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Postal News - October 2005 |
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October 31, 2005 - Postal Rate Commission Approves Rate Increase- - PRC website -The Postal Rate Commission issues 33 summary and` 430 page decision| - Mailers at MTAC Discuss Rate Case - PRC OKs, Sends 5.4% Rate Hike to USPS Board |
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October 31, 2005 -
Hallmark, L.L. Bean At Odds Over Postal Reform Bill - Senators Meet to Discuss Hold on Postal Overhaul Legislation - E-NAPUS Newsletter- Trick or Treat – Senate Opening for S. 662 |
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- Thanks in large part to pressure applied by Mail Handlers and other representatives of organized labor on the White House and its pro-business supporters in the U.S. Congress, the Bush Administration has announced that effective November 8, 2005 it will be reversing its backward-thinking order which had rescinded Davis-Bacon wage protections for federal rebuilding projects along the devastated Gulf Coast. The Davis-Bacon Act requires that workers employed on federal projects be paid prevailing wages for the area in which they are employed. | |
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October 28, 2005 -
Senators Meet to Discuss Hold on
Postal Overhaul Legislation |
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October 27, 2005 -Postal Workers From Former Brentwood Mail Facility Seeking Reinstatement of Lawsuits --A three judge panel from the Circuit Court of Appeals is being asked to reinstate a pair of lawsuits brought against the postmaster general and postal managers. The suits contend that Brentwood employees were deliberately kept on the job after officials knew they'd been exposed to weapons-grade anthrax. The appellate court decisions on whether to reinstate the lawsuits could come within months. |
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October 27, 2005 -
ELM Revision: Sick Leave for Dependent Care |
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October 26, 2005 - USPS to 'Outsource' Mail Handler Bargaining Unit Work at Boston AMC - The Postal Service has placed a bid for subcontracting of “terminal handling” work to be performed at Logan Airport in Boston MA, essentially subcontracting Mail Handler work at the Air Mail Center (AMC) in Boston. The proposal, initiated by National Postal Headquarters in Washington, DC, involved the plan to ‘standardize’ AMC functions throughout the country. Notice from USPS to APWU on standardizing all AMCs/AMFs/ATOs | Letter: Instead of 200 postal workers, Worldwide Flight Services will be handling mail. |
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October 26, 2005-‘Katrina’ Employees Who Transfer Voluntarily To Get Relocation Expenses -Employees affected by Hurricane Katrina who request voluntary transfers will be eligible to receive the same relocation expenses as those granted to employees who are involuntarily reassigned. The new policy is the result of an Oct. 26 Memorandum of Understanding signed by the APWU and USPS. | |
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October 26, 2005- Detroit Postal Worker Robbed Of Mail At Knifepoint - Authorities said the postal worker was removing mail from the back of her truck when a man dressed in black approached her. He allegedly pulled a knife on her and ordered her to hand over mail. | |
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October 26, 2005 - Postal Worker Convicted of Stealing $25 Money Order A former Dakota City, Nebraska postal employee was convicted of theft and sentenced Monday to spend 30 days in jail. | |
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October 26, 2005 - Penalty Overtime Exclusion Period Set -For this year, the time period during which the penalty overtime regulations are not applicable begins Dec. 3, 2005, (Pay Period 25-2005, Week 2), and ends Dec. 30 (Pay Period 01-2006, Week 1). |
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October 26, 2005 -
Interest
Arbitration Next for Supervisors' Pay Package? |
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October 26, 2005 - ‘Katrina’ Employees Who Transfer Voluntarily To Get Relocation Expenses -Employees affected by Hurricane Katrina who request voluntary transfers will be eligible to receive the same relocation expenses as those granted to employees who are involuntarily reassigned. The new policy is the result of an Oct. 26 Memorandum of Understanding signed by the APWU and USPS. | |
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October 25, 2005- Postal Worker Awarded Religious Day of Rest, Lost Wages A case involving a United States Postal Service (USPS) employee who was not allowed Saturdays off for his day of rest was settled Oct. 11 when the organization awarded him U.S. $65,000 for lost wages and grievances endured, and granted him his Sabbath off. | |
