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Select News from Postalblog
Veterans Preference and the U.S. Postal Service
Supreme Court
to Hear Postal Worker’s Retaliation Case
USPS Reports
$5.4 Billion Deficit for FY 2007
Appeals Court Overturns Postal
Worker’s Conviction for Theft
Fired Postal
Worker Featured in Push to Expand Reservist Job Rights
USPS Workforce
Size and Employment Categories, 1986-2006
Appeals Court Overturns Postal
Worker’s Conviction for Theft
Fired Postal
Worker Featured in Push to Expand Reservist Job Rights
USPS Responds to APWU Inquiry
Regarding Absences of 3 Days or Less
Letter Carriers Ratify New
5-Year Contract
USPS Offering
Cash Prizes in Automated Postal Center Sweepstakes
Postal Inspectors
Sue USPS for Overtime Pay
APWU Questions
USPS Medical Documentation Requirement for Absences of 3 Days
or Less
Arbitrator Awards
$50,000 for Postal Inspectors Misconduct
USPS, Postmasters
Reach Agreement on Pay Package
Notice: USPS Revised Rule for
Conduct on Postal Property
Mail Handlers
Awarded $13.8 Million for Casuals Violation
Company Tests Popcorn Vending
Machine at NJ Postal Facility
"Kelly Girl" Arbitration Award to Cost USPS Nearly $20 Million
USPS BOG Chairman Gets Blue-Collar Name Tag
Postal Supervisor Fired For Rewarding
Employees Non-Worked OT Loses Appeal
Court Excludes
AMS Specialist Position From APWU Bargaining Unit
Flat
Sequencing System (FSS) Strategy
USPS: Boston District's New Mystery Shopper Board Game
USPS Performance Scores at Record Levels
USPS Seeks Private
Companies For New Priority Mail Care Package Program
Former USPS
Contractor Nabbed in NJ Postmasters Scheme
Postal Employees Cry Foul Over
Alleged USPS Privacy Violations
Photo: Semi-Automated
Postal Robotic Delivery Vehicle
USPS Deployment of Automated
Postal Centers Put On Hold
USPS Seeks Vendors for Postal Package Processing System
Video: USPS
Infomercial
Postal Supervisor’s Retaliation
Lawsuit Dismissed
Video: NALC Branch #709: Reno
Picket Against Contracting Out
New CSRS, FERS
Retirement System Goes Online in 2008
NALC, NRLCA Presidents Debunk
PMG Letter Justifying Contracting Out Mail Delivery
PMG: USPS Strongly
Opposes the 'Mail Delivery and Protection Act'
Photo: Postal
Window Clerk and A Very Strange Mail Package
OSHA partnership helps reduce
ergonomic injuries at USPS
USPS Customer
Satisfaction Questionnaire Website Launched
Court Affirms Enforcement of
Unfair Labor Charges Against USPS
Senator Collins Introduces Postal Resolution Reaffirming Protections
of Sealed Mail
NAPUS: Is Mail Service at Risk?
USPS Awards Contract to Protect
Employee Personnel Records
NALC Young: It’s time to stop
the ‘run amok’ OIG
Postal Service Awards $874.6
Million Contract for Flat Sequencing System
Unofficial Transcript of NALC Rap Session
Recent EEOC
Decisions Involving Postal Employees
Postal Employees Know Your Rights
Postal Worker Fired After Second Violation of USPS Zero Tolerance
Policy
Postal Employees Should Think
Twice Before Appealing Case to MSPB
Kenneth Jones
vs. US Postal Service,
illustrates why postal employees should think twice before
appealing their discipline to the Merit Systems Protection
Board.
New Book:
Beware of Cat: And Other Encounters of a Letter Carrier
Postal Worker Fired After Second
Violation of USPS Zero Tolerance Policy
Bush Plan Would Cut Tax-Free
Employer-Provided Health Insurance
MSPB Overturns Postal Worker’s Removal for $45,000 Stamp Stock
Shortage
Postage Rate Hike in 2008?
Postal Service: ‘Intelligent
Mail’ Fully Operational By 2009
Video:
Signed, Sealed and Delivered- Labor Struggle in the
Post Office
NPMHU Sues USPS, APWU To Overturn RI-399 Arbitration Award
USPS: New Postal
Law-The Financial Impact
Can Bush Open Mail Without
Warrant?
Former
Postal Worker Charged in FEHB Scheme to Defraud USPS and NALC
Un-Merry
Christmas
Postal Service Terminates Disabled Iraq War Veteran for Unacceptable
Attendance
Letter
to the Editor
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Mismanagement at Royal Oak
Carrier Unit
FedEx and DOT at Stalemate in
Dispute Over Disclosure of Postal Contract Data
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USPS, APWU Reach $5.3 Million
Agreement in Anthrax Travel Grievance
Postal
Worker Fired for Refusing to Work on DBCS Machine
Postal Nurse Charged With Defrauding USPS
Five-Year Postal Employees Stats At a Glance
Big Win For APWU in MS-47 Maintenance Case - "Custodial Jobs
Protected"
Emery Agrees to Pay $10 Million
for Submitting Fraudulent Billings to USPS
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USPS to Sell Segway Scooters to General Public
Former
Postmaster jailed for stealing over $50k
Postal Worker Sues USPS – Denied Permission to Work Off-the-Clock?
