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TOP POSTAL
STORIES OF THE MONTH
|
May 03, 2006 -
Postal Service May Issue
'Forever Stamp', Raise Rates
The Postal Service's governing board is considering issuing the "forever"
stamp _ and seeking an increase of 3 cents in the first-class rate _
probably to take effect in the spring of 2007. The forever stamp would
would sell for the first class rate and, once purchased, the special
stamp would remain valid for whatever the first-class rate is when it
is used, regardless of future increases. the Postal Service still must
cover rising costs of fuel, salaries, equipment and other expenses.
Overall, the Postal Service expects to finish this fiscal year about
$2 billion in the red. |
-
USPS to seek 7.1% rate increase for first class, 'forever stamp'
-
USPS Proposes Average 8.5% Rate Increase
|
Magazine publishers Concerned
-
Postal Service proposes new approach to shape a more efficient future
-
USPS seeks price adjustments - forever stamp |
USPS Rate Case site
From the PRC web site:
USPS 179 pg. rate request [PDF] |
PRC's index page for rate case R2006-1
-
Listing of testimony filed by USPS in support of rate case
May 25,
2006 -
USPS Plans to Cull Unneeded Injured Workers
by Dan Sullivan
- Within 2 to 4 weeks the Postal Service plans to begin implementing
a nation-wide program examining the status of workers injured on the
job who are presently on medical restrictions in limited duty and permanent
rehabilitation jobs. Sue Carney, the APWU Director of Human Relations
says that USPS representatives told the union in March 2004 that the
Postal Service had “partnered with OWCP in the Long Island District
regarding the Outplacement Program and that OWCP was in agreement” with
it. A spokesperson for the Department of Labor, which oversees OWCP,
confirms that the agency has nothing to do with the USPS outsourcing
plans. |
May
24, 2006 -
APWU: Five Consolidations Cancelled
- USPS:
‘No Significant Opportunities to Improve Service’ - APWU has been
notified that the proposed consolidation of “certain operations” at
five postal facilities in the Northeast Area has been cancelled, because
they present no substantial opportunities to improve efficiency or service.
The five Processing & Distribution facilities are: Utica (NY) ; Plattsburgh
(NY) Post Office; Burlington (VT) ; Springfield (MA) and Portsmouth
(NH) |
May 22, 2006 -
Burrus: Rate Proposal Would Hijack Postal
Service
On May 3, 2006, the Postal Service announced its intent to increase
postage rates in 2007. This public announcement focused on the 3-cent
increase in price of a First-Class stamp, to 42 cents, and the introduction
of a new “forever” stamp. These public announcements and the analyses
that followed all missed the most important story. That story is not
the three-cent increase; how frequently rate increases have occurred;
or the impact of computerization, e-mail, and cell phones on hard-copy
communications. The real story is that this rate increase will begin
the final chapter of transforming the United States Postal Service from
a government service designed to foster communications among all the
people into a tax-free entity intended to serve first and foremost as
an extension of corporate advertising mailers.|
May 22, 2006 -
USPS Philadelphia
Center: The Postal Worker's Paradise
- Construction of the
USPS's new mail facility in Philadelphia kept 4,000 jobs in the city
and created a dignified workplace for postal employees. Today, state-of-the-art
workroom machinery, such as optical scanners and bar coders, gathers,
sorts, bundles, and directs about eight million pieces of mail a day.
Common spaces such as locker rooms and a full-service cafeteria (with
outdoor seating) were placed equidistant from administrative and workroom
spaces alike to put all the employees on an equal plane. The systems
were also designed to be efficient not just at moving mail, but also
to help employees use them efficiently. The split-level workroom and
its new machinery provide a drastic boost in efficiency from the five-floor
model that was used in the Main Post Office. The two sides and back
of the workroom are lined with 111 docks for mail trucks to drop off
and receive shipments. |
May 19,
2006 -
USPS Proposing to 'Contract Out' Postal Vehicle Service
USPS has notified Robert C. Pritchard, APWU Director,
Motor Vehicle Services that it is proposing to convert Postal Vehicle
Service (PVS) to Highway Contract Route (HCR) in Stockton and Fresno,
California. It is rumored that similar proposals are planned for other
parts of the country. The following is a copy of the USPS letter.
|
May 14,
2006 -
Postmaster disciplined for shutting down
office for funeral
"Postmaster Kathy Hinkle
is being punished for temporarily closing part of the U.S. Postal Service
in Columbia (Tenn.) so employees could attend the funeral for William
Bowman, who was a window clerk, Bowman’s widow, Sandra Bowman said.
Mr. Bowman, 58, of Nunnelly, died April 15 of a heart attack. Hinkle’s
supervisor, Manager of Postal Operations Bob Hatten, is issuing Hinkle
a written reprimand for closing a portion of the post office in Columbia
for about two hours on April 17th. Bowman said employees who attended
the funeral during work hours are willing to convert the administration
leave time to annual time and would pay back the two hours salary to
the U.S. Postal Service." |
May 11,
2006
-
Postal Worker
Awarded Nearly 8 Years of Back Pay for Constructive Discharge (PDF)
-Over $300,000 owed before adjustments - Thomas Bellini, a letter
carrier sustained an on the job injury in 1987 (he was later assigned
to the clerk craft). The case stems from an involuntary resignation
letter that Bellini submitted to the Postal Service. The APWU argued
that Grievant was forced to resign from the USPS, effective 6/5/98,
due to the Employer's continuing refusal since 1/6/98 to provide him
with employment or pay. Union argued Bellini's resignation was necessary
in order for him to obtain the only funds the Employer would make available
to him, his retirement fund contributions. The arbitrator ruled "evidence
supports a finding that his resignation was involuntary because it was
submitted under conditions of financial duress. Hence the evidence is
sufficient to prove a constructive discharge and the grievance is therefore
sustained. Bellini was awarded lost wages and related benefits retroactive
to September 24, 1998. |
|
|
May 31, 2006
FYI:
USPS Vendor Request for
OPF Conversion Services
Jaffer
Responds to “George W. Bush’s War Stamp Tax" article
Suspects sought in robbery of postal carrier
New London Post Office caught in red tape
Plan to reorganize mail delivery in Vermont is shelved
Signed, Sealed and Undelivered
Gas prices continue to cause pain for public services
|
May 31, 2006 -
Teamsters Hope to Lure FedEx Drivers
"Bob Williams,
who led the unionization drive, says the model does not work for the
drivers. Like many, he was lured to FedEx by advertisements that said
"Be Your Own Boss" and talked of earning $55,000 to $70,000 a year.
After he began, Mr. Williams said, he felt like anything but his own
boss. "They have complete control over my day," Mr. Williams said. "I
have to wear their uniform, buy their truck and use their logo. I have
to buy insurance from them. I have to do the route they tell me to do
and make the stops they tell me." Mr. Williams was also disappointed
by the pay, the lack of health benefits and assignments to unfamiliar
routes. He said he grossed a maximum of $62,000 a year but netted only
$30,000, despite 60-hour weeks."
|
|
May
30, 2006 -
Postal truck creates havoc in West Haven
(CT) neighborhood
-
"The gentleman that lived
in the house told him (the driver) not to try to back the vehicle up.
