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Postal News - March 2007

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TOP POSTAL STORIES OF THE MONTH

March 31, 2007-

Private Carriers Worry Postal Service Union

"It's not the good old days where you know your postal carrier and he knows you and your kids," said Paul Price, the business agent for the NALC's region 2, which serves Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Utah and Washington. Where the handbook used to say contract carriers could be employed in sparsely populated areas, now it simply says "neighborhoods," Price said." The post office performs background checks and credit checks on its contract carriers, he said. But Price argues that those precautions aren't strictly regulated, and when on vacation, contract carriers can turn their routes over to whomever they please.  Comments Related to Article | Contract carrier makes plea deal   |

March 29, 2007-

Going Postal in Beaverton
Look what's in an already-controversial mail delivery contract -
"Beaverton Postmaster John Lee told the letter carrier's union in January that he was hiring a contractor for delivery in a Beaverton-area suburb because he thought it could save $33,878 a year. But that's hard to believe given that records show the contractor, Christopher Onuliak, is getting $12,279 for a four-month "emergency contract." That means Onuliak is netting $118 for each day of delivery to 20 mailboxes in the Arbor Parc suburb... The deal is also a family affair. Onuliak is the son of Mike Onuliak, a manager at the Beaverton post office."   |

March 25, 2007-

They’ve Got Mail, but Look Who Delivered It

(New York) The Shorehaven contractor, whose name the Postal Service would not disclose, has a two-year contract, which started on Jan. 8, for $16,800 a year. He works only about an hour and a half a day according to a schedule prepared by the Postal Service and provided by John Springman, NALC Branch 36 Executive VP. Another tale of contract delivery: Box Delivery Contractor loses security clearance 9 years after incident (PDF) - A Florida Postal Service box delivery contractor had her security clearance revoked in 2006 for an incident that occurred in 1997. She had an otherwise unblemished 14-year career with the Postal Service  While appealing revoked security clearance she hired a replacement to deliver mail on contract 2 routes.  Photo: New Uniform for Postal Carriers?   |

 

March 23, 2007-

Young, Potter Reach Agreement to Resume Contract Negotiations

 "NALC President William H. Young and Postmaster General John E. Potter reached agreement March 20 to resume bargaining for a new National Agreement. They set April 6 as a deadline to reach a settlement. Young and Potter also agreed that, in the event talks fail and an impasse remains, mediation would be waived and the impasse would go directly to binding arbitration. NALC continues to protests USPS’s ‘contracting out’ moves and plans to take the issue to lawmakers in Congress." Young said he had received official notice of the USPS’s intent to contract out the work of 10 existing full-time regular carrier positions in Reno, Nevada. NALC News Bulletin (PDF)   |

 

Contract Postal Carriers Get More Routes

(Seattle WA) "One new housing development at a time, more non-postal service mail carriers are taking on routes across the nation, and the Puget Sound area is no exception. A new 89-home development in Lake Stevens is likely to be the most recent example. Though Pasadera Heights neighborhood near Everett is still under construction, the U.S. Postal Service is planning on contracting the route out this spring. Whether contracted carriers eventually incite the kind of controversy they have elsewhere remains to be seen."  |

 

March 17, 2007-

Hundreds Protest Use of Private Mail Carriers -

"About 350 union letter carriers showed up Thursday evening in front of Beaverton's Post Office to protest the use of private postal delivery contractors in urban Washington County." L.C. Hansen, president of the 1,800-member Branch 82 union said "the decision really cuts into the career letter carrier’s “brand” as a reliable, steady and conscientious professional who can be trusted to handle sensitive and important mail. Private letter carriers could be a step by the Postal Service to create a “Wal-Mart-type, low-pay jobs with no benefits,” she said." Video: Post Office Looks To Privatize|

March 30, 2007-

Rate increases may permanently damage mail industry
DM News: Cary H. Baer, a direct marketing consultant, says "
the rate increase has the possibility of doing permanent damage to commercial postal users and therefore the U.S. Postal Service itself. The commissioners and their staff just don’t understand the damage they may have done to the postal service and the direct mail industry. The postal service’s financial health depends on a growing volume of Standard mail. That is particularly important, given both new reform legislation and recent labor contract settlements."   |

 

March 27, 2007-

USPS Implements Phase Two of National Reassessment Process

“On February 28th, the Postal Service notified the APWU that they are ready to implement Phase 2 of the National Reassessment Process (NRP) in two USPS Districts.” (Implementation began in the Dakotas District on March 6th and in the New Hampshire/Vermont District on March 13th). “The Postal Service advises that no other Districts have been approved for Phase 2 at this time. There is no established District by District schedule. Districts will be approved for Phase 2 when USPS Headquarters confirms that they have completely and accurately completed Phase 1.” Phase 2 process is broken into three phases: the Search Process, Job Offer Process, and the ‘No Work Available (NWA) Process."  |

Some Postal Workers Under Investigation Back On Job
More than four months into an investigation of carrier mail-handling practices at the Battle Creek Post Office, some of the 28 suspended letter carriers are back on the job, a spokesman said Tuesday. “Some employees who were investigated and placed on emergency suspension have been returned to work,” said Jim Mruk, manager of public affairs and communications for the U.S. Postal Service’s Great Lakes regional office near Chicago. “There are others who have resigned or who we are in the process of removing.”   |

 

March 07, 2007-

NALC Branch To Protest USPS Plans to 'Contract Out' Mail Delivery

 (Oregon) The U.S. Postal Service plans to hire a contractor to deliver mail in the Arbor Parc subdivision north of Beaverton, a move that is believed to be a first for the Portland area but is criticized by the letter carriers' union. In a letter to the union, Beaverton Postmaster John Lee said the agency thinks it can save $33,878 a year by using a contractor to serve the growing subdivision. L.C. Hansen, the branch president, predicted the move would mirror those in other cities where contractors have cut letter carriers' wages and benefits to cut costs. Short-term contract employees might take security and other tasks less seriously than long-term employees with health and retirement benefits, she said. And it could erode the national postal delivery system. The union plans an "informational picket" on the issue from 5 to 5:45 p.m. March 15 at the Beaverton post office. Mail delivery shouldn’t be contracted out  | Contract Mail Delivery Routes - USPS & DOL Requirements  |

