -
eNAPUS: UPS Vows to Kill Bill Over Single-Piece Parcels (PDF)
-Ben Franklin
would not have signed the U.S. Constitution had he known that
it bestowed United Parcel Service with veto authority. Just
to make sure such a power was not snuck in, NAPUS scoured the
document and its 26 Amendments; we found no UPS veto power.
Yet, this week UPS warned Congressional postal reform advocates
that it would use its imagined authority to kill H.R. 22, unless
a provision that protects rural and residential communities
is stripped from the bill. USPS data reveals that residential
and rural parcel customers would suffer a 40% rate increase
if Congress kowtows to the UPS threat.
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July 28, 2006 -
GAO Says USPS Delivery
Standards, Reporting Need Improvement
- "While
the U.S. Postal Service has delivery standards for its major
types of mail, some have not been updated in a number of years
to reflect changes in how mail is prepared and delivered. For
example, the report said USPS does not measure and disclose
its delivery performance for most types of mail. Representative
measures cover less than one-fifth of mail volume and do not
include Standard Mail, bulk First-Class Mail, periodicals and
most package services.
"According to the deputy postmaster general,
some Priority Mail delivery standards call for on-time delivery
of Priority Mail in two days, but it is often physically impossible
for U.S.P.S. to meet these standards when that requires moving
the mail across the country," the report said ."
Mail Delivery Standards Called Outdated
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GAO 120-page report (PDF)
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July 28, 2006 -
White House, Mailer and UPS Demands Threaten Postal Reform (doc)
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Postal reform’s
fragile footing in the Congress edged perilously closer to failure
this week, due to White House, mailer and UPS pressures that
threaten the viability of a final postal overhaul bill.
Administration and mailer insistence on the inclusion of the
Senate-passed ratemaking exigency language, along with UPS threats
to oppose any bill that doesn’t open-up competition on single-piece
parcels, have dramatically complicated the outlook for postal
reform, with relatively little time remaining in the session.
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July 28, 2006 -
Postal official forced to strip gets trial on lawsuit she filed
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A trial began Thursday to
decide a lawsuit brought by a female U.S. Postal Service manager
who was forced by a male employee to walk naked, do jumping
jacks and fondle herself in front of co-workers. The 45-year-old
Akron woman has not returned to work since the incident more
than three years ago, according to court documents. She claims
Lonnie Wilson unlawfully imprisoned her, assaulted her and caused
extreme emotional distress.
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July 28, 2006 -
USPS Awards Lockheed $17.4M Contract - U.S. Postal Systems
parcels could get a speedier delivery as Owego's Lockheed Martin's
Distribution Technologies unit installs optical character-recognition
technology at 19 bulk mailing centers. The company was awarded
a $17.4 million contract by the USPS to install the computerized
address-reading systems in 38 secondary parcel- sorting systems.
Optical character recognition will improve efficiency by eliminating
an extra step in parcel processing, reduce manual mail handling
and complement the current bar-code technology," said Brian
Tanton, vice president and general manager of Lockheed Martin
Distribution Systems in Owego. "Our optical recognition systems
will support the USPS in achieving its strategic goals through
improved read rates and productivity in bulk mail centers. Previously,
only barcode-embossed parcels could be automatically sorted
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July 28, 2006 -
Post offices get forwarded to new addresses -
The United States Postal Service has made significant changes
to its post offices in Lower Manhattan. Two locations have closed,
one has opened and two are expected to open soon, a Postal Service
spokesperson said.
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July 28, 2006
Bee aware: insects can be a danger to postal carriers
The Postal Customer Always Rings Twice
ABX Air Subsidiary to Manage Dallas Transfer
Center for USPS
Letter Carrier Rescues elderly man
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July 27, 2006 -
Clerk Charged with Masterminding Armed Robbery at Post Office
"The feds charged
a postal clerk yesterday with masterminding a $65,000 armed
heist at the Brooklyn post office where he worked. Clerk Derrek
Pannell allegedly shot a videotape of the James E. Davis Post
Office on Empire Blvd. before the robbery last November to show
his accomplices the locations of the employee entrance and a
safe containing the most cash. Pannell, 32, of Queens, and Darren
Rucker, 26, of Long Island, bound six employees with plastic
ties and forced the manager to open the safe at gunpoint, according
to a complaint filed in Brooklyn Federal Court. Investigators
suspected the robbery was an inside job because the masked bandits
knew the security code needed to unlock the employee entrance
and which one of the four safes held the daily receipts."
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July 27, 2006
Kansas City: Retirement Seminar for Postal Employees (PDF)
Five post offices are tops in service
Investigation
clears Indian postal worker over gun
Tunnel closings
force FedEx, UPS, others to pick up packages earlier
Post office combats mail theft with drop-off sites
Rural Carrier Dennis Sullivan Marks 40 Years of Mail Delivery
Former Boley Postmaster Pleads Guilty
Omaha's Downtown Post Office Evacuated
Mail Load Ruined by Massive Flood
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July 26, 2006 -
APWU
Launches Ad Campaign To Combat Consolidation
The
APWU is taking its grassroots campaign against USPS “network
realignment” to a new level by airing radio and television ads
that warn of week-long delays in mail delivery. Broadcast advertising
began July 26, with radio and television commercials running
in Beaumont (TX), Bloomington (IN), Cumberland (MD), St. Petersburg
(FL), and Yakima (WA), cities where APWU activists have already
taken steps to inform citizens about the negative effect USPS
network consolidation plans will have on mail service for individual
postal customers and small businesses.
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July 26, 2006 -
Update: Mail Carrier Loses Both
Legs
-Action
News has learned that a postal worker injured by a suspected
drunk driver has lost both of her legs.
Doctors had to amputate her legs yesterday She is in critical
condition.
Mail Carrier Identified.
As Larry Pacentrilli
tried to stop the bleeding from her legs, postal worker Maureen
DePrince, 38, struggled to convey a request." She was saying,
‘Tell my husband and my mother I love them.' I guess she thought
she was going to die,” Pacentrilli said.