As we found out he was inebriated. He proceeded to back the vehicle
up, going 40-50 miles per hour backing it up," says Noel Lewis. The
destruction and now the fear continued. "My wife is standing here across
the street. He came out, she had to run, she literally had to run, seconds
before this guy could hit her," says Lewis. The mail truck went back
across Ownly Street and ran into a chain-link fence. "We didn't want
him to go back into his truck and do anything. We forced him to the
ground and then the police officers showed up," says Lewis."
|
Video:
Postal Worker Crashes Mail Truck
|
May
30, 2006 -
Stamp out
charity discounts for political mail, critics say
Some Republicans
are using nonprofit postal permits to send election fliers
- The California Club for Growth
Newsletter doesn't look much different from all the other political
fliers filling voters' mailboxes as the days tick down to the primary
election. But unlike almost all other political mailings, this one is
being sent at the special 40 percent discount that the U.S. Postal Service
gives to charities, potentially saving the candidates hundreds of thousands
of dollars in postage. Democrats say it's unfair and illegal. The Alliance
for a Better California, a Democratic organization, is suing the Postal
Service in federal court over a mailing that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's
political operation sent out at a discount during the special election.
|
-
Mail loophole has some California politicians fuming
|
May 30, 2006
State of the union on postal reform
Sioux City: Sen. Harkin Wants Postal Decision Put 'On Hold'
|
May 30, 2006 -
Postal Workers' Outcry Over Plan Goes Unheard
"The postal union and area business leaders
are opposing a plan that would send all of the Rio Grande Valley’s mail
through Corpus Christi. Local union officials and business leaders worry
the consolidation would cost some local postal workers their jobs, delay
local mail delivery, replace local postmarks with the Corpus Christi
postmark and delay postmarking altogether. Postal officials have said
the fears are unfounded." |
|
May 30, 2006 -
Washington Mutual, USPS
Seek to Extend Suspension on NSA
"The parties want to review
two recent PRC filings regarding other NSAs and revise their own. In
particular, they want to make revisions to historical volumes that were
filed in the case. The postal service had filed for an NSA with Washington
Mutual Bank on March 29 based on encouraging the company to increase
its use of First Class Mail. The USPS is seeking a three-year deal covering
First Class Mail for the bank's credit card services."
|
|
May 30, 2006
Technology and easy credit give identity thieves an edge
Italy post office ready to be privatised
Canada Post reviews rural route delivery
|
May 29, 2006
Limbaugh's Complaint |
USPS Confidential: Keep personal and corporate data secure |
Postal Service
selects buyer for 20-acre site near Playa Vista
Springfield: Postal consolidation plan reconsidered
Delivery Delivers: Pacific, SW Area Offices Win 'Best of the Best'
Post office strives to help Internet commerce
Americans quick to say that a wait's too long
Israel: Transformed company overhauls postal service
|
May 27, 2006 -
New Philadelphia postal center opens to support
e-NAPUS: Rolling Thunder - Simmering Deliberations (PDF)
Anthrax case over; problems
persist
Ex-letter carrier guilty of trading kid porn
Gmail
to provide USPS tracking numbers?
Canada: Postal carriers charged with theft of $200,000 in goods
|
May 26, 2006 -
NIOSH Reports on DBCS
at Denver Postal Facility
-The National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
has just completed a three year investigation
at the General Mail Facility in Denver of ERRP and other “solutions”
to the ergonomic design of the Delivery Bar Code Sorters (DBCS). NIOSH
found in part that the DBCS machines presently in use by the USPS
(four tiers, 201 stackers) present the same or greater risk of injury
to workers as the three-tiered DBCS machines evaluated by NIOSH in 1991-92.
more
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|
May 26, 2006 -
Postal Employee Official Personnel Folder
Goes Electronic
-
NAPUS: This week
the Postal Service provided a briefing to union and management association
representatives on the conversion of employee Official Personnel Folders
(OPF’s) from hardcopy to electronic format. The eOPF program will enhance
record recovery in the event of disaster and will comport with the Human
Resources Shared Services strategy. Conversion to electronic files is
also consistent with planned Office of Personnel Management (OPM) modifications
to retirement and separation processing systems.
|
|
May 26, 2006
Charleston postal worker helps with birth in his car
Tort Claim against USPS dismissed because it was lost in the mail
USPS Ships Live Birds by the Thousands
Online Memorial for slain
postal supervisor Lori Hayes-Kotter
Virginia Post Office Orphaned
Residents push for construction of post office
New Stamp Honors Amber Alert System
Mail carrier kidnapped, beaten by her ex-boyfriend while on route
|
May 25, 2006
-
Due to postal service changes, newspaper deliveries may be delayed
-
"If it
seems like it's been taking longer for you to receive your newspaper
in the mail lately, you're not alone. The U.S. Postal Service implemented
a 24-piece periodical sack rule that went into effect May 11. While
Daily Sentinel subscribers residing in the towns of Le Mars, Remsen,
Oyens, Brunsville, and Merrill receive their newspaper from carriers,
others receive it through the mail. If you receive your paper through
the mail and live in a vicinity which has fewer than 24 subscribers,
your newspaper delivery may be delayed.|
May 25, 2006 -
Underwater image used to create U.S. postage stamp - An underwater
photo that Randal Sanders took near the Florida Keys more than 20 years
ago has surfaced with a splash. It’s been used to create one of the
40 postage stamps in a commemorative series being released Saturday
by the U.S. Postal Service.
|
May 25, 2006-
Postal
Worker Charged with Making Drug Deliveries
The postal worker just seemed to be doing
her job as she carried innocent-looking white packages around the North
Philadelphia neighborhood, in her uniform. But yesterday, narcotics
cops announced the arrest of her and her husband after learning that
the deliveries weren't as innocent as they seemed.
|
|
May 25, 2006
Postal Bulletin : May 25th issue
Postal Advisory Committee
Hopes To Stamp Out Mail Problems In Las Cruces
Man threatens postal
worker over delivery of ad in mailbox
Letters fold as stamps
hold on
Mailbox Stolen From Barrington Post Office
Dennis Post Office to
close
USPS helps troops stay in touch with minutes, letters
Ending 24/7 postal service:
The case isn't open and shut
Student to make stamp pitch to US postmaster
Postal clerk admits to theft
Letter: Postal workers went extra mile
Postage a bargain
A Rare Stamp Reunited
With Its Lost Love Story
|
May 24, 2006 -
Stamps to Become a Marketing
Vehicle
"The U.S. Postal Service is
allowing companies to create their own branded stamps for first-class
mail. Instead of flags, you can expect to see a company logo; instead
of photos of famous Americans, you might see pictures of your local
real estate agent. It is a test, part of an effort to reverse the decline
in first-class mailings. As USPS spokeswoman Joanne Veto said, "We want
to make mail more interesting to consumers."
Zazzle Offers Stamps for Businesses
|
-
HP becomes first to print postage featuring corporate logos and images
May 24, 2006
Letter carrier Ron Kaiser to retire after 41 years in Postal Service
It's canines vs. carriers
Las Flores mix-up with Postal Service
Postal Worker pleads
guilty to theft
|
May 23, 2006 -
Postal Service Cops Going Hollywood
"Most of us are
familiar with the post office thanks to our mail carriers. But the post
office also has a law enforcement branch that protects consumers from
fraud and scams. The U.S. Postal Inspection Service spent $4.3 million
to produce a series of DVDs that showcase none other than the postal
inspectors themselves. As CBS 5 Investigates' Anna Werner reports, just
like the makings of a Hollywood movie, the DVDs have directors, actors,
sets, even catering."|
|
May 23, 2006 -
Business owners left
without mail for two weeks
Frank Higginbotham of Impact Glass, as
well as other business owners, said he has not seen their mail carrier
in a couple of weeks. As it turns out, their carrier is on sick leave
and the U.S. Postal Service is short about 100 substitute mail carriers
in Fort Myers and Cape Coral.
|
|
May 23, 2006 - -
Postal Investigation
Who's delivering
your mail? That's what the US Postal service wants to know as it
launches a national investigation, trying to find out how many sex offenders
are on the payroll. The probe comes after three sex offenders were discovered
working for the US Postal service in Dallas. Officials say they had
no idea sex offenders were working for them. That's because they may
have committed their crimes after they were hired. The postal service
plans to develop a fair policy for employees who are registered sex
offenders, one the public can accept. For now, they've reassigned those
three offenders in Dallas so they do not have contact with the public.|
Georgia City Carrier removed from USPS on charge of improper conduct
|
May 23, 2006
-
Maine Attorney General seeks stricter tobacco
delivery law - Attorney General
Steven Rowe has urged U.S. Sen. Susan Collins to reform the postal laws
to prohibit the delivery of tobacco products to minors, Dow said Monday.
