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2003:
Jan-June 2003|
July-Dec. 2003
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Top News Story
of the Month
|
-
USPS: No Regular Retail, Delivery Operations
on Friday, June 11th as a Mark of Respect for Reagan
"
usps, apwu, nalc, npmhu, nlrca memos
(
Potter MEMO )|
-
Former President Ronald Reagan Dies at Age 93-
Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of US who launched
the modern-day conservative political movement with the "Reagan
Revolution," died Sat. Bush signed a bill in 2003 that designated
a Billings, Montana post office as the
Ronald Reagan Post Office Building .
-
National Funeral Planned for Friday in Washington D.C.
-
Bush Declares Friday as National Day Of Mourning in Honor of
Reagan (6/6/04)
-
Executive Order for Closing Federal Offices on Friday
June 11th-Federal offices may be kept
open at the discretion of agency heads, the order said.
(6/6/04)
Commentary: Columnist Wrong
on Federal Holiday Mocks Reagan
-APWU Member Dan Sullivan's Rebuttal to
Giving federal workers a holiday mocks Reagan, what he stood
for-(6/10/04)
"The $150 million in lost productivity that the holiday will
cost the Postal Service won't come from the federal Treasury,
but it will come out of your pockets. Remember that money the
next time the price of stamps rises."(6/11/04)
-
Dixon Post Office has Reagan postmark for 30 days
-
Day of mourning comes with a cost
-
Reagan honed skills as Calif. governor
-
Updated Guidelines for National Day
Of Mourning (6/8/04)
-
El Dorado postman once worked with Reagan
-
USPS quick to confirm Reagan stamp-
-
Reagan-Era Alumni-former Whitehouse press secretary Larry
Speakes is now USPS advertising manager
|
Top Stories
USPS Must Reclaim $160 Million in Payroll
Overpayment to Thousands of Postal Employees-
Some 41,000 Postal Employees (mostly EAS & PCES) will receive an
overpayment when they are paid for Pay Period 13 . Overpayment is
the result of a payroll error and duplication of EVA closeout lump
sum payments these employees received for 2002. USPS is advising
employees not to spend the extra money and repay it as soon
as possible.-end- Postal Reporter comment: Or USPS may be required
to issue over 40,000 Letters of Demand to recoup the overpayments
(some of the overpaid employees are in the bargaining unit; |
-
Payroll error affects some employees (NAPUS)
-Computer
error overpays thousands of postal workers (San Francisco Chronicle)
Update:
USPS Computer Glitch Leads to $103 million in Overpayments
-
"The Postal Service as asked the Office of Inspector General to
the investigate a computer glitch that caused 41,000 employees to
receive too much money in their paychecks."
The problem reportedly
originated when the agency attempted to send bonuses to a select
group of employees. The computer misread the instruction that it
was given (or computer failed to follow instructions). USPS
spokesman George McKiernan said that reissuing checks or docking
future pay would be too difficult for employees who need to
use the money in the near future or adhere to strict budgets Also,
due to
payroll glitch, "a lump-sum payment that was to be paid to 1905
bargaining unit employees on June 18 has been delayed
until July 2."(source: Govexec & USPS) (6/17/04)
|
-
Postmasters
League: How to Calculate Erroneous EVA Payment (pdf)
(6/18/04)
Senate Panel Backs
Postal Reform Bill-The
Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act S. 2468
proposed
by Senate Govt. Affairs Committee Chairman Susan Collins (R-ME)
and Sen. Tom Carper (D-DE) passed unanimously.
The House and Senate could
vote on the bills as early as this month.
The three
nominations, Albert Casey, James Miller III to USPS Board of Governors
and Dawn Tisdale to the Postal Rate Commission were unanimously
confirmed. |
-
Senate Committee OKs Postal Reform Bill (DMNews)
-
APWU: Postal Workers and Americans Owe their Thanks to Sen Lieberman
(pdf)
-
Lieberman Wins Limits on Excessive Discounts to Private Mailers
(Senate.gov)
-
NAPS: Lieberman amendment promoted by APWU and small mailers
(Direct)
-
Senate committee approves postal reform bill (Federal Times)
-
Pitney Bowes Applauds Continued Momentum of Postal Reform
Mail
Handlers Named as Primary Craft for APPS (PDF)
-In a letter dated June 2, 2004, from John Dockins, USPS Manager
Contract Administration, APWU and NPMHU learned the Postal Service
has identified mail handlers as the primary craft to perform work
associated with the Automated Package Processing System (APPS).
The Postal Service also determined the appropriate level to
perform activities associated with the APPS is Level 4.
APPS
Passes 1st Test, National Deployment Begins Next Month
-The Automated Package Processing System (APPS) passed its
first test recently at the Twin Cities Metro Hub in Minneapolis,
MN, and begins national deployment in July at the annex in Oklahoma
City, OK.
APPS
combines the latest in automated package sorter technology with
optical character reader, bar code reader and video coding capabilities
to process a wider range of packages and bundles even irregularly
shaped ones. A total of 74 APPS will be deployed to 70 mail processing
facilities by fall 2005 -USPS Today News ). |
Postal Service Recognized
for Diversity-USPS
has been named one of the 50 Best Companies for Minorities for the
fifth year in a row by leading business magazine FORTUNE. USPS ranked
6th on the list this year up from 11th last year. The news article
said "with 59 percent of new hires minorities, USPS has managed
to best its own highly rated efforts to ensure a diversified workforce"|
USPS Ranks 6th Among Best Companies For Minorities in Fortune Annual
List
EEOC: USPS Diversity
Profiles 2003 -USPS'
top four major occupations were reported as Postmaster, Supervisor,
Clerk, and City Carrier.
Large percentage of women (56.71%)
are postmasters, smallest percentage (25%) of women are letter carriers.
GOING POSTAL II
Still
Fighting for Dignity In The Workplace-
The second book in the series describing working conditions of postal
employees by retired Portland, Oregon Letter Carrier Al Ainsworth.
Featured stories are a Nebraska APWU steward fired for taking Ainsworth's
first book to work ;a picket in Texas protesting working conditions;
stonewalling a disabled workers rights and a collection of short
stories in "The daily grind." The book is approximately 250 pages
and is scheduled for publication on July 10, 2004
Appropriate
Remedy for Exceeding 12hrs. day/60hrs. week Work Limitations
-As management continues to right size our work force we
will see an increase in overtime hours to cover the shortage in
the workforce. Along with this increase of overtime come increasing
attempts by management to deny the Bargaining Unit of its rights.
Article 8 overtime provisions of the Collective Bargaining Agreement
has been arbitrated and been put to rest, I thought
I see some
of the same issues that we fought hard and long for resurfacing.
The question of working over 60 hours within a service week continues
to surface even after being settled 16 years ago. The issue of 12/60
work hour limitations and the appropriate remedy when management
allows you to work beyond the daily/weekly work limitation has been
a problem since the 1988 settlement.