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July 26, 2006
Postal Service Human Resources System Moving
to Web
Postal review good move for Aberdeen
Postal letter to be sent
School employees' checks lost in mail
Volume mailers look for service agreements
in postal bill
Costly Mailbox Rules Take
Effect in September
Photo: Postal worker cools off in California
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July 25, 2006 -
Azeezaly Jaffer Left USPS Under
Allegations of Financial, Improper Conduct
-"A
Postal Inspection Service report dated June 19 includes accusations
of Jaffer running up an excessive $8,252 hotel bill at a three-day
event in Washington, of bypassing the Postal Service travel
agency in order to obtain travel promotional benefits and spending
extravagantly on meals and drinks. The report also included
allegations of excessive drinking, using crass language in mixed
company and commenting on the appearance of female co-workers."|
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July 25, 2006 -
Postal Boss Acknowledges Philadelphia
Problems
District manager
now says new processing plant has caused delays -Since the
Daily News' July 5 story of political mailings mishandled at
the new Southwest Philadelphia mail-processing center, bulk
mailers and frustrated citizens have come forward with more
horror stories of mail being delivered late or lost altogether.
And postal workers say hundreds of job transfers due to automation
at the new plant have created chaos there and at post offices
throughout the region. But the biggest challenge - or calamity,
depending on whom you listen to - has been the elimination and
transfer of hundreds of postal jobs. The automated equipment
resulted in elimination of more than 600 postal-clerk positions,
offset partly by about 100 new mail-handler jobs.
Customers:
Help is spotty
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July 25, 2006
Federal Court Backs USPS in Stamp Trademark Lawsuit
Postal service says mistake led to embargo on mail to Israel,
Lebanon
Two Letter Carriers Robbed In West Philly
Postal gaffe puts $90,000 in Newspaper employee’s hands
Credit card banks lighten up on the mail
UPS is betting on tech to deliver a competitive edge
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July 24, 2006 -
Mail Carrier Loses Leg In Hit-And-Run
Police said a mail carrier lost
one of her legs Monday when she was struck by a hit-and-run
driver in Ventnor. Tabasso said the mail carrier had delivered
her mail a few minutes earlier." When I seen two legs going
that way, I said, 'Oh my God.' I just started crying," Tabasso
said. Police said that just before noon, the driver of a Volkswagen
Jetta crashed into the postal service worker while she was unloading
mail from her van.
Ventnor crash severs postal worker's leg; man charged with DWI
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July 24, 2006 -
Letter - Postal Workers Injured on Duty Should Know Their Rights
- by Dean
Albrecht - It is extremely important that any Injured
on Duty (IOD) employee currently in the Vocational Rehabilitation
(VR) program or is going to be thrust in to it know their rights.
Do not be intimidated by the Claims Examiner nor the State contracted
VR officer. The lack of information being explained to the IOD
employee about the VR process by the Claims Examiner and the
VR officer is disturbing. ....there is a lot more to inform
the affected “Culled” employee. I have spent years in researching
this program in anticipation of it being instituted as outlined
in the Reorganization Act in which I obtained a copy of in 2003,
during one of the many visit to L’Efant Plaza for the
Glover settlement.
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July 24, 2006 -
Engel demands regional postal service lift embargo on mail to
Israel, Lebanon - Rep. Eliot Engel is demanding that
regional postal officials lift what he called a ridiculous embargo
on outgoing letters and packages headed to Israel and Lebanon.
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July 24, 2006 -
Post office reports progress -
Officials with the U.S. Postal Service say that
most problems with slow mail-delivery service in Las Cruces
have been corrected since a December report was conducted by
the U.S. Postal Service Office of the Inspector General.
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July 24, 2006 -
Peerflix Teams with USPS to Provide Online DVD Tracking -
Peerflix, the
leading peer-to-peer (P2P) network that allows members to legally
trade DVDs online, today announced a relationship with the U.S.
Postal Service allowing Peerflix members to track the shipping
status of their DVDs online. Peerflix members, who trade DVDs
directly with one another, will be notified each time a DVD
is scanned at a U.S. Postal Service location as it travels to
their home, in a pioneer application of U.S. Postal Service
technology traditionally leveraged by large businesses.
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July 24, 2006
City's slip could lead to $10M fall in Postal Clerk's injury
lawsuit
Dog days of summer for mail carriers
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July 23, 2006 -
Postal Workers Back Verdict in
Lawsuit
Postal workers from Bucks County
and communities as far away as Texas and Florida expressed satisfaction
after reading a Courier Times story about one of their peers
who won a ($500,000) lawsuit in federal court against supervisors
in the Langhorne Post Office. Several respondents took time
to recount experiences with their bosses they said mirrored
what Willingboro resident Willie Brown went through before he
lost his job. Many described working conditions that raise questions
about how the U.S. Postal Service oversees its managers. “My
observation is that the postal service promotes a culture of
intimidation and harassment. It appears that supervisors have
financial incentives, which lead them to treat employees in
a very hostile fashion,” [Brown's attorney Marc]
Weinstein said.
