Top Stories
•
Oakland CA Local APWU Calls Upon Congresswoman
to Sponsor Bill to "End Free Ride" for Non-Union Members.
According to a letter written to Congresswoman Barbara Lee (D-Ca),
the Oakland CA. APWU Local #78 is requesting that she
sponsor a bill, "to provide negotiated fees to labor organizations
that represent Postal Service employees." Oakland Local President
Fred Jacobs said, "No other bargaining unit employees in the country
receive the kind of free ride non-union members in the Postal Service
have been enjoying." Jacobs added that "this is the kind of measure
Republicans should love : it's about paying your way and not getting
something for nothing.
•
Former
Letter Carrier Speaks Out on Working Conditions at Provo Post Office
-Richard Aragon trusts USPS to deliver his mail,
but he doesn't trust Provo (Utah) postal supervisors to take care
of their letter carriers. |
-
Earlier Story: NALC probes Provo, Utah worker
complaints (2/11)
-
Reader recommends this solution to abusive
managers in any business
•
FedEx
CEO: Shut Down the Postal Service or Make Changes that Allow it
to Compete-Fred
Smith, CEO of FedEx, told members of the Senate Governmental Affairs
Committee. He also suggested that the government consider steps
to
repeal the monopoly on mail delivery by the
end of 2008, when similar government supports in
Europe are expected to end. Companies such as FedEx then would have
a level playing field. Top executives from package delivery, newspaper
and direct-mail companies urged lawmakers to give the U.S. Postal
Service more leeway to function in the marketplace during a Senate
committee hearing on Thursday.
-
House, Senate leaders urged to make Postal
Reform a priority
-
Senate Approves Collins-Carper Amendment to
Fund Postal Reform-
-
Testimony from 3/11
Senate Hearing On Postal Reform
-
The Road to Postal Reform Must Be Built on
Transparency First
-
Newspapers Want Fair Treatment for all Mailers
-
Testimony from 3/09
Senate Hearing On Postal Reform
-
Mailers Urge Congress to Reduce USPS Pension
Obligations
-
Passing the Buck on Postal Pensions
-
Mailing Industry Execs Call for Outsourcing,
Limits on Bargaining
-
McHugh still toiling to revamp struggling
Postal Service
• USPS
National Trend: New call-in number to request unscheduled leave-Beginning
this month, a new call-in number will be available in selected PCs
that use enterprise Resource Management System (eRMS).
[click on link above
for more updated info] (source: APWU steward)
-
USPS’ New Ergonomic
Program begins
- Alert:
Threat of occupational exposure to poor air quality at Trenton P
& DC
•
Widow: Postal worker driven to suicide-"The
inspector general of the U.S. Postal Service is conducting a review
of workplace environment at the Pueblo post office after a widow
complained that her husband was driven to suicide because he was
harassed, intimidated and mocked at his job. George told his wife
that injured workers were put on display to discourage any other
employees from reporting a work-related injury," Patricia Kruest
said. "They treated him like garbage"
-Is
there a connection? NALC Local Officer says: USPS'
aggressive policies may have contributed to several suicides in
the Dallas area.
•
UPS, pilots try feds' blueprint for negotiating-More
is at stake than labor peace in the latest round of negotiations
between UPS and its pilots. "Labor experts say the closely watched
talks also pose a test of what is known as
interest-based bargaining (similar
to USPS REDRESS) The increasingly popular process, which the National
Mediation Board first tried in 1997, is designed to build trust
and reduce the bluster and brinkmanship that often characterize
collective bargaining"
•
Linn's: Potter Axes Stamp to Honor 18th Century
'Theologian' Jonathan Edwards-"Bill
McAllister, a correspondent for Linn's Stamp News, said Potter likely
axed the stamp because he feared those who would complain about
honoring a politically incorrect, dead white male who also was a
theologian. "
Life of Jonathan Edwards from Yale Divinity
School |
•
Lawmakers begin drafting postal overhaul legislation
-"Now that the House Government Reform Committee has wrapped up
its postal overhaul hearings, and with only one more hearing planned
in the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, lawmakers already
have begun drafting legislation to change the nation's Postal Service.
Senate Governmental Affairs Committee Chairwoman Susan Collins,
R-Maine, will introduce legislation with Sen. Thomas Carper, D-Del.,
at the end of April, a Senate source said Monday."
|
USPS' VERA Request For Excluded APWU Employees Approved - OPM has approved USPS’ request to offer voluntary early retirement to eligible APWU-represented employees in categories that management had excluded from last year’s early outs (maintenance, motor vehicle, IT). If operational needs require, however, the retirement date for Retail Clerks may be delayed, but to no later than July 1, 2005 (3/05) |
-OPM Letter to USPS
Prep Work Prevents Mistaken Identity for OxiClean White Powder Sampler-Direct mail sampling campaigns by Orange Glo International for OxiClean, a white powder laundry cleaner, have moved smoothly through the mail stream -- thanks to plenty of advance notice and communication among the U.S. Postal Service, its workers and Orange Glo.(3/7)
- Standup Talk on OXI-Clean (picture included)
•
VER Timeline Set
for Previously Excluded APWU Employees-On April
09, 2004, full-time employees who meet the eligibility requirements
for this VER offer will be mailed a Statement of Interest package.