 

March 31, 2007-

Just In Case You Missed it

Military reservists who worked at the U.S. Postal Service between 1980 and 2000 could be eligible for thousands of dollars in compensation because they were improperly charged for their military leave. Note: The USPS has taken the position that they will not pay back pay for nonscheduled days charged to military leave before FY 2002.  See NALC (PDF)   In the case of David Miller, what he won is discovery and a hearing.  Many veterans continue to hope the USPS will do the right thing voluntarily. Postal Employee Challenges USPS Over Military Leave  |

 

Postmaster: Door slot request was not an order

Postal officials say that a recent request to customers in Riverside and Old Greenwich to move mailboxes away from the house and to the curb is part of a national trend to increase safety for carriers. Postmaster Bob Palmer's 22 postal carriers aren't looking for a more convenient way to deliver mail, he said. They are looking for a safer way. "They're not lazy," he said. "It's a matter of safety.   |

 

Postal Clerk Retires at Age 89

Postal clerk Carol Darwin is retiring at age 89 after her shift tonight sorting letters at the U.S. Postal Service's San Jose distribution center on Lundy Avenue. But what makes the story amazing is that Darwin hasn't missed a day of work because of illness since she began her career at the post office Jan. 16, 1966. In that time, she's racked up 4,244 hours of sick leave - a little more than two years' worth. In a statement from the Postal Service, Darwin said she didn't miss a day of class in college or high school, either. She credits her good health to eating organically grown produce, getting plenty of rest and exercise and keeping a positive attitude.  |

 

E-NAPUS: Postmasters Hit Capitol Hill (PDF

Postal Supervisor arrested in USPS fraud case  |

Persichilli installed as new Hornell postmaster


March 30, 2007-

Area Where Postal Worker Killed to Keep Home Mail Delivery
Residents of a neighborhood where a postal worker was killed by a stray bullet successfully fought the U.S. Postal Service's plan to replace home delivery with clusters of mailboxes outside homes.   |

 

Motorists sue over junk mail from Bureau of Motor Vehicles
Motorists in several states are suing Imagitas, Inc, a company that sends advertising in vehicle registration notices, saying it violates a federal law that protects their personal information. Note: Imagitas Inc.,( A Pitney Bowes company)  also has a contract with USPS for ad inserts that are included with Change of Address (COA) packets. |

 

Former Joplin postal employee convicted of damaging van at PO   |

Beloved Terra Linda mailman to retire after 43 years
Postal Service may move some operations to New Orleans

It's Official: APWU Contract Signed   |

USPS Announces New Stamps for New Rates
USPS website has new look for Star Wars promotion

Pitney Bowes Launches Website for Rate Change

Mail carrier goes the extra yard for his customers

 

March 29, 2007-

New York Online Gambling Racket Goes Postal  

- One of the alleged runners charged in the case include a  postal worker who placed bets for bosses at a New York City post office  |

 

 Postal Employee Health and Pension Benefits  Shielded?? A hand shot up from the audience at the National Postal Forum in Washington this week. A man wanted to know why, in December's postal reform law, Congress and the president didn't reduce health and pension benefits to make the U.S. Postal Service -- where labor costs account for 78 percent of expenses -- more competitive.  |

 

MA: Letter Carrier arrested for distributing drugs on route   |

Postal Bulletin 3/29/07: PostalPEOPLE, more...

APWU: Arbitrator's 2001 Analysis Deserves Consideration

NALC: New MOU on appealing Rural/City delivery disputes (PDF)   |
Postal carrier goes above, beyond duty   |

Former postmaster pleads guilty to stealing postal funds   |

Rhode Island introduces do-not-mail bill

Big postal job bucks? Not so fast, buddy!    |

 


March 28, 2007-

Maryland: Oldest Mailman In Area Set To Retire

Mail-boxed in a corner - If couple refuses to move mailbox, their mail could be returned to senders.

PRC's Blair hopes for expedited decision on rate consideration
Writing Junk Mail. Somebody has to do it

First of new Star Wars stamps revealed

Postal Service admits ZIP code error

Live from National Postal Forum: PRC’s Decision “Somewhat Anomalous”
Con men still seek a quick buck the old way: By using snail mail

 

March 27, 2007-

PMG Potter Keynote Speaker at National Postal Forum
We're living in a new world. The new postal rates, the new postal law, and increasing Internet access - will all have a direct affect on the Postal Service and your business. We need to hear from you about the new law, because our ultimate goal remains the same - to provide you and the American public with quality, universal service at affordable rates.
 Potter: Communication is key in new postal environment  | National Postal Forum: Potter Preaches Teamwork   |

 

Nation Gets Sneak Peak Of The Forever Stamp

The Forever stamp goes on sale April 12 at 41 cents. Customers can begin using the stamp when postage changes May 14.Once prices change May 14, the Forever stamp will remain on sale at the 41-cent First-Class one-ounce letter price until the next price change. The Forever stamp will then be available at the new price.”  |

USPS Star Wars Themed Pre-Paid Express Mail Packaging

Postal inspector's tip leads to Georgia player's arrest
USPS TO Build on $1.9 Billion Share Of International Shipping Market

APWU, USPS Reach Tentative Contract on IT/ASC Contract

APWU: National Election Committee Amends Rules

Car Collided Into Mail Truck, Portland Police Say

Unleashed dog halts mail service to entire neighborhood
Intelligent Mail bar codes available for flats mail May 1, 2007

 