Fired Postal
Worker Wins Reinstatement, $500,000
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July 22, 2006 -
New Postal Guidelines Delaying Newspaper Deliveries
"Recent
changes in the way the Postal Service handles magazines and
newspapers have caused delivery delays statewide, particularly
to rural areas. New guidelines implemented in early July call
for periodicals to be sacked and sent to Denver for sorting
before being returned to Steamboat for delivery. That process
takes one or two days, which caused the delays. Before the new
guidelines, periodicals delivered to post office boxes or via
carrier were set aside and handled by local delivery drivers
or dropped off at rural post offices. "
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July 22, 2006
Post office teams with Red Sox
National Postal Museum Seeks Direct Marketers' Support
Are you willing to pay $1.39 for a stamp
The Italian post office delivers profits
Eastburg Scouted for Postal Facility
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July 21, 2006
COLA Projected
Accumulation:
NALC
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APWU
Minneapolis: Mail center consolidation plan
advances
Mailman Delivers Despite Heat, Humidity"
DC Comics Adds to Legacy With USPS
Report says bypass mail is major cost burden
to Postal Service
Montana: Post Office
may change name to honor "Stagecoach" Mary Fields
NY: Postal Carriers Emergency Food Drive
for Flood Victims
Aberdeen: Bill Targets Postal Service
Hydrogen gets a test drive
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July 20, 2006
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Union Rep Gets Roughed Up Trying
to Investigate a Hostile Work Environment
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Postmaster,
204-B and Manager Reassigned -
About 100
members of the National Association of Letter Carriers’ Wasatch
Branch packed the union hall last week. The message was a show
of solidarity with letter carriers at the Alta Canyon station
in Sandy (Utah) where, last May, a 204-B supervisor allegedly
went a tad “postal,” as they say. According to Wasatch Branch
President Mike Miller (pictured at right) and several carriers’
witness statements, Miller’s tried to walk past the 204-B
Supervisor to the workroom floor . Grabbing Miller by the shoulders
or the jacket, witnesses said the 204-B tried to wrestle Miller
off the workroom floor and slammed him into a mail case before
carriers broke up the scuffle. Miller fielded complaints
of a hostile work environment for months leading up to the run-in,
I came in to investigate a hostile work environment, and I was
met with hostility,” Miller concluded. “But this time it was
management that went postal.”
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NALC Branch President Miller: Postal Inspectors
tried to intimidate employees
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July
20, 2006 -
APWU: Anti-Labor Provisions Threaten
Postal Reform
"At a meeting last week attended by key congressional sponsors
and White House officials, the administration made clear its
demands for support of the legislation: The White House insists
that the provisions allowing the unions to defer unresolved
collective bargaining issues to binding arbitration be modified
to require arbitrators to consider the economic health of the
Postal Service in their final decision. An additional point
of contention involves placing limits on the USPS' ability to
adjust postage rates. At the urging of the large mailers, the
administration is demanding that postage-rate increases - with
very few exceptions - be limited by increases in the Consumer
Price Index (CPI)."
Summertime Blues for Postal Reform
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July 20, 2006 -
Pacific Area VP Iniguez to Head USPS Energy Management Strategies
- Deputy Postmaster
General Pat Donahoe has announced that Al Iniguez will take
on the critical role of leading the Postal Service in developing
and implementing national strategies to help manage our rapidly
escalating energy costs. Northland District Manager Michael
Daley will act as Pacific Area Vice President, overseeing postal
operations for California, Hawaii, Guam, American Samoa and
the trust territories.
”
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July 20, 2006
Postal Bulletin : CSRS Retirement Guide Revision,
Glover Class Agreement
Post Office Comments Create Backlash for
Chicago Alderman
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Post Office Responds To Alderman's Comments
New postmaster works to lick problems
City gauging long-term demand for secondary
postal center
Superheroes go postal
USPS Feels DMers' Pain in Campaign
As postage rates rise, the wise will find
hidden value in paper
Tax data package feared stolen was actually
at the post office
Small firms strive to win USPS business
Storm takes toll on mail operations
Letter Carrier Saves Boys Found Home Alone,
Passed Out From Heat
I've Got Mail!
The letter: not quite
dead yet
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July 19, 2006 -
Driving Postal Vehicle Without Seatbelt May Get You Fired
At least that is one of the events which lead up the removal
of a Warren, Michigan letter carrier after getting injured on
the job. David Aleck was removed from his position as letter
carrier based on three charges: (1) “failure to perform duties
in a safe manner.” He was driving the vehicle without wearing
a seat belt and with the door open. Aleck fell from the postal
vehicle he was operating, and the vehicle then struck a parked
car. The second charge was (2) “failure to immediately report
an accident.” The accident occurred at 11:00 a.m., but he did
not report it until 12:45 p.m. The third charge was (3) “failure
to follow instructions to report to clinic.” Aleck failed to
obey the instructions of his supervisor that he report to a
medical clinic for an evaluation. MSPB ruled removal was justified
and the federal circuit court found no reason to overturn that
decision.|
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July 19, 2006
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Ask President Burrus : Bidding by Seniority is Outdated
I think people should be qualified for the jobs they are bidding
into. I have been doing my job as a DCO for nine years. I have
a live record, I am currently qualified, and I have been trained
on every aspect of the job. What made my blood BOIL was seeing
DCO vacancies awarded to people who are “pending qualification.”
What kind of nonsense is this? Only in the Post Office can someone
“qualify” for a job they’ve never done before because they have
some sort of seniority. Try that in the real world; they wouldn’t
even get an interview. This system is outmoded, outdated, and
in need of an overhaul.
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July 19, 2006
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Letter Carriers Feeling the Heat
"Traveling
their routes in trucks without air conditioning, most carriers
have to develop their own ways to cope with weather extremes.
They do, however, get advice from the U.S. Postal Service on
how to deal with heat waves in the summer and blizzards in the
winter, said Shannon LaBruyere, communications specialist for
the U.S. Postal Service for the Southeast Michigan Performance
Cluster. "The Postal Service tells letter carriers to drink
lots of fluids or to take breaks," said Tim Smith, treasurer
of the National Association of Letter Carriers, Local 3126,
in Madison Heights. "It would be nice if it provided bottled
water on these extremely hot days," said Smith."