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October 25, 2005 - Civil Rights Pioneer Rosa Parks DiesRosa Parks, the Alabama seamstress whose soft-spoken refusal to give up her bus seat to a white man triggered the Montgomery bus boycott, the first great mass action in the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, died yesterday. She was 92. In August 2005 USPS released a pane of 10 postage stamps (including the Montgomery Bus Boycott) entitled 'To Form a More Perfect Union' honoring the Civil Rights Movement | |
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October 25, 2005 -
'Postal' Game Set to Shoot Up Big Screen |
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October 24, 2005 - APWU: Locals Threatened with Consolidation Are Urged to Take Action to Protect Jobs, Service - APWU President William Burrus has written to 17 local presidents, notifying them of USPS plans to consolidate some mail processing operations in facilities represented by their locals, and providing them with material to help protect jobs and service in their communities." Any attempt to deter management from closing facilities or consolidating operations will require a grass-roots effort by members of your local, in concert with other postal unions and labor organizations, as well as with community organizations,” Burrus wrote on Oct. 24. USPS to Consolidate Certain Mail Processing Operations -USPS has notified APWU on plans to consolidate certain processing operations of nine facilities in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, California, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania. |- Kinston postal operation to move | Mojave mail to get new postmark |
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October 24, 2005 - PRC Gives No Decision on Periodicals Rate Overhaul -A proposal by a coalition of large commercial publishers for a radical revamping of the rate structure for Periodicals will get no recommended decision by the Postal Rate Commission to be acted on by the USPS Board of Governors. The PRC said last week it won't get involved in a dispute between the U.S. Postal Service and five large publishing companies involving a request to revamp the postal rate structure for Periodicals mail. In the Jan. 12, 2004, filing, publishers Time Warner, Condé Nast, Reader's Digest, Newsweek and TV Guide wanted the USPS to create a stripped-down basic rate structure. In general, large Periodicals mailers would benefit more than smaller ones under this plan. | |
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October 24, 2005 -
USPS: Hurricane
Wilma Service Update
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October 22, 2005- New Postal Vehicle via Indiana State NALC From PR Injured Workers Forum: "Check out the new USPS delivery vehicle ." |
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October 21, 2005 - Ask President Burrus Question: Why don’t the postal unions merge into one? Wouldn’t we (all the workers) be stronger with only one union? Why do the unions let the USPS play the divide-and-conquer game? Answer: As an industrial union, the APWU endorses the basic principle that workers employed by a single entity are better served when they are united as a single force. As president of APWU I embrace these principles, and I have attempted to initiate the dialogue necessary to achieving this significant goal. Regrettably, I have received no response to my written requests. | |
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October 21, 2005 - Woman Crashes Through Post Office Injuring 3 Postal Workers The car crumpled part of the fence of a Head Start Center, but no children were injured. It then barreled into the post office's personnel room, striking two postal employees and another man. One of the postal employees was pinned under the vehicle. He was taken to the hospital for moderate injuries to his legs. A female employee and the other man sustained minor cuts and bruises.| |
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October 21, 2005 - Political Uproar Over MailingsCalif. Gov. Foes Allege Postal Abuse; His Camp Spurns Accusation - Two small words printed on the bottom of a campaign mailer delivered this week to California voters have Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's opponents alleging his team illegally financed the mailings. The union- and Democrat-backed Alliance for a Better California said Thursday it had filed a complaint with USPS alleging Gubernator's ballot committee had illegally used a ``non-profit organization'' status to mail fliers at a 40 percent discount -- a rate that could save hundreds of thousands of dollars on a statewide mailing. Paul Krenn, national spokesman for the Postal Inspection Service, said that the alliance's complaint had not yet reached his office but said it was something his office would probably look into. | |
