|
Updated: Sunday
November 26, 2006 08:15 AM
|
|
November 27, 2006
-
Post Office
braces for crush of holiday mail
“On Monday you
can start seeing the increase of mail,” Rudy Garcia, officer in
charge of the Del Rio post office said. “You can see your
Christmas cards start coming through and you can see the volume
pick up. Once we get around the 8th, 9th and 10th of December
it’s in full force.”
It peaks generally the last Monday before Christmas, this year
on Dec. 18. Nationally the Postal Service expects to handle an
estimated 280 million cards and letters that day, triple the
normal volume. A couple of days later, the 20th or 21st, the
seasonal siege on the postal service peaks and begins to taper
off a little.
Christmas gift traffic ready to fly |
Heavy
reading arrives in the mail
|
USPS to Hold Press Conference Nov. 28 to Kickoff Holiday Season |
|
November 27, 2006
Postal carriers set goal of 10,000 pounds of food
Tiny post offices fill a niche
'Going Postal' Over Mailboxes Removal?
|
November 26, 2006
Mail Carrier performs duties beyond his appointed round
Michigan: Crash kills postal semi truck
driver
Iowa: Man hit by mail truck has no major
injuries
Mail a valued part of the day for troops
Montana post offices tops in nation again
Neighborhoods welcome old-fashioned mailboxes
Mailboxes vanishing in North Jersey
Homeowner says junk mail is too wasteful,
must be curbed
First-Class Male
Post office prepares for online shoppers
|
November 25, 2006 -
Postal jobs won't ship out
Rejection of proposal leaves
280 jobs safe - The local U.S. Postal Service distribution
center will not move to Mobile, a U.S. Postal Service official
said Friday. The decision means 280 area postal jobs will
stay put, said Joseph Breckenridge, spokesman for the Postal
Service in Northwest Florida. "We do not have any intention
of consolidating the operation in Pensacola with Mobile,"
said Joseph Breckenridge, spokesman for the Postal Service
in Northwest Florida.
|
|
November 25, 2006 -
Postal Handbooks Revised to Reflect Changes of Workplace Investigations
to USPS OIG
- Employee and
Labor Relations Manual (ELM) and Administrative Support Manual
(ASM) Changes From the
November 23, 2006 Postal Bulletin
- Effective immediately, Employee and Labor Relations Manual
(ELM) 665.14, Reporting Violations, is revised to reflect
the requirement to report alleged violations of Postal Service
laws and employee misconduct, including theft of mail, to
the Office of Inspector General. Archive:
APWU Questions Postal Inspection Service Transition to USPS
OIG
|
|
November 25, 2006 -Tax
dollars do support Postal Service
The USPS borrows money from the Federal
Financing Bank (a tax-funded account "loaning" our tax dollars
to federal agencies). A federal account by any other name
is still our tax dollars. I joined the old postal service
in 1962, fresh out of the Marines, and retired in 1985. I
was an officer with the postal workers' union and negotiated
contracts and even lobbied in Washington. I am quite familiar
with postal operations. But, don't fall for the fodder for
public consumption that tax dollars do not benefit the USPS.
They do and always will as long as it is a federal monopoly.
|
|
November 25, 2006 -
Postal employees in Maine celebrate motorcycle stamps
- Postal employees at
the Eastern Maine Processing and Distribution Center in Hampden
celebrated the new American Motorcycles stamps by riding their
bikes to work and taking a photo of the bikes with an enlargement
of the new stamps in the foreground.
|
|
November 25, 2006
Atlanta: Man suspected of robbing
post office killed by police
Rural Free Delivery Postal Museum
Rededicated
Mail early and avoid rush at
post office
|
November 24, 2006
USPS Board of Governors To Meet Dec.5-6, 2006 IN Washington,
D.C
Eagle Rock
post office to undergo full-scale renovation
Postmaster: Lyons
post office not closing
Postman delivers holiday meal
Staff reduction expected at some post offices
Former councilor
wants to sue Rio Rancho post office
Switzerland: Anger at postal reform
Alaska: Bypass mail delays draws complaints
|
November 23, 2006 -
83-Year-Old
Postal Worker Carries On
‘Retire’ not in vocabulary after
50 years of service - Harry Hoover has delivered mail
along the same route since he began working for the Postal
Service in 1962. He has more than a year of unused sick leave
and, as a gift Wednesday, eight hours of administrative leave,
but he doesn’t plan to take time off soon, he said.“I plan
to work until I no longer care if customers’ mail gets delivered,”
he said. After the ceremony, Hoover left to complete his 518-stop
route, just like always.
|
|
November 23, 2006 -
Postal Nurse Charged With Defrauding USPS-
A Postal contract
nurse was indicted on November 14, 2006 of cheating the U.S.
Postal Service out of approximately $64,000 with fake medical
invoices. Janet Ortega, 44, of Daly City, California was indicted
by a federal grand jury on seven counts of felony mail fraud.
|
|
November 23, 2006
Remote Control Mail: Check Your Postal Mail on the Web
|
Mark the Mailman is retiring,
and he'll be missed
Christmas message, postal style
|
November 22, 2006 -
USPS and
Four Postal Unions Agree to Extend Contract Negotiations
-
The Postal Service and its four largest unions have agreed
to extend contract negotiations in a continued effort to reach
negotiated settlements. Contract negotiations have been extended
until midnight Nov. 30 with the NALC, NRLCA and NPMHU.
APWU Negotiations will resume Monday, Nov. 27-
APWU: Contract Talks to Resume After Thanksgiving Weekend
-"Because
we are attempting to break new ground, the final pieces of
an agreement pose difficult challenges," he said. "Despite
intense discussions today, agreement on all of the issues
is still beyond our grasp."
NALC:
"As long as there is any reasonable hope for a negotiated
settlement," President William Young remarked, "we will do
everything in our power to achieve one."
NPMHU Contract
Update #15 -
“With renewed
energy, and perhaps even with a few new ideas, an overall
deal is still possible,” said President Hegarty. “It
therefore only makes sense to continue negotiations until
the parties reach an agreement or reach an actual impasse.”
|
|
November 22, 2006 -
Post Office Problems Still Linger After Carrier Route Adjustments
-
(CT) Many of the citizens objected to the
new routes because their mail was getting delivered late.