NPMHU Oppose Worksharing, OWCP Changes in Senate Reform Bill
- The National Postal Mail Handlers Union is opposed to "worksharing"
language in the Senate bill that could open the door to more
"outsourcing" of career postal jobs to private mailing companies."
The Mail Handlers Union is also opposed to provisions in Senate
Bill "that would single out postal employees and cut their
workers' compensation benefits for future injuries or illnesses.
-
National
Rural Letter Carriers Stance on Postal Reform
Lexington Institute:
Postal reform slips away-"If
closing outdated military bases is tough, closing a post office
-- or cutting the bloated postal bureaucracy -- seems well nigh
impossible. Any day now, Congress could vote on what's been hailed
as the biggest postal reform in 34 years. But personnel cuts, budget
rollbacks and post office closings -- all of which are crucial to
fixing the postal service's financial problems -- aren't even on
the table. Such is the awesome power of our entrenched postal
unions."|
EEOC Gives Final Approval to Settlement
in Injured Employees Class-Action Suit against USPS-
An EEOC administrative judge gave final approval to a settlement
of a class-action lawsuit (Glover/Albrecht vs USPS) that
accused USPS of discriminating against injured employees
who
were allegedly denied promotional and/or advancement opportunities
allegedly due to discrimination on the basis of disability.
(6/11/04) |
-
EEOC: Injured postal workers eligible for back pay (Federal
times-6/15/04)
-
Dean Albrecht: The recent
settlement of the Glover/Albrecht class complaint was not
a made whole remedy of all the injustice that rehab/modified employees
-
Dean Albrecht's pain defeated Postal Service
Book:
You've Got the Right to Go, When You Gotta Go-Have
you ever had to go to the bathroom and been told by your supervisor
to wait until your break? That's illegal. Workers have a right to
use the toilet "when they need to do so." That's the law according
to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).
In one cited case, comedian Jay Leno joked about a company's bathroom
rule
|
(see page update for OSHA links)
Potter:
Higher Fuel Costs Hurting USPS-USPS vehicles consume 800
million gallons of gasoline and diesel fuel annually. Potter also
noted that high fuel prices have increased heating and electricity
costs for the postal service's 38,000 facilities. Despite cost reduction
efforts that offset much of the increase, "continued increases will
have an adverse impact on postal finances."
-
USPS to Use GM's Fuel Cell Van in DC Area||
photos (6/15/04)
-Statement
of Thomas G. Day, USPS Vice President, Engineering
USPS Award Contract for Security Guard
Services--ABM
Security Services, Inc., has been awarded a multi-year, multi-million
dollar national contract with USPS. The contract covers unarmed
security guard services for more than 60 postal service facilities
located in 20 states across the country and includes more that 300
security personnel. USPS
closed postal
police operations in 6 cities last year saying the
presence of armed police is no longer needed at the 6 facilities
|
-
Private guards
are not allowed to carry guns on postal property
-
ABM also provides cleaning and maintenance service to USPS (8/22/03)
Postal Clerks' EEOC $165,000 settlement is upheld-EEOC
has upheld an administrative law judge's award of $165,000 in damages
to two disabled clerks at the Meadville (PA) post office. The two
Postal clerks each filed complaints with EEOC under the Americans
with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act after the men were
denied the use of chairs while operating CSBCS machines at the post
office in September 1999. In 2001, EEOC Administrative Law Judge
Francis Polito ruled in favor of both clerks, but USPS filed an
appeal with the EEOC claiming the chairs created a safety hazard;
complainant had a pre-existing condition and that this condition
had worsened by normal everyday use and several other arguments
USPS, Private Shipper in Mexico Sign Licensing Agreement
-USPS announced
today the signing of a licensing agreement with
Estafeta USA Inc., a leading
private shipping company in Mexico, which allows the company limited
usage of USPS' logo. Estafeta USA Inc. links to USPS' domestic delivery
network by clearing inbound packages originating in Mexico through
U.S. Customs, transporting them into
the U.S and tendering them to the U.S. Postal Service at the McAllen,
Texas post office as domestic Priority Mail. (note: did everyone
get all of this long sentence??)
House Panel Passes Bill Revise CSRS Benefits for Part-Time Workers-
-
Switching to Part-Time Late in Career Can Trim Size of Retirement
Annuity
-APWU
Retirees Director John Smith
USPS
On Roll and Paid Employee Stats April 2004 (pdf)
-
USPS FINANCIAL & OPERATING STATEMENTS April 2004
-
USPS Report of Revenue, Pieces, and Weights of mail QTR II FY 2004
NALC Acts To Revise Route Inspections
-The NALC Executive
Council, decided to present to the National Convention in Honolulu,
Hawaii for debate and consideration, a proposal to revamp the route
inspection process. The current system results in daily confrontations
between letter carriers & front-line supervisors and is dysfunctional.
|
-
Cased Volume Verification Concluded; Moratorium on Inspections Continues
Carrier Arrested for Alleging
Assaulting Co-Worker over Postal Policy-Police
reported a part time carrier, and a full time carrier, were driving
postal vehicles when the argument became violent. The argument ensued
over postal policy that allows full time workers to work an eight
hour day. The Full-Time Carrier had run out mail and was asking
the Part-Time Carrier for his mail so he could get in his eight
hours. The Part-Time Carrier allegedly refused to hand over his
mail. What happens next is simply unbelievable. |
NALC Wants to Make Federal Case Out
of Letter Carrier Assaults-There's
been a series of assaults against letter carriers, but many of the
cases are dismissed or not prosecuted at all . NALC Union officers
in Buffalo, NY wants to make a federal case out of it. The U.S.
Attorney's office says it's not an automatic federal offense when
a letter carrier is assaulted, and says there are other factors
to consider like interfering or tampering with mail.
Former NBA Star John Salley plays 'angry mailman' in new TV sitcom-Former
Detroit Pistons, Los Angeles Lakers and Chicago Bulls star John
Salley plays an angry, 7ft-tall mailman who just grows angrier every
time the show's star tries to befriend him. Salley also diverts
packages for others to (comedian) Tom Papa and his wife played by
Jennifer Aspen.