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October 20, 2005 -USPS Pursues More Efficiency in Five-Year Plan The Postal Service now spends $1 billion a year to return or otherwise process undeliverable mail, and the plan calls for halving that cost, Linda Kingsley , USPS VP said. "The agency will also continue to rationalize its mail processing facilities and the transportation network to increase efficiencies, and it will continue to introduce technologies to reduce delivery costs. Arranging mail for the carrier according to the arrangement of his delivery addresses — called delivery point sequencing — will be further emphasized for magazines and catalogs. About 77 percent of such “flat” mail is now sequenced, and the transformation plan goal is to get that figure to 95 percent by 2010, Kingsley said. Finally, the postal work force — cut by 100,000 positions in recent years and now at about 703,000 — will continue to shrink, though no exact figure has been established for that, Kingsley said. | |
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October 20, 2005 - The U.S. Postal Service: A Mailbox of Skills and Certifications - The IT department of the U.S. Postal Service employs a little more than 1,300 people. That’s not terribly big in comparison to the total number of Postal Service workers (700,000), but the impact these busy souls have on the organization and the country is huge. Consider that the U.S. Postal Service runs the third largest infrastructure in the world, and probably the largest intranet as well. Now consider that in this $69 billion operation, IT must do every job role imaginable, from operations to business portfolios, developing and maintaining applications, and running two large data centers with literally thousands of servers and hundreds of thousands of workstations. |
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October 20, 2005 - USPS refuses request for information on AuthentiDate contract -The United States Postal Service has denied a Times Union request for details of its troubled contract with Schenectady firm AuthentiDate Holding Corp., provider of its electronic postmark service. In a letter to the newspaper dated Oct. 14, the agency said the files contain AuthentiDate trade secrets, and therefore are not available under the federal Freedom of Information Act | |
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October 19, 2005 - OIG Audit Report on City Letter Carrier Operations in San Diego District (pdf) -An audit of city letter carrier operations in the San Diego District found that supervisors and managers did not: adequately utilize programs such as DOIS and MSP; did not adequately match workhours with workload when approving PS Form 3996, Carrier -Auxiliary Control and did not always properly document letter carriers' unauthorized overtime. | |
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October 19, 2005 - PRC Most Likely to Issue Decision on Rate Increase By Halloween - The Postal Rate Commission will most likely offer its recommended decision by Halloween to implement a 5.4 percent across-the-board rate increase, according to Jerry Cerasale, senior vice president, government affairs at the Direct Marketing Association. | |
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October 18, 2005 - Ex-Postal Official Target Of Criminal Probe John Walsh, 78 who served on the governing board for the U.S. Postal Service is under federal criminal investigation for allegedly using his position for personal gain. Walsh had been on the nine-member board for six years and had been its vice chairman since 2003. He resigned in August as a separate investigation by the U.S. Postal Service's Office of Inspector General was winding down. That investigation substantiated claims by a whistleblower that Walsh misused postal service cars, cellphones and credit cards, according to a 22-page report released to The Courant Tuesday. He allegedly received up to $10,000 in inappropriate benefits." | |
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October 18, 2005 - Postmaster, Supervisor Pay Consultations Concluded- Pay consultations between the Postal Service and NAPUS and the National League of Postmasters have concluded, resulting in a one-year compensation package that will remain in effect through FY 2006. In addition, pay consultations with the National Association of Postal Supervisors (NAPS) have concluded covering the same time frame. Effective January 6, 2007, the maximums to the salary structure for EAS Level 11-26 Postmasters will increase by 2.25 percent. The pay package announced this date by the Postal Service was not accepted by the National Association of Postal Supervisors | |