On May 24, 2004, part-time employees who meet the eligibility requirements
for this VER offer will be mailed a SOI package. The mailing will
be sent to approximately 8,100 potentially VER eligible full-time
and part-time employees. There will be several effective dates .
|
-
VER Timeline Extended
for Mail Handlers-The VER effective date has
been changed to May 31, 2004.
•
Inspector General David
Williams ’s job: ‘Tell the truth and hunker down’-"
Williams touts new cooperation between the OIG and the Postal Inspection
Service, the main law enforcement arm of the Postal Service. Since
the OIG was created in 1996, the two offices were at what Williams
called an “internal war.” Postal inspectors used to conduct internal
investigations before the Postal Service had an IG, and turf battles
raged for seven years. But Williams said he and Chief Postal Inspector
Lee Heath reached an agreement in Sept. to work together on internal
matters
•
USPS cites postal worker morale as reason
for sponsoring Armstrong-USPS has sponsored his team
since late 1996 and its contract expires this year. In that time
the Postal Service has seen the team rise from mediocrity to one
that has supported Armstrong in his victories in the last five Tours
de France. But critics wonder why the United States Postal Service
pays $6 million to $7 million a year for a team of nearly 40 riders,
officials, doctors, mechanics and masseurs who spend most of the
season at European races. Why not, instead, lower the cost of a
stamp? In response, Postal Service officials in Washington cite
worker morale — the identification that the average postal worker
makes with Armstrong and his teammates as they sweep to victory,
year after year, in the world's most publicized bicycle race.
|
•
Postal Worker Files Forward (Reverse) Discrimination
Suit Against USPS over lost of Postmaster promotion-Robert
Dunn a 30-year-veteran (and Irish Hungarian) had applied for
the position of Alger (MI) postmaster. But USPS placed someone else
(Hispanic) in the job to settle a different discrimination suit
. Dunn (representing himself) said he filed the suit because he
feels he was wronged, and believes USPS abuses affirmative action
policies in a way that discriminates against some employees. The
answer to the lawsuit, filed on behalf of PMG Potter, denies that
the post office "has in any way violated the rights of the plaintiff."
USPS also says the lawsuit isn't timely and "fails to state a cause
of action upon which relief may be granted." |
•
New York/New Jersey Carriers Begin Postal
Reform Lobbying
-Hundreds of letter carriers from New Jersey and New York fanned
out over Capitol Hill during the past two weeks, launching face-to-face
lobbying with House and Senate members of Congress on critical postal
reform legislation that is on the front burner this year. Rep. Robert
Menendez (D-NJ) said "I can not understand a country in which we
are seeking to build a postal system in Iraq, but seek to destroy
a postal system here in the United States," -NALC Bulletin
-NALC
President Young Elected AFL-CIO Vice President
•
Transforming Blue-The
postal intranet is evolving to include new features-
(Postal Reporter question: Who has access to the "blue"
or postal intranet? With the postal service redirecting postal employees
to the intranet to retrieve information-- why many employees do
not have access to it? Is it restricted to the only management?)
•
USPS to District Court: Anthrax Suit Should
Be Dismissed (pdf)
-In a Memorandum submitted to the District Court
regarding Briscoe, et, al vs. Potter, USPS wrote: "the Supreme Court
has held that the Constitution does not entitle public employees
to a safe workplace, or even to information about known workplace
risks. ....this Court should reject the plaintiffs' effort to transfer
to the defendant Postal Service officials the liability that properly
rests on the terrorist or terrorists who placed the letter containing
anthrax in the mail stream. "
USPS to District Court:
"The Plaintiffs' attorneys have undertaken extensive efforts to
publicize their irresponsible accusations against the Defendants
through statements about this case on
Judicial Watch's website and in
news conferences. These actions threaten morale and raise undue
concerns within the Postal Service workforce, where it is logical
to presume that the proceedings in this case are closely followed
by many." (note: like PostalReporter.com
)
• USPS,
Treasury Debate Military Pension Responsibility
-White
House Opposes Two Measures Many Lawmakers See as Vital
-Congress and the White House bump chests
over what needs to be done to revamp the troubled U.S. Postal Service,
even before a single bill has been filed.
-
GAO: Key Reasons for Postal Reform-"the
Service’s transformation efforts and financial outlook continue
to be on GAO’s High-Risk List."
-
Deliver Us From The Postal Service Monopoly-from
Sam Ryan, Lexington Institute:
"Some 1,300 U.S. postmasters will rally on Capitol
Hill today to urge Congress to protect the Postal Service's monopoly
on letter-mail delivery"..."Another proposal on the table - recently
urged before Congress by Fred Smith, founder of Federal Express
- is to allow a private carrier to transmit a letter, provided the
carrier charges at least six times the basic stamp price. Yet the
Postal Service is fighting tooth and nail to stop this from happening.
