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News from Postalblog
PMG Potter Names
New Chief Postal Inspector And Finance VP
Arbitrator Reassigns
Postal Supervisor For Violating Workplace Violence Policy
NALC Branch VP: Limited Duty
Carriers Suffer The Ultimate Harm
Gamefly Accuses
USPS Of Preferential Treatment For Netflix and Blockbuster
USPS Seeks
Suppliers For Electric Vehicle Conversion of LLVs
USPS Seeking Contractor To
Create New ID Cards For Postal Employees
USPS Cancels
Associate Supervisor Program
San Francisco
Passes First ‘Do Not Mail’ Resolution in Nation
Oakland APWU
Urges Congress To Investigate The Postal Service
PMG Potter Says
Reducing Delivery From Six to Five Days Could Save USPS $3.5
Billion Annually
USPS Closing Six Districts, Eliminating 1,400 EAS Positions
And Offering Early Retirement
USPS To ‘Outsource’ Change-of-Address Program?
Postmaster Setting Unrealistic
Expectations May Serve As Grounds To File EEO Complaint
USPS OIG’S Review Of Postal Managers
Unnecessary Purchases
Statement of
NALC President On Compliance with National Agreement
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Let Let me make the following clear to one and all, including
Postal Service management at headquarters and in the field,
and all letter carriers, at every level in the union and in
every post office: No one, at any level, has any authority
to amend or violate the national contract, period.
PMG Potter
memo on honoring contract (PDF).
It is up to each one of us to make sure that the changes we
bring to the organization are changes for the better,” Potter
recently wrote. Respecting and protecting the provisions of
the collective-bargaining agreements will help us to do that
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NALC: There Are No Plans
To Eliminate Six-Day Delivery
USPS: Declining Mail Volume Leads to Route Adjustments
Report: Employment
of Veterans in the U.S. Postal Service - FY 2007
PRC Annual Report:
Postal Execs Compensation
USPS Says It
Needs To Eliminate 9,200 City Carrier Routes in FY 2009
Postmaster, Supervisor Groups
Reject Pay Freeze (PDF)
Tight Times Strain Postmasters
USPS, APWU Reach Tentative Agreement On Four-Day Workweeks
USPS Wants Commercial Outdoor Advertising On Its Property
USPS to Implement
Two Tour Initiative Nationwide
Re: Postal Employees Ordered to Stop Offering
First-Class Mail
PMG Urges Leaders of Employee Organizations To Work With USPS
Flashback: Postal 1992 VER Cost $1.01 Billion
USPS To Launch
Nationwide Program To Track Revenue Performance Of Window
Clerks
Postmaster General
Cautions of Perfect Economic Storm
Connecticut
Congressman Presses Postal Service for Answers Regarding Meriden
Route Changes
Appeals Court Upholds Firing
Of Postal Carrier For Unsafe Driving
GAO: New Delivery Performance
Measures Could Enhance Postal Managers’ Pay for Performance
Program
Postal Manager Demoted Over Violation of NALC Contract?
Postal Worker's Self-Defense Claim Can't Save Job
NAPS Challenges USPS Network Plan, Questions USPS Outsourcing
USPS Posts $1.1 Billion Loss For Third Quarter
House Passes FERS Sick Leave Legislation
GAO: Data Needed
to Assess the Effectiveness of USPS Outsourcing
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Watchdogs
question US Post Office outsourcing system
USPS Names Two
Postal Execs To New VP Slots
USPS Releases
Details Of Voluntary Early Retirement Offer
Burrus: Employees Would Be Best Served by Postponing Early-Out
Decisions
NALC: Young Urges Congress to Reject Study
for 5-Day Delivery
USPS Early Out Offer Excludes ETs - No Cash Incentives
PMG Potter Announces
Reorganization At USPS Headquarters
House Committee
Approves Study On Ending Saturday Mail Delivery
EEOC: Postal Worker Was Not Provided
Smoke-Free Vehicle
ASFM-100 Work Awarded Back to Clerk Craft at Trenton P&DC
Court of Appeals Keeps Alive 14-Year-Old Lawsuit Against NALC
Postal Service Selects First-Ever Vice President of Sustainability
Video: Postal Workers Protest Terrorism On The Job
EEOC Rules USPS Must Process
Class Action Complaint For Rehab Postal Employees
OPM Submits
Proposal To Create Short-Term Disability Insurance Program
To Err Is Not Human for Demoted
Postal Supervisor
USPS Resolves
Dispute With Unions Over Computer Security Rules
USPS Selects Former Halliburton
Executive As New CIO
Big Pay Increases Approved For Top Postal Service Officers
USPS Retail Cost Cutting (PDF)
click
here to read the award (PDF)
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A Short Comparison of USPS Contracts With APWU, NPMHU, NALC
and NRLCA
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Flat
Sequencing System (FSS) Strategy
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November 30, 2009
Postal Projections for 2010 Spark Predictable – and
Misplaced – Alarm
The Postal Service’s Integrated Financial Plan for Fiscal Year 2010 projects losses of $7.8
billion, and major mailers and USPS executives — along with some members of
Congress — have pointed to this grim forecast as evidence that the Postal
Service needs a major overhaul in order to avoid collapse. Earlier this decade,
a similar rationale was repeated often to justify postal “reform,” and dire
predictions culminated in the enactment of the Postal Accountability and
Enhancement Act of 2006 (PAEA). The opening line then was that “the Postal
Service must adopt a new business model.” Over the protestations of the APWU,
the predictors of doom “succeeded” in passing this dreadful legislation.