USPS OIG Paper:
Postal Officers Travel Expense Guidelines
USPS Mail Processing Facility Faces $44,250 in Fines for Safety
Violations
USPS
and GE Sign New Six-Year $100M Contract for Semi-Trailers
Man Pleads Guilty in Kickback Scheme to Pay Postal OWCP Specialist
APWU Initiates
Dispute Over Changes to USPS Computer Security Rules
Postal Worker Injured in Iraq Wins Job Back Under USERRA
USPS to Conduct Search for Sex
Offenders on Postal Payroll
Postal Supervisor Fired for Rewarding Employees With Non-Worked
Overtime Pay
Reader
Raises Concern Over USPS Revised Emergency Salary Authorization
Policy
USPS
OIG Audit Report: Pasadena P & DC Consolidation
MSPB Upholds Removal of Postal Worker Videotaped Abusing FMLA
USPS to remove stamp machines
by 2010
Postal Service Plans for More
Than $1 Billion in Cost Reductions
Carrier
Fired for Gambling Signed Last Chance Agreement
Mystery Shopper Evaluations Should Not Be Used to Discipline
Window Clerks -
National
Dispute Initiated Over USPS’ Improper Use of Casuals
APWU: Olympia, Tacoma and Everett Mail May Move to Seattle
Postal Service Lists 139 Facilities
As Potential Candidates for Consolidation
Postal Worker Fired for Violating USPS Zero Tolerance Policy
Court Backs USPS in Stamp Trademark
Lawsuit
Letter
- Postal Workers Injured on Duty Should Know Their Rights
USPS
Migrating Personnel Info to PostalPEOPLE System
Driving Postal Vehicle Without
Seatbelt May Get You Fired
USPS
Dragnet Continues to Sweep Up Injured Workers
Supreme Court Revives Postal Worker's Discrimination Suit
Number of Active Postal Employees
by Age, Years of Service (PDF)
Trenton APWU Excessing Update, Custodian Exam for Clerks
Federal Court Overturns Letter Carrier Removal for Breach
of Last Chance Agreement
Postal Window
Clerks Protect Your Jobs
USPS releases
April 2006 Financial and Operating Statements
North Carolina
Postmaster Reassigned After Assault Complaint
Postal Mail
Handlers in Talks to Stay With AFL-CIO
NIOSH Reports on DBCS at Denver
Postal Facility
USPS Proposing to Contract Out
Postal Vehicle Service
Federal Court Affirms USPS FMLA Return-To-Work Policy
Whoa…An Interesting
Supreme Court Case Involving USPS
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October 31, 2007-
Postal Worker Arrested On Drug, Gun Charges
"A
postal worker who had been a soldier was arrested after conservation
officers found bomb-making materials, guns, marijuana and other
illegally possessed items on his rural Carroll County property,
authorities said. Jessie Snider, 27, was arrested Saturday night
after a Department of Natural Resources conservation officer heard
a gunshot come from Snider's property, the DNR said. A search of
Snider's home and barn revealed 25 guns, more than 5,900 rounds
of ammunition, an indoor marijuana growing operation and materials
for building bombs, including a can of the explosive C-4, the DNR
said Wednesday."
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Union Condemns USPS Invitation to' Ignore
Agreements
APWU President William Burrus has criticized
the outcome of a meeting of 700 USPS executives, at which participants
were invited to identify the best opportunities for improving postal
efficiency. According to a USPS News Link report dated Oct. 18,
among the top vote-getters were managing sick leave and overtime,
and maximizing the use of non-career employees. The union president
did not object to the solicitation of input from responsible managers
per se, he wrote, “but an open-ended invitation to improve efficiencies
is a solicitation to ignore agreements.” Ending harassment of employees
and improving employee morale were not included among the top recommendations,
Burrus observed, “even though it is clear that serious change [in
these areas] would improve efficiencies.”
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Judge Won't Block Transfer of Vermont Postal
Clerk
A Waterbury postal clerk can continue
to fight her reassignment to another town, but a federal judge has
rejected her bid for an injunction to prevent an immediate transfer.
In a written decision issued Monday, U.S. District Judge William
Sessions III said Ellen Bardin would not suffer irreparable harm
as she claimed if she is immediately transferred. Bardin could move
back into her Waterbury position if she prevails in her lawsuit
to keep her job in the town.
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Postal officials seek those behind explosive device in Michigan
Pitney Bowes Praises Postal Regulatory Commission
Cocoa post office goes extra mile in cancer fight
Mailman saves woman's life during route
Unemployment Checks Missing Due To 'Postal Error'
Longtime postal carrier retires
ACMA to USPS: Be Very Concerned About Catalog Circulation Cuts
Postal worker
admits she stole gift cards
Summary of yesterday's postal
oversight hearing
New Postal Service Rules Delivered Ahead of Schedule
Former contract
carrier pleads guilty to destroying Indian artifacts
Publications want lower postal rates
FedEx, UPS give
peak day package forecasts
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October 30, 2007-
Lawmaker to Introduce Bill to Pay FERS
Employees For Unused Sick Leave
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How much would be paid for unused
sick leave is not yet clear. But federal managers hope the
change will keep employees from taking excessive sick leave as
they approach retirement. Such sick leave abuse cost the
government $68 million in lost productivity in the year ended
March 30, 2006, an August Congressional Research Service report
says. Moran said he hopes to introduce a bill by Thanksgiving
that would pay FERS retirees for some percentage of their unused
sick leave. One favored option, according to Moran’s staff, would
pay 10 percent of the hourly rate of a retiree’s high-three
salary — the average of the employee’s highest salaries over
three consecutive years — for any accumulated sick leave balance
above 500 hours. Use It and Abuse It
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Archive :
Federal Groups Seeks Change in FERS Unused Sick Leave
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USPS-Branded Hollywood Legend Stamp
Puzzles Now Available
NALC and USPS agree to extend
negotiation period for local implementation
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October 29, 2007-
USPS Stolen Laptop Held Hawaii Employee Information
"About 3,000 Oahu postal employees received letters in the mail
this weekend warning them that their personal information may be
compromised. The employees' names, Social Security numbers and
other information were on a laptop computer that was stolen in
August. An employee called KITV concerned about why it took so
long for the postal service to issue an alert."