Again, why is USPS so opposed to letting
a private company deliver an ordinary envelope for $2.22?"
|
-
MCHUGH: Postal Reform Urgently Needed
(3/23)
-
USPS Financial Outlook
is Bleak and Getting Bleaker-(3/22)
-
Treasury secretary: Postal Service should
pay military retirees (3/24)
-
Testimony from Joint House/Senate Postal Reform
Hearing
•
OPM to Survey
Employees who take Early Outs/Buyouts -"In an
effort to ensure that federal managers are pursuing the Bush administration's
management and anti-discrimination goals, the Office of Personnel
Management will begin to collect information from employees who
are accepting buyouts or early retirement options." -OPM
March 12, 2004 memo|
Postal Service is the most businesslike of federal operations but.. Few federal organizations take the hoary old chestnut that "government should run like a business" more seriously than USPS. But a recent U.S. Supreme Court case shows that even with the Postal Service, the line between a federal function and a business operation can get fuzzy (3/07)|
Name Change-Lu's News & Views is now PostalReporter.com. All of the links on this website can be reached with both URLs. More changes and features will be added in the upcoming months. So please bear with PostalReporter.com during the transformation period. And thank you for making postalreporter.com one of theTop Postal Employee websites on the internet over the previous 3 years. (3/7)
Taxpayers to Congress: Cut Postal Waste and Excess-The Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW) today released letter by CCAGW President Tom Schatz to members of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee relating to scheduled hearings on reforming the United States Postal Service: The letter is allegedly supported by over 1 million taxpayers urging reform of the postal service (3/8) |
Group of Small Mailers Urges ‘Meaningful’ Postal Reform, Including Strong Regulatory Oversight-A new coalition representing small mailers in America applauded today’s opening of Senate committee hearings on postal reform, saying help is needed for a postal system that is in “financial and systemic distress.” (3/9)
Editorial: Postal service causes unnecessary angst -Terrorism and the threat of terrorism have caused the U.S. Postal Service to rethink how it does business. But postal officials still should make decisions with an eye toward profitability, and events that unfolded last week on Lady's Island make one think that might not be the case. (3/9)
More News By Date
March 31, 2004-
•
USPS & Access
Indiana Offer Electronic Postmark for Indiana Driver Record Certification
•
Postal carrier's murder
case advanced after man talked
•
Postal Service transfers carriers
•
New York Postal Worker Killed in Accident
•
UPS Debuts Global
Advisor Today
•
PRC to Hear Periodicals Rate Complaint-
March 30, 2004-
• USPS
Return-to-Duty Policy Ruled Subject to "ReHab Act"-An EEOC Administrative
judge ruled that the Postal Service violated the Rehabilitation
Act by Requiring an Employee with an FMLA-certificated depression/anxiety
condition to provide additional medical documentation before being
allowed to return to work. The decision reinforces employees protection
under the Rehabilitation Act, which imposes significant restrictions
on the inquiries and examinations that federal employers may try
to make. It also reinforces that the restrictions "apply to all
employees," and not to just those with disabilities. (excerpt from
Greg Bell, Director Industrial Relations in The American postal
Worker mar/apr issue pg. 13.
-
Miller v. Potter - EEOC Decision Requiring
Med. Cert. Violated Rehab. Act
•
FedEx's China sales
up 40% -But package transportation firm says it still seeks level
playing field amid Chinese heavyweights
•
Posting a profit by minimizing
postage expenses
•
Postal reform Website recent
articles
•
A Week in My Mailbox
•
Postal Transformation, Italian
Style
•
Giving and Taking Away in Washington
•
Reader: "St Paul Branch of NPMHU
Local 323 was sustained in a casual in lieu of arbitration.
Arbitrator Gordon advised the parties March 29 of his ruling. The
amounts of the monetary remedy have yet to be calculated, a process
which will take weeks, but the remedy has the potential to be in
the millions, a range of three to five million would not unrealistic.
The potential award has the possibility of being amongst the largest
ever obtained by one Local of the NPMHU."
March 29, 2004-
•
Man charged with
exposing himself to his mail carrier
•
Postal relocation
causes stir in Michigan
•
University of Penn Finalizes Purchase of USPS
Property
•
Illinois Postal
Workers deliver compassion-
•
NALC Temporarily suspends Southwest 'Customer
Connect'
|
•
House, Senate leaders
urged to make Postal Reform a priority
- "leaders in the House and Senate are "unenthusiastic" about moving
a bill. "They're saying, 'Yeah, if the committee reports out a bill,
we'll try to take it up,'" -House Government Reform Committee Chairman
Tom Davis, R-Va. told a meeting of the National Association of Postal
Supervisors 3/29/04 . He suggested the congressional leadership's
lack of interest stems from "heavy lobbying efforts" by groups that
oppose full-scale changes, such as private-sector competitors of
the Postal Service."
-
A 21st century stamp-political choices must
be made soon about postal reform.
Judge Delays
Lawsuit To Help Anthrax Probe
-A federal judge said yesterday that confidential information recently
provided to him by the Justice Department shows that the investigation
into the 2001 anthrax attacks is now at a "critical" and "sensitive"
stage and could unearth significant leads by early July.
March 28, 2004-
•
APWU NBA Greg Poferl
will enter federal prison April 6
•
More service, fewer lines
•
Neighborhood mailboxes are closed for lack
of use-
•
UPS Selma office to shut down
•
Men dressed in Postal Uniforms attack man
in home invasion
March 27, 2004-
•
Postal employees do huge job well
•
U.S. war on anthrax has its risks
•
Monument Will Honor Pioneering Airmail Pilots
March 26, 2004
•
National Association
of Postal Supervisors to hold legislative training seminar on
legislative and policy issues concerning the future of the U.S.