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In Rain, in Snow, but Not on Saturdays?
Postmaster General
John Potter, who has tried to contain costs by cutting 40,000 career employees
among other measures, is seeking permission from Congress to reduce mail
delivery from six days a week to five. Does this change make sense or are there
other ways ways to keep the Postal Service from hemorrhaging money?
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Postal
Service gears up for holidays
Postal
Service future gets input from First Coast
Postal employees retire after more than 30 years
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November 29, 2009
The
Shrinking Post
Office
The U.S. Postal Service
loses more money every year. Is there a future for ‘snail mail’? A demoralized
force - With a long-term hiring freeze in place, employees have seen hours
reduced, delivery routes consolidated, and their efficiency meticulously
monitored by a management desperate to cut labor costs. “Many of our carriers
hate coming into work,” says Robert McLennan, a union leader in Buffalo. Postal
workers are “frenzied with worry,” the Postal Service said such reactions are
not surprising, considering the circumstances. “The stress and tension are out
there,” says Postal Service spokeswoman Karen Mazurkiewicz. “Everyone is under a
magnifying glass.” |
Letter From Postmaster: Tie part of uniform
The
writer failed to mention that he receives money from the Postal Service to
purchase that tie. It is a part of the uniform (for which he received full
payment) mandated by the Postal Service that his union agreed to at the national
level.
Letter
Carrier: Mandating ties not so bright
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Credit Card
Solicitations on the Decline, USPS Hurting
Stamp of
disapproval: Postal Service considers moving Marysville sort to
Sacramento
Large response
saves post office
Meeting will discuss relocation of Market
Street post office
Postal employees retire after more than 30 years
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November 28, 2009
Norman hotel
delivers home feel for public, postal workers
The U.S.
Postal Center in Norman, which operates the largest hotel in the state, used to
cater only to federal employees and other large groups. Since summer, however,
the hotel has opened its doors to the general public.
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Holidays
get busy for the Postal Service
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November 27, 2009
Residents Speak Out Against Post Office Closures
Everything You Need To Know About Full-Service Intelligent Mail
Discounts
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November 26, 2009
Pittsburgh-Area Postal
Workers Awarded $75 million In Lost Overtime
the United States Postal Service was ordered earlier this
year to pay $75 million in lost overtime to nearly 1,500 Pittsburgh-area union
employees. The money is to cover the overtime pay full- and part-time employees
lost between 1994 and 2004 when the Pittsburgh Processing and Distribution
Center hired casual clerks instead. The largest amount paid to any single
person, according to the postal service, was $85,568. The smallest amount was
$314.59.
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NJ postal
carrier charged with stealing from mail to buy Thanksgiving
dinner items
Ross v.
U.S. Postal Service
USPS 2009
Annual Report (PDF)
USPS 2009
Comprehensive Statement on Postal Operations (PDF)
$50,000 reward for help capturing N.J. post office robbers
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November 24, 2009
New York: Mail carriers protest postmaster's
tactics
Saying
they feared “workplace violence” brought on by an oppressive management style,
about 20 letter carriers picketed outside the Chappaqua post office Monday
afternoon. The protest was sparked by Chappaqua Postmaster Pauline Iaconetti’s
allegedly abusive treatment of postal workers. While a supervisor in White Plains
in 2002, Morton said, Iaconetti was the direct cause of a mass demonstration by
postal workers there.
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November 22, 2009
Coco-crazy town's post office saved
Mail keeps
flowing despite cutbacks, changing times
Former USPS worker indicted on theft charges
November 21, 2009
Ex-postal worker gets 46
months in $20,000 gasoline scam
a
part-time letter carrier based at the Market Square Post Office was also jailed
for participating in an effort to smuggle 57 pounds of marijuana through the
mails. In the gas scheme, Gilbert or an accomplice would go to a gas station and
pump gas for customers, using the government cards and selling the gas at half
the posted price. The scheme ran from December 2006 through fall 2008.
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USPS
still missing out this holiday season
Illinois man gets four months for restraining postal worker with
ax handle
Postal Service backs down on
SF closures
Danville mail truck shooter indicted
November 20, 2009
Postal
Service calls for cuts of 40 Kalamazoo area jobs, $2.5 million
Syracuse: Mail switch
reaction mixed
Hickory: Opinions divided
over potential postal service shift
Blizzard of catalogs stuff
America's mailboxes: Merry mail or holiday headache?
UPS vs. FedEx vs. USPS. Which is best?
Congresswoman intervenes in
Key West post office staffing reductions
Former Kentucky Postal Employee charged with stealing items from the mail
BioDefense safeguards the nation’s mail streams
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November 19, 2009
Can the Postal Service be
Saved?
Illinois
Democratic Rep. Danny Davis, a member of the Congressional subcommittee that
oversees the Postal Service (and, until recently, its chairman), told
CBSNews.com in an interview that the agency "is between a rock and a hard
place." "It's just not generating the money that you need in order to keep
operating," he said. Davis said he was open to cutting Saturday service -
perhaps on a rolling basis, so that certain communities would lack Saturday
delivery once or twice a month - as well as loosening the health benefit
requirements. He also backed a government bailout for the embattled agency if
that's what it takes to keep it afloat.