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October 18, 2005 - EEOC Certifies Class Action Case for Rehab Postal Employees From PR Reader: "An EEO filed involved 861 Rehab postal employees from the Colorado/Wyoming District. On August 19, 2005 EEOC Administrative Judge Dickie Montemayor certified the Edmond Walker, et, al v John E Potter class action in Denver CO. The USPS is appealing the certification decision to the EEOC Office of Federal Operations--this may take a year or longer. The class action certification sought by the Walker case consist of: "All permanent rehabilitation employees whose duty hours have been restricted, from January 1, 2000 to the present, in violation of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973." | |
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October 18, 2005 -
Postal Service Offers
Explanation for Controversial Artwork |
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October 18, 2005 - Getting Tough On Workers' Comp: Increased Oversight Tames Rise in Costs, Claims -Ron Henderson, manager of health and resource management at USPS, argues that reducing costs ultimately boils down to one thing: workplace safety. “When the accidents don’t happen, the injuries don’t occur,” he said. In sheer numbers, the Postal Service has by far the most injuries and workers’ compensation cases. By focusing on safety improvements and training, the agency has cut reported injuries 27 percent since 2000, when workers’ compensation claims were at an all-time high there. Henderson said it’s taken “tremendous effort” from employees, managers and supervisors to make it happen. | |
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October 18, 2005 - I.D. Systems Receives Additional $2.6 Million in USPS Orders Under National Contract to Deploy Wireless Vehicle Management Systems - The Wireless Asset Net consists of intelligent wireless devices installed on powered industrial vehicles , a patented communication infrastructure, and client-server software for access control, utilization analysis, real-time location tracking, and many other functions. The system is designed to improve industrial workplace safety and security by restricting vehicle access to trained, authorized operators and by providing electronic safety inspection checklists." Vehicle Asset Communicator (pdf) | |
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October 17, 2005 - APWU: Employees Improperly Denied Early Outs To Be Granted Retirement in December - Under the terms of the one-year contract extension ratified in August, eligible employees who were improperly denied Voluntary Early Retirement in 2003 and/or 2004 will be granted opportunities for early outs, with the retirements taking effect Dec. 31, 2005. Eligible employees will be mailed offers on or about Oct. 31. Employees’ early-retirement decisions will be irrevocable at 5 p.m., Friday, Dec. 2. This is not a new opportunity for early retirement, but the resolution of a dispute arising out of the 2003 early-retirement offering. | |
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October 17, 2005 -
USPS Introduces 'Mailing
Resources for Election Officials'
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October 15, 2005 - Editorial: USPS Volume, Revenue Gains Fail to Deliver Profits - USPS may be using innovation and entrepreneurial strategies to make inroads against private carriers but it doesn't appear to be making inroads on the bottom line. | |
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October 14, 2005 - APWU Questions Transition of Work from Postal Inspection Service To OIG -.. in March 2005, the Postal Service informed the APWU that the responsibility for investigating certain types of employee misconduct (internal crimes) is being shifted from the Postal Inspection Service to the Office of Inspector General (OIG). APWU is questioning whether this change is proper because it has been the past practice that Postal Inspection Service agents are the law enforcement officers who conduct interrogations of bargaining unit employees regarding an internal crime investigation. ".. the Chief Postal Inspector reports directly to and is under the general supervision of the Postmaster General . Whereas, the Inspector General reports directly to the Board of Governors, and does not report, nor is under the PMG supervision. Our contractual relationship is with the PMG, not with the Board of Governors." | |
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October 14, 2005 - USPS Recruiting Recent Retirees, Others for Non Full-Time Employment - To help keep the mail moving during these times, the U.S. Postal Service is looking for substitute rural carriers and postmasters, a job perfectly suited for retirees, "empty nesters," and others who want to meet new people, get exercise, serve their community, make good money and still have time to do other things. | |
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October 14, 2005 - |