Postal Service. AGENDA: 8:30 a.m. - Rep. Tom Davis,
R-Va., chairman, Government Reform Committee- 10:30 a.m. - Postmaster
General John Potter DATE: March 29, 2004 LOCATION:
Crystal Gateway Marriott, 1700 Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington,
Va. CONTACT: Ted Keating, 703-836-9660
•
USPS proposes to 'revise' its purchasing of
property and services regulations
•
Michigan Postmaster transferred --nepotism
prohibited by USPS
•
Time is right for Congress to set Postal Service
free
•
Postal Rate Commission Agrees to Hear Complaint
Filed by Major Publishers
•
Prison guard, postal worker charged in drug
deals
•
2 charged in postal scam
•
North Carolina Postmaster Strives For Positive
Change
•
Bill aims to name
Cape Girardeau postal facility for vet
•
Lost Mail Slips Cost Hollywood studios more
than $25 million in royalties
•
Bogus bomb threat has Charlotte Postal Workers
concerned about their safety-A bomb threat at the
USPS main processing and distribution center in Charlotte, NC earlier
this week has left many workers upset saying they are the last to
know when an emergency hits. More than 1,500 postal employees work
at the Charlotte processing and distribution center. Early Tuesday
morning a bomb threat was phoned into the facility. It turned out
there was not bomb, but some workers were evacuated and others were
not. "Preparedness is the first step in handling any crisis and
the postal service was not prepared in this instance,” said Kevin
Flaherty, Local APWU President. Flaherty said the information was
not communicated clearly and there was a lot of disruption and concern.
Many postal workers were upset by the confusion.
March 25, 2004-
•
Editorial: Many Opinions on Fixing the USPS
•
New training video for carriers
out this week
•
Mail equipment workers feel sacked by restructuring-The
Postal Service says the consolidation of two facilities in Detroit
and Pittsburgh into a single operation in Cleveland for repairing
mail bags, trays and rolling stock is part of a cost-saving restructuring.
Local employees of Resource Consultants Inc. say the consolidation
is a retaliation against their company for $7.3 million the Postal
Service paid to it last summer to settle a dispute over unauthorized
contract changes at a Washington, D.C., facility also operated by
Resource Consultants
•
Temporary and
Permanent Help Wanted at Trenton P & DC, Overtime Available-Trenton
P&DC, successfully cleansed of anthrax contamination, is in need
of Building Equipment Mechanics, Mail Processing Equipment Mechanics,
Electronic Technicians, and Maintenance Support Clerks for assistance
maintaining interim facility located in Monroe, NJ and overhauling
of its mail processing machines.
•
Postal Clerk in TV Competition to win Mortgage
Paid in Full-Bishop “Smitty” Smith, a clerk
at the Hiawassee Post Office in Orlando, FL, and his wife will appear
on a “Home Free” episode of TLC’s Trading Places on Sunday, March
28 at 8 p.m. ET. Trading Spaces: Home Free pits neighbor against
neighbor in a tournament-style competition. Homeowners race
to redesign their neighbors' homes in the hopes of winning — their
mortgage paid off. Plus, one lucky viewer will also win his/her
mortgage paid -off in a parallel online sweepstakes.
•
AAA Reports California Gas Prices Highest
in Country
•
Photo: City Carrier Sergio Serrano looks at
gas receipt in disbelief
•
U.S. postal inspectors snare 30 pounds of
marijuana
•
Editorial: The wrong hands / A postal worker
is victim of a boy's gun access
•
The mail order of things-Ben
Clapp, 51, has been awash in mail for decades. His wife, Kathi Clapp,
is the postmaster in Lake Oswego; his son Jeff White is a postal
supervisor in Portland; and his other son, Jared White, is a letter
carrier.
•
Stamps.com Has Marks of a Dot-Com Survivor
•
USPS February 2004 Financial & Operating Statements
March 24, 2004-
•
Mandatory stand-up talk on tuberculosis and
associated protective measures-
•
USPS-brand packaging tape in Target stores
now
•
USPS, U.S. Cycling Still Talking Sponsorship
Deal
•
UPS CEO's pay rose to 1.2 million in 2003
•
Retirement: Not What You Think!
•
Saks Inc. Names FedEx as Exclusive Carrier
March 23, 2004-
• USPS
tests system for Human Resources--800 positions may be eliminated
-
Postal Service is testing a knowledge management system that would
let employees enter personal data, such as how many years they have
been employed, and through a session of questions and answers, the
software is
by Authoria Inc. will
provide detailed HR data, rather than calling on a human resources
official for answers . |
•
Some access to 'Blue'
(Intranet) from home coming soon-"The
first release, expected in the next
90 days, will launch with a limited number of features. The challenge
is to make external access to the postal intranet safe so the Postal
Service's infrastructure isn't at risk. Our overall goal is to add
as many of Blue's services and features as possible over
time." Transforming
Blue-The postal intranet
is evolving to include new features- (Remember
this question? Postal Reporter question: Who has access to the
"blue" or postal intranet? |
•
E-retailers turn to cheaper shipping, but
delivery doesn’t suffer
•
United States Postal
Service - A Race With Change" (pdf)
•
US Postal Service sponsorship still in question
•
African American Postal League to host its
16th annual convention
•
Postmaster is lighter on his feet
•
Royal Mail asks postal
managers to work longer hours after 3,000 staff cut
•
Mail sorting system dispute set to bring Ireland's
Postal Service to its knees
March 22, 2004-
•
Postal
Inspectors Say 9 Yr. Old Shot Letter Carrier-
Letter carrier
Clayton J. Smith of Colliers, W.Va., was shot dead in broad daylight
in the parking lot of the Crafton-Ingram Shopping Center in Crafton
on June 23, 2003
-Woman
Illegally Owned Gun In Mailman Death
•
USPS, U.S. Cycling Still Talking Sponsorship
Deal-A USPS spokeswoman said that the postal service
and Tailwind were still in negotiations.|
-USPS
Set to Pull Plug on $50 Million Pro-Cycling Team
-US
Postal Service sponsorship still in question
•
USPS Financial Outlook is Bleak and Getting
Bleaker
•
Church Members drop 8,000 letters in mail
to support ousted pastor
•
Post Office Consolidation Does Not Slow Down
Letters Mailed In NEWS 9 Test-
•
Retired Postal Supervisor Makes Archeological
Research Full-Time Job
•
Postal Carrier Explains Ins and Outs of his
job
•
FedEx Fiasco Opens Doors for Competitors
•
USPS Positions Mail as 'CRM Tool' for Big
Biz
•
USPS Campaign Promotes Click-N-Ship Service
•
THE AMAZING DISAPPEARING
mailman lost 165 lbs.