APWU:
USPS Report on Missing Laptops
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Pols Going Postal Over Mail Plan
"Sen. Charles Schumer is urging the U.S. Postal Service to halt
a planned merger of Bronx and Manhattan mail-processing centers
that would add nearly 117 new daily truck trips between the
boroughs just as the city pushes congestion pricing. "At a time
when federal, state and city government officials are struggling
to find solutions to traffic congestion and its effect, the USPS
should not be adding 117 trucks to our streets on a daily
basis," said a letter to the agency from Schumer, Rep. Jerrold
Nadler, Council Speaker Christine Quinn and 10 others.
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Letter carriers
put new roof on home of soldier's widow
(MIchigan) A group of area letter carriers
Sunday did for Amy Collins what her husband had intended to do
when he returned from Iraq. The U.S. Postal Service employees
scurried all about the roof of her home in Summit Township,
tearing away old shingles to lay new ones, volunteering as a way
to honor Army Sgt. James Collins. Collins died in combat Aug. 28
in Kirkuk, Iraq.
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Postal Worker
Charged with Stealing Equipment From P & DC
A Postal Worker and two others have
been charged with stealing $300,000 in equipment from the
Southeastern Processing and Distribution Center. The three are accused of stealing metal
containers used for transporting bulk mail, said the postal
service. The containers were then sold to scrap metal yards in
the Philadelphia area, said the postal service. One of the men
arrested was Christopher Amato, 45, of Norristown, a
tractor-trailer driver for the postal service. He has been
suspended by the postal service.
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UPS Accused of Tipping the ScalesThe Michigan
Attorney General's Office and the Michigan Department of
Agriculture are looking into allegations that United Parcel
Service of America Inc. uses faulty package measurement devices
to overcharge thousands of customers and package shipping
stores. The lawsuit is seeking class-action status to cover the
10,000 package shipment centers and more than a million UPS
account holders that could potentially be affected.
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Will Increased Postal Rates Put Mailers Out of Business?
APWU: Postal Service Could Lose Millions in Proposed Deal
PRC Issues Final
Regulations on Rulemaking for the New Ratemaking System
Car Crashes Into Post Office after Police Chase
Editorial: U.S. Postal Service delivers for who?
We Expose Royal Mail Security Shambles
Satire: Postmaster General Says Letter Carrier Surge is Working
Florida: Masked Man Robs Post Office
Brijit Cuts Magazine Pile Down to Bite-Size Pieces
Biggest
loss in mail move may be city's postmark
Postal Saving
note is no good
Wildfire Victims
Express Appreciation for Mail Service
Mail for Most Relocated San Diego District Post Offices Back in
Communities on Monday
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October 28, 2007-
USPS OIG Report: The Postal Service's Comprehensive
Strategic Workforce Plan (PDF) -
..as
of June 2007, bargaining employees represented 89 percent of all
Postal Service employees. Nonbargaining employees represented
the remaining 11 percent. Table 1 also shows that 22 percent of
bargaining employees were Function 1 employees (Mail
Distribution), 34 percent were Function 2B employees (Delivery
Services), and 16 percent were Function 4 employees (Customer
Services) and Other Functions were 28 per cent. Without good
workforce planning, the Postal Service may not be able to
perform its mission economically, efficiently, and effectively.
According to one vice president, the Postal Service is also
developing Talent View, a workforce planning tool for bargaining
and nonbargaining positions. This tool will be instrumental in
helping management analyze the workforce and make decisions
about the current workforce and what will be needed over the
next 5 to 7 years.
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Postal Carrier
Pleads Guilty To Mail and OWCP Fraud
By receiving disability pay from
the Department of Labor, Martel was required to periodically
submit a U.S. Department of Labor form disclosing any work
outside of his federal employment. The Information alleges that
when submitting the aforementioned forms, Martel did not
disclose his employment in the catering business. He falsified
the filings to receive benefits. Surveillance also
observed Martel working at another business on several
occasions. Note: Postal employees who file OWCP claims should expect to be watched and videotaped.
See
http://www.dol.gov/ecab/decisions/2007/Aug/06-1778.htm
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Waiting for Netflix's Plot to Advance
Customers are now used to Netflix's
by-mail business model. In the future, everything will be viewed
online. Netflix is experimenting, too. After all, the by-mail
business model that made it a success could disappear as quickly
as the old mom-and-pop video store, particularly if Apple or
Amazon figures out a more appealing approach that doesn't rely
on the U.S. Postal Service.
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Postmaster tracks
life by the mail
Mailman/writer delivers a scare
USPS California Fires - Postal Service employees respond
Photo: Fancy
Motorcycle Mailbox
Save Detroit's Postmark
San Diego: Mail Delivery Returns to Normal
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October 27, 2007-
Window Clerk
Plays for Women’s Professional Football Team
Post office undecided on replacements
for area stamp machines
Waterbury VT residents fight to
keep postal clerk
Granite State Is Latest Do-Not-Mail
Battleground
Maghound: a Netflix for Magazines?
FedEx plans rate increases for 2008
Postman's weekends are shot- for
a year- after vandalizing co-worker's car
New USPS Diktat: Mailing Labels
To The Top Of Magazines
Health plan provider shares tumble
after Cutting Price for Mail Handlers
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October 26, 2007-
Court To USPS:
Retire Not Fire Postal Veteran With PTSD
Lanny Jarvis, a decorated
Vietnam War veteran, began working for the Postal Service in 1988
after a medical examination determined that he was fit for duty
despite several war injuries. Ten years later, he was diagnosed
with post-traumatic-stress disorder (PTSD). In 2002, he transferred
to the Spanish Fork postal facility in Utah and started experiencing
PTSD-related incidents with coworkers.