 March 26, 2007-

Online Video Shows Meltdown at the Kensington Post Office

A Brooklyn post office branch cited for horrendous service got another black eye after a customer's postal behavior was signed, sealed and delivered to YouTube viewers. The clip on the Web site - shot with a cell-phone camera at the Kensington post office branch in December - shows an irate, profanity-spewing man demanding to see a manager, but he's stopped by police instead.  |

 

Photo: USPS Unveils New ‘Forever’ First-Class Stamp

Talk of Postal Hikes Kicks Off Conference

Delivering Change at the Post Office

OIG Special Agent Says Miami Cop Attacked Him

Postal Service hasn't earned right to rate increase

New company taking postal mail to the Internet

Postal inspector links 'Bishop' letters to KC

Mailers Council calls on USPS board to avoid another rate case


March 25, 2007-

St. Charles at odds with the postal service over slow mail delivery  |

 

March 24, 2007-

APWU: Postal Service Continues Plans to Close AMCs
"As part of an ongoing effort to outsource postal work, the USPS recently outlined management's continuing plans to eliminate Air Mail Centers across the country. Two letters to the APWU provide additional details about plans management announced over the summer. In a letter dated March 14, 2007 (PDF), the USPS notified the APWU that management will continue to consider outsourcing operations at 14 of 43 facilities management identified in July 2006. "This decision continues a disturbing trend of replacing good-paying union jobs with low-wage non-union workers," APWU President William Burrus said. The majority of workers affected by the closing of AMCs will be Mail Handlers, but some Clerks also will be reassigned."  |

 

Ex-Carrier and 'Pimp of the Year' Gets Near-Maximum Term

Former letter carrier Matthew Thompkins ran a profitable prostitute ring while delivering NYC mail. He agreed to forfeit four homes, eight vehicles and nearly $750,000. During raids, investigators found 2 trophies proclaiming Thompkins "Pimp of the Year." Thompkins, a Bronx native and former letter carrier, resigned from the Postal Service after he plead guilty last year.   |

 

Mail carrier puts his stamp on grandson's birth

For 35 years, Ed Eskesen has delivered mail for the U.S. Postal Service, but the grandfather's most special delivery was delivering his grandson early Friday morning. Eskesen, of Simpsonville, said his daughter, Leigh Ann, woke him up in labor around 2:30 a.m. Her baby was coming too quickly to go to the hospital. So Eskesen fought back his nerves and called a 911 dispatcher who walked him through the birth. "I'd trade my 35 years delivering mail for 15 minutes of delivering a baby," Eskesen said.  |

 

NM residents petition USPS for mail delivery but must pay and install centralized boxes - Since the post office in Alamo closed along with the general store, residents of Alamo and the surrounding areas have been driving 30 miles each way into Magdalena to pick up their mail. The residents got together another petition in November 2005 that got some results. The U.S. Postal Service finally dropped off mailboxes but left the problem of setting them up to local residents  |

 

Woman critical after postal vehicle bumps her - Carrier ticketed for inattentive driving  |

 

USPS to sell Historic James A. Farley Post Office in NYC for $230 million - The Farley building bears the inscription: "Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds"  |

 

My Trip to the Postal Service Bomb-Detection School

Mail Mixup Costs Family

Rep. Susan Davis Introduces Bill to Track Mail-In Ballots

APWU: Senate to Hold Hearing on Employee Free Choice Act

Rochester, MN: Bombs in Mailboxes

MA: Forget about collection mailboxes in Dighton

 

March 23, 2007-

Mail carrier puts safety first - Dave Leventry, acting postmaster for the Kittanning post office awarded postal carrier Roxanne Smerick a $50 U.S. Savings Bond and a plaque for completing 25 years of service without an accident.   |

 

Readers, carriers pan postal service - "Wednesday's story about mail delivery problems in New Lenox apparently struck a nerve."  Misdelivered Mail Sparks Fraud Fears |

 

Photo: Stony Brook, NY Post Office Flapping Eagle Wings Landmark

Lawsuit Over Postal Regulation Banning Solicitations on Post Office Sidewalks Still Alive

PRC seeks mailer input on postal reform

Direct Mail Goes Digital


March 22, 2007-

USPS OIG Report on Delivery and Retail Standard Operating Procedures (PDF)
The report summarizes an OIG review of Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) for City, Rural Delivery operations and Function 4 operations in nine USPS areas.  According to the report in part:  In the Houston District the OIG observed carriers retrieving mail from the staging area before the supervisor could record mail volume which created the potential for mail volume distortion. "The condition existed because the supervisor's primary focus was getting the carriers to the street, not following the SOP for measuring mail volume. "  |

 

Postal Clerk Sues USPS Over Forced Lunch Break

(Florida) Kenneth M. Fox says his painful arthritis requires him to keep moving, but his bosses are forcing him to take lunch breaks. Fox, a 55-year-old military veteran from Pinellas County, is suing the U.S. Postal Service under the Americans with Disabilities Act, claiming the mandatory lunch breaks are a violation of his rights under the law. Fox has worked since 1997 as an automation clerk at the airport postal facility, according to a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court. The lawsuit, which asks for an injunction and attorneys fees, says allowing Fox to work through lunch is a “reasonable accommodation” required under the ADA. Fox to work through lunch is a “reasonable accommodation” required under the ADA. Fox also asserts in his suit that  other postal facilities "permit employees to choose whether or not to utilize the offered lunch break."  |

 

Forever Stamp Debuts At National Postal Forum March 26
"Monday: The Forever Stamp is unveiled for the first time. The value on these stamps will always be the one-ounce letter rate and can be used for any future one-ounce letter mailing without extra postage. Tuesday: John E. Potter, Postmaster General, and Sir Martin Sorrell, CEO, WPP, address the Forum. Sessions on the newly established rates and a discussion on the new postal law will be held. Wednesday: Why mailboxes around the country were dressed up like R2D2 will be revealed with a new stamp unveiling." National Postal Forum
 |

 