March 21, 2004
•
Court Rules Against Brentwood Postal Worker
in Same Sex Harassment Case
•
'Best job in the world' says Manchester, NH
mailman Bill Bothman
•
Congressional List at Michigan Post Office is outdated -- by a decade
•
Postal Reporter.com Special: The Legend of
Snowshoe Thompson, the Unstoppable Mailman on Skis
|
Two organizations are lobbying for a stamp
•
Carrier honored for 50 years of dedicated
NALC service
•
Ex- Postal Manager lost on show 'Survivor,"
but gained a new perspective on life
•
Identity theft is 'the crime of the 21st century'
•
Printing Company with Postal employee on site
sends out more than 140 million pounds of mail a year
•
FedEx's Fred Smith and UPS's Mike
Eskew sat down together last week
and told the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs how their
rival and customer, the U.S. Postal Service, should be repackaged
- run more like a business but still under government control. Smith
lent FedEx's support to postal reform legislation that Sen. Thomas
Carper, D-Del., introduced last year but Eskew said UPS won't endorse
any legislation for now. (Traffic World)
March 20, 2004-
•
Alabama Mail Carrier injured when truck hits
house-Officials are investigating whether Terry was having
trouble before crashing |
•
Where does a federal retiree go for help with
retirement issues?
•
After Supreme Court Ruling, Where Won't the
Post Office Compete Next?
March 19, 2004-
•
NAPUS Member to PostalReporter.com:
one of the senior management officials involved in the abuse
of EAS employees in the Sacramento District was the postmaster of
Royal Oak, Michigan during the time of the multiple shootings in
the 1990s. (This rumor is buzzing around the Sacramento and Bay-Valley
Districts). In addition, USPS has started interviewing employees
this week in the Sacramento District surrounding the allegations
against senior management officials.
•
Postal Inspectors Double Tucson Force
•
Alert Postal Carrier Helps Save Choking Victim
•
Mail Handler's President John
Hegarty narrates video history of NPMHU
•
Postal Service Should Cancel More Electronic/Financial
Services-
•
Rule Changes Give CMM Mailers More Options-Effective
March 4, mailers have the option to use the Standard addressing
format with CMM, which is a delivery address containing the name
of the intended recipient. Previously, CMM customers had to use
the Exceptional address format, where "Current Resident" or "Current
Occupant" is used alongside the recipient's name
Also from DMNews -Financial
Firms Investigated in Postal Discounts
March 18, 2004-
•
Dept. of Labor creates SHARE Initiative Website-On
January 9, 2004, President Bush announced the Safety, Health and
Return-to-Employment (SHARE) Initiative directing federal agencies
to establish goals and track performance in 4 major areas. Federal
agencies are charged with lowering workplace injury and illness
case rates, lowering lost-time injury and illness case rates, timely
reporting of injuries and illnesses and reducing lost days resulting
from work injuries and illnesses.
•
Postmasters Plan Rally For Universal Service-More
than 1,300 postmasters are expected to travel to Capitol Hill the
week of March 22 to urge Congress to support universal postal service
•
Man faces charges over nude pictures at post
office
•
Anthrax scare may have been prank
•
The Myth of Efficient
Government Service
•
Terror scare closes Ponte Vedra Beach post
office
•
Investigators probe Tennessee mail carrier's
death
•
Temporary clerk in Nicasio piles up mail
•
Postal Mailing Standards Specialist winner
of Benjamin Franklin Award
•
Craddockville Post Office faces service suspension
•
FedEx Trade Networks Transport & Brokerage,
Inc. have petitioned the Federal Maritime Commission
to initiate a rulemaking to amend its regulations and permit qualified
third-party logistics companies, such as non-vessel operating common
carriers (NVOCCS) to enter into confidential service contracts with
their customers in the same manner as ocean common carriers. UPS,
National Customs Brokers and Forwarders Association, Inc, Ocean
World Lines, Inc, BAX Global, Inc. C.H. Robinson all filed similar
petitions in 2003.