On two occasions, Jarvis struck
and kicked a co-worker when she startled him, and he later struck
another co-worker who shoved him in passing.
USPS failed to explain why he was denied pay, leave, and disability
retirement, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit ruled
Aug. 30, remanding the case on those issues
USPS Fires Another Postal Veteran With PTSD
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Reasons Vary for Late Mail Deliveries
"Mail
carriers in Baton Rouge are out on the streets later these days,
and residents are asked to keep in mind that the man or woman coming
up to their front door after dark is not necessarily there to rob
them. George Cooper, president of the local branch of the National
Association of Letter Carriers, said the later delivery times have
made him concerned for the safety of his carriers because many people
let dogs out after dark and are quicker to assume footsteps are
those of an intruder." -
Our
Views: Deliver mail before dark
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Company Hired to Help Combat USPS Workers
Comp Fraud Clarifies Award
-“GlobalOptions
said it will work with the Office of Inspector General’s Workers
Compensation Analyst (WCA) program to investigate and combat workers
compensation fraud. But in the initial solicitation for WCAs, the
notice stated that ” Workers Compensation Analyst (WCA) Program
Management Services will Manage all stages of the Workers Compensation
Analyst (WCA) program for the United States Postal Service Office
of Inspector General (USPSOIG) - conducting surveillance activities
and videotape activities of suspect claimants and analyzing data
from employment, medical, Office of Workers Compensation Programs
(OWCP) files, and other pertinent sources for indications of possible
loss. The Contractor, and not the USPSOIG, shall be liable for its
unauthorized actions in the handling of workers’ compensation fraud
cases."
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Court: MSPB Cannot Supercede Union’s
Collective Bargaining Agreement
APWU: Support Wildfire Victims by Contributing
to PERF
Driver killed when tractor-trailer that hauls
mail plunges off I-91
'Snail mail' a 3rd-class term to postal worker
Canton postal jobs could move
Masked man robs Osteen post office
Detroit: Mail consolidation plan makes sense
Mail Carrier hopes fire leave won't cut into
pay
Car crashes into Saegertown Post Office
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October 25, 2007-
Postal Bulletin October 25, 2007
issue
PostalRelief.com Ready to Help Wildfire Victims
Beware Buddies Bearing Buyouts |
October 24, 2007-
Postal Workers Hold Informational Picket in Newport
"A
dozen U.S. Postal Service workers walked an informational picket
line in Newport on Wednesday to protest a reduction of hours at
the Spence Station. The facility, known as a small finance unit,
is located in the 1000 block of Mommouth Street. Mark Durgan,
President of the American Postal Workers Union, said two hours
of daily service have been cut meaning Spence Station now opens
at 8:30 a.m. and closes at Noon."
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Bogus
USPS Early Out / Buyout Letter Making The Rounds
A letter purporting to offer USPS
employees in the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) an early
out or a buyout by December 2008 is bogus. “The Postal Service
has no plans to offer mass early outs or buyouts to any
employees — CSRS or otherwise,” said Chief Human Resources
Officer Anthony Vegliante. |
Former NALC Steward Pleads Guilty
To Representing Postal Employees in Legal Cases
Former
California NALC Steward Stephen Millard was charged with failing
to disclose to either the USPS or U.S. Department of Labor (DOL)
the payments that he received for representing postal and other
federal employees in EEO , MSPB and OWCP claims against the
government on his backpay form. Millard was also charged with
representing USPS employees in claims against the United States
after his reinstatement in August 2001. |
Malibu Post Office Scheduled to
Open Wednesday
The Malibu Post Office, closed
yesterday and again today because of wild fires, is scheduled to
open Wednesday and mail delivery will resume. While the office is
not open to the public today, postal clerks using natural
lighting are working behind the scenes processing mail for
delivery on Wednesday. District Manager William Almaraz said
that generators are being installed today to support the
electrical needs of the approximate 5,000 square-foot building.
USPS: California Wildfires Update
and Alternate Pick-Up Locations
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Hamilton Postal Workers Reject
Campaign Claims
A cadre of township
postal workers this week demanded that Mayor Glen Gilmore leave
them out of his bid for re-election, saying they will not be
pawns in the campaign. In a petition signed by 105 members of
the local postal union, carriers took Gilmore to task over a
recent advertisement critical of GOP mayoral candidate John
Bencivengo for the Republican's attempts to sell a skin cream he
said would protect against exposure to anthrax. The postal
carriers also criticized former National Association of Letter
Carriers President Mark Van Wagner for a campaign piece sent
recently to township voters quoting him attacking Bencivengo.
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Fall 2007 Issue of 'The Mail Handler'
Detroit: Mail Missing From Stolen Mail Truck
Five Postal Employees Bleed Purple for Rockies Player
Pandemonium at the post office
Mailmen Take Hard Line To Dog Bites
US Postmaster: We're Growing
Junk-free mailbox
National Catholic Register Comments on Postal Hike
Brevard Post Offices leads US in breast cancer stamp sales
Postal workers picket over cut hours
Alabama mailman
pleads guilty to sexual abuse of 86-year-old
US Postal Service Expands Implementation of Wireless
Vehicle Technology
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October 23, 2007-
Post Office Aims to Leave Yesterday's Image Behind
"Experts in brand and corporate identity offered generally
positive comments about "Today’s Mail," with some notable
caveats. "The word 'mail' is an extremely powerful word," said
Dean Crutchfield, senior vice president for marketing at Wolff
Olins in New York, part of the Omnicom Group. "We all want a
letter from a friend, a birthday card, a Christmas card, a
check, a love letter. But the dominant amount of mail we get is
junk mail and bills," he added. "They have to be careful that
'Today's Mail' is not misconstrued as the bills and the junk."