Postal worker faces charges in identity theft

(PA) Kim McKnight Jimenez, 48,a passport clerk at the Gus Yatron GMF in Muhlenberg Township unlawfully obtained 18 credit cards by using postal customers’ names and Social Security numbers.. Jimenez surrendered to authorities Wednesday to face 18 counts of identity theft, police said. According to investigators: A mail clerk alerted Deborah Beatty, branch supervisor, that credit cards in other people’s names were being mailed to the three post office boxes and Jimenez’s home address.   |

 

EEOC Brief: A Postal Employee alleged that he was subjected to harassment based on his sex when his supervisor used the word "ladies" when addressing all of the window clerks, including the employee and when supervisor addressed the employee as "Ma'am." The EEOC found that "a reasonable fact-finder could not conclude that the challenged incidents, taken together, were sufficiently severe or pervasive to establish a hostile work environment." Therefore, the EEOC affirmed dismissal of the Postal Employee’s claim. Salisbury v. Potter  |

 

Photos: USPS/Star Wars Promotion Hits Light Speed

Mailbox product intended to alert customers --not startle letter carriers

Bayonne losing last local-only mailboxes   |

Dog poop too much for Canada Post   |

New R2-D2 mailboxes are not a bomb  |

USPS puts its stamp on wedded bliss


March 21, 2007-

Misdelivered mail sparks fraud fears
"The pink plastic card that arrived in her neighbor's mailbox Saturday underscores Jeanne Sidler's complaint with her mail service. The card, a note to the carrier from a supervisor, reads, "Misdelivery problem here Verify mail before deliveryi (sic) Customer is very upseti (sic) Do not deliver this card. "Not only did they deliver it, but they delivered it to the wrong house," Sidler said.  |

 

North Carolina: Two Postal facilities among safest in U.S

Al Gore to Deliver Postcards to Capitol Hill

Courteous postal clerks  |
Would-be postal thief caught in the act

Elderly woman drives into post office

The mail keeps coming late  |

Comply or face regulation, says DMA chairman  |
Postal Service looks at delivery change after shooting of death of carrier
 |

Former postal worker denies trying to arrange wife's murder

Canada Post turns to US counterparts in medal theft
 

March 20, 2007-

Unions Press FBI to Brief Congress on Anthrax Investigation

Letter carrier hangs up bag after 32 years

Our view: U.S. Postal Service isn't delivering  |

 

March 19, 2007-

USPS Board Sets May 14 for New Rate Increases
The Governors of the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) today approved an increase in the price of a First-Class stamp to 41 cents, authorized the issuance of the Forever Stamp, approved shape-based pricing, and set May 14 as the date for implementation of these changes. However, they delayed implementation of new prices for periodicals and requested reconsideration for some mail classes. DMNews: Most PRC rates win USPS Governors' approval | BOG Decision ( PDF)   |

 

APWU: Second COLA Under New Contract Expected To Be Small?

"After the first month of the six-month measuring period, and assuming the adjustment was made based on the February index point, the second COLA under the 2006-2010 National Agreement would be zero. However, the adjustment will be made based on the July 2007 index point, and it is expected that the July index will exceed 593.2 and the second COLA will result in a modest adjustment."   |

 

To Mail Or Not To Mail Is Marketers' Question
"First came the national "do not call" list. Then there was talk of a "do not e-mail" registry. Now, more than a dozen states from Hawaii to New York are weighing "do not mail" bills. The assault on the direct marketing industry shows no signs of letting up, forcing marketers to find new - and less annoying - ways of getting consumers' attention. Several direct marketing agencies said the industry has been steadily moving away from cold calls and "junk mail" toward more sophisticated techniques that allow them to pinpoint potential customers."   |

 

Fanciest Postal Code Is About To Be Split Up

Letter: Postal Retiree Defends Service

Retired Postmaster Wins HGTV Dream Home

Georgia Postmaster Wins Benjamin Franklin Award of Excellence


March 18, 2007-

Today In Postal History

The Strike That Stunned The Country

- The Great Postal Strike - March 18, 1970, thousands of New York City postal workers walked off the job in protest. At the time, postal workers were not permitted by law to engage in collective bargaining. Postal workers felt wages were very low, benefits poor and working conditions unhealthy and unsafe. The U.S. Post Office Department's management was outdated and, according to workers, haphazard. Informal attempts by workers to obtain higher pay and better working conditions had proven fruitless. Within days, they were joined by over 200,000 others in 30 major cities. Mail service ground to a halt and the plight of postal workers was brought to the public's attention. On March 25 President Richard Nixon called out 24,000 military forces to begin distributing the mail. But the military proved ineffective at the task. The strike was soon settled, with Congress approving a 6 percent wage increase. The strike led directly to passage of the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970, which  provided for collective bargaining for postal workers.  |

 

Albuquerque: Postal service aims to improve

Vero Beach City Council to go behind closed doors over postal case

 


March 17, 2007-

Cluster boxes may replace home delivery in dangerous areas

The postal service is considering ending home mail delivery to the area where a postal worker was killed and instead use a centrally located group of outdoor locked boxes in an effort to protect letter carriers. Other city neighborhoods where letter carrier safety is a concern also could get the cluster boxes instead of front-door delivery.  |

 

Postal Service asking its customers to think flat

A package is fine, but a flat is better. The best thing to do is send a letter. That’s the message from the U.S. Postal Service, which is trying to encourage customers to think smaller, when possible, with their mail ahead of a probable postal rate increase. The Postal Service is stressing that consumers can save money if they can turn packages into flats or flats into letters. |

 

R2-D2 Mail Collection Box Unveiled in Hollywood

Mail center's contract work force halved   |

Phoenix letter carrier gets probation for stealing mail   |

Shots fired in post office during robbery attempt

Postal Bulletin 3/15/07 Issue- New Handbook EL-804, Safe Driver Program, more..