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Some Post Office Retail Units Closed or Closing Early On Nov. 25 & 27
Some of the Post Offices will be
closed for retail services on Wednesday, Nov. 25 & Friday, Nov. 27. Regular mail delivery will be
unaffected by this temporary change. However, in some cities and towns there
will be no outgoing mail collected from either the blue mail collection boxes or
the Post Office lobbies and access to P.O. Boxes will be unavailable.
Notification of the adjusted hours is posted at each Post Office that will be
closed or closing early,
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USPS OIG Audit : NY Metro Area Has Not Effectively
Implemented Financial Controls
- over stamp accountabilities,
expenditures, and financial accounting and reporting. This occurred because unit
managers were either unaware of requirements or did not provide sufficient
attention to the financial controls. Further, area and district managers could
have improved oversight of local purchases and refunds. We identified similar
issues at 22 randomly selected sites conducted in the New York Metro Area over
the past 3 years in support of audits of the U.S. Postal Service’s financial
statements. As a result, New York Metro Area post offices have an increased risk
of losing cash, accountable items, and revenue without detection; and misstating
financial records. We identified more than $100,000 in monetary impact for
questioned costs and nearly $400,000 in non-monetary impact for assets and
accountable items at risk. |
The End of Mail? (Just
Kidding)
If this
forecast turns out to be right, then by 2015, single piece mail will drop from
the 20% of volume today to around 15%.The Postal Service will need to downsize
its retail network, collection efforts, and origination sortation, and
transportation from origin to destination facilities to what is needed to handle
almost a third less volume. The destination sortation network would require some
modest trimming as well, reflecting the decline in single piece mail. Finally, in
2015 the Postal Service would be delivering about the same volume of mail to
more households. With delivery density declining, the Postal Service's carriers
would likely find themselves delivering less mail over their workday. Today's
delivery optimization efforts would need to be intensified to deal with lower
density.
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USPS Blocks Popular
'Dear Santa' letters to North Pole, Alaska
TheU.S. Postal Service, citing security and privacy concerns of children, will no
longer forward "Dear Santa" letters to the Alaska town of North Pole, putting in
jeopardy the town's 55-year-old volunteer letter-answering effort by the town.
The concern is that names, addresses and other private information about
small children could get into the wrong hands. Postal Service officials note
that a postal worker last year in Maryland recognized a volunteer in the
agency's Operation Santa program as a registered sex offender.
USPS
stops Santa letters after sex offender responds to kids
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Progress with the Postal Act of 2006
(PDF)
USPS COO Pat Donahoe's PowerPoint presentation
given yesterday at MTAC meeting
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APWU:
Arbitrator Rules 'Separation of Casuals' Language in Article 12
Applies Only to Casuals in the Impacted Craft
JC Penney
to stop publishing 'big book' catalog
London mail sorting could move to Lexington
Carrier charged with
fraudulently obtaining disability pay in excess of $400,000
Chicago Mail Delivery Now Ranks
among Nation’s Best
Nebraska Rural Carrier Named USPS
National Safe Driver of Year
South Bend man
charged with threatening postal carrier
Postal work is no walk in the park
The nitty-gritty
of Open Season options
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November 18, 2009
Mayor of North
Pole, Alaska says The Grinch (USPS) has stolen Christmas
Feds charge Danville mail truck shooter
New USPS HR
Website Launches Today
Health Care
Reform: The Good, Bad & Ugly
Postal
workers: Consolidation may slow mail service
Mail found stashed in dryer vents
NPR:
Weighing Postal Service's Future
Update on
post office closings process (PDF)
'Save Our Service': Postal workers fight for
their jobs
USPS Energy Use Down 9% From 2005 to 2008
UPS sees holidays slightly busier this year
Older locals
want lower East Side post office to stay
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November 17, 2009
APWU:
Those Who Tell Workers to Sacrifice Fail to Understand Postal Realities
I
suggest that those who are unfamiliar with the detailed contractual agreements
between postal unions and the Postal Service should refrain from speaking about
issues they know so little about.
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Mail
Carrier found Drunk, Inside a Residence
Police
arrested a mail carrier after she was found drunk inside a residence while on
the job in Marion earlier this month, authorities said Tuesday. Kristine A.
Pflughaupt, 46, of Marion, was charged with public intoxication Nov. 3 after she
was found sitting on the kitchen floor of a house at 260 Sixth Avenue, eating
leftover noodles from Marie O’Kelly’s refrigerator.
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USPS To End
Saturday Service?
5-day delivery: Depends on your perspective
APWU: Arbitrator Rules Maximization Provision
Only Applies to Work Hours of PTFs
'Save Our Service': Postal workers fight for their jobs
Calif.: Marysville mail center could close
Former postal worker sentenced
Direct Mail Gone Wrong
2 South Jersey post offices begin sales of greeting cards
3 Lansing-area post offices could close, consolidate
USPS OIG: Betting on the Postal Service?
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November 16, 2009
Postal
Service Ends 2009 with $3.8 Billion Loss
The U.S.
