Related Links Chapter
7: Creating the Digital Postal Network: Linking Customers, Carriers,
and Correspondence to the Future of the Mail (NALC covers
GPS and Intelligent Mail scanners in its March 2004 issue of
the Postal Record) "Integrate facility automation efforts with
the transportation network using Intelligent Mail technology, GPS
and on-board computer technology so the USPS can track EVERY vehicle
and communicate with them. -Postal Commission Report
Flats Sequencing System & Delivery Point
Packaging Status Update presentation (pdf) (4/17/05)
|
Corporate Automation Plan -- Phase II Update
August 17 2005
William P. Galligan, SVP,
Operations
Corporate Automation Plan, Phase I
(CAP I) began in 1989, focusing on the automation of letters, flats and
parcels. CAP Phase II
includes those three plus automated bundle processing, automated tray and
container processing, longer term plans for
delivery (flats automation), transportation and intelligent mail, including
scanning and tracking.
The Advanced Facer Canceller
System (AFCS) has been modified to include Optical Character Readers (OCR),
upgraded ink jet cancellers, and an improved “doubles” detector. Aging
Multi-Line Optical Character Readers (MLOCR) will be replaced by Delivery
Input/Output Subsystem (DIOSS) equipment in 2006, with advanced features and
greater depth of sort. The Postal Automated Redirection System (PARS) Phase I
for undeliverable-as-addressed letters has been completed, and full deployment
of Phase II should be completed by late 2007 (282 plants through 12 remote
encoding centers). PARS for flats is being explored and eventually may handle
parcels as well.
The options for sequencing flats
have been narrowed to one, the Flats Sequencing System (FSS). Research and
development is continuing for FSS and a prototype machine will be tested in the
vendor’s plant in October 2005 and will be followed by a postal field test in
the spring of 2006. If successful, deployment could start in 2008. A second
option, Delivery Point Packaging (DPP), was ended after the Phase 1 evaluation.
FSS would bring about several
operational changes for mailers – different dropship sites, elimination of some
carrier route presort, a required 11-digit barcode (or ID tags), possible
elimination of detached address labels, increased 5-digit presort, standardized
label placement, and rates that reflect the appropriate savings.
The currently deployed Automated
Flat Sorting Machine (AFSM) 100 will receive two upgrades beginning in 2006
including an automatic induction system for automated feeding, and an automated
tray handling system for automatic loading and sweeping of trays on the backside
of the machine.
The initial deployment of
Automated Package Processing System (APPS) will be completed in 2006 and replace
outdated Small Parcel Bundle Systems.
See presentation
DEVELOPING AN
INTERFACE TO THE AFSM 100 AUTOMATED INDUCTION PROCESS
New work group #96 will look at
a new interface, the automated induction process to the AFSM 100. There is
significant labor related to getting bundles and packages ready for the AFSM 100
and loading them onto the equipment. This automated induction will eliminate the
need for labor (up to four individuals) and introduce an automatic feed process
for the equipment. The work group will look at how to make the whole process as
efficient as possible
AFSM-ai
PROGRAM
- Integrate Flat Mail Preparation
Operation into the AFSM 100
- Automate the Induction and Feeding of Prepped Flats into the Feeder/Transport
System
- Preproduction Machine Installed at Southern MD P&DC
- First Article Test – Pittsburgh PA P&DC
source: August 2005
Highlights Mailers' Technical Advisory Committee (MTAC)
Flats
Sequencing System & Delivery Point Packaging Status Update
April 17, 2005
Thomas Day, USPS VP
Engineering
stated that "the Postal Service is moving along two paths to a time
when manual handling of flats and letters will be minimized. One
route is an integrated delivery point packaging (DPP) system,
merging presorted flats and letters into a single bundle. The other
route is developing a flats sequencing system (FSS) that would sort
flats separately, which would reduce the time required to case the
flats and save office time for carriers, now about
2—3
hours a day. A contract with Northrop Grumman has been finalized to
build an in-plant prototype to demonstrate that their system will
work. The final sort should put the flats in a sequence that
minimizes carrier handling. If that test is successful, a full-scale
system will be installed in a DDU in Indianapolis for a field test.
If that test works well (probably completed by mid-2006), a proposal
will be sent to the Governors for approval to proceed with
production at the end of 2006, with deployment in 2008."
|
Award
Prototype Contract - Sep 04
Build Prototype
Sep 04 – Oct 05
In-Plant Test
Oct 05
Field Test (9 Week)
Apr – Jun 06
Production Contract
Oct 06
Deployment
Jan 08 |
|
The delivery point
packaging strategy would produce a single bundle of letters and
flats, which would significantly reduce the carrier’s route time
since it would eliminate a fingering process that picks letters and
flats from different containers in the vehicle. In a cost-sharing,
risk-sharing mode, the Postal Service and four contractors will
complete four test bed prototypes, which would be evaluated by mid
2006. After that, the most eligible version would be built and
tested at a USPS site.
There are significant effects with either system, some for the
Postal Service (mail would move upstream changing the flow of mail
patterns, which will affect logistics, space requirements and mail
management), and some for mailers (use of the 11-digit barcode,
improved address quality, and possible changes in mail make-up and
induction procedures).
source: February 2005
Highlights Mailers' Technical Advisory Committee (MTAC)
Flats Sequencing System & Delivery Point
Packaging Status Update presentation (pdf)
|