According to William F. Cournoyer, manager for post office
operations, one of the problems with the old system was that
many of the postal carriers were collecting too much overtime.
But when asked how much overtime workers are collecting now,
Cournoyer responded with "about the same." Many did not understand
this procedure. Ed Margnelli, owner of the Day Club, was one
of them. Margenlli asked Cournoyer, "If you have too much
overtime, why not hire more workers?" Cournoyer said they
are looking into the possibility of hiring more carriers when
the routes are fixed, but they have labor unions to contend
with.
|
|
November 22, 2006 -
Dog owner charged
with assault of postman
-
A South
Toledo man was charged yesterday with trying to hit a U.S.
Postal Service letter carrier with his car after he became
upset that the carrier pepper-sprayed his dog when the canine
tried to bite him, authorities said.
|
|
November 22, 2006 -
Mail Services opens Washington mail processing facility
- Mail Services Inc.
has expanded its international mail processing network in
response to increased volume and customer demand. MSI, a Baltimore-based
international mailing company, said a new Washington/Dulles
processing facility will handle publications, parcels, direct
mail and corporate mail destined for Canada and locations
worldwide beginning Jan. 2.
|
November 22, 2006 -
USPS 2006 Preliminary Annual Financial Report |
Five-Year Postal Employees Stats At
a Glance
|
|
November 22, 2006
Illness claims
well-known Postal Worker
Postal delay
causes low fund-raiser turnout
Thieves Target
Rural Mailboxes In Boulder County
Postal Inspectors
Raid Hotel
Santa Claus Post Office offering special postmark again
|
November 21, 2006 -
USPS and Four Postal Unions Agree
to Extend Contract Negotiations
-
The Postal
Service and its four largest unions have agreed to extend
contract negotiations to 3 p.m. today in hopes of reaching
negotiated settlements. The current contracts expired at midnight
last night with the National Association of Letter Carriers,
American Postal Workers Union, National Rural Letter Carrier’s
Association and National Postal Mail Handlers Union.
|
|
November 21, 2006 -
APWU: As Deadline Passes, Parties
Agree to Continue Talks
APWU President William Burrus has told
union members that progress toward an agreement had been made,
but that “important issues remain that have not been finalized.”
The parties will continue discussions on Nov. 21. “The terms
of the new contract are too important to rush agreement because
of an artificial deadline,” he said.
|
|
November 21, 2006 -
Post office reputation not so bad, judge says
|
November 21, 2006
Grandmother
burns rubber, minds mail
New passport rules could keep post offices
busy
APWU Wins Major Maintenance Arbitration
Case
UPS ups rates 4.9 percent
|
November 20, 2006
Mail carrier honored for 50 Years
of service
Postal Carrier
Arrested on route for mail tampering
|
Senate committee confirms USPS governors,
PRC chair
Is your mail late? No answer from the Post
Office
|
USPS Awards Kitty Hawk $29M Contract to
Manage Holiday Air Network
It's a new century;
try to keep up
|
November 19, 2006 -
Burrus: Contract Agreement 'Possible'
In a telephone
message on the eve of the expiration of the contract, APWU
President William Burrus told union members that although
final agreement is beyond reach at this time, "I am convinced
that agreement is possible." Negotiations are continuing,
he said, with health benefits and wages dominating the discussions.
|
|
November 19, 2006 -
Big Win For
APWU in MS-47 Maintenance Case - "Custodial Jobs Protected"
Arbitrator Shyam Das
rejected the USPS attempts to eliminate custodial work through
the ill conceived ‘Budget Worksheet’. He ruled that, ” it
is appropriate that the Postal Service be directed to
rescind the 2001 MS-47, to reinstate the
1983 MS-47, and
to reinstate or prepare staffing packages as soon as practicable.
As the Postal Service has stressed, the building inventories
still are in use and the performance standards have not been
changed. Prior staffing documents based on frequencies determined
by the appropriate level of management under the 1983 MS-47
presumably still exists, and can be revised under that handbook
where needed. Whether a remedy is appropriate for the intervening
period since the implementation of the 2001 MS-47, and, if
so what it should be, is a matter remanded to the parties
for further discussion.
-
MS-47-Housekeeping-Postal-Facilities-1983.pdf
|
|
November 19, 2006 -
Postal Worker Dock Death Linked
to Vermont Accident
"A month
before the Nov. 8 loading dock accident at a Springfield mail
processing facility claimed the life of postal worker
Robert J. Scanlon, another postal employee was nearly
killed in an identical accident at a mail facility in White
River Junction, Vt., union officials said. Union representatives
at each facility said if management had listened to the repeated
safety warnings about removing "glad-hand locks" used on trailers
at the docks, each accident could have been prevented. The
locks prevent truck drivers from removing a trailer before
it is loaded. Once loading is complete, the lock is removed
by a worker called an "expediter" who walks between the trailer
and the truck cab, which is then put in reverse toward the
trailer."
Postal
Workers Union and Regional Managers Differ Over Safety
|
|
November 19, 2006 -
Columnist:
Postal Service 'Stupidly' Bans ZIP Code Books
-"A
spokesman said the postal service would prefer customers to
use the www.usps.com Web site to obtain ZIP codes. After that,
they would prefer customers call the ASK-USPS toll-free number
at (800) 275-8777. Finally, postal service customers may purchase
a computer disk for $50, which includes a year of "free" monthly
updates of ZIP codes. Lena Mitchell: "How can something be
free when you paid $50 for it? I think that explanation is
a cover for the fact that the marketing department is trying
to use zip code information as a new profit center. Fifty
dollars, indeed, for a CD we all know cost only a few pennies
to produce."
|
|
November 18, 2006 -
Mail Handler Contract Update:
Economic Proposals Submitted
To frame the
negotiations during the final days, the NPMHU has set forth
its on-the-record economic demands. These proposals include:
• A new National Agreement to cover six years, from November
21, 2006 through November 20, 2012. • The continuation of
general wage increases during each and every year of the contract.