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July 19, 2006
Photos: Letter Carrier delivers mail in a
hydrogen fuel test vehicle
Postal workers in 44 Western Michigan offices left powerless
Chicago: Alderman Shouted Down After Insensitive
Remark About Blacks, USPS
Mail delivery process could change in Lane
Employees Will Miss Departing Postmaster
Roanoke postmaster takes job in Fort Myers
E-mail is the New Snail Mail
Mail Service Disrupted by Mail Bombs
Former postal carrier accused of stealing
mail
Kansas Bulk Mail Center is OSHA 'Star'
Company offers to get rid of junk mail
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July 17, 2006 -
Postal Reform Bill Talks Stall
Over Labor Costs
Cooper, who also chairs the Coalition
for a 21st Century Postal Service, said the Postal Service offers
better benefits packages than other unionized companies. Gene
Del Polito, president of the Association for Postal Commerce,
also said White House advisers, headed by Deputy Chief of Staff
Joel Kaplan, are pushing for a final bill to include Senate
language that would require all labor negotiations to go through
the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. Currently, contract
agreements are negotiated among three representatives -- one
from labor, one from the Postal Service and one neutral negotiator
hired by both sides. Under the Senate measure, the arbitrators
would have to take into account the Postal Service's financial
status when considering bargaining agreements, which Del Polito
said could weigh heavily against labor unions.
Staff Members
Hope to Settle Differences on Postal Reform - NPMHU
President John F. Hegarty said his group opposes a White House-backed,
and mailing industry-supported "hard cap" on postal rates.
"The added cost, the mailers suggest, should come out of the
hide of employees. "
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July 18, 2006 -
Man Faces Charges After Shocking
Postal Carrier With Snake
- Snake-in-mailbox
joke comes back to bite prankster- A man who tried to play
a joke on his female postal carrier by placing a 6-foot boa
constrictor in his mailbox is facing criminal charges and up
to six months in prison. U.S. postal worker Nakeema Anderson
was making her rounds when she opened Mell's mailbox and was
confronted with the massive snake, according to court records."
It was an incredibly stupid practical joke that wasn't funny,"
said James Rutherford Mell .
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July 18, 2006
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News Orleans Neighborhood Finally
Gets Mail Delivery
Roosevelt Johnson opened the door to a big surprise Monday morning.
The mailman. "Mail in the Lower 9th Ward — ain't that something,"
said Johnson, 46, who hasn't seen a mailman around the neighborhood
since Hurricane Katrina deluged the city 11 months ago. "This
means a lot," he said, shaking mail carrier Wayne Treaudo's
hand . The Postal Service says it is now delivering mail along
at least a portion of 350 of its 406 pre-Katrina routes.
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July 18, 2006
Postal
Workers Feel Heat After
Cooling Malfunction
Postal supervisor killed in accident involving high-speed chase
USPS unveils contract candidates for Homeland
Security ID cards
Postal inspector helps subdue escapee
Brother, sister charged in robbing Letter Carrier at knifepoint
Water woes shut down post office
USPS Forms New Global Organization
Post office evacuated after unknown substance
causes swelling, tingling
UPS Drivers Discouraged From Making Left
Turns
Organized Crime Stalking Canadian Letter
Carriers
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July 17, 2006
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USPS Migrating Personnel Info to
PostalPEOPLE System -
Postal Service transforms human
resources to meet the demands of the information age -
The Postal Service is replacing
its existing outdated human resources technology with a fully-integrated
system to streamline, standardize and automate HR processes.
Once fully implemented, the new system—called PostalPEOPLE—will
be the largest of its kind anywhere. One of the main benefits
of PostalPEOPLE is that it allows employees to perform routine
HR tasks when it is most convenient for them – either at personnel
kiosks located at postal facilities around the country, or away
from the workplace through a new online system with a personal
computer at home, local library, or internet café. Employees
can also call an interactive voice recognition (IVR) system
from any location. This 24/7 availability is important because
many postal employees work non-traditional hours and don’t have
the opportunity to address HR issues from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m
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July 17, 2006
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Michigan: Saginaw man soon charged with hijacking mail truck
- Police found the man
about 35 minutes after the incident. They also recovered the
mail truck at the home, and postal workers completed delivering
the mail that day, Richmond said.
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July 17, 2006
Profile: Why does the USPS have
a position of small-business specialist?
Beloved Mail Carrier Retires After
40-Year Career
Baton Rouge's First
Female Postmaster
Cartoons Get Postal Reprieve
Delivering more than the mail
Letter: Questioning customer service
Postal closing riles townsfolk
USPS Gives OK to Change Express Mail Classification
Language
USPS Taps Harte-Hanks to Optimize its Business-to-Business Marketing
Mailboxes Put the
Fun in Functional
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July 16, 2006 -
Arizona: Sharing, stealing $3.2 million - (Louis) Holley
was one of a dozen postal workers in Phoenix who chipped in
$5 a week for an office lottery pool. In January 1987, they
hit the jackpot in the Pick. But $3.2 million split among 12
people was only $270,000 apiece. Paid out over 20 years, as
all jackpots were then, meant Holley and the other winners each
got $13,000 a year. Fourteen years into the 20-year annuity,
Holley was accused of taking a $3.2 million jackpot all
on his own. In June 2001, someone stole millions from the Postal
Service's General Mail Facility at 48th and Van Buren Streets,
where the winners worked. It was an inside heist, from the facility's
Red Room, an interim bank that was full of money orders, gold
shipments and bags of cash.
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2001: Postal Inspectors Offer Reward for Fugitive in $3.2 Million
Theft
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July 16, 2006 -
Florida: Marrow drive set by postal workers -
Postal employees are trying
to find a cure for a 12-year-old suffering from Aplastic Anemia.
More than 100 employees have registered for the National Marrow
Donor Program Registry since July 13 in hopes of helping Kenny
Conidaris, of San Carlos Park. This Friday, registered postal
employees will wear “Delivering Life” shirts and blue wristbands
to bring awareness to the community blood and marrow drive at
Lani Kai Resort in Fort Myers Beach on July 22.
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July 16, 2006
OSHA Requirements for
"First Aid Kit" in the Workplace
Postal Service wants to limit number of mailboxes
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FedEx, UPS Subpoenaed
in Antitrust Probe
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July 14, 2006
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NALC: Postal Reform in Jeopardy!