Postal Service (USPS) today filed its 2009 fiscal year-end financial results,
showing a net loss of $3.8 billion for the year — despite cost-cutting efforts
resulting in $6 billion in cost savings and a $4 billion reduction in required
payments for retiree health benefits. Cost savings reflect a reduction of 40,000
career USPS employees as well as reductions in overtime hours, transportation
and other costs.
Accounting change boosts USPS bottom line
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USPS
Executive Officer Compensation For Fiscal Year 2009
PMG Potter:
$734,650- Salaries for
executive level officers were frozen for calendar year 2009. The salary amounts
vary from FY09 and FY08 because USPS salaries are based on the calendar year and
not the fiscal year. Therefore, FY08 salary numbers include a portion of 2007
salary figures. In addition, the values in the above table for Mr. Walker are as
of February 27, 2009, which was the end of his tenure as CFO. Joseph Corbett
assumed the position of Chief Financial Officer as of January 31, 2009, and
therefore did not earn FY08 salary. Robert Bernstock assumed the position of
President, Shipping and Mailing Services, as of June 30, 2008.
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Summer Sale Boosted Catalog Mailings, Paper Exec Says
"The
U.S. Postal Service's recent Summer Sale on Standard Class mail boosted catalog
volume, according to a major paper company executive. Richard D. Willett Jr.,
President and CEO of NewPage, cited the program as a significant factor in the
recently improved outlook for coated paper. “Several of our catalog customers
took advantage of discounted rates on incremental volumes and increased their
Third Quarter mailing volumes by more than 20 percent over prior budgets,” he
said in a presentation to analysts on Tuesday."
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Bremerton Mail Carriers Are
Leaving Sylvan Way Branch
Post office set to close in 2011
Angst at the Postal Service
Charlottesville: Postal workers picket, protest shutdown
Mail center employees rally against job losses
Carl Welser: Just where do I live, anyway?
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November 15, 2009
USPS, UPS, FedEx Express and the RLA
Negotiating under the Railway Labor Act
FedEx Ground and Contract Drivers
Take That, E-Mail
Mom of 'proud soldier' dissatisfied with postal service
November 14, 2009
Postal service, union
officials disagree on delivery day cuts
Carriers
continue to be inaccurately informed that the service will be cut from six to
five days next year, said Dave Bellware, president of Branch 1321 of the
National Association of Letter Carriers representing those working Rocky Mount.
“You can say a lie over and over again, but it doesn’t make it so,” he said.
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APWU: Fact & Fiction: The US Postal Service
Fiction:
Postal rates drive mail volume. FACT: While postal rates are a factor in
determining mail volume, they are not decisive. Fiction: The Postal Service is a
model of equal employment opportunity. FACT: The hiring process for employment
in USPS craft assignments is transparent and is based on objective factors, such
as test scores that reflect an applicant’s knowledge and skills.
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Postal Service looking to cut costs in southeastern Kentucky
Final rally for Elmwood Post Office today in Syracuse
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November 13, 2009
Potter insists on five-day delivery as part of Postal Service reform
John Potter, postmaster general and
CEO of the US Postal Service, used the open session of the
November 13 USPS Board of Governors meeting to press again for
structural reform of the agency, insisting that real reform must
reduce the number of delivery days from six to five per week.
The Postal Service reduced work hours by 115 million, the
equivalent of reducing the number of full-time employees by
65,000, Corbett said. The USPS has targeted further work-hour
reductions for next year of about 80 million to 90 million.
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NY Congressman rips PMG, requests face-to-face meeting on Elmira move
U.S. Rep. Eric Massa wants to meet
with U.S. Postmaster General John Potter to discuss unanswered
questions about moving mail-processing equipment and jobs from
Elmira to Rochester.
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Postal Service reassigns DUI employee, but questions unanswered
The US Postal Service says it's
taken action on a letter
carrier who lost his driver's license after a 2nd drunk driving
arrest, and was then being driven around his route by other post
office workers. Communications Programs Specialist Al DeSarro
told News First 5 that the USPS "found other productive work for
that letter carrier." The USPS contract with letter carriers does
require the postal service to make every effort to reassign a
driver who's driver's license was suspended or revoked. DeSarro
said this situation might be re-evaluated with the letter
carrier union.
Postal Service doesn’t keep track of DUI records of it’s drivers? Umm… What?
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Not your usual lunch break: Minnesota letter carrier helps free pilot from
plane wreckage
Postal Customer Satisfaction Score Reaches Four-Year High
Your Mail Actually Safe in Your Mailbox?
Mailbox relocation spurred by vandals leaves neighbors without their mail
West Sunbury woman pleads guilty to Postal
Service theft
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November 12, 2009
USPS bars NIOSH from returning to
the Denver P & DC?
Postal employees in Denver
requested NIOSH to investigate the flat mail sorting machines in
Denver and NIOSH initiated an investigation in April, 2009.
Denver FSM 100 flat sorting machine workers have recently had an
extremely high rate of injuries. The machines are poorly
designed and ergonomically unsafe. There has been severe
understaffing of the machines causing stress and overwork.In the
summer, NIOSH contacted a lead representative of the workers who
had originally asked NIOSH to come to the facility. The NIOSH
investigators wanted to return to the Denver facility and bring
with them an industrial psychologist who wanted to do a job
satisfaction survey of the workers. In September NIOSH informed
the workers that the USPS Western Area Safety Manager is
“opting not to participate in the survey that we had suggested.”