• The continuation of cost-of-living adjustments during each
and every year of the contract. • The maintenance of all current
benefits and benefit programs, including the current formula
for determining employee contributions for health insurance.
• The implementation of one-level pay upgrades for all Level
4 and Level 5 mail handlers, and other adjustments to the
current pay scales. • The implementation of increases in night
shift differential and Sunday premium pay as previously outlined
and circulated. • The implementation of improvements in the
clothing program and increases in the dollar amounts provided
as clothing allowances.
|
|
November 19, 2006
Late mail
deliveries worry Tempe postal customers
|
Carrier all mailed out
|
November 18, 2006 -
APWU Union Rep Speaks Out
On Post Office Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Incident
-
A postal union representative is speaking
out after
39
workers were sent to the hospital Nov. 8
after inhaling carbon monoxide fumes while
they worked that day. Gregg Libbey, union representative for
the American Postal Workers Union Local 1376, says the explanation
for the fumes, given by post office management and spokespersons
to fire, police and rescue personnel, as well as the media,
was not accurate.
|
|
November 18, 2006 -
Emery Agrees to Pay $10 Million
for Submitting Fraudulent Billings to USPS
- The United States
Government has reached a $10,000,000 settlement with former
USPS contractor Emery Worldwide Airlines concerning its responsibility
for the acts of Emery’s employees in allegedly submitting
knowingly inflated billings to the USPS for the handling of
Priority Mail at mail processing facilities during a multi-year
contract, Emery and the United States have agreed to
settle this matter arising under the False Claims Act, 31
U.S.C. §§ 3729, et seq., after lengthy negotiations. The United
States Government discovered evidence that indicated that
Emery employees inflated billings to the Government for services
by, among other things, misclassifying the size of mail, double-weighing
mail and inaccurately weighing mail
|
|
November 18, 2006 -
USPS OIG Investigation
on Discarded Mail at Houston Post Office
Acting on a call to the Postal
Service’s Office of Inspector General Hotline, alleging employee
misconduct at the Willow Place Station of the Houston, Texas
Post Office, OIG Special Agents initiated an investigation
on November 1, 2006. The OIG was responding to the report
of instances of intentional discarding and delaying of mail
by postal personnel. The investigation revealed that a number
of letter carriers were discarding deliverable mail as Undeliverable
Bulk Business Mail (UBBM).
>
|
|
November 18, 2006-
Final
Delivery for Married Mail Carriers
An era came to a close on Friday in Burlington
County, New Jersey. A husband and wife team of mail carriers
made its last delivery. 81-year-old George Mick and his 75-year-old
wife Jeanette are partners in life and, for the last four
decades, partners on the job at the Chatsworth Post Office
Happily married for 52 years, the Micks have spent 44 of those
years working part-time sorting and delivering mail. They
finally decided to retire and Friday was their last day.
|
|
November 18, 2006
Union rep doesn't
agree with postal management decision to excess employees
USPS Looking at sites for
new Milwaukee P&DC
|
November 17, 2006 -
Postmaster General gets the
last word
A Star Press
article several months ago revealed that Kathy Bland (pictured
at right) a 21-year mail carrier had saved close to 800 neglected
and abandoned animals along her route, paying with her own
money for them to be rehabilitated and placed in loving homes.
USPS had a less positive reaction. It sent one district-level
and one regional official to discuss "safety issues" with
Bland. But PMG John E. Potter's response late last month was
to write a letter of praise to Bland, copy it to the district
manager of customer service in Indianapolis, include it in
Bland's official personnel file -- and effectively close what
Bland considers an unpleasant episode in her life.
|
|
November 17, 2006 -
Postal reform efforts likely
to end at dead letter office
"Congress
appears unlikely to reform the U.S. Postal Service this year
or in the foreseeable future, blocking one of Sen. Susan Collins'
legislative priorities. The goal of reform proponents such
as Collins, R-Maine, is to make the post office more competitive
with the Internet and premium shippers such as FedEx by reducing
its reliance on rate increases for stamps. But Collins, chairwoman
of the Governmental Affairs Committee, said opposition to
compromise legislation in September left little hope for action
when Congress finishes for the year in December."
Postal Reform Unlikely to Come Up for November Vote
|
|
November 17, 2006 -
Phone Card Drive for Troops Comes
to End At NJ Post Office
It’s the end of the line for
Operation: Phone Home, a project by employees of the Newton
Post Office that resulted in 1,500 phone cards being donated
to soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan during the past two years.
The program finally came to an end, however, on Oct. 31, when
the postal system stopped carrying the phone cards as part
of its product line, said Newton postal employee Connie Martinez,
who has a son in the military and organized the program.
|
|
November 17, 2006
Illinois: Postal
Worker Announced As $ 7 Million Dollar Lottery Winner
Community helps mail carrier
recover from house fire losses
APWU: Contract Deadline Looms
APWU: The Right Choice
Union Says Bronx Loses in Mail Consolidation
eNAPUS Bulletin - “The Parting on the Left is Now the
Parting on the Right" (PDF)
Postal Service Highlights Performance Scores
UPS raises 2007 rates for ground,
air
USPS Retirement Planning Information
Online
Brave Postal
Workers Given Tall Salute
Postal Employee Charged With Opening Packages Containing VA
Medication
Mediachase Launches the USPS
ATLAS Management System
|
November 16, 2006
USPS designs deal for fashion fulfiller
Postmaster far from mailing it in
Time to sound off on the post office
Stamp with ballot may be a fake 'Jenny'
|
November 15, 2006 -
USPS Ends Year With Record Revenues
Positive productivity trend continues - Record levels of revenue
and volume helped the U.S. Postal Service conclude its 2006
fiscal year with net income of $900 million. But increases
in fuel and labor costs limited our overall financial success.
The FY 2006 year-end financial figures were released today
by Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President Glen
Walker during the November meeting of the Board of Governors.
The Postal Service’s 2006 fiscal year began Oct. 1, 2005,
and ended Sept. 30, 2006. Total revenue was $72.8 billion,
and total expenses were $71.9 billion. The net deficiency,
after including a $3 billion escrow allocation, as required
by law, was $2.1 billion.