Ex-Postal Worker Sentenced to 46 Years in
Postal Robbery
-a Dallas Postal Worker
since 1998 pleaded guilty in April to four counts of armed robbery
of a postal employee and two counts of carrying a firearm during
a crime of violence. Postal inspectors caught the men during a surveillance
at the Parkdale Station in Dallas. The inspectors had been watching
the station because of recent mail station robberies. |
-
US Dept of Justice Press Release (1/8/04)
-
NALCREST Still A
Bargain for Postal Retirees after 40+ Years-Neither
rain nor heat nor gloom of night stops folks from living large at
the unofficial retirement community of the National Association
of Letter Carriers located in Polk County, Florida. Nalcrest
(it stands for National Association of Letter
Carriers Retirement, Education, Security
and Training) was conceived and developed by NALC in the
early 1960s and is fully owned by the union. Nalcrests low
rents contribute to its popularity.
more info
from NALC
Rural Carrier: Yes, people do call
post office for ad inserts-"On
June 13, David C. Kaminski asked, I wonder whether anyone calls
the postmaster about not getting enough junk mail? (Editors Note
column, If you think junk mail is like ads inserted in The Rep,
just try to stop it). The answer is yes. I am a rural mail carrier,
and if I run short on advertisements, my customers will call. They
want their advertisements to plan their shopping trips. These advertisements
keep the economy flowing. The provide a job for the people who produce
them, keep businesses running with the money that consumers spend
when they shop using the advertisements, and they provide postal
employees with a job. Kaminski also said, Perhaps the nation needs
a do-not-mail list. There are a lot of postal employees in the
area who buy The Repository. He would not appreciate it if we started
a do-not-buy-The Repository list. I do not disrespect The Repository.
Please, Repository, do not disrespect my career." KATHY HILTON
June 30, 2004-
157 Years After the Birth of the Postage Stamp, Carriers Still Deliver.
-"This week marks the birth of our nation, the anniversary of our
independence. But it also marks the birth of a little-recognized
American institution: the postage stamp. Only July 1, 1847, USPS
authorized its first two stamps." In honor of the postage stamp
a local newspaper asked Springfield, MO. letter carriers to share
a few of their most memorable moments on the job. |
-
Original US stamps celebrate birthday
Felony charges dismissed against ex-postal worker
Postal Inspector Shoots Man during Drug Bust
Commentary: 37 cents is quite a bargain-When
you consider the topnotch service you get from a measly 37-cent
postal stamp, you must agree that mail delivery is one of the best
bargains on the planet
June 29, 2004-
APWU
Disputes Craft Jurisdiction of APPS
-"The
APWU maintains the APPS is involved in mail processing and/or the
distribution of mail and is the work of the clerk craft. All mail
processing and/or distribution of mail on automated equipment is
the work of the clerk craft." |
-
Craft Jurisdiction Dispute of Priority Mail Processing Centers converted
to L & DCs
Ballot Placement ,Candidates Certified, For APWU National Election
of Officers
Sen. Carper Pushes for Postal Service Revamp
Pitney Bowes Introduces Relia-Vote Mail Balloting System
Congress Needs to Amend Postal Reform
Cost to mail Canada letter will rise
to $0.50
Former clerk pays extra restitution, gets probation for thefts
A Postal Family Affair-Neither rain nor snow nor dark of night
have kept Postmaster, her husband, siblings, in-laws and father
from their duty in the USPS
June 28, 2004-
Union Leaders Earn Six Figures-According
to Dept of Labor data compiled by Political Money Line, the leaders
of America's labor unions are well-paid.
Salary for Postal Union
Presidents : NALC Young ($149,517) APWU Burrus ( $140,746)
NPMHU Hegarty ($132,640) NRLCA Baffa ($113,244) NAPFE McGee ($73,539)
APWU reported the largest drop
in members, down 53,754, Mail Handlers
membership, down
43,328
see table |
Labor Dispute Looms at Calif. Hotels Scheduled
to Host APWU National Convention
-9 Southern
Calif. union hotels agree to lock out workers if contract dispute
leads to strike. Westin Bonaventure
said a postal employees union
which had scheduled an August (23-27) convention that will account
for 22,000 room nights had called to ask about talks.
-
Hotel Union Members scheduled to vote on July 1st whether
to strike
Former Florida Letter Carrier Files Suit against Postmaster-A
former Bonita Springs letter carrier has sued her former supervisor,
the Bonita Springs postmaster and the Postmaster General, contending
she was wrongfully fired because of gender discrimination
Capitol Hill Anthrax
Response Spread Toxin-Roll
Call reports a recently released Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention report suggests the Capitol Police accidentally spread
the bacteria from the anthrax-laced envelope beyond the Hart Senate
Office Building where the letters containing the deadly toxin were
first discovered
Delivering the mail, and saving a life
ShipShapes First to Use USPS Changes Allowing Direct Mail Attachments
Brentwood Postal Facility 'back to normal'
USPS issues final rule to revise its purchasing of property regulations
DHS offers four companies liability protection for anti-terrorism
technology
City Officials in Norwich, CT concerned about shabby condition of
Post Office
Mailers Confident USPS Will Revise First-Class/Standard Rule
Lafayette's (ILL.) first woman postmaster takes reins
Postal Inspector describe a "Triangle" scam and how USPS is
fighting it
Sinkhole dumps mail, breaks water line
DHL Chasing Fedex, UPS with $1.2 billion investment package
Friends, family recall fallen soldier/letter carrier
Post office tries ATM concept in bid to speed up service
Siemens Wins Contract for USPS Postal Inspection Monitoring Solution-Siemens
Information & Communication Networks Inc. of Reston won a $1.4 million
contract from the Postal Service for hardware, software, installation
and maintenance for a centralized monitoring solution. -end-
June 26, 2004-
USPS dedicates New $300 million Philadelphia P & DC-
The center
will be the first urban processing facility put up for modern, computer-aided
distribution. The sprawling center, with more floor space than three
football fields is scheduled for completion in November 2005, "This
center will become the model that will be used in Chicago, Los Angeles,
and all over the United States," said S. David Fineman who chairs
the USPS board of governors. |
A Postman Who Rings Twice and Sometimes
Even More
Prosecutor sizing
up police-patron clash at post office
Post
office to close at least temporarily, possibly for good
100,000 pieces of
mail destroyed after fiery accident --driver escapes
Going once, going twice-- Starbuck (WA) post office to be auctioned
off
Boy held in attempt to attack mailman
-A 16-year-old was arrested Friday on suspicion
of yelling racial and gang slurs at a postal worker and then trying
to hit him with a metal pipe, police said. The boy was standing
on his balcony when he began yelling and telling the postal worker
that he didn't belong in the neighborhood .The postal worker was
able to back away without injury and call the police.
June 25, 2004-
eBay and USPS to Offer Co-Branded Shipping
Supplies Exclusively For The eBay Community--
Andover Postal Carrier Convicted of Mail Theft
Marketers Who Send Junk Mail Not Welcome, Group Claims
New
Postal Machine in San Diego Automates Mailing
Lightning strikes postmaster
Revised Cost
Estimate for H.R. 4341, Postal Accountability Enhancement Act
Postal Worker/ veteran
falls between cracks
Letter: Compliments to Somerville (TN) Postal Employees
June 24, 2004-
At
its closed meeting on June 15, 2004, the USPS Board of Governors
voted unanimously to add 'Proposed Filing with the Postal Rate Commission
for Repositionable Notes (RPNs) Pricing Experiment' to the agenda
of its closed meeting and that no earlier announcement was possible.