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Supreme Court reviewing former Postal Employee's Discrimination
case
“When your supervisor grabs you and
tells you he’s going to blow your brains out and you get fired,
we know that in America that isn’t right,” Wills also claims
that USPS fired him based on absences that had been approved by
the Family Medical Leave Act.
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PRC Investigates Suspended Post Offices
(PDF)
PRC
initiated this public inquiry to develop further information on
the status of suspended offices and the Postal Service practice
of suspending offices for extended periods without affording the
public the rights guaranteed by 39 U.S.C. 404(d).
"The
Commission is concerned that post office customers throughout
the nation do not have access to local post offices and their
services due to suspensions. It is evident that several post
offices have been suspended for a number of years, and the
Postal Service apparently has taken no effective action to
reopen or close such offices."
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KY: Paducah postal worker gets 22 years probation on theft charge
Congressman skeptical about cuts in mail
delivery
More Americans Are Paying Their Bills Online
Fire at store destroys Maine post office
How Does Labor Law Matter for the USPS?
Mail thief caught on tape in Southwest Las
Vegas
Mishawaka, IN man
arrested after assaulting mail carrier
Post office preparing for the holiday rush
Crowd wants postal station to stay open
Charlottesville: Postal Service might move
mail services
St. Louis: All area post offices will remain
open
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November 11, 2009
Small-Parcel Shippers to Get USPS Rate Breaks
Fort Payne postman accused of mail theft
November 10, 2009
Congressman Paul Hodes Demands
Answers in Postal Service Fraud
Congressman Paul Hodes
called on the United States Postal Service to present a plan to
fully reimburse postal workers for the wages they have lost as a
result of managers manipulating their timecards. Several weeks
ago, an investigation uncovered a scheme at five New Hampshire
postal stations to manipulate workers’ timecards, and the
individuals responsible for these actions have yet to be held
accountable.
Somersworth NH NALC Rep claims time sheets were altered
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How Would You Make Over the U.S. Postal
Service?
Everyone agrees that the U.S. Postal Service could do better.
With bankruptcy looming, there's a consensus that big changes
need to happen, most involving cutting staff and scaling back
services. But what if we could unleash the creative ingenuity of
entrepreneurs to improve the post office? We asked Inc. 500 CEOs
how they would approach the problem. Here are some of their
responses.
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Truck carrying mail involved in crash that kills 4
Some mail delivery may be delayed by Ida
Police: Teens shot paint balls at letter carrier
Missing mail prompts investigation
Bangor Postmaster Waives Preliminary
Hearing
Champaign post office cuts hours
Refurbishing old equipment saves USPS almost $70 million
Driving the Customer Away
Special Delivery
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November 9, 2009
Job
Cuts or Wage Cuts
Alan Robinson, President of Direct
Communications Group: "...given the difficulty of selling
eliminating long-standing contract provisions to their members,
postal unions and the Postal Service are likely heading toward
an arbitrated contract agreement where an arbitrator will be
asked to make the choice between jobs and compensation."
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150 plants and 400,000 Postal
Employees
On November 5th, former Deputy
Postmaster General Michael Coughlin suggested that the Postal
Service in order to survive must have a much smaller footprint
with possibly 150 plants and 400,000 employees. There is one
major drawback to implementing a 150 plant Postal Service, which
is greater than the logistical and management challenge of
shrinking the network; the elimination of 200,000 postal jobs at
a rate between 20,000 and 40,000 per year in an implementation
plan. Shrinking the network at that rate would create a far
louder political outcry than even the first round of base
closings. Shrinking the network at that rate would also create
significant severance or early retirement costs and the Postal
Service does not have the cash to pay them.
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OIG:
Disappearing Collection Boxes
So, Who Drew the Short Straw?
November 8, 2009
USPS Board Of Governors Set Agenda For Next Meeting
Local post office concerns eased
Health Benefits Open Season
Flexible Spending Accounts 2009 Open
Season: November 9 thru December 27
Christmas Pay Procedures for Rural
Carriers
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November 7, 2009
APWU President criticizes USPS for lack of diversity in executive staff
In a letter to the Postal Service
Board of Governors, APWU President William Burrus wrote he is
“deeply troubled” by the lack of diversity in the USPS executive
staff, and said, “Although the nation has made significant
progress toward equality, it appears that the USPS remains mired
in the Dark Ages.” Burrus wrote the letter after receiving a
copy of Postal Service’s Official Organizational Chart.
USPS Official Organizational Chart
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Burrus Letter
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CSRS vs FERS:
Somebody's Got it Made!
35 Elmira Postal Workers receive notice
eNAPUS: Postal
Subcommittee Trolls for Data on New Postal Products (PDF)
Great
Falls Couple Mad After Post Office Stops Delivering Mail
Postal Service holds public meetings on closing offices in Syracuse
Feds weigh impact of
new FERS sick leave benefit
When the post office
leaves
November 6, 2009
Postal Service eyes options beyond layoffs and buyouts
Employee layoffs are not the only
solution to digging the agency out of debt, said Rep. Stephen
Lynch, D-Mass., chairman of the House Oversight and Government
Reform's federal workforce subcommittee. "It would be a
mistargeting of our problems to look at the backs of our
employees." But Lynch expressed disappointment over the agency's
consolidation and cost-savings efforts thus far, particularly
because recent buyout offers have not generated enough employee
interest to reduce the Postal Service workforce.