(PDF)
(NALC News Bulletin) "NALC’s support
for comprehensive postal reform legislation is now cast in doubt
after key mailers walked away from an effort to find a reasonable
compromise on the issue of price indexing that lies at the heart
of the legislation languishing in Congress. The mailers abandoned
negotiations with pro-reform employee groups, including NALC,
and lined up behind the Bush Administration’s demand for the
inflexible, “hard price cap” included in the Senate-passed version
of the bill. The demand is just one of many damaging anti-labor
proposals being pushed by the White House, including one
to interfere with our collective bargaining by tilting the interest
arbitration process in favor of postal management and another
to saddle the USPS with military pension obligations."
|
-
NPMHU:
Postal Reform Takes Dramatic Turn For The Worse
-
eNAPUS Legislative Newsletter: Postal Reform Tripartite (PDF)
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July 14, 2006
-
APWU Joins Workers' Rights Demonstration
at NLRB Headquarters
-
"The current
administration's NLRB has been slashing workers' rights at every
turn," said APWU President William Burrus, who attended the
rally with union national officers and staff, along with the
17-member Constitution Committee, which has been meeting in
Washington this week. "The Bush labor board has already ruled
against the on-the-job rights of rights of disabled employees,
temporary workers and graduate students," Burrus continued.
"Now they are trying to undermine the entire labor movement
by making millions of people ineligible for union representation
- we must fight against this."
|
|
July 14, 2006
Postal Worker gets prison for falsifying
mileage reimbursement
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Powdery substance
in Rowlett post office found to be gypsum
New Stamps Honor Baseball Sluggers
RE: 'Fed up with spam'
Berkeley (CA): Post Office Might Close In Elmwood District
PRC Eyes Deal on USPS Paid Circ Proposal
Lupton City Residents Start Petition
To Get Post Office Back
Man Arrested in
San Rafael Post Office Bomb Threat
Bus hits Pine Brook post office
Postal worker pleads guilty to embezzlement
USPS Extends Exclusive Contract With RELM Wireless
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July 13, 2006 -
Four Postal
Workers Arrested On Drug Charges
"A couple of Boston area postal workers were allegedly delivering
more than just the mail on their routes, authorities said on
Wednesday. Four postal workers (3 letter carriers, 1 clerk)
were arrested Wednesday and charged with a variety of drug violations,
including two men who at times allegedly sold cocaine or marijuana
while on duty, Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said.
Michael Sheehan, 42, of Revere; Stanley Giordano, 42, of Newburyport;
Raymond Bell, 37, of Chelsea; and Michael Micciche, 38, of Revere,
all pleaded not guilty at their arraignments in Chelsea District
Court."
|
|
July 13, 2006
Post Offices providing alternatives in flood areas
Residents won’t be told if mail will be affected
Maine: Scarborough mail processing center opens
The Cape, Lee's Largest City, Has Rural Routes
Anthrax death sparks lawsuit
Where is the help for the long post office lines?
It's in the cards
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July 12, 2006 -
Pay-for-Performance Plan Boosts
Postal Managers’ Salaries
"Postmasters, executives, supervisors
and administrative workers in many cases are seeing higher annual
raises and bonuses under the U.S. Postal Service’s nearly 3-year-old
pay-for-performance system than they did under the previous
system. Increases are averaging 5 percent under the new system,
compared with 4 percent previously. “Overall the league is pleased
with it,” said Steve LeNoir, National League of Postmasters
president. “The raises under [the new plan] are better than
in the past. The average increase for league members now is
about 5 percent per year, compared with 3 percent before, he
said. The National Association of Postmasters of the United
States, meanwhile, reported that the average salary increase
for its postmasters in 2005 was 4.45 percent and the average
bonus payment was 1.3 percent. “It is better than anything else
before it,” NAPUS president Dale Goff said.
|
|
July 12, 2006 -
Elyria post
office to eliminate 8 routes
"The U.S.
Postal Service will shake up its routes in Elyria this month,
eliminating about eight routes and folding them in with other
routes. "If you had afternoon delivery, you might have morning
delivery, and if you had morning delivery, you might have afternoon
delivery," Postal Service spokesman Dave Van Allen said. None
of the 98 mail carriers assigned to Elyria will lose their jobs.
Instead, Van Allen said, about eight carriers will be shifted
to other post offices."
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Residents won’t be told if mail will be
affected
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Framingham: Route Changes Create Heavy
Burden
|
July 12, 2006 -
Postal
Service Launches Huge Motivation Program
In its new iteration, the USPS'
eAwards program, which tracks various metrics of postal performance
and subsequent rewards, has partnered with "approved vendors.."
Some of the performance metrics the USPS tracks include basic
job functions and attendance records. But the program
also uses more innovative metrics as well, like mystery shopping,
in which managers go undercover as consumers and reward employees
who display exemplary customer service. The USPS earmarks $200
million each year to reward its 78,000 managers and 779,000
employees.
GiftCertificates.com Chosen by
USPS
|
|
July 12, 2006 -
Hurricane-displaced postal worker returns home
Orange Park postal workers said they will sorely miss an
inspirational, soft-hearted supervisor.
Marguerite Jefferson, 60, is returning home to New Orleans after
working about eight months at the Ridgewood branch office. It
was her temporary assignment after Hurricane Katrina destroyed
her post office and her home. "She brought sunshine to the building,"
said Cynthia Allen, sales associate. "She had a great attitude,
a good heart and a good spirit. She was a mother figure to everybody
here."
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July 12, 2006 -
Posters Going
Back Up At Carmel Post Office - Posters by artist Bill
Bates poking fun at Carmel will be going back up at the Carmel
By The Sea post office. The posters were taken down two weeks
ago as part of a renovation to create more space for retail
within the post office. The move created an outcry from some
of the people who use the post office, who said they felt the
posters were an integral part of the place.
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July 12, 2006
APWU: Constitution Committee Begins Reviewing Convention Resolutions
Postal Clerk
in saw horror goes home
Contract Mail
Carrier Arrested for ID Theft
Temporary Mail Carrier pleads guilty to 'dumping' mail
Post office move lacks stamp of approval
Letter carrier foils home burglary
Glade L. Peterson Receives Postmaster Award
Postal Service puts 'ZIP' back into Stumpy Point
Column: Is E-mail Truly Reliable?