The General Counsel of the United States Postal Service certified
that in her opinion discussion of this item could be properly closed
to public observation. (source: Federal Register)
A Tale of Two CEOs-"If
you follow the news from U.S. Postal Service headquarters, you've
probably noticed a spate of imminent retirement announcements by
many middle and senior managers who you have known and worked with
over the past two decades. Yes, the population at USPS headquarters
is aging, and it's beginning to show."
Brentwood
Employee's Response to EEOC in Anthrax Discrimination Case
Last Minute Lease Agreement Saves New York Post Office
USPS Accused of Ignoring Pro-Family Pleas Regarding 'Playboy'
Latest Postal Bulletin : Limited Use of Postal Property, Directives
/Forms Update
Postal
Inspectors Link Two Postal Workers to ID Theft Ring
Former Notre Dame postmaster charged with destroying mail--a package
of outgoing cognac
Wilma Rudolph stamp to debut July 14
Ex-Appleton postal worker will be sentenced for theft
Severance Post Office robbed
June 23, 2004
Letter
Carriers' Union Convention Scheduled for Honolulu July 19-23;
Over 8,000 Delegates Registered to Attend Sessions
Images from the First Day of Issue Disney Stamp Event at Disneyland
FedEx 4th-Qtr Profit Rises as Growth Boosts Shipping
UPS Files Cases Against Deutsche Post With European Union
Postal
Worker Remembered On Anniversary Of Death-It's been one
year since postal worker Clayton Smith was accidentally shot and
killed. But that year hasn't eased the suffering of family and friends.
USPS Final Rule: Release of Information, Privacy of Information-On
October 1, 2003, the Postal Service published a general revision
of its rules dealing with records and information (68 FR 56557).
This revision updated terminology to reflect the Postal Service's
current organizational structure, removed obsolete or duplicative
provisions, and revised the fee schedule for disclosure of information
where necessary. Further inspection of the affected provisions indicates
that minor additional revisions are necessary to remedy oversights
in the previous notice and avoid possible confusion
EEOC: Class Certification Proper. A Colorado
Postmaster's formal complaint asserted that the agency's application
of its merit evaluation system, which imposed a 10% cap on managers
receiving a "far exceeds" rating, resulted in female postmasters
being denied the opportunity to be eligible for and receive a "far
exceeds" merit rating. EEOC subsequently certified a class of all
female postmasters employed in 1999. EEOC modified the definition
of the class to encompass: female postmasters whose performance
exceeded expectations but received a "met expectations" rating due
to the 10 percent cap. The class complaint, as modified, was remanded
to an EEOC District Office for processing.
2001 Background
of Holmes, et al. v. USPS case
June 22, 2004-
Mailers Council Calls for Amendments to Postal Bills
East Liverpool (OH) Post Office May Close It's Doors
1940 mural in Wilmington's post office getting facelift
-
Before and After Pictures of New Deal Post Office Murals
Administrators of the
Postal Grievance
Research System will be
putting on a demonstration at the Central Region APWU National Presidents
Conference Oct 2-4
June 22, 2004-
According to
Denver APWU - "The
Postal Service is pursuing plans to establish contract retail services
in Hallmark and Office Depot stores across the country. This represents
a serious threat to jobs in customer service offices. The APWU will
do everything in its power to resist these initiatives. We believe
retail services are best performed by genuine postal employees."
USPS, Hallmark join forces to offer
customers added convenience
June 21, 2004-
USPS
Income $919 million over budget- Standard Mail Volume Up 3.8% -
- USPS had net income
of $2.9 billion -- $918.9 million over budget -- from Oct. 1 to
May 31. Meanwhile, mail volume was up and expenses are under plan.
According to USPS revenue was $46.65 billion, 0.5% better than planned,
while expenses of $43.75 billion were 1.5% under the planned budget.
Mail volume rose 0.7% compared with last year. Standard and International
mail grew 3.8% and 6.9%, respectively. However, several mail classes
saw declines. Periodicals fell 4.4%; Express Mail, 4.2%; Priority
Mail, 2.4%; First-Class, 1.7%; and Package Services, 0.2%. For the
month of May, total mail volume fell 2.5%.
West Virginia Rural Carrier inspires others with his positive attitude
Clarksburg Rural Letter Carrier Frank "Franky" Billings spends most
of his days stuffing about 400 mailboxes with various letters, postcards
and packages. He's a mailman -- or, as he likes to say, a rural
route mail carrier. But to most people, he's more than just a mailman
or rural route mail carrier. To the 400-plus residents he delivers
mail to on a daily basis, he's a friend, source of strength and
a hometown hero.
Special
deliverer: Mailman has fun with costumes, unique gifts-First
you hear his whistle, then you see his smiling face. If it's a holiday,
he'll be dressed in a Santa hat, or patriotic garb, or some other
festive costume. If it's your birthday, he'll give you a dollar
folded, origami-style, into a ring. If it isn't any of those, Dave
Bohn will still say hello and ask how you're doing. Then he'll go
on his merry way, delivering mail to the next house on his route.
Bohn is a mail carrier, but he delivers more than just letters to
the customers on his route. That's why the Pemberton Rotary Club
honored him last month as their citizen of the year
USPS
Files Request for Two More Negotiated Service Agreements
(NSAs)
with the
Postal Rate Commission
: one for
(PDF)and
more
from DMNews
-
USPS FINANCIAL & OPERATING STATEMENTS May 2004
Handhelds keep USPS
managers in touch
Salvaged
mail delivered from Warrendale, PA Post Office
UPS,
pilots ask mediator to supervise contract negotiations
Mailman faces close encounters of the canine kind
Latest
NALC Bulletin-COLA, NALC member killed in Iraq...more
Japan eyes universal postal services
after privatizing reform
Mickey Mouse..Donald Duck..
Postal
Service to Issue Disney Stamps
Contract Mail Carrier Isn't the Oldest
at 86 in USPS --81 yr. in Alabama Holds Honor-
June 20, 2004-
USPS
Gets 140 Replies to First-Class/Standard Proposal-The
rule proposal calls for an exclusive-purpose test in which
personal information would be permitted at Standard rates only when
advertising or solicitation is the exclusive purpose of the piece
and personal information is included solely to increase the effectiveness
of the ad or solicitation.
Historic
Annapolis (MD) Post Office May Undergo Makeover to fit Condos and
Retails Shops-
into the space behind the building where mail operations once took
place. USPS has no intention of closing the wood-paneled post office.