At Hearing on Postal Service future, hope is in short supply
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and streaming video of yesterday's hearing |
Mobile post office, itself a stopgap, is now gone
Congressman says Must Explain closing of Philadelphia L&DC
Family of murdered mail truck driver searches for answers
November 5, 2009
Postal Service: Rumors of death exaggerated
Hickory: Postal service sets date for public
forum
Albany: Post office gets big backing
How to avoid drowning in Open Season's flood
of choices
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November 4, 2009
GAO: USPS Needs To Continue Making Cuts In Its Workforce And
Network Costs -
USPS has
asked Congress to change the restrictions established by PAEA so
that it could offer new nonpostal products and services such as
banking and insurance. Allowing USPS to compete more broadly
with the private sector could lose money, and fair competition
issues would need to be considered. Thus, in addition to its
revenue-generation initiatives, USPS will need to continue
making significant reductions in its workforce and network
costs.
House Subcommittee Holds Hearing to Examine Postal Service
Revenue-Generation Initiatives
- On Thursday,
November 5, 2009 at 10:00am the Subcommittee on Federal
Workforce, Postal Service, and the District of Columbia will
hold a hearing entitled, “More than Stamps: Adapting the Postal
Service to a Changing World.” The purpose of the hearing is
to examine revenue-generation initiatives recently undertaken by
the Postal Service in order to further address the agency’s
ongoing financial challenges.
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USPS
announces 2010 shipping prices
In addition
to an overall price increase of 3.3 percent, on average, for
Priority Mail, there will be new prices for Express Mail, Global
Express Guaranteed, Express Mail International, Priority Mail
International, Parcel Select and Parcel Return Service, also
effective Jan. 4. Prices for First-Class Mail, Standard Mail,
Parcel Post and other mailing services products will not change
in 2010, with the cost of a First-Class Mail stamp remaining at
44 cents.
Details of the new rates (PDF) |
Burrus Update: Caught Like a Burglar With
the Goods in Hand
The union’s challenge to Postmaster
General Potter to set the wages of mail-processing employees at
an amount that is less than the worksharing discounts major
mailers enjoy has generated several flawed responses by mailing
industry officials, APWU President William Burrus reports in an
Update for union members.
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Who could replace Potter?
It has been made quite clear by the
Board of Governors Chairman Carolyn Gallagher that Postmaster
General Jack Potter will not be leaving anytime soon. The
question is still exists - who could replace Potter?
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Postal worker found drunk in mail truck
The
Future of the Postal Sector |
Eight Challenges for a Postal Business Model
FERS Sick Leave Cure: Rumor vs.
Reality
Child Support Company
Sued By U.S. Postal Service
Pitney Bowes Asks -
What’s next for the USPS?
Mail Truck Rollover Kills Driver in Nevada
Are
19 L.A. communities losing their U.S. Post Offices?
Hearings scheduled on Albany NY area post office closings
Congressman seeks to save Green Bay mail processing center
from move to Oshkosh
Local family battles post office over shredded death
certificate
A perfect fit for postal ads
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November 3, 2009
Postal carrier charged with littering after dumping mail
Post office changes routes in recession
Mail
theft on the rise in Las Vegas
Consolidation proposed for Kinston mail service
Letter to the Editor: Wrong to close efficient postal center
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November 2, 2009
Family: Post office job pressures led to threats
This is a case of a good man driven to obsession by the
treatment he received at work. He is really just a cool guy who
is very creative," Henry David said. "This difficulty and pain
at work has been going on for at least two years. He
disintegrated, and the obsession took control. The post office
system and management style, he just couldn't shake it off.
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Are There Other Viable Alternatives for
6-Day Delivery Operations?
In these challenging times,
reducing the cost of delivery operations — one of the Postal
Service’s largest expenses — could save millions. One option the
Postal Service is considering is to discontinue Saturday city
and rural delivery and collection services |
Most TSP funds
slip in October
Dead letter: The world's ailing
postal services
Smith Electric Vehicles to partner with AM General on USPS EV
It's 3 p.m.; do you know where your postman is?
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November 1, 2009
5 Minutes Or Less
Dealing with lines and the people
who are in them is the subject Manager, Customer Service
Operations, Alice VanGorder discusses in the latest segment of
“Talkin’ Retail.” VanGorder reminds retail associates that the
Postal Service wants to limit a customer’s time in line to no
more than 5 minutes. “That’s our standard, that’s our goal,” she
says, adding there are several ways retail locations can reduce
time in line.
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Pricing Volume Mail
Postal Service: Study backs consolidation to Richmond
Burrus:
The Challenge: Postal Wages and Discounts
After
37 years, Lee County postal worker cancels last stamp
Ukiah postmaster wrapping
up 35-year career
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October 30, 2009
Georgia Postmaster ordered to
leave office under criminal investigation
Allegations involve
violating the Privacy Act - Jerry Schafer, who
was in charge of all postal operations in the city, since has
sought to retire voluntarily, but that retirement would not
preclude charges being brought against him later, said Sam Montalvo, a public information officer for the postal service’s
Office of Inspector General. Montalvo described the alleged
criminal matter as “misuse of postal government information,
which is a violation of the Privacy Act.”