"After enactments of the state statutes, and voluntary agreements by
carriers and credit card companies, it is ironic indeed that the USPS
serves as the last remaining channel for the delivery of cigarettes
to minors," he said in a letter to Collins. "Due to the other carriers'
refusal to serve as conduits for delivery, the delivery of cigarettes
to minors by the USPS will undoubtedly continue to increase." Collins
has said that she would look into the matter and consider introducing
legislation to address the problem.
|
May 23, 2006
Rowley post office suspends mail because of mold
Utica postmark is here to stay
Mail carrier delivers help with rescue
Armed robbers strike outside Tucson's main post office
Wait a minute, Mr. Postman
Postal pension games
The ballot's in the mail --exclusively in Washington State King County
|
May 22,
2006 -
Bulk mail is bouncing back
The no-call
list, spam blockers and other regulations that limit unsolicited solicitations,
such as blast faxes, may be giving junk snail mail new life. The U.S.
Postal Service and the bulk-mail industry are using new technology to
lower costs and improve responses to mailed solicitations for sales,
memberships, sales coupons and surveys. Instead of fading away like
the horse-drawn carriage, "snail mail" is growing. And it has advantages
that those in the industry are quick to point out. |
May 22, 2006
Houston: Police seeking pair who robbed postal carrier of uniform
Appealing to post office higher-ups’ better angels
Explore History on New US Postage Stamps
Mail carriers keep a wary eye on dogs
USPS Runs With Priority Mail Shoe Box
Royal Mail seeks alliance with American parcel giant
DMA Says Direct Marketing Growth Fell in Q1 2005
|
May 21, 2006
Missing
Postal Custodian's body found in Ipswich River
Rural letter carrier saves woman's life
Sioux City Postal Meeting
Payne postmaster part
of family tradition
Photo: 2-year-old pretending
to be Mail Carrier at Touch-a-Truck Event
|
May 20, 2006 -
Kentucky Postal Employee Arrested on Child
Pornography Charges
- "A postal service
worker [OIG via court documents: window clerk] in Jamestown was arrested
after officials discovered he was using company computers to view child
pornography. Morris E. Hall, 58, was arrested at the post office on
Thursday on a charge of receiving child pornography, the U.S. Attorney's
office said. Federal authorities began investigating Hall in October
2005 after receiving information that a Postal network user was typing
in certain keywords while doing an internet search. Authorities said
the network user's computer number matched the one assigned to Hall."
|
|
May 20, 2006 -
Postal vehicle break-downs blamed on gas blend --
Half of the Nantucket post office’s delivery
trucks were out of service last week due to problems with their fuel
pumps that may have been caused by a new shipment of gasoline blended
with ethanol, two postal workers said. Island mechanics also reported
working on about 30 cars with similar problems in the same time period.
|
|
May 20, 2006
Ex-Marine faithful to his mail route
Postal vehicle break-downs blamed on gas blend
e-NAPUS: Collins Queries OMB Nominee on Postal Reform (PDF)
Unruly Dogs Bring Halt To Neighbors' Postal Delivery
Postmaster’s reprimand rescinded
|
Mail carrier passes out while driving, hits van
Where have all the sidewalk mailboxes gone?
Postal glitch sent tax bills back to homeowners
|
May 19, 2006 -
Mailman opened letters
Electronic device in mail was the tip-off - A mail carrier has been
sentenced to a year probation, six months of electronic monitoring and
mental health treatment for opening mail belonging to residents of Concord
Heights. Darrell Butcher, 47, of Hudson, Mass., pleaded guilty to one
count of obstruction of mail on Monday in federal court. Judge Joseph
DiClerico waived Butcher's fine because he was unable to pay it, according
to court records.
|
May 19, 2006 -
Return
to sender, address unseen - An important Veterans Administration
meeting on disaster preparedness for more than 600 legally blind local
veterans turned into a disaster itself this week.
Nobody showed. Not one vet. Turns out they didn't even know about it.
The fliers that were supposed to be mailed to them were instead returned
to the Sepulveda VA's Visual Impairment Service Team by the Santa Clarita
postal processing center because the return address on the mail was
not recognized as being eligible for "free matter to the blind" mailing
privileges.
|
May 19, 2006 -
Fort Belvoir Post Office receives five-star rating -
"Spirits are
high at the Fort Belvoir Post Office and all of the employees are proudly
wearing lapel pins because they recently received a five-star overall
service rating from the Gallop Organization. "The Gallop Organization
surveys USPS customers, asking them to rate local post offices on efficiency,
accuracy of delivery, consistency of delivery and wait time in line,"
said Postmaster Jim Fleisher. In addition to lapel pins for each employee,
the post office also received a sign for their door so that all of the
customers entering the post office will know about the five-star rating,
said Fleisher."
|
May
19, 2006 -
Hunting
identity thieves -- alone, one at a time
Matthew Boyden doesn't deliver the mail;
he investigates it, with a .40-caliber pistol strapped to his waist
and an MP-5 machine gun within easy reach. He is one of the nearly 2,000
U.S. postal inspectors who fight mail fraud, the use of the mail to
commit crimes. In the past six years, Boyden has arrested more than
300 people, many of them identity thieves who steal personal information
in order to loot bank accounts, launder stolen checks or milk credit
cards for cash.|
|
May 19, 2006 -
Critics say a move to Palatine will slow delivery -
Twenty four hours
a day, seven days a week, up to 6 million letters are processed at the
Palatine Post Office. The Rockford facility is much smaller. Local Union
Leader Greg Voiles says Palatine`s size is the problem." Normally your
larger plants such as Palatine aren`t as efficient as a smaller plant,
as Rockford is," says Voiles. But Palatine Senior Plant Manager Ron
Woodall says Rockford customers won`t notice a difference. But letters
mailed to a Rockford addresses from a Rockford address will have to
start at the Rockford Post Office, and then be shipped to Palatine for
processing, finally going back to Rockford for delivery. "It could be
a day delay or more," says Voiles. And Voiles says if operations do
move to Palatine he estimates a loss of 50 to 100 Rockford jobs. Woodall
disagrees. "No career employees at Rockford will loose their jobs,"
says Woodall. "We will divert them to other positions in the Postal
Service." So far no decision has been made if Palatine will be the new
home for Rockford Postal Workers. The next step for the study is a public
forum. It will be June 5th at 6:30 p.m. at the Northern Illinois University
Educational Center.
|
May 19, 2006
Authorities: Fire Was Electrical
Postal Carrier Threatened With Ice Pick
Postal Service in no hurry to move Aurora office
Letter carriers worry about being bitten by dogs
Mailings give post office
a boost
Mail carrier delivers
mail and a aiding hand
APWU: Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) Update
Postal Service planning to handle camp mail
Wheeling Post Office in Mock Disaster Event
Uncertain fate for 'grocery post offices'
|
May 17, 2006 -
USPS March Financial Results
"USPS revenues
of $6.59 billion for March were 3% or $189 million over plan and $424
million or 6.9% more than March 2005. Expenses were virtually on plan,
producing a net income of $295 million before the escrow allocation.
Total mail volume in March was 1.5% more than last year, with volumes
in all major categories except Express Mail and International Mail above
their March 2005 levels. Year-to-date, net income before escrow allocation
is $1.57 billion or $147 million over plan. Year-to-date, the net gain
after escrow allocation is $74 million."
USPS
Net Income Rises in March |
|
May 18, 2006
Postal worker charged with
theft
Junked mail conflict builds at post office
|
PO removes trash, recycling bins
Montana post office district has new manager
Canada: Former letter carrier charged with mail theft
USPS rectifies Taiwan reference on Web site
Growing city looking for a brand new mailbag
Post Office Needs Rural Carriers
Two dogs attack Tiverton letter carrier
Adobe Pens Deal with Stamps.com
Canada: Alleged mail theft a sign of increasing
workloads, postal union says
|
May 17, 2006 -
USPS Unveils
Prescription Drug Card for Workplace Injuries
The USPS has announced
a voluntary prescription drug card program for employees who suffer
workplace injuries or illnesses. According to the Postal Service, employees
who choose to participate in the program will submit their drug card
and prescriptions to the pharmacy of their choice, and the prescriptions
will be filled at no cost to the employee.
|
May
17, 2006 -
Fire at Oakland Postal Mail Sorting Facility
Bay-Valley
District Offices Damaged-
"Oakland firefighters have controlled a fire that began this morning
at the Post Office distribution center (1675 7th St) .