Montgomery post office receives OSHA award
|
July 11, 2006 -
OIG White Paper - USPS Cost Burdens
(PDF)
"It is one thing
to ask ratepayers to pay the extra costs of activities related
to the Postal 's core functions--such as delivering mail to
remote areas or operating post office in small towns where there
are no alternate means of service - but another to ask them
to pay for activities outside this mission.
The paper focuses
on five major cost burdens we considers significant, not all
of which are easily quantifiable:
(1) The Postal
service may not be able to receive the rebate available to other
employers who provide qualified prescription drug coverage to
their annuitants (Medicare Part D). (2). The Postal Service
must provide air bypass service in Alaska. (3) International
Mail Air Transportation (4) Civil Service Retirement system
obligations in an escrow account. (5) The Postal Service must
pay CSRS costs associated with retirees previous military service."|
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July 11, 2006
Postal Worker to get Bronze Star for actions in Vietnam
Letter carriers get million-mile award
Greenville, TX: Changes coming in local postal service
GCN Tests USPS' Electronic Postmark
USPS Offers Final Rule on EVS for Parcel Select Mailings
USPS: May Financial Results Show Net Deficiency of $354 Million
USPS Uses RFID to Manage Vehicles, Drivers
Piermont bids postal clerk farewell
|
July 10, 2006 -
APWU: Burrus Condemns USPS Plans
to Privatize AMCs
- "APWU President
William Burrus has denounced Postal Service plans to subcontract
work currently performed by bargaining unit employees at more
than half of the nation's Air Mail Centers. "This ill-advised
adventure would privatize an important and sensitive sector
of the United States Postal Service, slashing the postal workforce
and jeopardizing security and service to ordinary citizens,"
he said. "Once again, management is succumbing to the demands
of the big advertising mailers."
|
|
July 10, 2006 -
Gaylord, Mich: Congressman Stupak won't minimize Postal Service
- Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Menominee, will not allow the
U.S. Postal Service (USPS) to minimize service in his district
under any circumstances, said John Marcotte, president of the
American Postal Workers Union (APWU), Gaylord, following a meeting
in Washington, D.C. June 30. Marcotte, a 12-year USPS employee,
along with APWU Secretary/Treasurer Amy Owen of Gaylord, were
invited to join Stupak in Washington, D.C. June 30. Lori Sheltrown,
congressional aide to Stupak, and Tom Day, senior vice president
of Government Relations, U.S. Postal Service, also attended
the meeting to discuss the possible move. According to Marcotte,
Day agreed to give the results of the AMP study to Stupak, though
he asked them not to be released to the public. According to
Stupak's Press Secretary Alex Haurek, as of Thursday they had
not yet received the AMP study
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July 10, 2006 -
Threads of Dignity: Uniforms Have Changed Over the Years
- Through years of fashion updates, civilian uniforms
have been a source of pride and sometimes prejudice. As symbols
of social values, uniforms inspire debates over gender roles,
worker rights, fashion and outsourcing. Last year, Customs and
Border Protection employees complained about the "Made in Mexico"
tags in their shirts. Some U.S. Postal Service employees buy
their uniforms only from pro-union workplaces. Postal Service
employees, who have delivered and sorted mail in blue-gray uniforms
for more than 100 years, now enjoy the recent additions of polo
shirts and letter carrier trousers enhanced with nanotechnology
that helps water evaporate quickly. In May, El-beco began making
"tagless" polo shirts that feature silk-screened information
on the inside instead of itchy paper or cloth tags. Besides
those small changes, Laurie Hayden, manager of labor relations
systems, says: "We have a classic look that has not changed
in many years." The Postal Service gives employees annual allowances
of about $300 to buy clothing from the approved list of 600
vendors. In 2005, it spent $86.5 million on uniforms, which
included administrative costs.
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July 10, 2006
Louisiana: Postal Service reopens Bywater Station
USPS Generates Net Income of $6.2 Million in May
Federal Register: Electronic Verification System for Parcel
Select
More Reasons for US eBay Sellers to Love the Postal Service
Piermont bids postal clerk farewell
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July 09, 2006 -
Vote-by-Mail Movement
"A recent conference in the nation’s
capital was held to examine the concept of eliminating poll-booth
voting nationwide and replacing it with voting by mail. One
state, Oregon, has already adopted this process for all elections.
The venture has proven successful, and ballot initiatives are
pending in Arizona, California, and Washington. A group headed
by Bill Bradbury, Oregon’s secretary of state, has asked the
APWU to take a leading role in this effort as it moves forward.
All 50 secretaries of state will be at a meeting next year to
discuss this, and President Burrus has accepted an invitation
to that gathering. The greater use of the Postal Service during
election periods would not only increase mail volume, but would
further enhance the credibility of the service we provide to
the American public."
|
|
July 09, 2006
Man held in robbery of letter carrier
|
July 08, 2006
Investigators: Some Las Cruces mail seven
months late |
OIG Report (PDF)
Postal
worker hurt when dogs attack
Contract Mail Carrier pleads guilty to Netflix
thefts
Residents' postal demands met by new mailbox
Postal Carrier Found Guilty Of Stealing $275,000
Coin
PRC Releases Database of Every Mail Collection Box in America
Camp E-Mailaway
|
July 07, 2006 -
APWU
VP Guffey : Our Action Plan to Fight Consolidation -
"It is important that every rank and file member understand
the APWU strategy to thwart the USPS plan to consolidate mail
services. As President Burrus pointed out in a recent letter
to local and state presidents, appropriate legal challenges
will not be enough: "We must recognize that our traditional
forms of struggle - grievances, NLRB charges, lawsuits - are
not likely to be the most effective methods in this effort.
This is a battle that must be waged in the court of public opinion."