It's a pattern being replayed in cities nationwide. As mail-processing
operations are moved from older, distinctive downtown buildings,
officials seek creative ways to reuse valuable real estate, said
Bob Novak, spokesman for USPS' Baltimore district |
-
Keating Partners LLC in Philadelphia has worked with USPS on other
projects
CAGW: Cycling Waste-The USPS misdelivers
Getting off spam lists can be risky
OPM Release Final Rule on Voluntary Early Retirement Under the Homeland
Security Act
Burglars rob, vandalize Paulden (AZ) post office
Fallen soldier/ Letter Carrier leaves behind
a large family
Mastrapa's wife, Jennifer, went to
post office to bring news of husband's death
June 19, 2004-
Postal worker gets 7 months for stealing cash in greeting cards
Post office disrepair concerns city
officials
June 18, 2004-
Judge
delays ruling in lawsuit that claims USPS breached contract
-Florida
Letter Carrier about to come home from Iraq killed-
Sgt. Arthur
Stacey Mastrapa, who kept his scheduled return home secret for a
Father's Day surprise was killed along with two other soldiers in
a mortar attack in Iraq. Mastrapa worked as a letter carrier
in Altamonte Springs.
Rural letter carrier a Lifesaver of note
APWU advise members to refrain from
participating in postal reform programs / campaigns
organized by other organizations
Western Area Transfer Opportunities June
18, 2004
Fire destroys Post Office in Pennsylvania
NAPUS:
Impact of Post Office Level Changes (pdf)-throughout
the year, the field processes changes to authorized post office
EAS levels (both upgrades and downgrades). NPA differentiates between
post offices by assigning unit indicators based on EAS level groupings
Four Salinas CA Letter Carriers notch 1 million safe miles
Pitney Bowes Campaign Teaches 'Value
of Mail'
Three
postal employees charged with taking mail
Postal Worker delivers tombstone
AuctionDrop says poised for growth
with UPS deal
BioDefense sees growth with mail scrubber
Community Banks Critique ID Theft, Postal Proposals-A group
representing community banks raised concerns this week about regulatory
proposals to combat identity theft and adjust some commercial mail
rates. The ACB group also raised concerns this week about a proposal
from the U.S. Postal Service. It claimed its members could be overly
burdened by a planned test to determine which letters should be
eligible for relatively cheap Standard Mail rates.
Commentary: What is the Postal Service Trying to Tell us-Businesses
providing services usually try to find a logo, slogan or icon that
inspires trust, and conveys proficiency and product excellence,
or so one is told in Marketing 101. So exactly what is the U.S.
Postal Service trying to tell us as they trot out a jackass and
a green monster to promote the priority mail service?
Dulles
Postal Center Gets Anthrax Detection Equipment
June 17, 2004-
Retirees Looking At 2.4 Per Cent Raise in 2005
Original Free Victory Stamps unglued postmaster
-Cadet contracted with a printer to make Free
Victory Stamps, without checking with the U.S. Postal Service first.
Sheets of 50 stamps "sold like hotcakes" at Post Exchanges -- until
the Postmaster General's office stopped their use.
June 16, 2004-
List of Candidates Nominated for Upcoming National APWU Election
Released
-
Special Assessment of APWU Members' Dues Postponed
USPS Changes Retirement Plan for Manually Set Postage Meters-The
Postal Service proposes to revise the Retirement Plan for Manually
Set Postage Meters, published in the Federal Register on December
13, 2000, for meters with lease expiration dates on or after October
1, 2004. The proposed retirement date for these manually set electronic
meters will be May 31, 2005. The Postal Service will set no electronic
manually set meters after February 28, 2005. Comments on the Proposed
Plan must be submitted on or before July 15, 2004.
The Case of the Invisible Post Office-You've
got one letter to mail at the post office downtown. Your job: find
it.
Direct Mail's Environmental Impact Is Small,
USPS Study Says
Police surround Clovis, NM Post Office after
woman calls 911
From Wisconsin Window Clerk, Mike-Re: Measuring
Length and Girth "You may wish to use as an additional reference."
How to Measure a Tire (gif)
from Mailer's Companion
Post Office to Issue Reagan Stamp in 2005
Heritage Foundation: Postal Reform Legislation: Less Than Letter-Perfect
It's Gettin' 'Hot in Here'--Steamy Boulder, CO Post office too hot
to handle
PRC Sets Hearings for Periodicals Complaint
USPS Plan Benefits Nonprofit Mailers Offering Insurance||
Notice
Battle
Against EEOC Changes Heats Up-
More than
100 members of Congress are urging a House Appropriations subcommittee
to reject an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) request
to use funding from its fiscal 2005 appropriation to set up a privatized
national customer service center and close and consolidate field
offices. On October 27, 2003 EEOC Chair Cari Dominguez launched
an initial restructuring proposal that would, among other things,
establish a privatized national call center for handling questions
from the public on legal rights and protections. The EEOC also would
eliminate federal workers rights to a hearing, create an electronic
filing system for claims that would shut out workers, and cut funding
for investigations and litigation.
-
Unions, civil rights advocates cry foul over EEOC changes (4/7/04)
June 15, 2004
Mail: The American
Jobs Machine
Postal Governors Approve Major Capital Projects-Board
approved funding to purchase 1,587 stacker modules for 955 DBCS
machines and 2,041 tray carts as supporting equipment, wireless
tracking and more.. |
DHL targets rivals with $150 million ad campaign
Signature gatherers forced off Post Office property
Letter carriers say high number of dog bites no laughing matter
Discovery channel is Armstrong's new
sponsor
Officials Promise Mail Service Improvements:
Rare Lewis and Clark stamps reach Salem
The high price of security
Is the Future of E-Mail Under Cyberattack?
Dog psychology lessons 'help postmen':
Giving postmen training in dog psychology has reduced attacks on
them by 80 per cent, the German post office is claiming. Deutsche
Post said yesterday that all 79,000 of its delivery workers have
now been on the courses.
Senate
Postal Reform Bill on Hold?
According to
Postcom.org. "Sources have reported
that Senate Budget Committee chairman Don Nickles (R-OK) has placed
an indefinite "hold" on the Senate's postal reform bill.
Also, the Congressional Budget Office has told House government
reform committee chairman Tom Davis (R-VA) that "enacting H.R. 4341
would result in on-budget savings of $26.1 billion and off-budget
costs of $34.5 billion over the 2005-2014 period. (The net expenditures
of the USPS are classified as 'off-budget.' Thus, CBO estimates
the net cost to the unified budget would be $8.4 billion over the
2005-2014 period." See CBO Report |
Postal Reporter has provided
a better printing format [in pdf] of
'how to measure length and girth'
. Some window clerks have expressed [to Postal Reporter] of
a desire for USPS to provide the graph in
color.