The fire broke out
on the administrative side of the post office building, where the front
office is located and personnel files are stored, postal officials said.
The building
is a five-story concrete structure where all mail moving through the
East Bay and portions of the North Bay at some time move through, according
to U.S. Post Office spokesman Augustine Ruiz." No
postal workers were injured or mail damaged. Oakland APWU President
Fred Jacobs said no determination of the fire has been made as yet.
Oakland
post office fire under investigation |
3-alarm fire damages Bay-Valley District Office |
KTVU Slideshow |
May 17, 2006 -
RR Donnelley Opens New Consolidation Facility in
Texas -
"RR Donnelley is the largest shipper of mail into the United States
Postal Service, delivering approximately fifty percent of all U.S. standard
mail into the postal stream," said Dan Scapin, President RR Donnelley
Logistics and Distribution. "Our expansive consolidation network, expertise,
and scale allow us to offer to our customers proven services that help
them to achieve postal savings and cycle time reductions. This new facility
positions RR Donnelley better to serve direct response marketers, magazine
publishers, catalogers, and other mailers in the Southwest." RR Donnelley's
logistics network permits it effectively to deliver mail to every Bulk
Mail Center and Sectional Mail Facility in the United States."
May 17, 2006
National Dog Bite Prevention Week, May 21-27
|
Postal service battles bites
USPS Expands Personalized Postage for
Businesses
PhotoStamps |
ZazzleStamps |
USPS Authorizes PictureItPostage
|
May 16, 2006 -
NALC, USPS Extend Multiple Days of Inspection MOU (PDF)
-(NALC
Bulletin) President Young has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with
the Postal Service (M-01571)
which extends the terms of the previous MOU on 'multiple days of inspection'.
During a six day route count and inspection, the MOU allows management
up to three 'days of inspection', but limits them to only one day of
completing PS Form 1838-C. Additionally, when two or three PS Forms
3999 are completed, the MOU dictates which PS Form 3999 will be used
to transfer territory when adjusting routes. The terms of the new MOU
are applicable through May 26, 2007 unless mutually extended by the
parties. Also: Young, PA activists prod Sen. Rick Santorum
into supporting Postal Reform Bill Provision
|
|
May 16, 2006 -
First Mail-Delivery Van
Converted to Hybrid
At a ceremony today at the Boston General
Mail facility, the Postal Service launched the first conversion of a
mail-delivery van into a hybrid-electric vehicle. The hybrid-electric
mail-delivery van will be monitored in regular service-delivering mail
to Boston-area homes and businesses -- to determine its potential for
emissions reduction and fuel-economy improvements. It was converted
by Azure Dynamics Incorporated, Boston, a developer of electric and
hybrid-electric powertrain systems. Based on the company's other hybrid
applications, and depending on the vehicle and its duty cycle, Azure
officials expect fuel-economy improvements to be in the range of 30
to 50 percent.
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|
May 16, 2006
-
Letter Carrier's $3.1M injury settlement doesn't take away pain
- Steven Watson's eyes tear when he thinks about all he's missed
out on. Four years ago the Westerleigh man was young, healthy, married
to his longtime sweetheart and the father of a toddler. But that all
changed when a car rammed into the back of Watson's mail truck. Watson,
a letter carrier, was delivering mail in Dongan Hills. He had parked
his truck and was sorting through mail trays, court papers said when
a Ford Expedition rammed into the rear of Watson's truck . Watson suffered
severe back injuries, including a ruptured back disc. He could not return
to work, do everyday chores like take out the trash or rough-house with
his son.
|
May 16, 2006
Coal Run post office in mobile home
Postal employees await test results on materials
USPS, Washington Mutual,
Temporarily Suspend NSA Proceeding
Misuse of Democratic mail permit investigated
College Students Earn 'Best P.R. Campaign' Title in Postal Service Contest
|
May 15, 2006
-
Supreme Court Won't Revive Anthrax Lawsuits
"The Supreme
Court has decided not to revive lawsuits by former employees of Washington
mail center who were exposed to anthrax. The former employees had said
that workers at the Brentwood postal center were deliberately kept on
the job even though officials knew that workers had been exposed to
anthrax in letters that were sent to Capitol Hill. Dena Briscoe of Clinton,
Maryland, was the lead plaintiff in the class-action lawsuit brought
against the U.S. Postal Service. Briscoe says the court's decision not
to hear the case means "no one's being held accountable. " Note:
A third Brentwood employee also filed a lawsuit over anthrax exposure.
In McQureerir v. United States of America, et al., the judge dismissed
this case on April 25, 2006 based on the same reasons as set forth in
Briscoe and Richmond lawsuit.
|
May 15, 2006
-
Legislative provision would benefit Postal
Service competitors
-"Bill
Olson, an attorney for the Association of Priority Mail Users, said
there has been "an enormous amount of private lobbying" from UPS throughout
the drafting of the overhaul bill. He said the single-piece package
provision in the House measure "effectively accomplishes the agenda"
of companies such as UPS. "Competitors want the Postal Service to be
forced by reform to charge prices beyond what the market will bear"
to drive customers away, Olson said. "This bill effectively does that."
|
|
May 15, 2006
USPS to demonstrate hybrid mail-delivery van
USPS says incidents of slow delivery in Cumberland isolated
Mailers Fear New Rates Won't Reward Efficiency
USPS
Gains Share of US Air Market
A lasting tribute to an unforgettable man
Post office removes trash, recycling bins
|
May
14, 2006 -
Letter Carriers Deliver Big In Annual Food
Drive
"Thousands
of postal workers across the nation, and hundreds in Brevard County,
participated in the Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive. One Saturday a year,
they ask postal customers to leave food at the mail box, which the carriers
pick up and take to area food banks. Last year, postal carriers collected
71.3 million pounds nationwide. Locally, carriers collected about 195,000
pounds, said Mike Monopoli, head of the Melbourne branch of the postal
carriers union."
MT: Drive collects 135,000 pounds
|
-
FL: Miami-Dade and Broward counties tallied 455,686 pounds.
May 14, 2006
-
Congress Seeks Stamp Solution
-
"[Dave] Roman, who
retired from the Army in 1995 after 20 years, is among 392,000 military
retirees who started second careers in the U.S. Postal Service and have
become pawns in a dispute over the deficit. The White House is insisting
the Postal Service pay military pensions, which the service must pass
on through postage rates, for those current and former employees. The
dispute is a striking example of buck-passing in Washington, and shows
how the ballooning deficit can trickle down to the everyday lives of
Americans." |
May 14, 2006
-
Downsizing America's future
Advances in automation at the U.S. Postal
Service, primarily in the development of rapid mail sorting machines
that require fewer workers, have also eliminated thousands of postal
workers- jobs, which have historically had a very high percentage of
African-American employees. |
May 14, 2006 -
Mercury Leak
Forces Evacuation Of SJ Postal Office -A mail handler found
a package leaking a small amount of mercury in a U.S. Postal Service
facility in Swedesboro early Sunday, causing officials to evacuate the
building for about three hours, authorities said
May 14, 2006 -
Mailing of
Bricks Hits Brick Wall
A metro Atlanta man trying to send thousands of bricks to Congress as
part of a protest against illegal immigration says he's struck a brick
wall in getting the Capitol's post offices to deliver them to Congressmen.
Jim McAuliffe, co-owner of a Gwinnett County-based mailing company,
says the Capitol's post offices are refusing to deliver nearly 1,200
bricks that arrived Tuesday and another 2,300 expected to arrive Friday
May 14, 2006
New Link: The Postal People Photo Blog
30 of San Leandro's mailboxes will be cut
|
May 13, 2006 -
Shirt-Maker
Cashing in on Goleta Tragedy?