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The Reinterpretation of William Burrus
Many postal workers have jumped to
the defense of APWU president William Burrus as a result of my
article,
Mathematically Challenged: Burrus Proposal Doesn’t Add Up for
USPS. But if many of these defenders are correct, they
should be angry at Burrus for garbling the message and
distracting people from the real issue.
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E-mail to save snail mail?
Wyandanch post office robbed at gunpoint
Grade Your Government:
USPS
Mailman pleads not guilty to killing jogger
USPS Petitions
Against Local Rent Increase
Ukiah postmaster wrapping
up 35-year career
Mail carrier wouldn’t pick up ballots
Postal carrier made change that kept mail
from Chesapeake couple
MS: Fondren post office boxes burglarized
Arrest made in robbery of St. Louis letter carrier
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October 29, 2009
Retiring
Postal Employee Pulls Gun on Postmaster
The main post office in Albany was
shut down Thursday afternoon when a retiring employee pulled a
gun on his boss. "We are locked down," said a Postal Service
employee. "We had an emergency and we are locked down." Just
after 12:30, a 52-year-old man, who's about to retire,
confronted postmaster Ron Bradley in the back parking lot of the
post office. Bradley was in his car and told police the mail
handler pulled a gun on him. Updated:
Postal worker pulls gun on Postmaster
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APWU:
Postal Service Relies on Incomplete Data, Discriminates Against
Underserved Communities
-An analysis of the
postal stations and branches being considered for closure shows
that the USPS study process “discriminates against communities
with high percentages of low-income, minority and
transit-dependent residents,” according to recent testimony
submitted to the
Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC) by the APWU. In addition,
the union asserts, the Postal Service uses incomplete data to
support its conclusions.
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Victory! FERS Sick-Leave Credit Becomes Law
President Obama signed legislation
Oct. 28 that will allow postal and federal workers who retire
under the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) to receive
credit for sick leave when they retire.
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Rap Song: I'm The Mailman
From PostalReporter
reader: "Two yrs. ago I wrote a rap song called I'm the mailman.
Well last year I finally recorded it and has performed at our
annual holiday party, our state convention, and at a
picnic/rally for Chicago's local #11 union this pass summer. It's a great song and I think everyone that visit this site will
like it."
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Roof collapses at Connecticut PO
NJ Senator wants answers from PMG on Philadelphia L&DC closing
Irrational Pricing at the Postal Service
Police: Suspect Shot at Mailman
Mailman wins $50,000 on 'Millionaire'
Mail carrier charged with delay and destruction of mail
Two postal workers plead guilty in thefts
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October 28, 2009
Congress Must Fix Funding Requirement;
USPS
Must Expand Goals, Burrus Says
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In a follow-up to testimony before a Senate subcommittee,
APWU President William Burrus explored alternatives to
station-and-branch closures, facility consolidations, and
five-day mail delivery — which the Postal Service is
proposing in reaction to a severe financial crisis. Burrus
urged lawmakers to encourage the
USPS
to expand its goals. The Postal Service’s financial
difficulties are caused by three major factors, Burrus
wrote [PDF] Oct 23: the requirement to pre-fund retiree
healthcare costs; the nation’s economic crisis, and
excessive workshare discounts.
|Comments (49)
Drew
Aliperto Named As New Pacific Area VP
Postmaster General Jack
Potter has announced the selection of Drew Aliperto as
vice president, Area Operations, for the Pacific Area. He
replaces Michael Daley, who will retire next month after a
37-year career with the Postal Service.
|Comments (63)
APWU Urges Locals to File
OSHA Complaints Over Electrical Hazards
Why doesn't the
USPS
want a price increase in 2010?
October 27, 2009
St. Louis: Postal Carrier Robbed at Gunpoint
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October 26, 2009
Congress in no
rush to cut mail delivery
Despite the U.S. Postal Service's persistent
financial distress, Congress appears unlikely this year to approve the
postmaster general's cost-cutting proposal to eliminate Saturday mail
delivery. Postmaster General John Potter, who proposed five-day delivery in
January, contends that ending Saturday delivery could save his agency up to
$3.5 billion annually. But a concurrent estimate by the Postal Regulatory
Commission put projected savings at $1.9 billion.
|Comments (81)
USPS ‘Incentive’ Program
Results In 19,000 APWU-Craft And 3,000 Mail Handlers Retirements
- Depending on whether they were
eligible for early or regular retirement, employees were required to apply
for retirement by Sept. 25 or express interest by that date. Some employees
can revoke their decisions until the effective date of retirement, so the
final tally could be significantly lower than the 19,738 reported by the
USPS.
|Comments (74)
USPS Policies Threaten
Postal Viability
New Heights – Of Absurdity – In Rate Setting - In
2010, the APWU will return to the bargaining table to determine future
wages, benefits and working conditions. It is expected to be a contentious
round of negotiations, with postal management attempting to recover from the
massive deficits experienced over recent years. Much of the revenue loss
could have been avoided through proper rate-setting, but it is anticipated
that instead of facing their mailing partners, management will turn to the
employees: Those who they praise will be asked for sacrifices so that postal
executives can continue to provide subsidized postage to their friends.