USPS has published in the Federal Register "proposed revisions
to Domestic Mail Manual (DMM) E670.5.5, which sets forth guidelines
for determining whether the coverage provided by an insurance policy
offered by an authorized nonprofit organization to its members is
not generally otherwise commercially available." Comments on this
proposal are due on or before July 15, 2004
Heroic
Letter Carrier honored-
USPS to pay $25M for network
Window Clerk ends 37-year career with USPS
CEO
Gary Mulloy leaves Advo
Prison
industry legislation could effect Cenla institutions-
Federal
agencies are required to purchase goods from the prison industries
system, creating an unfair monopoly, according to opponents. Pending
legislation would eliminate the purchasing mandate over a period
of five years and force agencies to seek bids from private companies
as well as the prison industries. Employees of the Federal Prison
Industries program, commonly referred to as Unicoris also a textile
factory that produces inmate clothing plus physical training shorts
for the Department of Defense and
repairs mailbags for the Postal Service
June 14, 2004-
News
tidbit: Calif. NALC has
won another arbitration award sanctioning a management official
for violating the 1992 "Joint Statement on Violence and Behavior
in the Workplace" (Arbitrator Claude Ames). However, NALC also lost
one (Arbitrator Donald Olson). Arbitrator Carlton Snow in a August
16, 1996 National Arbitration Award stated: "[T]he
Joint Statement on Violence and Behavior in the Workplace constitutes
a contractually enforceable bargain." .... "The grievance procedure
of the National Agreement may be used to enforce the parties' bargain,
and arbitrators have available to them the flexibility found in
arbitral jurisprudence when it comes to formulating remedies, including
removing a supervisor from his or her administrative duties." NALC
has been diligent in applying this decision in its
grievances.
June 13, 2004-
USPS
Suggests Changes to Reform Bills-Although
USPS generally supports the postal reform bills , the agency told
mailers about two amendments it hopes to see added to the legislation.
One change urged by USPS would require that each competitive
product maintain an institutional cost contribution of 25 percent
The other amendment calls for refining the cost attribution factor
used for postage purposes to ensure that the method of cost attribution
is based on a transparent assessment of cost causality.
-
National Postmasters League on
Postal Reform bills, "is waiting to see how several unresolved
issues are handled before endorsing either bill."
-
Mailers Urge Responses to USPS Rule
by June 18
Electronic
Hand-Held Measuring
Device-USPS
is seeking information for
potential sources to provide a
hand-held pen, wand or similar
portable device that will be used
for determining the length, width,
and height as well as the combined
length plus girth on parcels that
qualify for Balloon Rate, Nonmachinable Surcharge, Oversize
Rates. This device (if USPS
decides to invest in it) could be
increase revenue. Additionally,
such a device will assist
window clerks in determining
correct parcel rates. |
New Links-PJ'S SIGNS-Source
for Rural Letter Carrier Supplies
and
-
Right Hand Drive Conversion Kits
- Postal Things Inc.
offers patented right hand drive
conversion kit for Rural Letter
Carriers.
Better days beckon Baghdads weary
postmen
USPS considering building its
own, $9 million irradiation
facility in Washington
Company Working with Congressman
to Supply USPS with Anthrax
Biothreat Kit
Retired from USPS after 32 years,
65-year-old gets degree
Brick post office a little too
popular
Pitney
Bowes plans for an era of declining mail usage-
Ad mailers wouldnt spend billions
if consumers didnt want their
products-Mail ands Jobs
Director takes issue with "junk
mail" term
Child injured when bike hits mail carrier vehicle
Workers at the cramped Odessa post office are desperate for more room
Upcoming Book by Alleges Armstrong involved in doping
Calif.
Anthrax Incident Spurs Concerns
in Biodefense Research
-Some believe scare at
Oakland (Northern Calif.)
Children's Hospital exposes
loopholes in biodefense -The live sample,
shipped via FedEx in liquid form
three months ago, .
CDC & FBI are launching a
full investigation
|
-
Federal Agencies Investigating
Anthrax Sample Mix-up
From PR
Reader-
Death penalty for Vietnamese
postal official guilty of $600,000 embezzlement-Thieves
in the US Postal Service are treated much more leniently. Compare:
"A
former registry clerk who was a 25-year employee was sentenced on March 4, 2002,
to 41 months in prison, three years' supervised release, and
restitution of $497,014 after pleading guilty in November 2001. Postal
Inspectors arrested the former clerk in August 2001 for stealing $3.2
million in registered remittances from the Phoenix, Arizona, P&DC. He
was sentenced at the high end of the sentencing guidelines because, as an
employee of the U.S. Postal Service, he abused the public's trust."
Wilmington
DE Post Office to move in 2005-Wilmington
Trust will not renew its lease with the federal government for the
post office in the bank's skyscraper near Rodney Square, officials
said. The lease expires in September 2005, U.S. Postal Service spokesman
Ray Daiutolo Sr. said. He said the postal service is looking for
another location. Wilmington officials said they are working to
make sure the new site is near the current one
Postal Worker's brush with death has
become invitation to life
ZIP code switch Saturday called 'progress' for Ball, LA
Postal Worker learns Golf always seems to reward those who take
chances
Committee still seeking stamp for missing
and exploited children
Man sentenced to prison
on charges of stealing mail from Buna,
CA Post Office
First-class mail
appears normal at Mansfield OH main post office
June 11, 2004
EEOC Gives Final Approval to Settlement
in Injured Employees Class-Action Suit against USPS-
An EEOC administrative judge gave final approval Thursday to a settlement
of a class-action lawsuit (Glover/Albrecht vs USPS) that
accused USPS of discriminating against injured employees
who
were allegedly denied promotional and/or advancement opportunities
allegedly due to discrimination on the basis of disability.
The agreement includes
no admission of wrongdoing by the Postal Service. Claim Forms are
scheduled for mailing to employees during the week of July 12, 2004.
|
-
EEOC: Injured postal workers eligible for back pay (Federal
times-6/15/04)
-
Dean Albrecht: The recent
settlement of the Glover/Albrecht class complaint was not
a made whole remedy of all the injustice that rehab/modified employees
-
Dean Albrecht's pain defeated Postal Service
Former Letter Carrier to head up Postal Inspection Service
investigations-
Ronald J. Walker has
been promoted to inspector in charge of internal and external investigations
for the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. The position involves overseeing
programs related to mail theft, postal burglaries and robberies,
financial and revenue investigations, financial crimes databases,
fraudulent workers compensation and intelligent mail (using high
technology to track mail)
Peruvian
customs agents find 2,700 yr. old ancient skulls mailed
to California-Peruvian
customs officials said they have seized five 2,700-year-old pre-Incan
skulls that someone tried to illegally mail to California. After
the discovery by Postal Inspectors, agents called in archeologists
from the National Institute of Culture who determined that the skulls
dated back to the Paracas culture around 700 B.C. The Paracas culture
was one of more than a dozen that preceded the Incas, whose century
long reign ended with their defeat by Spanish conquistadors some
500 years ago.