Santa Barbara "postal workers are upset
with two State Street clothing stores. The stores have been selling
a t-shirt with the U.S. postal service logo, riddled by eight bullet
holes. It appears to poke fun at the tragic night in January when six
Goleta postal workers were murdered. The six postal employees and a
neighbor were gunned down by Jennifer San Marco. San Marco committed
suicide. That's a total of eight people who died. The same number of
bullet holes appear on the shirt."
|
-
The same shirt sold on Amazon.com
May 13, 2006 -
USPS
PIN Database Upgrade Sunday -
PostalEASE, LiteBlue, other applications
will be unavailable. The USPS Personal Identification Number (PIN) database
is scheduled to be upgraded this Sunday, May 14, from 4 a.m. to noon,
CT. The upgrade is in support of a larger mainframe operating system
upgrade planned for the following weekend. During the upgrade, employees
will not be able to use certain applications that depend on the USPS
PIN database to allow access.
May 13, 2006 -
Junk mail makes ID theft easy - When Lorie and Rich Walsh sold
their Warminster house to Katina D. Joyce they filed a change-of-address
form with the post office and moved on.But more than five years later,
solicitations for credit cards kept coming for them at their old address,
and according to police, Joyce took advantage of the situation. She
used the junk mail credit offers to open an account in Lorie Walsh's
name earlier this year, police said.Using Walsh's Social Security number
and date of birth, she had access to the credit and the checks that
came with it, according to court records. In the span of about one week
in March, Joyce is accused of cashing checks totaling $4,550.
|
May 13, 2006 -
Nation’s Letter Carriers Prepare For 50-State
Food Drive
Letter
carriers across the country will collect non-perishable food donations
Saturday (May 13) as they deliver mail along their postal routes in
the nation’s largest one-day effort to combat hunger in America. Members
of the National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC), joined by thousands
of rural letter carriers, hope to exceed last year’s record 71.3 million
pounds of food delivered to community food banks, pantries and shelters.
|
-
Postal Workers' Wedding Starts NALC Food Drive
May 13, 2006 -
e-NAPUS: Revised CBO Estimate Projects 5-Year Savings for Postal Reform
- "the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) revised its estimate of the budget effect of H.R.
22 and S. 662. ON May 10, CBO recalculated that enactment of the Senate-passed
version of postal reform would net $1.3 billion in savings over the
first 5 years. Last year, CBO projected a 5-year cost of $500 million.
Although Wednesday’s estimate projected that the 10-year budget impact
of S. 662 to be $1.5 billion; this represents $3.5 billion less than
CBO’s 2005 calculation. CBO also recalculated its figures on the House-passed
postal bill, H.R. 22. The Congressional bean-counter anticipates that
H.R. 22 would yield 5-year budget savings of $200 million. This compares
favorably with it previous estimate of a 5-year cost of $1.4 billion.
The recent CBO 10-year budget estimate for H.R. 22 places the impact
at $4.3 billon, which is approximately $1.6 billion less than the 2005
projection."
May 13, 2006 -
Ex-Postal Supervisor Charged with Perjury
- "A former postal supervisor was charged with perjury yesterday
after prosecutors said he twice provided false statements to investigators.
The man was investigated after an woman said he sexually assaulted her.
John R. Kelley, 44, of Saugus was a supervisor at the Dorchester Center
post office, where the woman worked as a clerk. The woman said that
in September 2000, Kelley ordered her into the boiler room and raped
her. When postal investigators interviewed Kelley about the complaint,
he provided a written statement saying he did not have any sexual contact
with the woman. She then filed an Equal Employment Opportunity complaint,
and the Postal Service and Boston Police Department were included in
the investigation. In July 2001 Kelley was interviewed again and reiterated
that he had no sexual contact with the woman. In December 2001 she filed
a civil lawsuit in US District Court. Kelley was deposed under oath
and admitted to knowingly providing false statements twice." (scroll
down)
May 13, 2006
Postal Service working to stamp out late-arriving ballots
'Cheers,' USPS Style
Deutsche Post delivers poor profit as DHL struggles in US market
New
Purple Heart stamp available soon
|
May
12, 2006 -
Former APWU Secretary-Treasurer Bob Tunstall
Dies
Former APWU Secretary-Treasurer Robert
L. Tunstall died May 12 at his home in Oregon. Mr. Tunstall, who had
diabetes, was 64. Bob Tunstall’s service with the APWU began in 1963
at the Portland (OR) Post Office, when he was “fresh out of the Marine
Corps.” “My first postal assignment was as a distribution clerk,” he
wrote after he announced his retirement. “I also worked as a stamp supply
clerk, bulk mail clerk, postage due clerk, box section clerk, and pouch
rack clerk.” In 1974, In 1998 and again in 2001, he was elected
secretary-treasurer. |
|
May 12, 2006 -
Former Postal
Worker pleads guilty to bankruptcy fraud against supervisor
- Gregory I. Armstrong, 43, of Severn pleaded guilty to bankruptcy
fraud arising from false filings of involuntary bankruptcy petitions
against his boss in retaliation for a poor performance letter. Armstrong
was an employee at the Capitol Heights distribution center, sorting
and delivering mail. The supervisor's mortgage company became aware
of the bankruptcy petitions and took steps to foreclose on his home.
After conducting hearings, the bankruptcy court dismissed the petition
and referred the matter to the U.S. attorney for prosecution.
Previous story:
Man Charged With Fraud Deemed Not a Nation of 1 (12/22/05)
|
May 12, 2006 -
Remember when the postmaster knew you?
He still does, at the Balm
mail depot. Guy, the fourth postmaster here in 100 years, doles out
stamps, smiles and conversation
|
May 12, 2006
Mail From Northeast Florida Burned in Truck Fire
Postal
worker recalls terrifying pit bull attack
Former letter carrier indicted for bank fraud
Mailing Deadline Approaches For Ballots In New Orleans Mayoral Election
3 victims were known
for fishing outings
USPS observes Mailbox Improvement Week
PMG Potter Wins Industry Leadership Award at the World Mail Awards
Post Office Responds
to Residents Concerns
|
May 11, 2006 -
NJ
postal worker charged in insider trading case - The Securities
and Exchange Commission today filed securities fraud charges against
a New Jersey letter carrier who illegally leaked secret grand jury information
to members of one of the most pervasive insider trading rings ever prosecuted.
The new charges allege that, while serving on a federal grand jury investigating
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., letter carrier Jason Smith leaked information
about the proceedings to the ringleaders of the insider trading scheme
who traded in Bristol-Myers securities based on the information. By
leaking the information, Smith, age 29, a resident of Jersey City, N.J.,
and a letter carrier with the U.S. Postal Service, violated grand jury
secrecy rules and his oath as a grand juror.
|
|
May 11, 2006 -
Postal Workers' Wedding Starts NALC Food
Drive -
On a breezy, sunny Sunday, it was
business unusual at the parking lot of the Food Bank of Contra Costa
and Solano. Later that day Letter Carrier Margie Garcia and Clerk Geary
Baria were pronounced husband and wife in front of an audience of more
than 300 family members, friends and fellow postal workers. Garcia and
Baria decided to tie the knot at the Food Bank to kick off the 14th
annual National Letter Carriers Food Drive. "What a great way to start
their lives together," said Chris Casey, Walnut Creek postmaster. In
lieu of gifts, guests were asked to bring donations of nonperishable
food. World's
Largest Food Drive Scheduled for May 13
|
May 11, 2006 -
PRC set dates for Postal Rate and Fee Changes case - May 31, 2006:
deadline for interventions, answers to motion for waiver and for
protective conditions. 2. June 5, 2006: Deadline for
answer to motion for waiver of rules regarding certain library references,
and answer to motion concerning Forever Stamp. 3. June 7, 2006:
Deadline for statements identifying topics for prehearing
conference. 4. June 16, 2006: Prehearing conference.