Postal Service Ends Year in the Black or
Postal
Service ends fiscal year in the hole
|
|
November 15, 2006 -
A Lame-Duck Revival for Postal Service Overhaul?
"Sen.
Susan Collins (R-Maine) said yesterday that she is
not giving up on legislation that would overhaul the U.S.
Postal Service and will try to win approval of the bill next
month during the lame-duck session. Collins said she has met
with the chief Democratic sponsor, Sen. Thomas R. Carper
(Del.), and has talked with White House officials about how
to revive the bill. Various proposals are being discussed
by mailers and others to see whether modifications can be
made to get the bill moving, she said.
Rep. Henry
A. Waxman (D-Calif.), who has worked on versions of the
bill, has expressed concerns about whether Congress should
dictate a rate-setting formula, which he worries might lead
the post office to reduce services in tight economic times.
Waxman also wants to ensure that mailer discounts do not become
sweetheart deals."
Democrats unlikely to shift course on DM issues
|
|
November 15, 2006 -
Postal Workers honored for saving co-worker -
Holyoke
Postmaster Wayne O. Desroches recognized David C. Lundgren,
Bradford J. Farrell, Christopher J. Boyle and Cynthia J. Houle
last week as "Holyoke Heroes" by presenting them with citations
for their roles in helping save letter carrier Patricia Clifford.
Lundgren used CPR to save the life of fellow Holyoke post
office letter carrier Clifford, who had stopped breathing
when she went into cardiac arrest at the post office on Sept.
14.
|
|
November 15, 2006 -
Wait for stamp cut to 5 years post-death
The wait before a notable person who has died can be honored
on a U.S. postage stamp is being cut to five years, half what
it had been. Postmaster General John E. Potter announced the
change Wednesday at a meeting of the postal governing board.
"For more than three decades we have had a rule requiring
notable Americans be deceased 10 years before they could be
recognized for commemoration on a postage stamp. We created
this rule to make certain their legacy stood the test of time,"
Potter said.
|
November 15, 2006
APWU: Talks Continue at Discouraging Pace
Caught on tape: Mail carrier accused of throwing package
|
Humeston Post
Office air quality unclear
Power saw attack
victim speaks out
New woman postmaster
is Grand Haven's first
Huge mail fraud case in Boise uncovered
Stamp diss: Post office trims barbers from list
New scanner rollout complete in Northern Virginia District
USPS Premium Forwarding Service has record first year
USPS Holiday Shipping and Mailing Guide Reaches 110 Million
Households
Suspect Who
Mailed White Powder to Celebs, Politicians Arrested
Updated postal network could expand global trade, says WTO
head
Israeli delegation blocked from U.N. postal conference
|
November 14, 2006 -
USPS OIG Review Supports Closing
Sioux City Mail Processing Center
It appears the Sioux City mail processing and distribution
center will be consolidated with another U.S. Postal Service
center.
Last December members of the American Postal
Workers Union Local 186 in Sioux City related that the center
and about 100 jobs could be moved to Sioux Falls.
U.S. Sens. Tom Harkin and Charles Grassley and Congressman
Steve King requested the postal service inspector general
conduct review the AMP. The legislators reported Monday the
inspector general has said "there is sufficient evidence supporting
consolidation of the Sioux City processing center," said Grassley.
USPS OIG
Audit Report on Sioux City Mail Center
|
|
November 14, 2006
Mailman Robbed While On Duty In Brooklyn
Package at Chesterton Post Office leaks and injures employee
Shots fired outside NJ post office
Six positions
to be eliminated at Bradford Post Office
New Mexico: Las Cruces opens new Post Office
Mail Delivery
is Suspended after Carrier is Attacked
Hershey Kiss
stamp spurs KFC to request similar publicity
|
November 13, 2006
APWU: Arbitrator’s
Decision Regarding Ergonomic Work Practices on DBCS
APWU: An Opportunity to Do Better
Letter Carrier’s
Artwork Still Popular
City officials want asbestos-plagued Post Office reopened
|
Original
story
Study Health-Plan
Options Carefully This Open Season
APWU Announces Negotiations Hotline
Roswell will keep postmark
History column: U.S. mail used to be a crucial link to world
Junk mail: The good and the bad
Small Va. community gets postal
compromise
|
November 12, 2006 -
Postal Workers Caught on Tape
Fox 25 Undercover
tracked down three letter carriers in a wealthy Boston suburb
(Belmont) . Investigative reporter Mike Beaudet has the video.
The reporter taped 3 letter carriers (10 days over a 3 month
period) meeting in a high school parking lot, [joy] riding
around town in one of the letter carrier's truck, and
on one occasion apparently smoking marijuana. One carrier
resigned after confronted with the allegations. The other
two carriers were placed on emergency non-paid leave.
|
|
USPS to Sell Segway Scooters
to General Public
The
U.S. Postal Inspection Service has teamed up with Supply Management
Investment Recovery in Washington, DC, to sell via auction
38 Segway scooters to the general public.
PostalReporter has received
quite a few comments on USPS auctioning off Segway Scooters
after posting it a few days ago. One PostalReporter reader
offered another
idea on how to get rid of scooters.
Another reader concluded that "I
assume this means the experiment failed"
|
|
November
12, 2006 -
Postal worker loses plea to wear fun neckties
District official insists on
regulation blue, a part of the uniform - After an 18-month
bureaucratic odyssey that earned a written shrug from Postal
Service headquarters in Washington, Window Clerk Steve Adams
sees that he is powerless against his local superiors who
want him to look like a U.S. Postal Service professional.
Last month Adams, a small-town institution for the 10 years
during which he wore wacky, colorful ties to the Soldotna
post office, got the final word insisting that he stick to
wearing standard-issue navy-blue ties with his striped postal
shirt.
|
|
November 12, 2006 -
Florida Postmaster
Cleared of Sexual Harassment
Marianna (Florida)
Postmaster Willie Melvin has been cleared to return to work
Monday following an investigation of a sexual harassment complaint.