It was the foul odor of the skulls
that tipped off postal inspectors, who then X-rayed the box and
found the skulls. The remains were turned over to the institute.
The
five biggest lies told to consumers-Recently
the United States Postal Inspection Service issued a report based
on over 80,000 mail fraud complaints they received in 2003. According
to the USPS here are the biggest lies used by rip-off artists to
sucker you into giving up your cash:
Brookfield's
zip code-06804-is number of the day -
Acting Postmaster Heidi Mygodmey and her staff
sponsored the outdoor celebration at the Post Office in recognition
of the numerical date 06-8-04, which matches the zip code that Brookfield
has had since the sorting system was established in 1963.
Automated Postal Center Available in Providence RI Post Office
Post Office in Copiague, NY will be renamed in honor of Maxine Postal
NYC's 'Son of Sam' /Former Postal Worker
Denied Parole
Letter Carrier Russell Graybill III testifies at Scott Peterson
trial-Prosecutors
tried to use postal bar codes and cellular phone records this morning
to punch holes in Scott Petersons account of what happened the
day his pregnant wife was reported missing
'George the Mailman' was west-side fixture
June 10, 2004
Deadline Looms for Potentially Damaging Nonprofit Postal Ruling-
MSPB Upholds EAS-20
Postal Manager's Demotion
-Postal Bulletin June 10th issue-POM Revision, ASM
Revision, National Vacancy Announcements, Household Diary Study,
New Management Instruction: AS-840-2004-2, Electronic Messaging
(e-Mail)
USPS hopes to install 100 anthrax detectors this year
Would Proposed
Postal Service Legislation Help Bring Down Costs?
New,
expanded post offices help serve growing areas-For supervisor
Ben Carter, there is no comparison between the old post office in
Fairfax, Va., and the new one that opened April 12. Now that U.S.
Postal Service has completed new post offices in Fairfax and other
cities this fiscal year, it is turning its attention to other underserved
or growing areas. A survey running from mid-May to July is expected
to find out what places across the country need new or expanded
post offices. The Postal Service wants bigger workplaces wherever
it finds an office that needs about twice as much space to prepare
mail for delivery.
-Lockheed
Martin Wins $33 Million Contract to Upgrade Address Recognition
Systems to Dispatch Mail Faster
-Lockheed Martin
(NYSE: LMT) has been awarded a $33 million contract from the U.S.
Postal Service to introduce address recognition capability earlier
in the mail processing cycle to help postal centers nationwide dispatch
mail faster. As part of the Postal Service's Optical Character Reader
(OCR) Enhancements for Letter Automation Program, Lockheed Martin
will upgrade Remote Computer Reader (RCR) machines at 350 postal
centers throughout the United States to provide greater sort capability
on 1,086 Advanced Facer Canceller Systems (AFCS). AFCS machines
automatically position envelopes so that postage can be cancelled
and envelopes can be marked with an identification tag that enables
further processing.
USPS on automation roll: Postal Service unifying records management
policies
Paid attention to your mail carrier lately?
"It could be we
have two 'dual-appointed, casual employees,' who are not full-time
employees, and they don't get a uniform allowance, so normally we
let them share some other employee's uniforms.
June 09, 2004-
Fast
anthrax test OK'd-A
new test funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) and developed in collaboration with a commercial partner has
become the first test approved by the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) for detecting antibodies to anthrax. The test, produced by
Immunetics Inc. of Boston, provides an easy-to-use clinical laboratory
tool for assessing whether patients have been infected with anthrax
USPS to implement Emergency Management System-The U. S.
Postal Service discovered a major flaw in its emergency-response
system following the deaths of five people from anthrax sent through
the mail in the fall of 2001: There was no quick way to let postal
workers and others know about such attacks at mail facilities. The
Postal Emergency Management System allows web-based and wireless
communications among designated USPS individuals who are responsible
for planning and coordinating activities that must take place during
emergency situations. It enables nationwide staff to initiate, track,
and manage emergency responses. The PEMS application is the Information
Technology component of the USPS Integrated Emergency Management
Program.
USPS
On Roll and Paid Employee Stats April 2004 (pdf)
-
USPS FINANCIAL & OPERATING STATEMENTS April 2004
-
USPS Report of Revenue, Pieces, and Weights of mail QTR II FY 2004
High-Tech Postal
Center Available In Cary, NC
Postal
employee indicted in thefts of cash, gift card
Where's the Mail? GrayHair Knows With
3PAR Utility Storage
June 08, 2004
NALC Acts To Revise
Route Inspections -The
NALC Executive Council, decided to present to the National Convention
in Honolulu, Hawaii for debate and consideration, a proposal to
revamp the route inspection process. The current system results
in daily confrontations between letter carriers & front-line supervisors
and is dysfunctional. |
-
Cased Volume Verification Concluded; Moratorium on Inspections Continues
USPS Files Proposal for Flat-Rate Priority Mail Boxes
-
USPS filing with Postal Rate Commission (pdf)
Mail delivered after nearly two decades in postal worker's home
Civil Service Will Remember Reagan as the Anti-Government President
-
Reagan enabled digital progress that challenged postal monopoly
(6/7/04)
FedEx Snatches USPS Global Express Contract from DHL World Express
-"About
7,400 Postal Service locations will offer the new co-branded service.
As demand for this product grows, so will the number of Postal Service
access points," the Postal Service said in a statement. The new
service] will be provided by FedEx Express starting July 1.
Police investigate
mail scandal
Prescott Arizona Citizens group protesting mail quandry
- A group of citizens concerned with inadequate
mail delivery service standards will hold a petition drive.
The group will also be picketing the Arizona State Convention of
NAPS meeting to draw attention to the issue. The petition requests
that USPS provide the same standard of overnight local mail delivery
to the Prescott and Prescott Valley area as it does to nearly every
other similarly populated area in the US.
Cooper Tire unit wins 10 yr. USPS contract to retread tires
USPS, FedEx Ally on Global Express Guaranteed
USPS Scanners Help CD Shippers Stay on Key
June 07, 2004
Will Postman Ring Twice After Postal Reform?
The Postal
Service would like Congress to include two amendments within its
proposals for postal legislative reform. The first pertains to the
attribution of costs
(an amendment to which PostCom heartily agrees) and the second concerns
the
markup rule for competitive products.
The
Postal Service also objects
to a provision within the Senate bill (S. 2468) which would convey
responsibility to the Postal Regulatory Commission for developing
service performance standards for all market dominant mail products.
(Postcom.org)
Automated Postal Center Opens in Pennsylvania
The challenge of anthrax decontamination-
Senator Collins: For Postal Service, Collins-Carper bill a lifesaver--When
we place a 37-cent stamp on an envelope and drop it in a mailbox,
few of us realize how important the U.S. Postal Service is to the
economy of our nation. The Postal Service and the industries that
rely on it account for nearly 9 percent of our gross domestic product.