May 11, 2006
Postal Bulletin 5/11/2006 Issue
PMG Potter
Receives Tully Award
Computing's Heritage Goes Postal
|
May 10, 2006 -
The Postmark Is Going the Way of the
Telegram
With
little fanfare, the postmark Americans have been accustomed to for more
than a century is quickly going the way of the telegram and the rotary
dial telephone. Last month, the postal service finished deploying new
equipment nationwide that replaces the traditional circle-and-bars postage
cancellation with a computer-generated city, state, and date, slapped
onto mail by a high-speed ink-jet printer. The post office began phasing
in the new cancellations at regional mail processing centers last August
and completed installation on all 1,083 of its state-of-the-art canceling
machines a few weeks ago, she said. With the demise of the traditional
postmark, America is losing an icon ubiquitous in travel books, pop
art, and historical memorabilia.
|
May 09, 2006 -
Burrus: The Postal Service was created
for the people
The glaring absence of any representatives of “the people” is evidence
of the transformation of the U.S. Postal Service from the constitutionally
required service to the people into a service catering to commercial
entities. Postal management has aided the transition to a service that
is simply a delivery arm of major mailers, and in so doing has rejected
any semblance of balance between services to individual citizens and
to the business community. USPS headquarters at L’Enfant Plaza in Washington,
DC, has become a cesspool of industry officials under contract or in
a lobbying capacity who influence the decisions of a service constitutionally
intended to serve the people.
|
May 09, 2006 -
Postal Service fights overhaul bill's accounting language
"The Postal
Service is contesting language in both the House and Senate versions
of a postal overhaul bill the agency contends would damage its ability
to compete with private companies such as UPS. At issue is how the agency's
general accounting practices will be determined once the overhaul legislation
is enacted."
|
May 09, 2006 -
Bush BOG Nominee lobbyist for gambling, horse racing and cigarette makers
-
The President intends
to nominate “Ellen C. Williams, of Kentucky, to be a Governor of the
Board of Governors of the United States Postal Service, for the remainder
of a nine-year term expiring December 8, 2007, vice John S. Gardner.”
Ellen C. Williams has served on the Kentucky Public Service Commission.
She also has served as chairman and executive director of the Republican
Party of Kentucky. Earlier this year she was hired to help lobby for
expanded gambling and changes to horse racing regulations.
|
May 09, 2006
Prank call on bomb threat on tour bus leads to charges
|
For 35 years, careful carrier was letter-perfect
Houston mail carrier attacked
by 3 pit bulls
USPS Ordered to Pay
PayMaster For Use Of Patented Money Order Forms
Woman Faces Charges After
Post Office Incident
|
May 09, 2006 -
George Bush's War Stamp Tax
From Wayne Madsen
Report: "In January, the Postal Rate Commission approved a two-cent
raise in first class postage to 39 cents. The commission has now indicated
it wants to raise the price of a first class stamp by three cents to
42 cents next year. The reason for the Bush stamp tax is that when the
Bush administration took power in 2001, the Postal Service Fund, a special
account established within the Treasury Department, had a substantial
surplus. However, in order to pay for its Iraq war adventure, the Bush
administration raided the Postal Service Fund and created a deficit.
The two successive rate increases have been necessary in order to replenish
the fund, according to Postal Service sources."
|
May 09, 2006 -
Albuquerque
office overhauled again
"The U.S. Postal
Service has made major management changes at the Albuquerque office
- for the second time in three months. The Postal Service replaced former
district manager Momi Lee and former acting senior plant manager George
Lasica on Monday, said Margaret Romero, Postal Service spokeswoman in
Albuquerque. Victor Benavides, former postmaster of Aurora, Colo., is
the new acting district manager, and Rickey Shirley, former plant manager
in Little Rock, Ark., is the new acting senior plant manager, Romero
said." |
May 09, 2006 -
Hewitt Associates Awarded Contract to Modernize OPM Retirement Systems-
Hewitt Associates, a global human resources services company,
has been selected to deliver defined benefits technology and administration
services to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM), the Federal
Government's principal human resources agency. The ten-year agreement,
valued at approximately $290 million, will enable OPM to modernize and
improve the administration of its Federal retirement system for 5 million
participants. The company will serve participants of the Federal Retirement
System, including current and former staff members of the executive,
legislative and judicial branches, as well as employees and retirees
of the U.S. Postal Service
|
see more info
May 09, 2006 -
Postal Service campaign proves direct can be hip
One way to promote a product is to not take it too seriously. Try a
wink and a nod with a little self-deprecation thrown in for good measure.
The U.S. Postal Service did just that, in a direct-mail campaign portraying
its core product-direct mail-as tragically unhip. The result? The mailing
ended up positioning the stodgy, quasi-government agency's mainstay
product as quite the opposite. The direct-mail campaign, launched in
January, was designed to remind advertising and marketing executives,
often a jaded bunch, that direct mail can be an effective marketing
channel. The "When Pigs Can Fly!" mailer, created by agency Campbell-Ewald,
targeted 150,000 marketing and advertising executives
May 09, 2006
Sacramento mail carrier admits stealing 200 debit cards
End the practice of naming post offices
Postage printing a pricey pleasure
Postal worker to walk 26 miles for multiple sclerosis
Colorado and Wyoming Postal District Bests U.S. Average
May 08, 2006 -
Bush To Nominate USPS Board of Governor - "The President intends
to nominate “Ellen C. Williams, of Kentucky, to be
a Governor of the Board of Governors of the United States Postal Service,
for the remainder of a nine-year term expiring December 8, 2007. "
May 08, 2006-
Rate Case Renews Reform Cries
"Mailers and associations expressed concern last week about the U.S.
Postal Service's filing for an average 8.5 percent postal rate increase
with the Postal Rate Commission, and they reiterated the need for postal
reform.
Rate Case Worries Mailers
"Large
business mailers like banks, credit card issuers, telecommunications
companies, catalogers and retailers as well as magazines, newspapers
and nonprofits are most affected by this planned increase. So what are
the likely implications for the mail channel and the USPS? "People are
going to look at e-mail," DM News senior editor Melissa Campanelli predicts.
"To the USPS' defense, it's the first time in nearly five years that
they've adjusted rates to cover operational costs and fuel. UPS and
FedEx announce fuel raises every year." The governors cited rising
fuel and healthcare costs as among the reasons for the filing."
|
May 08, 2006
Clerk, Letter Carrier Craft Numbers Continue to Decline
USPS rate hike announcement
draws PIA response
A hedge against postal increases
Car slams into semi carrying
mail
Postal woes still irk
locals
Recent USPS OIG Audit Reports
Post office needed
The economics of forever stamps
Tampa post-office might remain forever closed
May 07, 2006 -
Federal Court Affirms USPS FMLA Return-To-Work
Policy
In [Rodney] Harrell v. U.S. Postal Service the Seventh
Circuit Court of Appeals re-addressed
the issue of return to work
provisions in
ELM
865.1 following a FMLA protected
absence of 21 days or more. USPS argued (with support from Dept. of
Labor) that "any return-to work certification requirements included
in a collective bargaining agreement take precedence over the FMLA’s
return-to-work provisions .The court affirmed the district court's
ruling that USPS could impose stricter return-to-work provisions than
those in FMLA. Also, the court affirmed the district's court ruling
that USPS contact with plaintiff's health care provider caused him no
injury; and Harrell had notice of defendant's return-to-work expectations.
|
May 07, 2006 -
Mental exam for postal worker
Patrick Walton knew he was in trouble on the job. He'd been missing
work and getting into altercations with his co-workers at the Cicero
post office, federal prosecutors said. Postmaster Paul Francher told
Walton that he needed to come in for a disciplinary hearing, assistant
U.S. Attorney Carl Eurenius said. Walton showed up for the April 19
meeting with a loaded .22-caliber rifle and a hammer, then refused to
get out of his pickup truck, Eurenius said. After being arrested on
a felony count of being "a prohibited person with a firearm," Walton
spent the next three weeks in the psychiatric unit at St. Joseph's Hospital
Health Center. On Friday, Walton appeared in federal court for a detention
hearing... He will stay incarcerated as federal officials try to arrange
a comprehensive mental evaluation, Eurenius said. |
May 07, 2006 -
Postal workers
assist those in need
- The words from the single mother
in need touched Tim Kelly's heart. The woman was struggling financially
but received an unexpected blessing when a United States postal carrier
gave her $170 to help her family.