One employee asked what would be an immoral act," Breckenridge
said. "Melvin said an example of that would be if a (male)
supervisor told a female employee to take off her shirt. A
female employee took offense to the statement and field a
sexual harassment complaint." The investigative team was made
up of postal officials from other post offices in the Panhandle.
Melvin was placed on paid administrative leave while the investigation
was under way.
|
|
November 12, 2006 -
Seattle antibiotics home delivery test
goes well
- In the first anti-bioterrorism test of its kind, 41 postal
carriers accompanied by police officers delivered simulated
packages of antibiotics to about 38,000 homes in Northeast
Seattle on Saturday.
|
November 12, 2006 -
West Virginia : Glady Post Office to shut down Dec. 1
- The U.S. Postal Service is ending Glady's 120-year-old
service in December. The Glady Post Office lacks restrooms
and running water, which are required by law, and does not
generate enough revenue to continue operations, local postal
officials said. Post office assistant Calvin Shiflett and
his wife, Mary Francis, who had served as post master for
30 years, both retired on Oct. 28. Trudy Sponaugle is serving
as officer in charge until the post office closes on Dec.
1.
|
November 11, 2006 -
Power outage
hits San Bernardino Mail-Processing Facility
..a mail-processing plant in Redlands bustles with machines
and people sorting 5 million pieces of mail. But at around
3 a.m. Friday, a power outage caused work to come to a halt,
delaying the delivery of some items until Monday. The San
Bernardino General Mail Facility, as it is known despite its
Redlands location, sorts mail for ZIP codes starting with
the numbers 922 through 925, said Mike Cannone, U.S. Postal
Service spokesman. Because the Postal Service will observe
Veterans Day today, carriers will deliver any mail left over
from Friday to their customers on Monday, Cannone said. Cannone
said employees at the plant prioritized first-class and priority
mail. "Most delays will be with the nonpreferential mail,"
he said. "The advertisement mail and stuff like that."
|
|
November 11, 2006 -
NALC: Wal-Mart aims for always
lower salaries
November Postal Record -
Last year,
Wal-Mart raked in profits of $11.2 billion—that’s $11,200,000,000—on
$312 billion in sales. This year, in a bid to surpass that
mark, top managers at the mammoth retailer have set their
sights on capping workers’ pay. Using such corporate code
words as “workforce flexibility” and citing the need to “maintain
competitiveness,” a confidential Wal-Mart management memo
circulated in August revealed the company’s plans to cap employee
wages by cutting back hours and pushing workers onto lower
pay scales. Wal-Mart employees aren’t likely to find much
assistance in their unionizing efforts from the National Labor
Relations Board, even though the board’s 1935 charter states
that its mission is to enforce a policy “of assuring free
choice and encouraging collective bargaining.” Lately, the
board, controlled by a pro-business bloc, has taken a decidedly
anti-worker, anti-union stance on most of the issues brought
before it..
|
|
November 11, 2006
Postal wife stabs husband (also postal)
to death
Post office in Maine shut amid investigation
Oakdale post office mold scare ends
US Postal
Service boosts publicity ahead of holidays
|
November 10, 2006 -
They deliver:
36 Postal employees honored for military service
The
Stamford Veterans Committee yesterday honored those who have
delivered for their city and their country. The committee
presented 36 postal employees with Connecticut Veterans Wartime
Service Medals during a ceremony at the Stamford Postal Facility
to commemorate Veterans Day, observed nationwide today. "I
do believe the postal service is one of the largest importers
of veterans in America," said presenter Archie Elam, a Gulf
War veteran and a U.S. Military Academy graduate.
Report: Veterans working for USPS dwindling
|
Postal workers to receive flags for military service
|
Brave NY Postal Workers Given Tall Salute
|
|
November 10, 2006 -
Saturday mail
drill simulates response to bioterror attack
Postmaster Touts Premium Forwarding Service for 'Snowbirds'
Canada Post: U.S. retailers reaching Canadians at holidays
Possible Inverted Jenny Used on Absentee Ballot
Man Wanted In Thwarted Post
Office Attack
Fatality probed
at postal center
Business goes
on at postal service
USPS launches
Shipping Assistant 3.0
|
November 09, 2006 -
Postal
Groups React to Dem Wins in House and Senate
APWU: Union Headquarters Celebrates 'Great
Day for Democracy' - This is a great day for democracy,
a great day for the labor movement, and a great day for us,”
Burrus said .
NPMHU: Election
Letter to All Mail Handlers
-The American people turned out in great numbers, and have
sent their collective message, loud and clear, to the Washington
...
eNAPUS: Earthquake Hits US Capitol With
Lingering Aftershocks (PDF)
- On Tuesday, an angry electorate exerted their political
energy, bestowing a vote of “no confidence” on the President
and his party..|
|
November 09,
2006 -
Portland APWU Rains on Potter's Parade
-
More than
100 APWU members picketing in a steady, cold rain greeted
senators Susan Collins (R) and Olympia Snowe (R), who had
planned to help mark the opening of the new state-of-the-art
mail-processing center in Scarborough, ME. When union protestors
told them about severe understaffing at the new facility,
the negative effect the lack of personnel would have on service,
and shabby treatment of the area's postal workers, the senators
decided to stay away from the ceremonies, opting instead to
visit with APWU protesters and answer media inquiries
|
November 09, 2006 -
Over 40 Postal Employees At Two
Post Offices Under Investigation for Delaying Mail -
"Two
West Michigan post offices are the focus of a major federal
investigation. There are accusations that employees tampered
with the delivery and intentionally delayed bulk mailings
at offices in Grand Rapids and Battle Creek. Managers inside
the two locations prompted the investigation.
24 Hour
News 8 has received numerous calls from mail carriers who
say they had been recently ordered to cut junk mail in order
to save time, and now they believe they are taking the fall.
Many of them are now on unpaid leave.
.....as many as 20 employees at the Grand
Rapids facility have been disciplined and possibly fired."
Postal workers accused of throwing away mail
- The postal workers are accused of not delivering "first
class occupant mail", which is bulk mail that should go out
to all addresses. The federal Office of Inspector General
has been looking into allegations of fraud for five weeks
using surveillance with the cooperation of postal management.