March 16, 2007-

Beaverton Postmaster: Contractors play important role in USPS |

Postal carrier accused of mail theft |

New Jersey postmaster faces numerous charges |

Post office project becomes lesson on community
 


March 15, 2007-

PMG Potter Airs Reservations on Postal Reform Law
.."
the nation’s 72nd postmaster general made clear that he has some serious concerns about how the Postal Service will operate under the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act.  "I'm bullish about the mail," Potter continued. "I'm not saying we cannot be successful going forward." He added, however, that the future of the mail might now be in the hands of Dan Blair, head of the newly empowered Postal Regulatory Commission."  |

 

APWU: Contract provision offers additional protection against excessing

 The union’s new contract permits full-time employees who the Postal Service identifies as “excess” to remain in the craft and installation as part-time regulars |

 

USPS Confirm 'Star Wars' R2-D2-Themed Collection Boxes -

The Postal Service is embarking on a promotional partnership that could begin with something similar, “A short time from now, in a collection box not so far, far away…”By tomorrow morning, 400 collection boxes across the country will feature an R2D2 wrap. R2D2 is the little bubble-headed Star Wars android who speaks in whistles and chirps. And while none of us can say yet what the partnership is, we can tell you that an exciting announcement about it will be made March 28  |

 

You've Got Mail

But it isn't always the U.S. Postal Service delivering it
"The Postal Service's hunt to outsource delivery for about 190 addresses north of Beaverton is part of what critics believe is a worrisome trend toward privatization. They question the security of a federal agency seeking the lowest bidder to handle the responsibility of delivering sensitive items such as prescription drugs, utility bills and replacement debit cards. "It's important to preserve the U.S. Postal Service as the nation's universal mail provider and not be tempted by risky privatization plans," says U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.)."   |

 

BOG considered rate recommendations via closed  telecon last week - According to the Federal Register, the USPS Board of Governors met via closed teleconference on March 6th to consider the PRC's recommended rate changes

 

Postal vehicle hits child  |

Congressman halts plans to shut 3 Bronx mail centers  |

Harassment By ATVs Scares Mail Carriers Away |

MDI lays off 250 after losing postal contract

Postal Service benefits as millions buy stamps, arrange deliveries online

USPS Celebrates Star Wars Anniversary, Droid Style

 


March 14, 2007-

NALC Young: It’s time to stop the ‘run amok’ OIG

The OIG has run amok in recent months, unleashing a reign of terror on letter carriers in dozens of post offices across the country. Time and again, overzealous agents have swooped into stations and placed groups of carriers on emergency suspensions pending removal—all for activities and work methods long approved by their supervisors or local postmasters. Like a bunch of fanatic Barney Fifes, OIG hotshots have seized dozens of carriers on dubious charges without proper investigations or respect for our members’ due process rights. They also have routinely ignored the Postal Service’s obligations to consult and inform the NALC on matters involving discipline set out in our National Agreement.   |

 

Predictability, flexibility key issues at USPS/PRC regulatory summit
Bookspan CEO Markus Wilhelm aid the flexibility might mean that the USPS can offer seasonal rates. We all know that we all mail heavily at the end of the year and in January,” he said. “So, if everybody wants to mail in January, does it make sense to have the same prices that you have during the rest of the year, or do you offer incentives to get companies to mail other times of the year?” This concept could work for offering incentives to mail different days of the week. “From my own experience, Tuesday is the busiest day of the week for the postal service,” Mr. Wilhelm said. “But we could enable the postal service to become more efficient and adjust their prices to allow us to deliver on different days of the week.   |

 

Minnesota: Letter carrier dies after postal truck hits trees  |

Rude postal clerk  |

USPS to downsize Clinton facility

Chicago Mayor Daley on mail: Feds are 'dysfunctional'   |

Spring Valley Post Office welcomes area postmaster to help out
Dunn Postmaster Addresses Mail Problems

PRC chairman seeks mailer feedback on rulemaking

 


March 13, 2007-

Potter and Donahoe Visit Chicago, Vow Delivery Will Improve Fast

"For now, mail delays here remain a reality. On Sunday, loads of undelivered mail -- much unsorted and postmarked in mid-February -- was found at the downtown processing plant and shipped to several neighborhood offices, sources said. A South Side office received about 90,000 pieces of mail from mid-February and early March, a source said. A spokesman for the post office's Great Lakes Region said he couldn't confirm those reports, but that any "backlog in the system" will be reduced as improvements are implemented.   |

 

Security issues remain with many Coastside P. O. Boxes
(Calif.) A recent mail fraud scheme targeting the Montara post office has left both residents and the U.S. Postal Service concerned about the security of the post office boxes that were targeted. But two weeks after the case was revealed to the public, little has changed to remedy what inspectors admit is an obvious hole in post office security. Detectives within the San Mateo County Sheriff's Office discovered that two Coastside residents had allegedly gained access into eight mail boxes in the Montara post office by reaching through their own cubby and into boxes rented by other patrons.  |

 

Postal Service responds to NJ picketing  |

USPS maintenance facility makes environmental strides

Maryland withdraws do-not-mail bill; Vermont, Arkansas introduce bills

OK: Miami Postal Workers Protest |

Chinese-American Postmaster Left Indelible Stamp on Postal Service |

Study: Credit card mail increases 6 percent |

Postal work a family tradition |

Fundraiser for mail carrier comes a day after he succumbs to cancer

Proposed postal rate hikes leave mailers in shock


March 12, 2007-

Beaverton: Stop Contracting Out - Join The Picket Line March 15  - We can already see some of the results (contracting out). In Florida, deliveries to a new shopping mall are being handled by a private contractor whose criminal record would prevent him from working directly for the USPS. Would you let your pizza guy deliver your paycheck, or your ballot? |

 

Maureen Deprince battles back without legs, eyesight  |

Do-Not-Mail Movement Gains Traction in State Legislatures
DMA’s Greco again asks postal governors to reject catalog rates
 
|
Reject the PRC’s recommended postage hike
In-town Chicago mail system worst in US
  |