May 07, 2006 -
Morgan Hill Post Office receives recycling award - South
Valley Disposal and Recycling Inc. has named the Morgan Hill post office
this year's Business Recycler of the Year. As a result of its efforts
to recycle cardboard and mixed paper, the post office reduced the number
of days its garbage needed to be emptied, the U.S. Postal Service reported.
The U.S. Postal Service is one of the largest recyclers in the U.S.,
with more than 20,000 recycling stations. It also buys more than $200
million worth of recycled-content products each year, the postal Service
reported. In 1999, the Postal Service introduced its first postage stamps
made of recycled paper. It also offers postal cards and stamped envelopes
made of recycled paper
May 07, 2006
Letter carriers to hold
food drive Saturday
May 06, 2006 -
Postal Worker Arrested in Bomb Threat
A U.S. Postal Service worker was arrested Saturday in a bomb threat
that forced the evacuation of two charter buses and the closure of the
Capital Beltway for 90 minutes. The woman, whose name was not released,
called a passenger aboard a charter bus carrying other postal workers
from Merrifield, Va., to Atlantic City, N.J., and said there was a bomb
aboard the bus, said Sgt. Russell Newell, a Maryland State Police spokesman.
Police stopped the bus in Silver Spring, searched it and found nothing
dangerous, Newell said. |
May 06, 2006 -
Collector claims postal regulation interferes with plans to sell artifacts
on eBay - When is a book not a book? If the book has advertisements
in it, it's not a book, not for the post office. At least that's the
impression Jerry Karwowski got when he tried to mail a few things from
the Union Grove Post Office.
May 06, 2006
Mail carrier thrives on friendships with customers
Postal
Service increasing use of retread tires
Brookside fights postal bureaucrats
Making postal life easier
May
05, 2006 -
USPS must go green, group says
Austin Energy will give $1 million toward hybrids -A plug-in,
gas-electric hybrid vehicle advocacy group called for congressional
action Thursday at the World Congress on Information Technology in Austin
to transition the U.S. Postal Service fleet to
plug-in hybrid vehicles
in order to save money and gasoline. The benefit in the transition of
the U.S. Postal Service fleet is saving up to $100 million dollars a
year based on fuel-cost conversion, according to a City of Austin press
release. With approximately 210,000 vehicles, the Postal Service uses
about 106 million gallons of gasoline per year. |
May 05, 2006 -
First Class Volume Slips, Standard Is Up
The U.S. Postal Service's revenue and expenses rose in the first three
months of 2006 versus the year-ago period, acting chief financial officer
Robert Pedersen told the agency's Board of Governors at its meeting
in Washington. Also for the fiscal year to date, First Class volume
is 1.3 percent below the same period last year while Standard Mail volume
has grown 1.5 percent and Priority volume is up 7 percent. Transportation
costs, including fuel-related expenses, are 11.7 percent higher. The
governors also approved funding to buy additional Delivery Bar Code
Sorter equipment for sorting letter mail in the sequence in which mail
carriers deliver it. This purchase consists of entirely new machines
and stacker modules for existing Delivery Bar Code Sorters. It will
reduce the manual sorting of letter mail required today for new addresses
that have been established since the last DBCS equipment deployments
were completed. Funding to buy 148 Automatic Induction Systems for retrofit
onto existing Automated Flat Sorting Machine 100s also was approved.
|
May 05, 2006 -
Agencies Tent the Mall, and a Mailman Really Delivered - Postmaster
General John E. Potter yesterday kicked off the Washington area celebration
of Public Service Recognition Week, which features exhibits by more
than 200 federal agencies on the Mall. At a breakfast address, Potter
saluted the "quiet heroes" of the government, such as Mike Miller ,
a letter carrier from a New Orleans suburb who used an inflatable, motorized
boat for four days to rescue people stranded by Hurricane Katrina.
May 05, 2006 -
Baker City - Letter carrier held in killing is set to enter plea in
July - A Baker City letter carrier accused of running over and
then shooting his postal supervisor is scheduled to enter a plea in
July. Grant Gallaher, 41, has been indicted on charges of intentional
murder and attempted aggravated murder in the April 4 case, said Baker
County District Attorney Matthew Shirtcliff. A Baker County grand jury
still is looking into forensic evidence, and more charges could be filed,
he said.
May 05, 2006 -
Binghamton's outgoing-mail
process may sent to Syracuse
- The U.S. Postal Service said it is considering consolidating
outgoing-mail processes at its offices on Henry Street in Binghamton
and East Taft Road in Syracuse to cut costs and increase operating efficiencies.
All outgoing mail collected at the Binghamton facility would be transported
to Syracuse and then redistributed to reach their final destinations
if the proposal is approved by Postal Service headquarters in Washington,
D.C., said Maureen Marion, a Postal Service spokeswoman in Syracuse.
May 05, 2006
e-NAPUS:
Will Rate Case Jump Start Postal Conference? (PDF)
Threat halts mail at
apartment complex
Music CD swappers turn to snail mail
A stinging problem for Massachusetts letter carrier
Industry Awaits Postal Bill Conference Committee
Sioux City contingent comes away from PMG meeting with hope to save
center
Man, 52, charged in attack on Detroit letter carrier
May 04, 2006 -
Postal overhaul sponsors
criticize proposed rate hike
"The Postal Service's rate increase
proposal, announced Wednesday, drew grim reactions from the lawmakers
working to overhaul the agency. "I am disappointed the Board of Governors
did not see fit to wait until comprehensive postal reform legislation
becomes law before making a decision on whether to seek rate increases,"
House Government Reform Chairman Tom Davis."|
May 04, 2006 -
Postal workers plan picket Friday in Rockford - The American
Postal Workers Union will hold an informational picket Friday in front
of the Rockford main post office on Harrison Avenue over talk of the
U.S. Postal Service moving some operations from that post office to
the processing and distribution center in Palatine.
May 04, 2006 -
Postal Service Introduces Priority Mail Shoe Box - The U.S.
Postal Service is making it easy now for retailers and customers shipping
footwear to “strut their stuff” this summer, with the introduction of
a new Priority Mail Shoe Box that will accommodate almost any brand
and size shoe.
May 04, 2006 -
APWU: Dues Error to Be Corrected
Contrary to clear instructions
provided by the APWU that the special dues assessment was to be deducted
only in Pay Periods 07-06 and 08-06 in $2.50 increments, the USPS Data
Center has processed a third $2.50 deduction in Pay Period 09-06, which
is reflected in paychecks dated May 5. This third deduction is beyond
what was approved by the APWU National Executive Board, and will be
rebated to union members in Pay Period 10-06.
May 04, 2006-
What's the Deal With DOIS? (PDF)
NALC Postal Record: "So now we get to DOIS. Hmmmm...is the "D"
for "dumb?" That might be too mild, since letter carriers across the
nation are using plenty of harsh language when "discussing" the Delivery
Operations Information System. "DOIS isn't broken-it never worked right
in the first place," said NALC President William H. Young. "What was
supposed to be a data management tool has become an electronic mis-management
device. It's a perfect example of 'garbage in-garbage out' technology."
"The scary part of it is, they are using the corrupt DOIS numbers as
a basis for all their planning, budgets, staffing levels-the works,"
Young said." |
May 04, 2006 -
Postal Service delivers $101 million
for OKC facility
At its monthly meeting today, (May 3, 2006),
in Washington DC, the USPS Board of Governors approved $101 million
to fund design and construction of a new co-located (COLOC) Local Processing
Center will replace the current Processing and Distribution Center (P&DC)
which was constructed in 1966.The new U.S. Postal Service Local Processing
Center and Vehicle Maintenance Facility will also include a Regional
Distribution Center. The facility will consolidate parcel and bundle
distribution. The network facility will allow savings by consolidation
of Standard parcels, First-Class parcels and Priority parcels.
|
May 04, 2006 -
Update: Class-Action
EEO Complaint Initiated for Disabled Veterans
- "The Postal Service appears to have had an unlawful policy regarding
disabled veterans. In short, the USPS would require any person requesting
disabled veteran preference to bring in medical records unconnected
to the claimed disability. It is this overbroad demand for records that
gives rise to the claim. When applicants took exams, they would be given
a form that warned them to get their medical records ready. The form
told them they would be required to provide complete medical records
for the preceding 24 months. The request was not limited to records
related to the claimed disability, but was for all medical records of
all types." |
May 04, 2006 -
Members of Congress
Criticize Postal Service in Consolidation Process -
In a letter
dated, May 1, 2006, 19 members of Congress expressed serious concerns
about the way in which the Postal Service is proceeding in its consolidation
plans and asked the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to determine
if the USPS consolidation plans are in line with previous GAO recommendations
regarding the consolidation process. The members of Congress join other
top Senators and House members who have made previous similar requests
to the GAO.