USPS to promote 'Today's mail'
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USPS: California Wildfires Update
and Alternate Pick-Up Locations
Mailbox Explodes
As Man Reaches For Mail
Woman Says Piece
Of Mail Constitutes Hate Crime
Workers Protest
Changes At Post Office
Benefits Guide Helps Decode
Alphabet Soup
Catalog Choice, Another Opt-Out
Service, Debuts
'It's never boring. ... I feel like
we accomplish something'
Modified postal
center being built in Wyandanch
Former Kingsport postal carrier
gets five years of probation
Identity Thieves
Are Usually Young And Often Not Online, Study Finds -
The evolution of
franking: different ways to indicate postage was paid
Collector’s
10-Year Hunt Pays Off With $150000 Stamp
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October 22, 2007-
Photos of military personnel back
up at Paso Robles Post Office
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Photos of military personnel were
back up on the wall at the Paso Robles Post Office on Monday
morning, under the order of the deputy postmaster general. The
post office received the news Monday morning that they could
replace the photos, clerks there said. They had been taken down
Friday after a customer complained that the display was pro-war.
When the issue came to the attention of the regional postal
center, they asked that Paso Robles postmaster Mike Milby and
his staff take them down because they violate a regulation
against displays of non-postal business material at any U.S.
post office.
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A Campaign Recalls Postal
Workers' Deaths
"James H.
Pickett Jr., 50, a 30-year U.S. Postal Service employee, is a
one-man army who manufactured and sold an array of memorabilia
to jolt the memory of his co-workers on yesterday's anniversary
of the anthrax mailings that led to the shuttering of
Washington's central mail-processing facility and the deaths of
two of his colleagues there. His mission is simple: to establish
a day of remembrance. Plaques and ad hoc anniversaries aren't
enough, Pickett said. Without a more formalized day, the memory
will fade, and it could all happen again."
US Senate Committee Hearing: Six Years After Anthrax
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USPS mail delivery consolidation plan for Canton has many
downsides
Mailbox stolen from Horicon post office
The tale behind Monkey Mail
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October 21, 2007-
Brooklyn Post Offices To Offer
“Senior Citizen” Window
Beginning in November, the
Brownsville Station Post Office and The Metropolitan Station
Post Office –both in Brooklyn, NY –will offer dedicated
lines for senior citizen customers. |
Photo: Postal Rural Carrier’s Speedy Delivery
In Hodgenville, Kentucky , local
officials investigate an accident in which a rural carrier
backed into a couples living room. The carrier who had delivered
a parcel used the front yard to turn around and struck the
accelerator instead of the brake while in reverse. Postmaster
Bob Hummer stated that the accident was under investigation by
the postal service. |
Dog attacks
letter carrier in Torrance
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October 20, 2007-
Blind
Man Says Postal Clerk Didn't Help Him
On Thursday, Roger Francis was
trying to mail a piece of medical equipment at the Independence
Avenue post office when he asked a clerk for help addressing the
package. Francis said he was denied help. Service manager
Rowland Tidmore said it's against the U.S. Post Office's policy
to address packages for customers. |
NALC: MISC
Deduction on Your Earnings Statement
Many members have inquired about a large deduction amount under
the “MISC” category on their recent paycheck that included the
$686 COLA cash-out payment. NALC explains this deduction.
Vanished gem + postal mix-up =
$673 gone
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October 19, 2007-
Post Office
forced to strip wall of local soldiers' photos
California - Some are likening it to a wall of shame. Since
2001, pictures of men and women in the military have been a
fixture of the Paso Robles Post Office until this morning. But a
spokesperson for the United States Post Office says regulations
specify that only official postal announcements and other
government notices can be put up on the walls." We just cannot
put those photos back up, they should not have been up there to
begin with," said United States Postal Service spokesperson
Richard Maher.
Photos’ removal a postal faux pas? [check out poll]
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Former
Postmaster is sentenced for drug transactions
The former postmaster in Cadet is
sentenced today to a year and a day in prison for illegal drug
transactions while on duty. Federal prosecutors say Deborah Jo
Eden illegally sold, traded and bought prescription drugs while
at work in March. They say she also had methamphetamine in her
possession. They say Eden used money from the post office's safe
to fund some of the drug transactions.
Another Former postmaster pleads not guilty to felony theft
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PMG Potter and USPS Executives
Focus On 2008
PMG Jack Potter met with more than
700 USPS executives this week in Dallas to recognize FY 2007
performances and to prepare for the challenges of FY 2008. In a
follow-up session, attendees voted for the top three
opportunities from each topic. The results will provide the
focus for USPS efforts during FY 2008: To increase
efficiency, the top vote-getters were managing sick leave and
overtime, better utilizing transportation and maximizing use of
non-career employees. To drive growth, attendees recommended
maximizing our competitive pricing flexibility, becoming the
last mile of delivery for competitors and owning — that’s right,
owning — parcel returns.
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Photo: Post Office of the Future
Lounge chairs, free WiFi and plasma
TVs are featured at the renovated Woodfield Station post office
on Mall Drive in Schaumburg, Illinois. The facility at 651 Mall
Drive has just unveiled a cutting-edge renovation that couples
customer friendliness with state-of-the-art technology and is
the first of its kind in the U.S. The timing and location of the
next such facility is undetermined but could take up to two
years of studying what works and what doesn’t in Schaumburg.
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Postal
Carrier Rescues Child Struck By Truck
Heroism prevents hit-run
incident - King City (Calif.) letter carrier has been
nominated for a federal heroism award after helping stop a
driver who ran over a young boy Monday and kept going. ...
acting postal supervisor Lily Rangel heard a thump in the King
City Center parking lot about 3:15 p.m. and turned to see a
child caught under a moving truck. She then held and comforted
the boy until an ambulance arrived. He was flown to a trauma
center, where he remained Thursday in stable condition.