March 17, 2004
•
Looking
ahead: Options and reforms for the postal sector in the 21st century
•
Joint House/Senate Postal Reform Hearing Scheduled
–
•
Heritage.org releases Briefing on Postal Reform
•
Postal Service rejects springy
Z-Coil shoe. |
Z-Coil website
•
RCI Contract loss stamps out 200 jobs-More
than 200 people will be out of work at the Capitol Heights division
of Resource Consultants next month, following the loss of a Postal
Service contract. The Postal Service will reduce the number of centers
to 18 from 22 over the next nine years -- a move expected to save
$20 million to $40 million, says spokesman Jim Quirk. He says the
company has two similar contracts with postal facilities in Pittsburgh
and Detroit that also are in danger of shutting down. (note: On
March 12, 2003, the Detroit Local APWU entered into a landmark agreement
with Resource Consulting Inc. by signing workers as union members)
•
Postal worker saves life -Joseph
Wayne Strickland wasn't even going to mention it, but he had to
call his boss and explain why he was going to be late for work.
He was busy saving a man's life.
•
Sometimes we find a few gems along with the
junk mail
•
Moms, daughters and legacy of love- Postal
Clerk was a supervisor's dream
March 16, 2004-
•
USPS investigating Providian
over possible ineligibility of discounted postage rates-
Providian Financial
Corp. (PVN) according to the company's annual report filed
on Monday with SEC, " a claim against us and one of our vendors,
alleging that the company and/or vendor received discounted bulk
mail postage rates from the United States Postal Service on certain
mailings between 1997 and 2001 which were not eligible for the discounted
rates." The filing also said that Providian received a subpoena
from USPS to turn over documents. USDOJ is working with USPS
to investigate allegations and to determine whether to pursue the
matter. Providian could be "subject to treble damages, penalties,
and other relief."
•
Smelling Canada Postal Privatization-From
Canada Union of Postal Workers President: " I am writing to
express my concern over recent media reports citing statements by
Treasury Board President Reg Alcock that your government may be
considering privatization of Canada Post On behalf of the 54,000
members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers I am requesting
that you make a clear and unequivocal commitment that your government
will continue to support public ownership of Canada Post Corporation
and that it will also oppose deregulation of this vital public service."
•
Doodle Led to Postal Mural
•
Messing with the mail
•
USPS Drops First Wave of Flip Book
•Computer
deals-Changes to the USPS Employee Connectivity Program
March 15, 2004-
•
Fifty- year-
old California Postal Clerk on his way to Iraq
-After spending 26 years serving as a weekend warrior -- two days
a month and two weeks a year -- Carl Gutierrez , a Postal Clerk
and a warrant officer with the National Guard, was called late last
year for a one-year deployment in the Middle East. Gutierrez's job
at the Wilmington post office will remain secure, but the family
will have to make do with less money during his absence
•
Bond develops between rural carriers and residents
in Western Kentucky
•
Idaho Falls man rebuilding Iraq postal
system
•
This is a Good Time to revisit the presentation
:Trade Deals and Postal Workers
•
Observant Colorado Mail Carrier help police
track down burglars
•
New Mexico Post Office robbed -- Postmaster
assaulted-
•
DM News Request Correction from Washington
Post over "Junk Mail" Article
-
Referenced Editorial from Washington Post
•Direct
mailing changes shape with new rules
•
Auxier Post Office honors cancer survivors
•
UPS Fined $71,000 for Covering up fatal accident
of employee
•
FedEx to Pay $3.2 Million ++ to Female Truck
Driver for Sex Discrimination, Retaliation-
March 14, 2004-
•
Alert: Threat of occupational exposure to
poor air quality at Trenton P & DC
•
New Postmaster brings stability to Nantucket’s
postal operations
•
UK Postal Managers threatens strike action
at Royal Mail over job cuts
March 13, 2004-
•
Post office gets personal-Nevada City branch
hosts 'heartfelt' letters contest
•
New York Postal Worker busted for trashing
bulk mail
March 12, 2004-
•
Maryland Postal clerk charged in robbery hoax-
Accused of fabricating report of 'holdup' at the Childs post office-Police
charged one of the post office's clerks with making a false statement
to a law enforcement officer. The Window Clerk eventually admitted
she had fabricated the armed robbery, according to court documents,
because she made a clerical mistake and feared retribution from
the Postmaster for voiding the money orders.
•
What is Red Circle
(RC) on Postal Pay Rate Chart? by Thomas P. Molanick
•
Diversified Security Solutions, Inc.
announced that its Henry Bros. Electronics subsidiary
has been awarded a $697,000 contract by Teng Construction of California
Inc. to upgrade the electronic security at the Los Angeles, California
United States Postal Office Processing and Distribution Center.
The project will include Access Control, Alarms, Gate Access and
Closed Circuit Television for the entire site which operates 24
hours a day, 7 days per week. Installation and integration within
the processing and distribution facility will begin this month and
will be completed by summer 2004"
•
Postal incident sparks customer's outrage
•
Williams SC Postmaster
becomes the nation's youngest at age 21
•
Kindergartners Design
‘Stamps Of The Future’
•
Ad for postal jobs leads to scary dead end
•
Substitute Letter Carrier's Encounter with
the 'Twilight Zone'
•
Man robs La Mesa post office, threatens workers
•
Man used direct mail to raise
$1.7 billion for the aid of disabled vets
•
Check your mail: Interest remains high in
post cards and advertising cards
•
Spy Block bill
would outlaw hidden spyware
•
OPM's USAJOBS Web site
list postal positions
•
Substitute Letter Carrier's Encounter with
the 'Twilight Zone'
•
Man robs La Mesa post office, threatens workers
•
Man used direct mail to raise
$1.7 billion for the aid of disabled vets
•
Check your mail: Interest remains high in
post cards and advertising cards
March 11, 2004-
•
Editorial: Going
Postal-Funding the fight against ricin and anthrax.