Postal Service Says It's Trying To Improve Delivery

Postal service takes more than just mail

Canada's postal service helping U.S. retailers
Tables Turned in Anthrax Investigation
 |

Forever stamp's sticking point


March 11, 2007-

Postal Carriers Protest "Hostile Work Environment" in Brick, NJ -

Postal workers from throughout New Jersey picketed in front of the Brick post office in "protest to what they perceive as ongoing managerial abuses by Postmaster Thomas Wagner. Demonstrators totaling 120 came from other post offices, including Edison, Toms River and Trenton, where Wagner had been in charge, and joined the Brick workers, according to union employee officials." "He created a hostile work environment for everybody here in Brick,'' said Ed Decker, president of the NALC Local 5420 in Brick. Wagner has a controversial history in his postal management career, attracting complaints and news coverage, but getting promoted and reassigned, the union said.  |

 

Postal Employee Challenges USPS Over Military Leave

Photo: Not Your Average Looking Post Office

Chicago suffers mail woes | Shaking up the Mail Bag   |

Why 'Forever Stamps' Are Worth the Price


March 10, 2007-

Postal Service Aims to Save with Independent Carriers

Looking to cut costs nationwide, the Postal Service will now award contracts to nonpostal employees for deliveries in large new housing tracts, usually located on the fringes of cities. These independent contractors don't get benefits. They drive their own cars. The only sign that they are associated with the Postal Service may be a badge at their waist or hanging from a lanyard around their neck." This is the wave of the future," said Susan Sensano, growth coordinator for the Fresno post office. |

 

NY Metro Area Postal Union Joins Anti-War Action  |

Photo: Post Office Named After Postal Carrier

Postmaster cites anthrax as reason for mail processing move  |

Postal officials reveal threats by mail-bomb sender

Catalogers decry rate case hike with letter-writing campaign

Congressman Requests update on Gaylord mail processing consolidation

USPS to Issue Star Wars Stamps for 30th Anniversary?  |


 

March 09, 2007-

Burrus Urges BOG to Approve PRC Rate Recommendations (PDF)

 "I am writing on behalf of the American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO (the APWU), to urge the Governors to approve the Recommended Decision of the Postal Regulatory Commission in Docket No. R2006-1 (hereinafter "Recommended Decision"). The APWU has participated actively in this rate proceeding as an intervenor. Our particular concern in this case is the manner in which discounts are established for workshared First Class mail. On that issue, the Recommended Decision is fundamentally correct and should be approved by the Governors." Postal Governor Vote on Rate Case Expected Next Week   |

 

Seattle Postal District Stoops to a New Low Double Standard (PDF)
From NALC Branch #79 President's Report: "One of the most egregious examples of a double standard has happened recently in our branch. A Station Manager "falsified clock rings and paid a Carrier for work not performed.  When The manager was finally proven to have falsified these clock rings, what was the penalty? Was he fired? No. Was he stripped of his supervisory status? No. Did he have to pay the money back? No. We've actually had Carriers removed for even taking a coffee coupon from UBBM. We've had numerous cases where Carriers have been fired for falsification. These removals are upheld even if it didn't result in any loss to the post office. Management always argues that once an employee falsifies something, they can no longer be trusted and therefore the removal should stand. Why can't a craft employee be trusted after a falsification charge" but a manager can be?   South Carolina Postal Supervisor Fired for Same Infraction | Archive: Clock Rings Lawsuit  |

 

Residents Upset Over Closing PO During Postal Workers Lunch Breaks

 Two workers at the Windsor Terrace post office have enraged the neighborhood with a simple demand that they be given a lunch break. The other day, The Stoop’s switchboard lit up with complaints after a sign was posted explaining that the Prospect Park West postal substation would be closed every day from 12:30 to 2 pm. “I mean, they have a job to do!” screamed one of our callers. “And this is what they do? Postal officials approved the lunch break and have responded by sending over a “Mobile Post Office” truck — though residents say it’s not always there. Alsip mayor: Boycott post office until unreliable mail service is fixed | Chicago: More Mail Delivery Complaints | Kensington’s going ‘Postal’ over poor service  |

 

USPS Want Postal Pallets Back!

"A number of recyclers have been visited by Postal Service employees demanding the return of stray pallets. The USPS has indicated that it has active criminal investigations underway in several parts of the country involving plastic recyclers, pallet bounty hunters, mailers and even post office employees.... thousands of postal pallets are used by the printing industry to distribute millions of flyers. Many of these never make it back to the government."  |

Postal workers reassured on meningitis  |

Ex-postal clerks indicted in credit card theft  |

Special Delivery to Bob

USPS rate changes could be a boon to some small businesses

Postal Insurance Online Claims Filing Coming Soon  |

USPS Grants First Scholarship Awards on Postal History

City sends message about mailboxes

'USPS.com Week' coming next week


March 08, 2007-

Man angry over USPS subcontractors not delivering to blocked box    |

Maryland withdraws do-not-mail bill; Vermont, Arkansas introduce their own

Is it True postal workers more likely to go postal?    |

1,000 late Social Security checks should be in hand

Driver charged after hitting mail carrier

Turn junk mail into more junk mail
Maine: Winthrop postal officials grilled

Postal pot peddler linked to Lake Oswego

USPS and SBA Offering Internet Tools for Entrepreneurs

New postmaster is third-generation to deliver


March 07, 2007-

USPS Became 'Welfare Job' During the 1990s?