The U.S. Postal Service says as many as
28 Battle Creek postal carriers were suspended without pay.
Wednesday over allegations of improprieties at the local post
office.
Grand Rapids Letter Carrier:
management is delaying deliveries to
curtain OT
|
Video: Carriers Blame Clerks
|
|
November
09, 2006 -
39 Postal Employees Treated for
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
(Virginia) The employees were
exposed to the carbon monoxide at the Main Post Office
They were running generators outside because of an overnight
power outage, said Capt. Jim Judkins, spokesperson for the
Suffolk Department of Fire and Rescue. The post office was
without power Wednesday morning when employees arrived for
work. They placed generators on the back loading dock of the
building so they could begin the day’s work. The wind blew
fumes from the generators inside the building through the
large garage-style back doors, Judkins said.
|
|
November 09, 2006 -
Accident Kills Massachusetts
Postal Worker
A 58-year-old U.S. Postal Service
employee died last night after the driver of a tractor-trailer
backed into him at a loading dock of a mail distribution facility
on Brookdale Drive, police said.
|
|
November 09, 2006
USPS to Sell
Segway Scooters to General Public
Postal Worker honored as a
veteran
Election Day Post-Mortem for Marketers
Postal Bulletin: 2006 Benefits Timeline, more...
Federal Register: USPS Revise Postage Meter Rules
|
November 08, 2006 -
NPMHU Contract Update: USPS Submits Laundry List of Harsh
Proposals -
"The Postal Service
has proposed several work rule proposals that, whether considered
individually or collectively, would effectively re-write large
portions of the current National Agreement to the detriment
of all mail handlers. These proposals include the following,
among others:
|
1. Total elimination of protection from layoff
2. An increase in the part-time flexible workforce
to 30%
3. An increase in the employment and utilization of
casuals by eliminating the "in lieu of" clause from Art. 7
4. Allowing casual and part-time flexible employees
to be scheduled for overtime prior to exhaustion of the Overtime
Desired and Volunteer Lists
5. Eliminating extra pay for the Christmas holiday
6. Eliminating completely Article 30 provisions on
local implementation, as well as all currently existing Local
Memoranda of Understanding"
|
November 08, 2006 -
Campaign mailers spelled overtime
for letter carriers
"Letter
carriers and beleaguered residents finally got some relief
on Election Day after days of campaign fliers and stuffed
mailboxes. On Tuesday afternoon, several customers said they
were glad the junk mail nightmare was nearly over. "We are
so sick of it," said "over-50" Escondido resident Ellen Griffith,
a registered Republican. "And it isn't just our party -- all
the other parties (have been) sending it to us, too." She
said her husband got so fed up with the number of campaign
fliers that were filling up their mailbox everyday that he
would simply throw them all in the trash."
|
|
November 08, 2006 -
Former Postmaster jailed for
stealing over $50k
The former U.S. Postmaster in Cochranton (PA) will serve five
months in jail for stealing more than $50,000 worth of money
and stamps during a two-and one-half year period. Larry Alan
Robison, was sentenced to five months in jail followed by
five months home detention and then three years probation.
[per court documents] The Postal Inspectors initially went
to post office to investigate reports that Robison was receiving
pornography through a post office computer. But eventually
they discovered he was stealing by pocketing money from some
stamp sales. Postal Inspectors also discovered Robison was
using a Post Office box to receive the pornography.
Porn Addiction Drove Postmaster to Steal
|
|
November 08, 2006
NAPS: Postal
Reform Hinges on a Potentially Cooperative Lame Duck Session
Hurta retires
after 36 years
Westover postal
employee (PMR) charged with theft
Newark postmark
due to be canceled
NAPUS: The Congress Woman
from UPS is GONE!!
-
Dems take control of House, changing oversight dynamics
|
|
November 06, 2006 -
APWU Presents Economic Proposals; Burrus Assails 'Lack of
Progress' in Talks -
After offering
a blunt assessment of the first two months of negotiations,
APWU President William Burrus presented the USPS with economic
proposals, calling for raises and upgrades that are commensurate
with union members’ performance over the six years of the
contract that expires Nov. 20. Economic proposals for a contract
of three years duration include :
Basic annual salary
increases of 4 percent, effective Nov. 25, 2006, Nov.
24, 2007, and Nov. 22, 2008; Upgrades; Return of Night Differential
to 10 percent of the basic hourly straight-time rate; and
Conversion of the current uniform and work-clothes allowances
to a centralized purchasing and distribution system for required
on-the-job clothing.
|
|
November 06, 2006
Former Postmaster
Charged with Theft-- Another PM Placed on Leave
NPMHU Update:
Trends All Down In USPS Marketing Presentation
Political fliers plucked from trash, delivered
|
Postal worker rescues elderly woman after crash
Editorial Officials should
have attended postal center's
celebration
Oakland Park: Postal Workers Protest Possible Downsizing
|
November 06, 2006 -
Supreme Court To Decide If Federal
Employees Can Be Sued
The Supreme
Court heard arguments on Oct. 30 about the extent of federal
employees’ immunity from on-the-job lawsuits. Under the 1988
Westfall Act, federal employees are immune from suits so long
as the Attorney General certifies that they were doing their
job when the incident in question occurred. The government
then substitutes itself as the defendant. In the case Osborn
v. Haley, the high court must decide whether the Attorney
General can certify an act as job-related simply by denying
that the incident ever occurred. If an employee is sued for
an act clearly not in his or her job description, can the
government defend the employee anyway if they believe in the
employee’s innocence?
|
|
November 06, 2006 -
Mail carrier finds attitude powerful
weapon against disease
At first Jackie Sandefur thought
he was having a bad case of flu. Then the longtime local mail
carrier concluded that the strange things happening to him
were worse than influenza. "I thought I was having warning
signs of a stroke," he says of that period nearly three years
ago. It had never occurred to him that his difficulties might
be due to a disease called multiple sclerosis. The carrier
who continues to work five days a week delivering mail half
on foot, half by car on his northend route, said his life
as an MS patient truly changed when he became involved with
the Tri-State Multiple Sclerosis Association.
|
|
November 06, 2006 -
Commentary: It’s Time for a ‘No Junk Mail Registry’ -
Since June 2003 we have had a
“Do Not Call Registry” and thanks to enforcement by the Federal
Trade Commission, Federal Communications Commission and state
governments, my unsolicited telemarketer calls that came mostly
during dinner have nearly stopped. I am most concerned about
first class mail addressed to me. Conversely, the U.S. Postal
Service, because of greed, is more interested in delivering
junk mail. But every time the USPS needs to balance its budget,
first class mail, not junk mail is the first rate to be increased.