•
Reporter accepts challenge to walk with postal
carrier
•
Newspapers Want
Fair Treatment for all Mailers
March 10, 2004-
•
New automated call-in system slated for USPS
Eastern Area -
•
Robbers hold up Chicago post office
•
Post office decides against personalized stamps
•
Postal inspectors investigate counterfeit
stamps
• Investigators
Struggle With Ricin Probe
•
Teenager charged in stabbing of Virginia Rural
Carrier-
•
Questions on US anthrax tests-
•
PRC Proposes Amending Rules for USPS Nonpostal
services/Products-
•
Vine Grove shows its appreciation for postal
employees
•
Mailers Call for a More Nimble, Competitive
USPS-The
postal service's current distribution network was established over
30 years ago, and yet it has remained virtually unchanged ever since..
Facility locations, size and transportation routes should be changing
constantly to keep up with demand, eliminate redundancy and overcapacity,
and to achieve productivity gains." (DMNews)
March 9, 2004
•
Jury awards $680,000 to mail carrier for dog
bite
•
Germany Post Office Robbed--of potato salad
•
Postal worker honored for helping officer
in trouble
•
Pitney, Ebay in Pact to Provide Browser-Based
Postal Service
•
Deutsche Post mulls entering U.S. market
•
Group Calls for USPS Audit
March 8, 2004
•
Fund-raiser set for Connecticut postal worker
who awaits marrow donor
•Two
Essentials of Postal Reform
•
USPS hires 3rd contractor to complete Mass.
Post Office
•
Orkand Awarded $100M USPS field maintenance
support services contract in Norman Ok
March 7, 2004
•
Postal Service to share crisis
management lessons
•
Washington DC Taxpayers Have To Pay More To
Send Tax Returns
•
Postal Clerk's $16,000 donation to political
campaign ruled legal
•
Tiny post office is pulse of Crystal Beach
•
Wanted: Stamp of Approval for Coal Miner's
Stamp
•
USPS to share crisis management lessons
• DC Taxpayers Pay More To Send Tax Returns
March 6, 2004
•
Virginia Letter Carrier viciously stabbed
while on route
•
Ricin scare changes how Congress gets mail
•
As Mail Theft Rises, So Does Innovation to
Thwart It-
One option available
is a welded steel mailbox which sells for $795 or maybe a
"Secure Mail Vault"
of welded steel. The $349 pole-mounted unit features a touch pad
with a secret code
•
Roof Worries Push Post Office Out of Building
• Caller
ID for Email-Bill
Gates Outlines Technology Vision to Help Stop Spam Microsoft Outlines
Policy and Technical Proposals Aimed at Helping Contain The Spam
Problem, Including the Development of Caller ID for E-Mail
•
Postal Mom shares tale to urge seat belt use
March 5, 2004
•
INVESTIGATION:
"U.S. Rep. William Lacy Clay Jr.
says he has begun an investigation into why the Main Post Office
at 1720 Market Street in St. Louis, MO has closed its infirmary
during most weekend hours, when hundreds of workers are busy sorting
mail for Monday deliveries. Some 2,400 work in the building. St
Louis Local APWU President Roosevelt Stewart, "Mail is flying
all day and all night long and there are accidents all the time."
A spokesman said he could not say how many workers are injured,
but the infirmary "doesn't have heavy use" on weekends." -end-
•
Many may qualify for free PO boxes-
•
USPS Awards Dolce Int'l $22 million Contract
to Manage Bolger Center
•
Redding Letter Carrier Wins $21 million in
California Lottery
•
Opinion: Why the Postal Service should not
be a monopoly
March 4, 2004-
•
It's rare that the top executives at UPS,
FedEx and DHL sing from the same song-sheet,
but when they testified
on Capitol Hill recently they were unified in their opposition to
granting greater ratemaking flexibility and other competitive freedoms
to the U.S. Postal Service. FedEx Chairman, President and CEO Frederick
W. Smith told Congress his top priority is "an appropriate firewall"
between the mail monopoly and the competitive package and parcel
services USPS offers.
•
Postal
Terrorism : Post Offices Disrupted by 20,000+ Suspicious Powder
Reports-Since
the anthrax attacks in 2001, work at the nation's post offices has
been disrupted by more than 20,000 incidents of suspicious powder
leaking from envelopes and packages. All but a few have turned out
to be nothing more than soap, dust, talc or other non-lethal substances.
Still, the scares have taken a toll in
nerves, lost time and money.|
-
Cartoon depicting Post Offices dilemma
- Stress
burdens postal workers-
•
Postal
Reform Hearings-Postmaster
General John E. Potter, USPS Chairman David Fineman, and Treasury
Secretary John W. Snow are expected to appear at the joint hearing
on March 23rd . Direct Marketing Association outgoing President
Robert Wientzen will testify before the Senate Committee on Government
Affairs on Thursday,
March 11
on the topic of legislative reform of the US Postal Service. Wientzen
will appear on a panel that is scheduled to include executives from
the UPS, FedEX and the Newspaper Association of America. In addition
to the March 11 hearing, the Senate will hold a hearing on
March 9th.