According to the President of a Direct Marketing Firm " ...in the 1990s, the Clinton Administration was busy eliminating welfare. While the smoke and mirrors appeared to be successful, the reality was that welfare was simply transferred to a full employment program in the federal government. The USPS, IRS, Social Security Administration and a host of other agencies all swelled and absorbed a large number of the nation’s unemployed. Now, 15 years later, it’s time to fund the pensions of all those people, along with the legions of baby boomers who are calling it quits, and the pension funds are – surprise – unfunded. Postal reform demands funding of those pension benefits, and you are looking at an unending future of increased postage as far out as you can see."  |

 

Burrus: Union mail works

In a letter to the editor of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, American Postal Workers Union president William Burrus wrote: "The Trib's editorial "Perverse 'solution'" (March 1 and PghTrib.com) can only be described as a "cheap shot" at the U.S. Postal Service and postal employees. It concludes that a recent ruling on a proposed rate increase "is a victory for union wages and benefits." The American Postal Workers Union is indeed proud that we were the only organization to suggest that the postage increase for individual citizens and small business should be limited to 2 cents -- rather than 3 cents as the Postal Service requested. We are pleased that we were able to persuade the Postal Regulatory Commission of the soundness of our reasoning."  |

 

Police: Man fishes through mail in front of post office

USPS, PRC announce regulatory summit
USPS Honors 10 Companies With Supplier Performance Awards

 


March 06, 2007-

APWU: Retroactive Pay to Be Issued May 18 - The USPS has notified the APWU that it expects to disburse back pay for the period from Nov. 25, 2006, through Feb. 2, 2007, in paychecks dated May 18 (Pay Period 10-2007). The retroactive pay will reflect a 1.3 percent raise for five pay periods (Pay Period 25-2006 through 03-2007).The 1.3 percent raise was negotiated for all APWU-represented employees as part of the 2006-2010 Collective Bargaining Agreement.

Mailing industry urges "en masse" response to halt increases in catalog rate - A list industry veteran is calling for action over the catalog rate increases recommended late last month by the Postal Regulatory Commission. In an urgent message sent March 5 to all MeritDirect customers, Ralph Drybrough, CEO of MeritDirect List Brokerage Services, White Plains, NY, said that the PRC-proposed flat rates would increase rates by about 20 percent, rather than the 9 to 11 percent increase proposed by the U.S. Postal Service." - Postal Rate Crisis: Industry finding 'devil in the details'   |


 USPS 2006 Comprehensive Statement on Postal Operations

The “Comp Statement,” as it’s sometimes called, is required by law and has been produced each year since 1976. It’s designed to give all postal stakeholders — including employees — a good idea of the Postal Service’s programs and accomplishments, as well as the challenges we faced. In short, it is the summary history of the Postal Service in a given year.  |

 

Do Not Mail Bills Create Conflict Between States and Federal Government

Several thousand pieces of mail found in Kingsport storage units  |
Postal workers deserve our utmost appreciation for their labors

Postmaster wants to make door mail slots history  |

USPS says FSS on track

They'd rather be in Marysville


   March 05, 2007-

MSPB: “Goosing” Doesn’t Warrant Removal

The USPS removed Stephan Evans from his EAS-17 Supervisor of Customer Services position based on the charge of unacceptable conduct towards a craft employee. Specifically, the agency alleged that the appellant and a male subordinate had engaged in “goosing” one another and that the appellant was aware of “goosing” being performed in the office by his subordinates, but did nothing to stop it. [”Goosing,” a slang term, means to poke, prod, or pinch a person between or on the buttocks.] The supervisor appealed his removal to the MSPB. Following a hearing, the administrative judge determined that removal was excessive and mitigated the penalty to a demotion to the next lower-graded, nonsupervisory position with the least reduction in grade.   |

The U.S. Postal Service is currently “seeking information on available technology and supply sources in the area of mail processing equipment.” The U.S. Postal Service is “seeking to deploy an equipment - Postage Due Automation (PDA), that will eliminate and/or reduce the time associated with the individual manual weighing, counting and reporting of mail pieces for postage due mail and any other type of mail that may fit similar processing requirements (e.g. address correction). .” In a recent notice, USPS said, “Automating the manual and very labor intensive postage due mail operation shall result in work hour savings nationwide.”   USPS Recent Request for Vendors, RFI - Postal Package Processing Concept, EAP Services, Automated Letter Movement System, Flats Sequencing System, Production and more (3/5) |

 

USPS Establishes Light Duty Standard Operating Procedure

Light Duty Protocols have been established as part of USPS National Reassessment Process (NRP). These protocols are to be implemented in a manner consistent with collective bargaining agreements, applicable LMOU provisions, and Postal Service policy. The eRMS light duty enhancement, scheduled for release on February 20, 2007, will facilitate the use of this protocol in the local offices.  |

 

 APWU, NALC: Employee Assistance Program Forms Improper

“Standardized method of referring employees to Employee Assistance Programs is inappropriate. Recently the APWU and USPS agreed upon that this type of action on the part of local management was not proper (see attached letter-PDF). Management’s written referrals to the EAP should not in any way resemble a form or any standard template. Standardized referrals tend to suggest that the referral is part of a disciplinary process. This is not the perception we want employees to have about the EAP.”   |

 

Postal Rate Crisis: Industry finding 'devil in the details'

Letter: Time to stop the mountain of junk mail

Chase Drops, Still Tops Direct Mail Volume List

Ex-carrier gets probation for tossing mail  |
Rep., NALC State President reply to Tabled Do Not Mail Bill
 |

Photo: Burlingame, CA Post Office Mural
Baird closes door on long postal career

Bicycle tracks lead to Post Office burglary suspect

Florida: Why, oh, why is mail delivery awful?  |

Residents fear for safety crossing busy road to get mail   |

Rate hike could mean heavy burden for lightweight-catalog mailers

 

March 04, 2007-

Signed, sealed - but is it delivered?