The USPS is a labor-intensive organization; $3 out of every $4 in
revenue goes to pay the wages and benefits of its employees.
full
story
Viewpoint: Allow Postal Service to compete-Supposedly
Congress is riding to the rescue of the U.S. Postal Service, which
has been troubled for years by an arcane labor system and shortsighted
financing. But the legislation that is proposed fails to offer critical
fixes to put the post office on better footing. The USPS is still
mired in a twilight world
full story
DOD, USPS to use
low-tech e-voting
Editorial: Will postal reform
deliver for small business
USPS Host Sponsor to Multicultural Business Conference
Retired Postmaster may never leave the life of USPS
Canada's Postal Service Refusing to Ship Medical Marijuana
Check is in the Mexico mail for local courier
At Pitney Bowes, The Profit Is In The Mail-Pitney
Bowes has essentially created a cut-rate postal service for large
corporate customers: it picks up mail, sorts it, then ships it via
FedEx, the U.S. Postal Service or another mail carrier
June 05, 2004-
Court upholds NLRB ruling that USPS did not violate
NLRA-The
American Postal Workers Union petitioned for review of an order
of the National Labor Relations Board holding USPS did not violate
§ 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1),
by ejecting two nonemployee union organizers from its Bulk Mail
Center in Atlanta, Georgia. Because the NLRB had a rational basis
for its decision, the court denied APWU Atlanta, Georgia Local's
petition for review.
June 04, 2004-
Eighteen Mail carriers transferred from Downtown Racine WI Post
Office-
USPS Resumes Installation of Biohazard
Detection System (BDS)
|
USPS Board of Governors Meeting June
15th in Washington DC
Mail theft raises red flag for residents
USPS to Honor Mickey Mouse and Friends
on Stamps
Police arrest three after mail stolen
from trash
End of an era: Postmaster retires after 38 years -When
Enola Mixon began her career with the U.S. Postal Service in Greensboro,
mail was still sorted by hand. Priority and express mail didn't
exist. And few women or minorities held leadership positions.
June 03, 2004
Book- Web of Betrayal : A Work Saga for the 21st Century
Power outage leads to mail shortage
Pit bull tears ear off Canada Letter
Carrier
Delivery is not Door to Door
They're going postal-Tenants
cry foul over lack of U.S. mail delivery-
Symbol
Technologies Executives Indicted on Corporate Fraud Scheme-The
will pay $3 million to the US Postal Inspection Service Consumer
Fraud Fund and an additional $98 million. Carriers Track Mail with
Symbol's Scanning Computers
Survey: Customers Rate Package Delivery
Service Highest in Satisfaction.
-The
survey by the University of Michigan Business School, part of its
annual study of how more than 80,000 customers rank their experiences
with about 200 companies, rates the package delivery service business
highest in satisfaction. By far, the industry with the highest rating
was the package/express delivery service industry, with a score
of 81, up from 79 last year. FedEx Corp. remains the leader, with
a score of 83, but UPS at 80, and USPS' package and express
mail service, at 77, were not far behind. In fact,
the postal service is steadily closing
the service gap with FedEx; 10 years ago, it was 16 points behind.
June 02, 2004-
Mail Carrier Arrested, 600 Pounds of Undelivered Mail Found-A
rural Boone County mail carrier behind bars after an investigation
into mail that was not delivered. Authorities say more than 600
pounds of undelivered mail was found on the property of the mail
carrier. Sheriff's officials say a quarter pound of marijuana, materials
to make methamphetamine and explosives materials were seized from
the home. Meth materials and a firearm were found in carrier's delivery
van that was parked on postal property.
|
Credit Card Direct Mail Up 21% in Quarter
Who's Going Postal Over Postal Insurance- Part 2
Mail Delivery Resumes In Acid-Bombed Neighborhoods
Man Charged With Ordering Dog to Attack
Germany Postal Service Reaches Pay Deal for 160,000 workers
MidAtlantic Postal Express workers unpaid after loss of USPS contract
Postal worker honored for 40 years of appointed rounds
Letter Carriers Collect Record 70.9 Million Pounds of Food
DoD, USPS Announce Initiatives to Expedite delivery of election
ballots
USPS Certifies Acxiom for NCOALink
June 01, 2004
-Postal
Inspector/Reservist grateful for letters sent to Iraq by students
-Hundreds of soldiers are thousands of miles away from home
fighting in Iraq. During one soldier's time overseas, she received
letters from 75 Charlotte (North Carolina) sixth grade students.
Army Major Arthurine Jones, just off active duty in Iraq, made a
detour from her home in Chicago to thank the students for their
letters. Jones won the Bronze Star for her service in Iraq. She
will now return to her full-time job as a postal inspector.
Please Read the latest Letter to Editor-A
Big Thank You goes out to the PR reader
North Carolina Gov. Declares Rural Letter Carrier Week June 27-July
3, 2004-
Legal Brief: Was former Postal Supervisor given Due Process Prior
to Removal?
Man charged with ordering dog to attack mail carrier-Police
said the carrier, whose name was not released, was delivering mail
when he was attacked by the man's Rottweiler. The carrier tried
to run away, but the dog jumped a fence and grabbed his leg, the
Connecticut Post reported. The mail carrier suffered puncture wounds
in his leg.
Heritage.org: Congress and Postal Reform: Less than Letter-Perfect
Acxiom, USPS Combine New Technologies To Enhance Client Mailing
Services
iSold
It Launches Nationwide eBay Mail-in Service;
Selling on eBay is Now as Close as
Your UPS, FedEx or Postal Store
Mail service cut off in Coral Springs, Florida after acid bombs
found
Address slip from Titanic postal clerk Oscar Woody to be auctioned
Japan prepares for postal reform
-
Tax police probe Japan's post office
Mail reaches Marines even during combat
Operation S.A.M. gets treats to troops -But consider that
Operation S.A.M. -- Serve All Military -- has relied almost entirely
on the U.S. Postal Service to ship about 11/2 tons of goods to men
and women serving in the military around the world.
-911 addresses lead to mail complaints-Some
residents have found that a postage stamp on a letter is worthless
if they fail to put the most recent 911 address on the letter. Residents
who have been griping about the service at the Dover-Foxcroft post
office, however, say postal officials should show a little common
sense The source of the confusion for local postal patrons is modern
sorting machines that don't recognize outdated addresses, according
to a postal official. What these individuals do not realize is that
in an effort to economize, sorting of all letters is done by machines.
Machines are programmed to read the new 911 street addresses, cities
or towns, and ZIP codes, USPS Spokesperson Christine Dugas said
. Regardless of where a letter is mailed or where the recipient
is located, all mail is taken to a processing center where it is
fed into automated machines.
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