May 04, 2006 -
Aberdeen postal matters to be discussed at public
hearing - "A
public hearing will take place in Aberdeen to discuss Hub City postal
matters, according to South Dakota’s congressional delegation. The delegation
said in a press release that its request for such a hearing has been
granted. No date has been set for the meeting. A spokeswoman for the
U.S. Postal Service said a meeting is being discussed, but could offer
no further details. She was away from her office Wednesday. The U.S.
Postal Service has conducted two studies of postal service in the Aberdeen
area. It wants to determine whether it would be more efficient to do
some mail processing now done in Aberdeen at a larger facility in Huron."
May 04, 2006
Sioux City Mayor optimistic after postal
meeting
Letter carrier
suspended in theft probe
Letter
Carrier Charged With Burning U.S. Mail
Postal workers deliver for cyclist's 150-mile ride to fight MS
Postal
union rejects Toms River food drive
GiftCertificates.com Chosen by the USPS for eAwards Program
Storm sends postal worker to Cedar Park
Mail
carrier delivers aid
May 03, 2006 -
USPS
Presentation on the Evolutionary Network Development (PDF) -
On April 28, 2006, the United States Postal Service presented an informal,
off-the-record description of the Evolutionary Network Development optimization
and simulations models and some simulation model outputs related to
the Bridgeport CT AMP decision reflected in USPS Library Reference N2006-1/5.
This Library Reference consists of copies of the presentation slides
that formed the basis for the Postal Service’s presentation.
May 03, 2006 -
Postman change envelops neighborhood feelings -
"Popular
postal carrier Daniel "Danny" Cervantes has had his Ahwatukee route
changed, much to the consertnation of a group of residents who are trying
to overturn the decision. The Postal Service changed the route of a
beloved postal carrier who has served a small group of streets for nearly
18 years. Residents say it will take another 18 years to build such
a bond and they want Cervantes back. The U.S. Postal Service has told
the residents through a spokeswoman that the change is final and not
up for discussion.
May 03, 2006 -
NALC President Young's Message: Dominating the Game (PDF) -"Teamwork
in both the inside and outside roles of the union starts with organizing:
An amazing 92 percent of city letter carriers voluntarily belong to
NALC, making us the best organized open shop union in the land."
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May 03, 2006 -
Consumer Alert: Ads That Look Like Bills - The U.S. Postal Inspection
Service is conducting a review of Listing Corp., a company whose mailed
marketing pitches look like domain-name invoices. When the mail carrier
delivered what looked like a Web-domain-related bill for $60 from a
company called Listing Corp. last year, the San Diego chapter of the
American Society for Industrial Security immediately sent in the money.
The document, sent via the U.S. Postal Service, was actually an advertisement
for Listing Corp.'s services. For an annual fee of $60, the company
said, it would submit the nonprofit's Web site to 20 unspecified major
search engines and later e-mail a quarterly "search engine position
and ranking report.
May 03, 2006 -
Lost in
the mail - Rural Carrier Hoarded 3200
pieces of mail
- The U.S. Postal Service
has a rich history of making sure the mail gets delivered even in the
harshest conditions, but now it's trying to figure out why one rural
mail carrier hoarded thousands of pieces of mail from her delivery route
since December. "We're talking about approximately 2,000 pieces of first-class
mail and about 1,200 pieces of standard mail, which is bulk business
mail," said postmaster Mark Lotocki. A postal service spokesman isn't
sure if any charges will be brought against the postal worker, but officials
say the mail carrier is no longer employed by the postal service.
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May 03, 2006 -
UPS Store, Mail Boxes Etc. franchisees to demonstrate - The
UPS Store franchisees from across the United States will picket the
United Parcel Service shareholder meeting in Wilmington, Delaware Thursday
morning over issues related to multiple lawsuits filed against the world's
largest consumer shipping and packaging network. More than 450 franchisees
who own Mail Boxes Etc. stores and The UPS Stores have filed three lawsuits
in California. In separate complaints, the franchisees accused UPS of
intentional misrepresentation, concealment and breach of contract, intentionally
failing to disclose performance and financial data in addition to multiple
violations of franchisee laws among other allegations.
May 03, 2006
Minooka tries to address postal issue
Weighing the junk mail - Man collects 200
pounds in one year
CTO partners with USPS
to promote US passports
New Orleans Re-Opens as Market for Periodicals:
Catalogs Still Banned
May 02, 2006 - Class-Action EEO
Complaint Initiated for Disabled Veterans
According to Hill vs Potter
Clarence Hill filed a class complaint alleging that the Postal
Service discriminated against him and all disabled veteran applicants
by making improper pre-employment medical inquiries.
From Postal Reporter reader:
"Any disabled veteran who has received
a call in notice from the USPS and has submitted their medical records
at the interview or before. This is a direct violation of the
ADA
Any disabled veteran who has received a call in notice since 1992 should
contact Clarence Hill to join in the class. Any veteran who knows a
veteran who has applied with the USPS please pass the word along. "
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May 02, 2006 -
Man
robs West Virginia Post Office, escapes in Postmaster's vehicle.
U.S. postal inspectors say the robbery happened at about 3:45 p.m. Monday.
That's when police say a man walked into the post office with a gun
and held the postmaster at gunpoint. Officers say he escaped the post
office, after stealing the postmaster's personal vehicle.
May 02, 2006
Postal Worker recognized
for 25 years of service
Crystal meth fails to arrive Express Mail
Japan Post to have more employees after privatization
RR Donnelley Adds Tracking Capabilities
To Co-Mailing
May 01, 2006 -
House has yet to name postal reform negotiators
"House members
working to advance a Postal Service overhaul bill continue to put off
naming conferees to negotiate a compromise that will meet the White
House's approval. The House passed its bill in July, but a veto threat
has stymied the bill as White House aides push lawmakers to eliminate
provisions that were part of both the Senate and House bills. Senate
conferees were appointed last February, just after that chamber passed
the legislation." House Government
Reform Committee Chairman Tom Davis, R-Va. said the recent administration
staffing changes have stalled the discussions between the Senate conferees,
House members and White House staff. |
May 01, 2006 -
How Have
High Gas Prices Changed Your Life?
Rob from Kentucky hopes the government can provide some relief soon:
“I am a rural letter carrier in Kentucky and my route is 122 miles long
and I am now paying $33.00 a day just to carry my route. We receive
41cents per mile, but that doesn't even cover my gas and all of my car
repairs. I carry my route 5 days a week so that means I am spending
660.00 dollars a month in gas alone. We need relief in a major way.”
Jenny Hannuksela, an Illinois rural mail carrier said “When I first
started here it was around $7 a day to run my route, which is 64 miles.
Now I'm up to $20 per day. I get reimbursed, but at this point it barely
pays for (the trip).”
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May 01, 2006 -
APWU San Diego: USPS National Reassessment
Process Info Updated
- From San Diego Local President
Rick Cornelius: "The NRP web site is updated with the latest documents
from San Diego www.apwu197.org. The class action Article 37 case
filed on the issue of 23 [letter carriers] LC's and 1 [mail handler]
MH coming in as FTR's bypassing over 100 PTF's will be posted
in the near future. |
May 01, 2006
Consultant
Recycles USPS Postal Address Validation Website |
Letter: USPS Should Add 'Deceased' Card Similar to NCOA Postcard
PRC: No Changes to Bank One NSA
Delivering Hope
Post office 'bomb' just a forgotten box
New Orleans: Through rain and debris, mail will be delivered
Postal carrier mails in last day
County postal carrier retires
A Weighty Issue
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