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Photo: Stump Creek, PA Post Office
From dogs to catalogs, mail carriers deliver original view of neighborhoods
Letter carrier aids of 82 year old man in dog attack
PRC unredacts data in the Bank of America NSA
decision
Pickets hope to stop Postal plan |
Videos: Postal workers discuss pickets
No mail delivery boggles minds of residents at The Cottages
Iowa Postal workers back Edwards
APWU: Union Evaluates Candidates, But Makes No Endorsement at This Time
Mural depicts history of mail
Texas: Alamo to get new post office
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October 18, 2007-
Boston Cops: Postal Worker Got Punchy
"Neither rain, nor sleet, nor flashing blue lights will stop
this letter carrier from her appointed rounds. A U.S. Postal
Service worker gabbing on a cell phone and smoking a cigarette
while making her rounds in East Boston yesterday nearly ran down
a detail officer, sped away as the cop was trying to flag her
down, then threw a punch at a second cop who stopped her, police
said. Noelle Lacorte, 26, of Revere is charged with assault and
battery on a police officer, failure to stop for police,
disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest."
Postal worker
appears in court
|
See Video of drug bust
|
Overhead Door Leads
To Postal Worker's Suit Against Wal-Mart
Rain, snow and sleet may not stop
the postman from his appointed rounds, but an overhead door at
Wal-Mart proved to be too much for a mail carrier in Longview.
Sheila Justice claims she was injured because she had to lift an
overhead door every day to deliver the mail to the department
store. She filed suit on Oct. 12 alleging she received personal
injuries to her right arm and shoulder because of Wal-Mart's
negligence. The plaintiff is seeking more than $75,000 in
damages for medical expenses, physical pain, mental anguish,
physical impairment, disfigurement and loss of earning capacity.
|
Post office
needs security cameras
The decision by the U.S. Postal
Service to ignore an obvious security issue in the old post
office building on East Street is a copout that shows a lack of
concern for the community’s interests. It’s also only too
typical of our independent Postal Service at work. If the post
office lobby had security cameras, like so many other facilities
that are open at night and on weekends, the attacker of a
64-year-old woman might have been identified and arrested by
now. But, alas, it does not.
|
In the face of changes, Postal Service cuts back
Judy Mahaffey, supervisor of
customer service support for the Chattanooga area's post
offices, said a big part of that cost-cutting effort is reducing
staffing and its costs through the use of new technologies. "The
more machinery, the less cost is involved," she said. Machines
that do tasks employees do now, such as sorting through items
for delivery, can bring down expenses, Ms. Mahaffey said. Eli
Lehrer, a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute,
a Washington, D.C., research institution that argues for
free-market policies, suggested another option: complete
privatization.
|
APWU Races for President -1974-2007
USPS OIG Audit: Automated Flat Sorting Machine 100 Enhancements
(PDF)
Darth Vader, Dark Lord of the Sith, to make appearance at Yoda
stamp event
Letter Carrier Promotes CFC on Limbaugh Show
Neighbors give dog-bitten carrier a puppy
|
October 17, 2007-
Appeals Court Rejects Jewish Postal Worker's Suit Over Work
Schedule
For 10 years, the Chagrin Falls Post Office allowed a mail
carrier to take Saturdays off to observe the Sabbath. But in
2002, with a staff shortage because of budget constraints and
pressure from other carriers upset at more frequently drawing
weekend assignments, the post office ended its arrangement with
Martin Tepper and began scheduling him to work on Saturdays.
Tepper, who joined the post office in 1980 and became a
Messianic Jew a few years later, filed a complaint with the
Postal Service that was rejected. He then sued the Postal
Service in federal court in Cleveland in 2004, claiming a civil
rights violation. He again lost. The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals upheld the ruling against Tepper on Monday. |
.USPS Proposed Rule: Modern Service
Standards for Market-Dominant Products
..the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act (PAEA)
(codified at 39 U.S.C. 3691) requires the Postal Service, in consultation with
the Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC), to establish by regulation a set of
modern service standards for market-dominant products, no later than December
20, 2007.In part, "the law requires that the Postal Service take customer
satisfaction, the needs of customers, and the actual level of service that
customers receive into account in the establishment of modern service standards.
The law also requires the Postal Service to develop service standards in
consultation with the PRC. Customer satisfaction, needs, and service have always
been important to the Postal Service."
|
Greco Calls on Direct
Mailers to Include Opt-Out Notices in Each Mailing
Meeting scheduled to to address Canton mail consolidation plan
Santa Ana District Manager speaks out on Aliso Viejo project
Petition Seeks
Return of International Surface Mail Service
Editorial: Youngstown residents face loss of important service
Residents bear brunt of mail dispute
|
October 16, 2007-
Postal Carrier and her wolf deliver into
the wild
Missoula, MT -
Karen
Craver delivers mail to remote residents of the wild and woolly
North Fork Flathead River Valley, braving moose and bears and
the occasional mailbox squirrel. Fortunately, she has her pet
wolf to keep her company on this route west of Glacier Park.
|
Military postal service gearing up for approaching holiday
season
October 15, 2007-
Appeals Court Rules Against USPS
in FOIA
Request Case
Douglas F. Carlson, an attorney and
self-professed postal watchdog appealed the District Court's
ruling in favor of USPS in Carlson’s action under the Freedom
of Information Act. Carlson sought public disclosure of the names,
addresses, telephone numbers, regular business hours and final collection
times for outgoing mail for every United States post office.
The
district court determined that the records sought were exempt from
FOIA disclosure as “information of a commercial nature, .” The appeals
court ruled that the requested records are not “information of a
commercial nature,” and reversed the district court’s ruling.