The USPS has conspired with the all powerful direct mail lobby
to give priority rights to the junk mailer.
-
Not all junk mail goes right into trash
|
|
November 06, 2006
eBay proves virtual gold mine for Postal Service
|
USPS Board
of Governors to meet Nov. 14-15
USPS delivers the goods with machine phase-out
|
The postman
giveth and now taketh away
Mail May Be
Stopped At Trailer Park
The cost of
voting by mail
How does Postal Worker perform
tasks with 10-inch nails?
FedEx Express to increase average shipping
rates 3.5 percent in 2007
Soldiers Speak About Importance of Mail
|
November 05, 2006 -
Political mail reaches ‘phenomenal’
levels with current election cycle
-
Friday alone,
more than 5.2 million political mailings were sent out of
the Cincinnati district of the United States Postal Service,
which services several zip code areas, including Mason County.
Described as a "phenomenal amount of mail" by Bonni Manies,
the manager of consumer affairs for the USPS, this year's
political mail is more than twice in volume than the political
mailings of the last major election. Processing the amount
of political mail that goes through the system daily is both
a blessing and a curse. Manies said the mailings do put more
money into the system. However, it has made the jobs of many
workers more difficult.
|
|
November 05, 2006 -
Post office brass offers mea culpa
(Colorado Springs) Post
office officials have apologized for poor downtown service
during the past few months and say a process is in place to
correct delivery problems. “The service was not meeting customers’
expectations. What they deserve is consistent, reliable service,”
said Al Desarro, U.S. Postal Service spokesman for the West.
“We apologize for that, and our intent is to get service as
good as possible, and hopefully this will be permanent change.”
The main post office is in the process of making route changes
in order to improve service.
|
|
November 05, 2006 -
Study: People Prefer Junk Mail Over Spam -
A new study by researchers from
the University of Georgia Grady College of Journalism and
Mass Communication revealed that most people preferred junk
mail rather than spam, when given an option to select the
lesser of the two evils.
|
November 04, 2006 -
Senators Urge PMG To Address
Concerns Raised By Postal Workers Union
- (Maine) "We are writing to draw your attention to concerns
raised by the Portland Chapter of the American Postal Workers’
Union (APWU), Area Local 458. Its grievances include the belief
that it will be facing the consolidation of over 70 day shifts
to 22, and the transfer of junior clerks into other job crafts
including maintenance and mail handler duties. The union is
also concerned that some postal workers may lose the seniority
benefits they have spent years attaining in their areas of
expertise."
|
|
November 04, 2006
'Save Our Service'
is theme of postal rally in Minnesota
Senators Request
GAO To Assess Progress on Biodetection Technologies
Neighborhood’s
mail held hostage by dog
Post Office Box in family 66 Years
eNAPUS: Vote, Then Join NAPUS on Election
Night 2006 (PDF)
Crackup Between Postal Truck and Livery
|
November 03, 2006 -
APWU: Contract Talks Take a Discouraging
Turn
..."management
presented a series of proposals that, if adopted, would drastically
demean postal employment. The subjects included: Elimination
of no-layoff protection; Increased use of casuals; Expansion
of part-time employment; Elimination of local negotiations;
Modification of holiday scheduling and pay; Expansion of work
and/or time standards; The union’s response is straightforward:
These proposals are “dead on arrival.” The USPS decision to
submit such outrageous suggestions can only hinder negotiations.
Clearly, management knows the union would never entertain
such regressive proposals."
|
|
November 03, 2006 -
NALC: USPS Makes Regressive Proposals;
Stalls Serious Contract Negotiations
-
USPS proposed the elimination of time and one-half pay for
work on Christmas Day, and other retrograde holiday premium
and scheduling provisions; an increase in the number and usage
of low cost non-career employees; elimination of key protective
provisions of Article 34 (time and/or work standards); mandatory
use of travel credit cards, with individual employee responsibility
for payment, for travel on official USPS business. Coming
out of the October 31 session, Young issued a warning: “If
today’s Postal Service effort is any clue to what they are
thinking about in basic economics, and they come to us with
a stale and discredited formula of wage freeze, or lump sums
or worse; increased letter carrier cost of health insurance;
elimination or capping of COLA; elimination of No Lay Off
protection — it will be a monumental confession of management
failure — and an abdication of responsibility to their employees,
to their customers, and to the American public.”
|
|
November 03, 2006 -
Postal Worker Sues USPS – Denied
Permission to Work Off-the-Clock? -
In his complaint to the New York District Court, 29-Year Postal
Worker George Shamoon alleged that he was discriminated and
retaliated against by the Postal Service and his former supervisor
when he was: denied 32 hours overtime; not permitted to work
off-the-clock (during his lunch and breaks, and (As a result
of “working off the clock,” Shamoon received a letter of warning,
followed by a notice of suspension that was later rescinded
and; not given a $500 award “for achieving over 3000 sick
hours” ( He received only a certificate in recognition of
his achievement).
|
|
November 03, 2006 -
USPS Awards Siemens Contract
Expansion for Delivery Bar Code Sorters -
Siemens announced that it has been awarded a $109.4 million
contract modification from the United States Postal Service
(USPS) for additional mail sorting equipment. The scope of
the award encompasses an additional 211 Delivery Bar Code
Sorter (DBCS 6) machines to expand USPS’ existing fleet of
letter sorting equipment. The company will provide installation
and associated integrated logistics support services for the
new machines in addition to carts used to transport trays
of sorted mail. Production and installation of the DBCS 6
order is expected to be completed by Dec.1, 2007.