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October 13, 2005 - Over 100 Clerks to be Reassigned from Monmouth P & DC -According to Bill Lewis, Trenton APWU President, "The Postal Service has notified the APWU at the regional level of their decision to consolidate mail processing operations at the Monmouth P&DC with those of the Trenton & Kilmer P&DCs. The Postal Service is reporting that only the outgoing mail is being moved. Within 6 months both incoming and outgoing will be processed at the Trenton P&DC. The Postal Service is preliminarily reporting that 116 level 5 clerks and 6 level 6 clerks will be excessed out of the Monmouth P&DC. | |
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October 13, 2005 - Postal Worker Convicted of Attack Federal jury rejects self-defense claim against co-worker - "A federal jury took about 90 minutes Wednesday to convict a Mobile County postal worker of attacking a co-worker with a metal pipe earlier this year. Assistant U.S. Attorney Michele O'Brien noted during her closing statement Wednesday that Charles Rodgers had admitted on the witness stand that he stashed three pipes by his work area at the U.S. Postal Service's processing and distribution center in Tillman's Corner. He told jurors that he was hot and stressed that day." | |
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October 12, 2005 -
APWU: Vacancies for Katrina-Impacted Employees |
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October 12, 2005 - Killer of Tulsa Postal Carrier Will Go Free -He killed a postal carrier in broad daylight. But, now, he's about to go free. Jason Weed was found not guilty by reason of insanity in the December 2001 shooting death of Robert Jenkins. Jenkins was gunned down while delivering mail at a midtown apartment complex. Weed has been in custody ever since. But, Tuesday, a judge ordered Weed can go free. | |
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October 11, 2005-MSPB Reaffirms Hatch Decision; Restores Full Retirement Annuity - (NALC News Bulletin) - The United States Merit Systems Protection Board has reaffirmed its landmark decision in Hatch v. OPM that an injured full-time postal employee who returns to limited duty, but cannot work 40 hours per week, is still entitled to have his or her retirement annuity calculated as if he or she had been in full-time status. NALC President Young praised the latest MSPB ruling in a case brought by retired letter carrier David Hatch of Lynn, Massachusetts Branch 7 who challenged an action by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). Young said it should set a precedent for similarly situated retirees. | |
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October 11, 2005- Arbitrator Rules LMOU Allows Changes to Carrier Route from "Fixed" to "Rotating" Days Off -National Arbitrator Shyam Das has rejected NALC’s position that the Postal Service violated the National Agreement when it unilaterally changed 19 letter carrier route assignments at the Fort Point station in Boston from fixed to rotating days off. In an award issued September 28, Das held that management’s action was justified by the provisions of a Local Memorandum of Understanding (LMOU) in Boston that management contended provided for rotating days off | |
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October 09, 2005- Letter Carrier Tackles Suspected Robber -ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- A letter carrier who heard the cries of "Stop! Thief!" tackled a suspected bank robbery suspect and helped detain him until he was arrested by police. The robber, clutching wads of cash, ran from a downtown bank Thursday and was knocked off his feet by a letter carrier, Jonathan Higgins, 43. Higgins fought with the suspect until he was detained by two police recruits. After the suspect was handcuffed, the letter carrier ran back to his unattended mail in the pony cart and finished his route. "He gets the carrier of the week award," Higgins' supervisor, Jeanie Halpin, said."|
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October 09, 2005 - Linn's U.S. Stamp Yearbook 2004 is now available - The book includes complete production details and design credits for each new stamp, including proposed and preliminary designs. Some of the information discussed in the 2004 yearbook includes: Why controversial singer-actor Paul Robeson was finally honored on a Black Heritage stamp, how the 2004 contemporary Christmas stamps can be traced to a little workshop in Germany, how a grudge against the U.S. Postal Service by John Wayne's son almost spoiled plans to honor the actor with the 2004 Legends of Hollywood commemorative, and what prompted Disney officials to grant approval to feature Disney characters on U.S. stamps. Amick also tells how complaints from brides and their mothers resulted in a decision to issue new stamps with what the Postal Service calls "pretty, soft and feminine" illustrations specifically for wedding invitations. |