-
USPS Update on Plan for Regional Distribution Centers
|
|
July 07, 2006 -
Postal Clerk Sliced Up by Power
Saw - Wielding Attacker on New York Subway
-
"A maniacal
ex-con randomly carved up a 64-year-old man with two power saws
in a Manhattan subway station early yesterday - moments after
stealing the tools from a construction crew, police and witnesses
said. "He stabbed me in the heart! Help me!" postal worker Michael
Steinberg screamed as his 6-foot-tall attacker stood over him,
madly revving the black-and-yellow cordless saws. Steinberg
gasped before the silent, blood-splattered psycho stole $200
and several credit cards from his pockets and fled."
Steinberg:
Longtime NY Metro APWU steward
|
|
July 07, 2006 -
USPS Financials: Mail Volume, Revenue Up for May (PDF)
Total Mail Volume for May, FY 2006
was 1.3 billion pieces or 8.0% above SPLY. With the exception
of Periodical Mail and International Mail, all of the major
mail categories posted volumes above their May 2005 levels.
These two categories combined were 17 million pieces below SPLY.
Year-to-date, Total Mail Volume is 0.9% or 1.2 billion pieces
above SPLY. A significant mail volume increase over SPLY for
YTD is in the lower revenue-per-piece Standard Mail category,
which increased 1.4 billion pieces or 2.1%. YTD, First-Class
Mail volume is 0.6% less than SPLY generating only $470 million
more revenue than SPLY. Total Workhours decreased for SPLY :
YTD are 15.2 million hours or 1.6% above plan and 2.1 million
hours or 0.2% below SPLY.
|
|
July 07, 2006 -
NALC President Young: Tide may be turning in USPS power struggle
NALC and the Postal Service will begin negotiations on August
28 for a new National Agreement to replace the one that expires
in November. NALC will do everything in its power to reach a
negotiated settlement that is fair to letter carriers, fair
to postal customers and fair to the public we serve . Meanwhile,
work on the many issues involving the use of DOIS appears to
be on a fast track. I had hoped that I would be able to announce
significant progress had been made, but that would be premature.
Still, I am encouraged that a breakthrough is possible. The
same can be said of our third bundle dispute. Last month I described
the improper creation of Part Time Regular assignments for some
business routes in Texas. I have been informed that those business
routes have been converted to regular eight-hour assignments,
as the National Agreement requires.
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|
July 07, 2006
Postal Carrier on Trial for Alleged Theft of $275,000 Coin
Defense Department seeks input on military mail overhaul
Postal Service nears full strength in New Orleans
A Salute to: Post Office workers
‘Mailman Joe' Kovach dies in sleep
Ex-Rural Carrier
pleads guilty to obstruction of mail
|
July 06, 2006 -
USPS Dragnet Continues to Sweep
Up Injured Workers
By Dan Sullivan:
"Last month Buffalo, New York postal clerk Barbara Brzozowski
was thrown out of work under the Postal Service's Reassessment
Program, a scheme to dump injured workers on the Office of Workers'
Compensation Programs (OWCP) rolls. Her only crime appears to
be getting hurt while working on one of the ergonomically unsafe
flat sorting machines at the General Mail Facility in Buffalo
that the USPS pays so much attention to. Her injury was typical.
She's worked 21 years for the Postal Service and the repetitive
lifting of third class tubs of mail had left her right shoulder
a mess. In April 2003 she filed an OWCP injury claim. After
a year of therapy and light duty work, she tried to go back
to work on the flat sorting machines.-
USPS Reassessment Program Back on Track
in Pacific Area
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|
July 06, 2006 -
Mail Handlers President Hegarty
Blasts USPS on Contract Initiative
- USPS Announces Possible
Subcontracting at 43 Airport Mail Facilities -
In an ill-advised move, on the eve of collective
bargaining, the USPS has notified the NPMHU National Office
of its plans to consider the outsourcing of the tender and receipt
of mail at 43 air mail centers. Attached to this memorandum
is a copy of the July 3, 2006 notification, which lists the
facilities that may be affected.
[Read July 3rd notice]
This
anti-labor plan couldn’t come at a worse time. We are
about to enter into bargaining over the terms of a new National
Agreement, productivity is at an all-time high, career mail
handlers are performing their duties in an efficient and productive
manner, and management comes up with this ill-conceived “brainstorm.”
What a wonderful way to kick off bargaining, by telling the
career mail handlers that they are not wanted or needed in one
of the most critical areas of the Postal Service.
|
|
July 06, 2006 -
Supreme Court Revives Postal Worker's
Discrimination Suit
Mike Thomas, an Illinois custodian
filed a complaint alleging that the Postal Service discriminated
against him by altering his shift while allowing female employees
with less seniority to keep their day shifts. Thomas also claimed
that his shift change was in retaliation for filing the complaint
with the EEOC that resulted in a 1994 settlement. The district
and circuit courts ruled in favor of the Postal Service, determining
that “a decision to change an employee’s work shift, without
a change in the employee’s title, pay or responsibilities, does
not rise to the level of an adverse employment action.” The
Supreme Court disagreed with both courts. On June 30, 2006,
the Supreme Court granted the custodian's petition from an unpublished
Seventh Circuit decision involving the scope of Title VII'S
Anti-Retaliation provision, and vacated the judgment and remanded
the case for further consideration.|
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July 06, 2006 -
Valassis Buys Advo for $1.2 Billion
Marketing company Valassis Communications Inc. said Thursday
it is buying Advo Inc., the nation's largest direct-mail marketer,
for $1.2 billion. The combined company is expected to serve
about 20,000 advertisers, including 94 of the top 100 in the
United States, with direct-mail, newspaper inserts, e-mail marketing
and other programs. Advo was founded in Hartford in 1929. It
sends about 27 billion pieces of mail annually and is the largest
private customer of the U.S. Postal Service.|
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July 06, 2006 -
Rules of Taking Unpaid Leave - As a tool of last
resort when sick and annual leave run dry, federal employees
can take time off without pay under certain circumstances, such
as to complete military duty or to recover from a prolonged
illness. But the rules surrounding leave without pay (LWOP)
are complex and can result in a loss of benefits if not followed
closely
|
July 06, 2006
USPS Dragnet Continues to Sweep
Up Injured Workers
Postal News Tidbits July 06, 2006
Postal Bulletin: UPS Contract, Directive Updates, more...