|
November 03, 2006
USPS encourages mailers to use electronic documentation
USPS reiterates CASS/DPV plan
ARK: Postmaster
retiring after 37 years
USPS On Rolls
and Paid Employee Stats PP 20-2006 (PDF)
Post office gets Star Status for safety
November 02, 2006 -
Workers Picket At Grand Opening
Of New Maine Postal Facility
-
Snowe, Collins Allen
Refuse To Cross Picket Line -
The grand opening of the new
postal processing center in Scarborough was held Thursday,
with dozens of of postal workers picketing outside. They say
they're unhappy with the streamlining of operations at the
new facility. It was supposed to be a traditional ribbon cutting,
attended by some of Maine's top elected officials. Even though
they lobbied hard for the project, they did not attend the
ceremony. They're not treating us the way they should be treating
us. They're excessing clerks out of our craft, and they've
got temporary employees in there filling in for their jobs,
people who have been here for a dozen years. They're not listening
to anything that we've got to say. Hopefully they'll listen
to this," said postal clerk Rick Poland.
Protest
dampens mail plant event
|
|
November 02, 2006 -
Postal Workers
Union and Regional Managers Differ Over Safety -
The day after
federal regulators announced they were fining the U.S. Postal
Service mail processing facility in Vermont $40,000 for operating
an unsafe machine, union officials representing about one-third
of the workers there said the facility has larger safety problems.
The officials cite an accident in October in which a postal
employee was injured between a freight truck and its trailer
as evidence that safety problems are not limited to the mail
sorting machine targeted by inspectors from OSHA. Jim Adams,
district manager for the U.S. Postal Service in New Hampshire
and Vermont, said employees are posturing for union negotiations
and may be upset that managers are cracking down on “attendance
problems” among workers.
USPS
Mail Processing Facility Faces $44,250 in Fines for Safety
Violations
|
|
November 02, 2006 -
USPS Close Greenville, TX Post
Office
Officials
with the United States Postal Service have announced Greenville's
Main Post Office will close later this month (October). Polly
Gibbs, customer relations coordinator with the Postal Service's
Dallas District, said the closing was called for to allow
the building to be cleaned of asbestos.
"For the time being we are temporarily relocating," Gibbs
said. "We haven't made a final decision as to whether we will
come back to that building."
Gibbs said
the Postal Service has known for some time there was asbestos
at the current building, but that it had never been found
to be at levels considered hazardous.
|
|
November 02, 2006 -
Delaying rate case costs USPS
$450 million each month, says speaker -
USPS CFO H.
Glen Walker "discussed the costs while discussing the
fact that there is a potential for more risk and uncertainty
in the achievement of the agency’s fiscal year 2007 plan compared
to recent years. The 2007 integrated financial plan includes
cost reduction programs totaling $1.1 billion, including a
planned
decrease of 40 million work hours from the estimated fiscal
year 2006 level. Savings will come from automation improvements
and implementation of additional "breakthrough productivity"
initiatives."
“A big uncertainty is how the
agency will come out on its labor negotiations,” Mr. Walker
said. |
|
November 02, 2006 -
Going postal over a letter
Sarina vs Sabrina Halts Mail - The
Gossetts' problems began when Sabrina moved out of her mother's
house in Bensonhurst nearly two years ago. When she got her
own apartment, Sabrina filled out the forms to have her mail
forwarded - a big mistake, apparently. The slight difference
in their first names was more than the Postal Service could
handle. Mom Sarina "completely stopped getting mail," said
Sabrina.
|
|
November 02, 2006
Bush to Nominate
Dan Blair to Postal Rate Commission
USPS May Cut
Wait to Be Pictured on Stamps
Letter carrier gets 3 years in prison for
stealing rare gold coin
CA: Fremont post office accused of dumping thousands of campaign
mailings
|
Man sentenced for defrauding USPS
|
Postal Driver Charged in Fatality
|
Neither rain nor gloom of night should stop this sale
NYT: Junk Mail is Alive and Growing
|
Mailers given another chance to comment on USPS mailing standards
USPS: Send Military Care Packages Early This Holiday Season
|
November 01, 2006 -
APWU Urges Members to 'Get Out
The Vote!'
"The
Nov. 7 election gives us the best chance in many years to
elect a pro-worker Congress," APWU President William Burrus
has said, "and I urge every union member to take advantage
of this important opportunity and vote." Burrus has asked
union members to vote for APWU-endorsed candidates in races
for the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. "On Election
Day, you will make decisions that will affect your family,
your job, and your country."
For a list of APWU-endorsed candidates,
click here. [PDF-Members Only]
|
|
November 01, 2006 -
USPS OIG Paper: Postal Officers
Travel Expense Guidelines
-
"This white paper provides the results
of our review of the current U.S. Postal Service officers
travel expense guidelines. We performed this review
in response to a request from Postal Service management to
evaluate whether travel guidelines for its officers were reasonable
when compared to other entities’ travel policies. In general,
the travel guidelines the Postal Service instituted for its
officers were not always consistent with travel guidelines
prescribed by the entities and sources against which we benchmarked.
Based on our benchmarking, we determined the guidelines did
not always incorporate key best practices."
|
|
November 01, 2006 -
Solar array will power Oakland Postal Facility
-
"The San Ramon-based energy
company today unveils one of the nation's larger solar arrays,
a nearly 1-megawatt system atop the U.S. Postal Service's
processing plant in West Oakland. The solar array, combined
with energy-efficiency improvements made throughout the cavernous
sorting plant, will save the agency an easy $1 million a year
and cut power purchases from Pacific Gas & Electric Co. by
nearly one-third. That's roughly 2.6 million 39-cent stamps."
|
November 01, 2006
Oakland Post
Office Gets $3.46M Rebate From PG&E
Former mail
handler admits stealing gift cards, certificates
Early mail
carrier used seasonal modes of travel
Postal Remedy: New, Lighter Papers
Red tag alert: Political campaign mailings on the rise
New Mailing Standards for Infectious Substances
Dealing with
labor pains
After 35 years, postal worker
says so long
|
|
|
|