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October 07, 2005 - Arbitration Award in 5-7-9 Case Sets Principles for Skilled, Semi-Skilled Work -"After multiple hearings and a lengthy briefing period, Arbitrator Shyam Das has issued an arbitration award (PDF) that establishes principles for differentiating between semi-skilled and skilled maintenance work. Although the union's grievance was sustained in part, denied in part, and remanded in part, union officers generally believe the award will benefit Maintenance Craft employees." | |
October 07, 2005 -
USPS, Unions
Deliver a Partnership For Safer Workplace |
October 07, 2005 -
Press Release:
Brentwood Exposed Meeting (pdf)
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October 07, 2005 - Postmaster Loses Job, Placed Under Internal Investigation The postmaster of the Watertown, NY Post Office has been relieved of his duties and is under internal investigation for undisclosed reasons. Maureen D. Marion, a spokeswoman for USPS, confirmed Thursday that Theodore Poleto was fired about a week ago and that Walter Whalen has been named temporary officer-in-charge at the post office. Mrs. Marion also confirmed that there is an investigation of Mr. Poleto, but declined to say the nature of the action.| |
October 05, 2005 -
FedEx to raise shipping rates in 2006
- FedEx
Corp. on Wednesday said it would increase shipping rates for its
FedEx Express service by an average of 3.5 percent effective Jan
2. The rise comprises an average increase in standard list rates
of 5.5 percent, offset by a decrease in its fuel surcharge of 2
percent. The company will also raise a delivery surcharge for
certain postal codes by up to 10 cents per package. |
October 04, 2005 -
APWU: USPS Seeks
to Thwart Landmark FMLA Ruling
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APWU Files Dispute Over USPS Return-to-Work Requirements (PDF)
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October 04, 2005 - 24-Hour Post Office Will Close -A trend toward automated shipping is prompting the closing of the last Omaha post office that is staffed 24 hours a day. The retail window will close in January, Postmaster Eva Jon Sperling said Monday. The office is currently a retail facility in front and a processing center in back; only the retail portion will be closed. The seven full-time employees will have the opportunity to bid on other Postal Service jobs, Sperling said. The closing is due to a decline in customer visits. "We're providing access in other ways," Sperling said. | |
October 04, 2005 - Postal Worker's Assault Case Gets New Court - The assault case against Elizabethton Postmaster Bruce Range was removed from Carter County Sessions Court and transferred to U.S. District Court . The federal case stems from an incident at the Elizabethton Post Office on the morning of July 20, when postal employee Gary White said he was seeking payment for advanced sick leave. White said Range slammed the top half of a Dutch-style double door on his arm. In his brief for the court, M. Neil Smith assistant U.S. attorney said even if White’s arm was injured when Range closed the door on it, Range would have been acting properly “in closing and securing the door to prevent a disruptive and disorderly employee from entering a secured work floor.” | |
October 04, 2005 -
Former Postal Worker Pleads Guilty To
Misappropriation Of Funds
- A former South Carolina postal worker has admitted
taking more than $100,000 in postal money orders. The U.S.
Attorney's Office said Amanda Gail Bennett is accused of
converting about 140 postal money orders to her own use while
she was in charge of the Wellford post office in 2003 and 2004.
Prosecutors says some of the money orders were posted to her
personal checking account and some were sent to people in
California, Pennsylvania and New York. Postal officials in Saint
Louis detected the problem in an internal check. All told,
officials said Bennett took
$117,463.83 |
October 04, 2005 - Book Excerpt: Breaking Down at the Post Office - The "going postal" phenomenon began with U.S. Post Office massacres. In the popular mind, these post office murder sprees still have no context. They were too bizarre, too ridiculous. Post offices are quiet, colorless places in the public eye. Nothing could be more dull, even comically bland, than a United States Post Office. And no one could be more harmless than the mailman in the blue-gray shorts, driving his white delivery truck or power-walking in his pith helmet." | |
October 03, 2005 -Postal
Worker, family survive blast in Bali restaurant -
Duke Ha Ly, a
47-year-old mechanic for the U.S. Postal Service, and his
family were awaiting their meals at a seafront restaurant in
Bali when a huge explosion shattered their Saturday evening.
Parts of the roof of Nyoman's Café fell on their heads. Ly
suffered only scratches from the flying debris. |
October 02, 2005 -
Possum Found Near Honolulu Mail
Processing Facility |
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