That's the question many bulk mailers are asking as late deliveries continue to frustrate -" Valerie Hughes, a spokeswoman for the Postal Service's Gateway branch, said the t usually takes seven to 10 days for standard and bulk mail to arrive. The post office gives businesses a discount on these forms of mail because of the time and preparation required for mailings. So what's the problem? Hughes said according to a file on the matter, most of the St. Charles chamber's mail was not DPS (delivery point sequence) compatible, meaning it cannot be easily processed through a machine." But the non-profit hired a company to presort bulk mail to make it more machine compatible, however delivery problems still exist.. |

 

NAPS Branch President Sounds Off on Postal Issues
FROM A READER: "NALC Exec. V.P. Fredric Rolando wrote in the May 2006 Postal Record: 'Unless the management associations step up and protest the misuse of DOIS and its effects on service and operations, they will simply continue to perpetuate the problem.' One brave NAPS official has! Lou Kush, President of NAPS Branch 61, has written several eye-popping articles about postal mismanagement.  Kush is an EAS-22, Manager of Customer Services, in Auburn, WA. He speaks from first-hand experience!"  |

 

Editorial: The Do-Not-Mail Backlash

The US Postal Service created the backlash of demands for a Do-Not-Mail list with its wrongheaded approach to letter carriers. Many have been punished for simply following Handbook M-41, City Delivery Carriers Duties and Responsibilities, which states, “Deliver mail according to the instructions or known desire of the addressee.” For an outrageous example of seven Florida carriers, who were issued notices of removal for simply following their customers’ wishes. (note: according to a reader most of the carriers were reinstated)  |

Letter Carrier avoids jail term for stealing Teddy Roosevelt's revolver - Anthony Tulino said he is being fired from his postal-service job, so "I lost my home. |

 

Photo: Post Office Makaweli, HI

Postal clerk kills wife then self

Postal reform Q&A: Taxes on competitive products

Hoosiers could soon be voting by mail

Biloxi Post Office rebounds
N.J. congressman wants hearings on anthrax case

Mason City's new postmaster gets rude awakening

Junk mail rates

1500 line up at post office to get passports

House Approves Employee Free Choice Bill

Stuart post office on the move

 

March 03, 2007-

Editorial: The Class System in Postage Stamps - It seems that postal fuel cost increases are largely due to bulk mail, which weighs more and costs more to transport per unit than first-class mail. Yet it costs less to send bulk mail . People at or below average income are far less likely to stockpile "forever" stamps than are businesses and wealthier individuals . Those least able to afford postal rate increases will then eventually subsidize the cost of honoring outstanding "forever" stamps when rates go up again. More reaction to the Forever Stamp |

 

Calif.: Anthony Cortese, long-time San Jose NALC Branch president dies

Late-month market dip sends TSP funds down

MS: Armed Robbers Hit Jackson Post Office

Postal Rate Recommendation Could be Catastrophic for Catalogers

Indiana:  Newspaper Abandons Home Delivery Service, Will Use U.S. Mail

Texas : Postal carrier a 40-year staple on route
DMA Calls on Members to Protest "Exorbitant, Unexpected Postage Rate Recommendations


March 02, 2007-

APWU, USPS Sign Off On Contract Questions and Answers

The APWU and USPS signed off on a set of Questions and Answers [PDF] regarding the 2006-2010 Collective Bargaining Agreement, which outline the specific application of provisions involving the conversion of part-time flexibles and the supplemental workforce. “These joint interpretations clarify the parties’ intent about how to implement the new contract,” said APWU President William Burrus. |

 

CBO Suggests Reducing Federal Employee or Retiree Benefits:

Congressional (Budget Office) number crunchers have released their most recent ideas for decreasing the country's deficit. Reducing benefits for federal employees and retirees, not surprisingly, is on the list. Some highlights of the report: Change the calculation of retirement benefits for new retirees from an average of the employees' highest paying three years of service to their highest four or five years; Increase federal employees' contributions to their defined pensions; Change the formula for cost-of-living adjustments to retirees' pensions. |

 

Reports of Mismanagement at Walter Reed No Surprise to Former Letter Carrier

Curtis Mills is a former Army sergeant wounded in Iraq. Mills, a 33-year-old Shapleigh resident who became frustrated by endless waits for treatment at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, had to hobble across the medical center's campus to collect signatures needed for some of the dozen surgeries scheduled on his right shoulder and leg. The limbs had been shredded by a roadside bomb. His injuries prevented him from returning to a job as a postal carrier.  |

 

Postal worker back in business

Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night will keep the postman from his appointed rounds. You can add “serious head injuries” to the list after Jerry Totten returned to his downtown route Thursday, a month after being struck by a pickup while delivering mail. Totten, Lawrence’s sole walking-only postal worker, wore a helmet on his first day back. |

 

Postal Worker/ Gay activist remembered for being 'pioneer' after committing suicide -

 Kathy Worthington fought USPS to be allowed to take open-ended leave to care for her partner under FMLA. Worthington's request was denied twice, but she tried one more time and won approval

 

USPS Names Epperson District Manager In Colorado and Wyoming

Postal complaints heard; more carriers to be hired  |

Photo: Postal worker delivers mail in the blowing snow

Postal Changes Coming To Raleigh County Town
APWU: Strange Bedfellows  |

Calculator projects impact of USPS rate increase
Is eBay stamp racket the Net's stickiest scam?

A book of stamps and a bag of chips

Man pleads guilty to obstruction in postal workers death

Postal regulation vs. mailer incentives

A sour mail-female relationship

Postal worker accused of renting building to store undelivered mail

"A whole new attitude" for injured carrier

Mailman arrested, charged with delivering pot

Steep Kaiser increase hits federal retirees  |

Man Called 'The Bishop' May Become Next Unabomber
PA: Suspicious package closes post office in Lancaster


March 01, 2007-

El Paso Residents Experiencing Mail Problems Again   |

USPS: Deliver Magazine Launches Companion WebSite   |

Photo: Bloomsdale, MO Post Office

After 40 years, postmaster puts seal on career

PRC Chairman Discusses Rate Increase

Postal Bulletin 3/01/07 Issue With New Look

Rising postal rates: Perverse 'solution'

Consumers Don't Find Advertised Postal Jobs

Post office burns, mail spared

USPS drops plans to close 9 mail processing centers

Nonprofit direct marketers fight postal hike

 

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