Carlson had alleged at one time
that USPS was cutting collection times so
postal
managers can get paid bonuses for meeting performance
standards.
See Full opinion
|
APWU Launches Ad Campaign Against Consolidation in Michigan; Detroit, Flint
Facilities Threatened - An
APWU advertising campaign in southern Michigan got underway last
week, urging the citizens of Flint and Detroit to speak out
against the consolidation of mail-processing operations into a
new facility in Pontiac. The campaign is designed to generate
interest in community meetings Oct. 22 and 23, when the USPS
will discuss Area Mail Processing studies for the two cities.
|
Runaway Mailman Charged With Unlawfully
Obstructing the Mail
John Jordan, the Indiana Letter Carrier
who mysteriously disappeared from his mail route in July, now
faces a federal charge related to the incident.
|
Hearing to be Held on Rep. Susan Davis's
No-Excused Absentee Voting Legislation
Fake Mail Carriers Sought In Home Invasion
Dog in Custody After Biting Postal Worker
Thrift Savings Plan Braces for a Retirement Tsunami
USPS News Release: Deliver Boldly Enters the Digital Age
Cash-only stamp vending machines get ax
Lincoln Post
Office Going Green
MetroGroup to
close Rutland bulk mailing plant
Volunteers spruce up Palmyra post office
Employee and Labor Relations Manual
- Issue 18
Rural carriers
EMA reduced
|
October 14, 2007-
USPS Threatening To Discipline
Employees Over Failure to Pay Local Tax ??
From PR reader: Local taxes-
The USPS is threatening to discipline employees that don't
follow local tax codes. States affected include Alabama,
Colorado, Delaware, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, New
York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. From Postal
Bulletin: "You are reminded that, as a Postal Service
employee, you are personally responsible for ensuring that the
correct local taxes are deducted from your pay. All Postal
Service employees are reminded that they are bound by the
materials contained within the Code of Ethics, Principles of
Ethical Conduct for Government Officers and Employees."
|
Manhattan: You've Got Mail
"The
mail, as an old song insists, must go through, though the song
does not say the mail must go through another borough. A
proposal by the United States Postal Service, however, would
have mail sent to the Bronx processed in and distributed from
Manhattan, a change that critics say would disastrously affect
the quality of mail service in the Bronx and further clog
Manhattan streets with delivery trucks."
|
Petition against
Consolidation of the Flint Mail Processing Center
Houston: New postal site only for passports
|
October 13, 2007-
Contract Carrier's new vehicle force mailbox
change
"A
new US Postal Service mandate requiring carriers to update their
vehicles has sparked some interest among Magalia residents after
it, in turn, required residents to raise mailbox heights.
The mail carrier for Magalia is a contracted worker from outside
the postal service. She used to drive a 30-year-old, retired postal
service truck, but all carriers under the contract now have to drive
a vehicle no older than five years old for reliability reasons,
English said."
|
Detroit postmark could get ax
Postal Clerk in $58,000 vending
theft case sentenced to probation
Port
Huron Gets No Respect from Postal Service
OHIO: South Side
post office faces possible closure
|
October 12, 2007-
Postal Worker Gets 2 Years for Stealing Over $400,000 In Money Orders
Manuel A. Moreno, 46, pleaded guilty in April to one count of
theft of a money order. At a hearing today in Oakland, a U.S.
District Judge ordered Moreno to pay $410,959
in restitution. Moreno has no prior criminal history and
assisted in the investigation by highlighting loopholes in the
U.S. Postal Service's accounting system and auditing procedures,
Assistant U.S. Attorney Shashi Kewalramani wrote in court
documents. "This information allowed the agency to modify the
accounting and audit procedures such that thefts on the order of
what the defendant was able to carry out may be averted in the
future."
|
USPS Seeking Info On Automatic
Vending Machine Manufacturing
"The United States Postal Service (USPS) is seeking information
regarding the potential for strategic partnerships to provide a
modular kiosk solution capable of printing postage-on-demand,
dispensing/vending postal products, supporting shipping and
mailing functions, and providing supplemental or complementary
services (government or non-government). The USPS needs to
understand the feasibility of strategic partnerships to provide
this solution in an attempt to expand our alternative access
capabilities, provide ease of use for postal customers, and
provide self-service options during and after normal retail
operations."
|
NYPD:
Noose found near ground zero post office
A noose was found dangling outside
a ground zero post office that was damaged in the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks, police said. Postal workers in a second-floor
office at the Church Street station noticed the noose Thursday
afternoon on a light pole above scaffolding on the building, New
York City police said. |
Postal workers help deputies arrest couple on drug charges
NYC: Postal Service a step
closer to Morgan consolidation
Earnings statements to be online only for
EAS and PCES employees |
APWU: It's Official! Election Results Certified
|
East
Liverpool post office staying put
Mail Carrier Robbed By Teens In North Minneapolis
Montgomery Neighbors: Postal
Service Won't Deliver Mail
Post office to deliver mail to woman's door
|
Elkton, Minnesota losing
post office
Longtime postal
carrier retires after 32 years
|
October 11, 2007-
USPS proposes addressing standards for FSS
Postal Bulletin 10/11/07
Issue
Changes in Temporary Mail Forwarding Policy
What is up with the United States Postal
Service?