Mail carrier,
firefighter attacked by dogs
June was much kinder to Thrift Savings Plan -
All Funds Grew Except
I Fund
Female met mail challenges
Direct Mail Spending Rises
DA's Office drops
112 counts against mailbox bandit
Mail Delivery
Not Delivering
|
July 05, 2006 -
Delivery Failure -
Postal Service's
new sorting facility plagued by problems -
"Kennedy and
his business partner, Mel Nasielski, say the story (lost, late
mailings) has become all too common for the Postal Service,
which recently completed the transfer of its mail-sorting operations
to a new $300 million high-tech center in Southwest Philadelphia...
Harmon Elliott, president of the American Postal Workers Philadelphia
local, said about 600 fewer clerks work in the more highly automated
center than at 30th and Market streets, and operations are strained.
"I've been telling them for the last couple of months they need
more people there," Elliott said.
Union Vice President Edward Oliver,
who used to work in bulk mail, said hundreds of workers have
new jobs in the new facility, and many aren't properly trained."
New
postal center opens to support
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|
July 05, 2006 -
South Dakota Postmaster Pleads Guilty to Misappropriation of
Postal Funds - United States Attorney Steven K. Mullins
announced that Ila Ann Crain, age 36 pled guilty to a federal
Information charging her with Misappropriation of Postal Funds
in the amount of $4,886.92. The charge relates to the conversion
of United States Postal Service funds and money to her own use
between October 1, 2005, and January 18, 2006.
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July 05, 2006
Business mailers reach global customers with help from USPS
Flag shuffle leaves postmaster 'perplexed'
UPS open door for union at truck unit seen smart
I.D. Systems Receives Additional Orders from USPS for Wireless
Vehicle Management Systems
|
July 04, 2006 -
Letter Carrier Walked Through Life in Shorts
Brad Fuelle who died last month at 49, held an unusual record,
one not recorded by Guinness. Fuelle, who spent 21 years working
for the U.S. Postal Service out of the Madison (Wisconsin) west
side branch, delivered the mail for 34 consecutive months -
wearing shorts. When Fuelle's streak ended, it wasn't because
Brad had succumbed to frigid January temperatures. He ran into
something much more formidable - a humorless bureaucrat. In
November 1999, a new postal station manager took Fuelle aside
and said he didn't think the shorts - though they were postal
service uniform shorts - were a good idea. "He said there were
two issues," Brad told me. "My health, and the image of the
post office. I asked whom Fuelle was bothering by wearing shorts,
and the manager explained : "I got a call from a guy who said,
'It's 22 below zero and you have a guy gassing up his truck
wearing shorts! What kind of people do you hire?'" On Tuesday,
Feb. 8, 2000, Fuelle wore the long postal uniform pants and
his streak came to an end. He told me the manager actually drove
out to the route to make sure Brad wasn't wearing shorts.
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|
July 04, 2006
Postal Worker Who Wrote Shirelles '60s Hit
'Mama Said' Dies
Patriotic celebration ends 42 years of service for Idaho Letter
Carrier
Slinger Post Office provides link to active-duty
soldiers
Postlude to a career
Streets are empty, post offices full
Navigating Today's Parcel Shipping Environment
|
July 03, 2006 -
USPS Communications VP Azeezaly Jaffer Resigns
USPS News Link: Postmaster
General Jack Potter announced that Jon Leonard has been named
Acting VP, Public Affairs and Communications (PA&C). He replaces
Azeezaly Jaffer,
who is pursuing other career opportunities outside the Postal
Service. A 31-year postal veteran, Leonard has broad experience
in the Postal Service, both at Headquarters and in the Field.
Was
Jaffer forced to resign??? .
APWU :
New USPS VP Suppressed
Article on Olympia Productivity.|
|
July 03, 2006
Man's artistry on mail leads to postal project
Medway licks breast cancer
Postal Service to Avoid $110 Million in Energy Costs Through
Projects
Postcom: Letter Details Changes to USPS Sales Organization
Postal Service won't push the envelope in Bridesburg
African-American Lessons in Giving from late
Postal Worker
Postal worker killed by husband in murder/suicide
UK: Managers delivering mail due to staff shortages
|
July 02, 2006 -
USPS Communications VP Azeezaly
Jaffer Resigns -
Postcom, "Mailers Council executive director Robert McLean
has reported that "Azeez
Jaffer, the USPS' vice president for Public Affairs and
Communications has left the Postal Service. The reasons for
his unexpected and sudden departure are unclear. Jon Leonard,
who recently became the PMG's leading speech writer, was named
acting vice president for Public Affairs and Communications."
|
|
July 02, 2006 -
Postal Service no Pony Express during the flooding -
For two days during the flooding this past week, postal workers
say they were unable to get mail from Scranton , where it is
processed, to Bradford County . The consequence? No mail was
delivered to residents here. Personal notes were delayed. Bill
payments were delayed. All manner of correspondence about matters
great and small, was interrupted. The postal service’s excuse:
the roads were washed out, blocked and impassable. But is that
a good enough explanation for why the mail could not be delivered?
Were all the roads blocked? Of course not. Is the postal service
so strapped for cash they could not afford maps to figure out
alternate routes?
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July 02, 2006
What Next In Decline Of Groton Postal Service?
Reagan stamp among popular reissues
Stamp collector raises ruckus over 'Mickey
Mouse' issue
Rural carrier honored for safe driving record
Van Nuys Mailman Delivers a $100,000 Prize
Postal carrier picks up a save
|
July 01, 2006
Drive-thru post office
Mail fraud’ charge is odd yet posts result
Anna Celebrates ZIP Code Day
Enid postal worker honored
Audit isn't final word on postal consolidation
UPS, Pilots Union Reach New Contract Deal
German Postal Carrier Caught Hording Mail
At Home
Mail Volume Tumbles at Los Angeles Int'l Airport
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