|Comments (41)
Update: Only 18,000 of 30,000 take USPS buyout
This early retirement offer was the most
successful yet of four made by the Postal Service in the past 18 months,
with a response rate of 6.6 percent. Few employees accepted previous offers:
The last offer, which was extended to 147,937 employees in June, was
accepted by just 2,505 employees — less than 2 percent. The previous offer,
which concluded in February, was accepted by 2.3 percent of eligible
employees. Yoerger, the postal spokeswoman, said the agency is hoping to
eliminate 93 million work hours this year, the equivalent of 53,000
full-time employees.
|Comments (104)
USPS Renames Mystery
Shopper Program
USPS has decided to refocus its Mystery Shopper
program to improve desired employee behavior and influence customer loyalty
and brand recognition. “To better align with the program’s objectives and
feedback from the field, the Mystery Shopper Program will become the Retail
Customer Experience”, said Dean Granholm, vice president, Delivery and Post
Office Operations.
|Comments (54)
USPS seeks change in financial reporting rules
The Postal Regulatory Commission's decision
will determine whether the Postal Service has to list its 2009 payment to
the retiree health benefit fund as $5.4 billion, or $1.4 billion, as
intended by the legislation.
|Comments (11)
Grand Forks mailman accused of drunk driving placed on unpaid leave, could
face discipline
Workers Protest Changes At Steubenville Post
Office
USPS Working Out Details for Winter Sale
Mail is the workhorse of b-to-b marketing
Non-profits kick off holiday direct mail
efforts
Feds On a Winning Streak
Former postal worker appeals federal sentence in embezzlement case
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October 25, 2009
California: Postal
officials decide to spare American Canyon branch
More questions than answers at postal
hearing
North Dakota: Grand Forks
mail carrier arrested on DUI charge
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October 24, 2009
Congress should
preserve postal service
Financial burdens forced upon the postal
service and no one else in our nation, public or private, quash any chance
of the postal service staying out of red ink in this economy.
|Comments (50)
Postal facility to close, cost 86 jobs
APWU: Unions Protest As Health Insurers Plot to Kill Reform
Postal worker retires after 40 years
Post Office sees
decline in direct mail service
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October 23, 2009
Congress Approves
FERS Sick-Leave Credit:
"At long last! After a protracted
campaign, postal and federal workers who retire under the
Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) will receive credit
for sick leave when they retire. The new benefit was included
among a number of pay and retirement provisions in a compromise
version of the 2010 Defense Authorization bill, which the
Senate approved 68-29 on Oct. 22."
NPMHU: Victory on FERS Retirement Provision
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Dealing with postal employee's
fear
Steubenville May Lose The
Rest Of Its Postal Processing
Did anyone take the USPS buyouts?
Leave With Pay
Casual exception, Penalty
OT exclusion periods set
Bangor postmaster gets bail reduction
2,000 Coconuts Mailed to Postmaster General
Former postal
worker gets five years probation
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October 22, 2009
Mailers Council
Calls for Legislative Reform to Avoid Postal Service Insolvency
The Mailers Council’s white paper offers these recommendations
for addressing the Postal Service’s problems: The Postal Service
needs to be allowed to reduce its head count; It must be allowed
to close unneeded facilities and consolidate its retail network;
The Postal Service needs greater control over compensation.
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Postal Service
CFO Says More Lobbying Needed
The stop-gap legislation signed by President Obama on Sept.
30 reduced the U.S. Postal Service's $5.4 billion health-care
retiree payment for fiscal 2009 to $1.4 billion. That's a
big help, but the USPS needs permanent change, says Joseph
Corbett, its executive vice president and chief financial
officer... As far as the proposed five-day mail delivery schedule,
Corbett says the groundwork has been laid. Hypothetically,
he says, if no permanent structural changes are made regarding
prepayment of retirees' health-care benefits, the "spotlight
would grow brighter on five-day mail delivery.
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Lawmakers
say Senate health care bill could hit feds with new taxes
Virginia representatives Gerry Connolly and Jim Moran have
taken issue with an excise tax included in health care reform
legislation crafted by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max
Baucus, D-Mont. The provision in the bill would levy a 40
percent tax, beginning in 2013, on the overall value of health
insurance plans that cost more than $8,000 for individuals
and $21,000 for families. Though the tax will be imposed directly
on insurers, most analysts believe employers and consumers
ultimately will bear the price of the tax, as insurance companies
will charge more to make up for the fee.
NAPUS: Finance Committee Health Bill Could Hurt Postmasters
and Federal Workers
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Bangor, Pa.
postmaster charged with soliciting 3 girls, 2 women for sex,
drugs while checking collection boxes
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As the Bangor postmaster drove around checking collection
boxes Tuesday afternoon, he was also looking for sex and propositioned
two women and tried to lure three girls into his car, he allegedly
told police. Gregory George Schlegel was charged Tuesday afternoon
after the women and girls -- ages 12, 13, and 17 -- reported
the incident.
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Lantana
residents send message to PMG Potter - on coconuts
KC woman and son indicted for alleged assault of postal inspector
More Online Retailers Offer Free Shipping
Rethinking the Parcel Market
More Labor Problems at FedEx Ground
USPS OIG Audit Report: Carrier Optimal Routing (COR) System
(PDF)
UK postal workers begin two-day national strike
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