•
Presidential Candidate Sen. John F. Kerry
(D-MA) has named former Postal Commission Co-Chair James A. Johnson
to assist in identifying a Democratic Vice President candidate
•
Mail carriers face daily hazards
•
28 Swissvale PA. Postal Workers Honored as
"Heroes of the Year"
•
What's Possible in Postal Reform 2004
•
The Anthrax Mailer: An al Qaeda Operative
•
Postmaster Focuses on Cutting Manpower and
Saving USPS Money
•
Fishkill, NY Remote Encoding Center to close
in less than week
•
Reward offered in attack on Houston mail carrier
•
Indiana Mail carrier shot at by a pellet or
BB gun- Bulletproof Glass in postal van shattered
•
Postal Service Opens Contract Unit in South
Carolina Pharmacy
•
NALC Legislative Fact Sheet on Postal Reform
(March 2004)
•
Mailman honored for rescuing student
•
Outlook: DM Industry Can Expect More Regulations
in Months Ahead
•
Postal boxes eyed for removal
•
Veteran carrier knows Timberlake mail volume
growth first hand
•
Authorities find hundreds of undelivered
mail pieces in Virginia man's home
•
Mail truck destroyed in Louisiana accident-
•
New Triangle research reports explore the
US mail and packages “Workshare” model -“ Worksharing”
with the United States Post Office provides private sector mailers
there with revenues of over $14 billion a year. Both consumers and
the private and public sectors of the US mail industry see worksharing
as a success. Triangle has produced two major new reports on “Worksharing”
in the USA: Domestic Worksharing with the USPS in the Mail Market
and a companion edition focusing on Packages. The two reports provide
descriptions of the key elements that comprise “Worksharing” with
the USPS including the all important dropshipping/zone skipping
elements. The reports examine the pricing mechanisms and decision
criteria used to gain “Workshare” discounts. The regulatory structure
and some recent reports of the Presidential Commission are reviewed
including the new Negotiated Service Agreement.
•
Legal Briefs:
Qualified Individual
with a Disability – Significant Risk of Substantial Harm: Employee
alleged that he was discriminated against on the basis of disability
when he was denied medical clearance by an agency physician to resume
his driving duties as a Tractor Trailer Operator. EEOC found that
the agency should have conducted an individualized assessment of
the employee rather than relying on DOT regulations.
Demotion
– Disciplinary/Adverse Actions: Employee appealed the agency’s
decision to demote him from a supervisory position.
March 03, 2004-
•
Lines common at post offices--No facilities
planned despite big demand
•
Japan: Three stamps and a can of Coke, please
•
PostalWatch.org launches Postal Reform
events site
•
Sender of anthrax spores remains mysterious
figure
•
Cornstarch caused postal shutdown- Cornstarch
was the grainy powder whose discovery shut down Staunton's main
post office and suspended some mail delivery last week
March 02, 2004-
•
Former Postal Supervisor convicted of $100,000
embezzlement-
A former
postal supervisor , who served as mayor of Pearsall in the 1970s,
has been convicted of embezzling more than $100,000. Court records
said he supervised the section that ensured postal delivery vehicles
were properly maintained, and made a verbal contract with a man
who ran an Auto Service business. The business owner records said,
inflated charges for work on vehicles or submitted invoices for
payment for work that was not performed.
-
Del Rio Postmaster removed from post when
investigation began (April 2003)
-
Texas postal supervisor and contractor indicted
on conspiracy charges
IG Press Release
•
NAPUS President Olihovik to appear on FederalNewsRadio
Call-in Show Friday
•
Lack of funding may force Hamilton postal
facility to remain closed
• New Link:
Mail Handlers Union Local 300 Mid Island -
Hicksville, NY
•
Pit Bull attacks Letter Carrier Before Law
Takes Affect
•
Business Consultant: Direct Mail is Junk Mail
•
Postal Uniforms Vendor Embroiled in Labor
Dispute
•
Downtown Rochester NY Postal Service may move
•
Letter: Forcing Mailers Into First Class Won’t
Benefit the Postal Service
•
Learn more about the U.S. Postal Inspection
Service Crime Lab
•
Postal Service Files Cost-Saving Initiative-
•
Stamp Advisory Committee Urges Potter to Reject
US Personalized Stamps
•
TSP officials ask lawmakers to end open seasons
-
•
Red Tag Monthly Newsletter:
Drowning in Barcodes, USPS Pharmacy & more-
•
Editorial: Not just a postal problem-It's
impossible to understand why the Bush administration isn't budgeting
the necessary funds for systems to enable USPS to detect biological
poisons in its facilities.'
March 01, 2004-
Senate Hearing on Postal Reform: Sustaining the 9 Million Jobs in
the $900 Billion Mailing Industry-
Day 1, March 9, 2004 10:00 am and
Day 2,March 11, 09:30 a.m
A joint House/Senate
hearing on postal reform is scheduled for March 23.
•
New Jersey Ex-Postal Worker Gets 20 Months
For Stealing Checks
•
UPS Denies It Wants To Cancel $1.6 Billion
Airbus Order
•
Small town unites to save post office-
•
Wow!
America's longest mail route is just over 175 miles
•
USPS Wins Prestigious Grace Hopper Award
•
Reminder: Employees Must Receive Standup Talk
on OXI-Clean-
•
APWU urges members
to use caution
•
Post Office robbed - Money orders stolen at
gunpoint-
•
Direct Mail Brings Traffic to Retail Stores
•
UPS Wants to Cancel Aircraft Orders-
•
Letter carrier delivered much more than mail
to neighborhood
• Books: Former
rural letter carrier delivers as author of national bestseller
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