Post office site to remain in Port Huron
A first-class lesson in civil rights
Postal area redesign spurs complaints
|
October 10, 2007-
Insider Says
Problems Persist At Las Cruces Post Offices
Las Cruces post offices are facing
serious allegations from an insider who describes the mail
process as being seriously delayed. "They're not processing the
mail correctly or on time," said the person, who did not want to
be identified. "Sometimes what I've heard is that they delay the
mail so the carriers can get out of work earlier so there won't
be so much delayed mail or overtime.
|
USPS Selects
Company
to Develop Pilot Program to Assist
With OWCP Fraud
GlobalOptions Group, Inc.
announced that its Fraud & SIU unit has entered into a formal
agreement to develop a pilot program for the United States
Postal Service to assist in combating insurance fraud. The
Workers Compensation Analyst (WCA) program is being developed to
aggressively investigate Workers Compensation Fraud through
research and/or surveillance support.
|
Young,
Potter Sign Five-Year National Agreement Covering 222,000 Letter
Carriers
"NALC
President Young said the new contract, signed in a brief
ceremony at U.S. Postal Service headquarters, will help ensure a
continuation of the Postal Service as the most efficient and
dedicated postal system in the world. "This contract rightfully
includes not only justified wage increases and cost-of-living
adjustments for America's letter carriers, but also the
assurance to the general public that career Postal Service
employees, not outside contractors, will continue to efficiently
deliver the mail throughout our cities and towns for many years
to come," Young said."
|
Photo: Post Office in Bentonville,
Ohio
USPS Relocates
Disabled Woman's Mailbox After Dispute
PRC: NSA could
cost $45m
Man charged with writing bad checks
for $ 300,000 in postage
Public meeting set over shift of
Postal Service jobs out of Flint
Postal
carrier battles leukemia
|
October 9, 2007-
Postal Worker Killed By Gunman Buried Monday
Hundreds of uniformed postal
workers and dignitaries, including Alexandria Mayor Jacques Roy,
former Mayor Ned Randolph and Alexandria Police Chief Daren
Coutee, turned out Monday to mourn John Martin "Marty" Thiels, a
30-year veteran of the U.S. Postal Service.
|
What to Do If
Postage Goes Up Again
|
October 8, 2007-
Mailboxes Getting Rarer
"What happened to the mailboxes? That's what Republican
committeeman Jim Finnegan wanted to know this summer as he made
his twice-a-week rounds through the narrow streets around
Kensington and Allegheny. "There used to be three in front of
the 7-Eleven at Kensington and Ontario," Finnegan says. All
told, he says, a dozen mailboxes from his division have
disappeared. The U.S. Postal Service says it's aware of the
situation." Christopher Shaw, author of Preserving the People's
Post Office, says businesses effectively lobby Congress to make
the Postal Service serve the needs of corporate mass-mailers
over senior citizens.
|
Dry Cleaner owner offers drive-thru
postal services
Through her store, Kauser will provide all of the services
residents would expect from the local post office through the
use of a Contract Postal Unit (CPU). The unit, which Kauser and
her staff will work during their during shifts, will allows
patrons to buy stamps, shipping boxes, insurance and return
receipts, and the store will main a drop box. Kauser is also
offering the services with the store's drive-thru.
|
Woman
killed after collision with Postal Truck |
October 7, 2007-
Columnist: What Goes Around Comes Around for Postal Manager
A
few months ago, I wrote a series of columns about mail delivery
problems in Port St. Lucie. Many of the complainers were
directed to the post office's customer service manager in PSL,
usually referred to as "Gerry" on the phone. Dealing with Gerry
was never a pleasant experience, readers told me. He was
unhelpful, surly and frequently verbally abusive. Calls often
ended with him screaming at them at the top of his lungs.
Gerardo Boloy, to give him his full name, had been assigned to
the Stuart post office, where late last year he was one of two
finalists for the vacant postmaster position. Unfortunately for
Gerry, the other guy got the job. In light of Gerry's past
dealings with postal customers in Port St. Lucie, this story
restores my faith in karma. Whatever goes around does indeed
come around. |
Michigan: Postal worker injured in crash
Mom's mail route
to begin with loving glance at plaque
Iowa: Postal
Service closing office in Randalia
KY: Covington
Post office closure might be permanent
Learn how to
junk all that junk mail
|
October 6, 2007-
APWU: Final, Unofficial Election Results Posted
Ballots for the APWU election of national officers are being
counted by the American Arbitration Association, under the
supervision of the APWU Election Committee.
|
Postal Service fined $10,000 for cutting down trees
The U.S. Postal Service
has been fined $10,000 for cutting down trees at its Coconut
Grove post office. Grove residents were outraged after tree
cutters removed several large trees Sept. 18 from the post
office on Grand Avenue and McDonald Street. The trees were cut
down to make way for improvements to the post office parking lot.
|
Postal
service pulls out of San Juan Capistrano
U.S. Postal Service officials said Monday that they have
scrapped plans for a proposed nine-acre mail processing
facility near the city's northern gateway, following two
weeks of heated opposition from residents and city
leaders. Also see:
Aliso
Viejo gathers for postal protest
Del Polito on Postal - Worry, Be Happy
The Future
of the Postal Service
Postal
Worker Still Waiting for Justice
|
October 5, 2007-
Letter Carrier Killed in Law Office Shootings While Delivering Mail
(Louisiana) Alexandria
Mayor Jacques Roy identified the victims who died in the
Louisiana law office standoff as lawyer Joey Giordano and Marty
Thiels, a postman who apparently had gone to the office to
deliver mail.
A postal truck still sat outside of
the office as police were trying to get the gunman out.
Statement by NALC President William H. Young On Death of
Letter Carrier
|
Ex-postmaster charged in fraud case
The former postmaster of the Dickinson, TX post office faces criminal
charges alleging she arranged for her husband to win a
custodial-services contract for the facility. Linda Schultz
faces charges of securing execution of a document by deception
and theft by a public servant. Francois also reportedly found
bills for light bulbs and other items for which the Postal
Service paid what an affidavit called “excessive” prices. The
total amount alleged as stolen in the case is $32,723.
|
Postal Employee and Contractor
indicted in Voyager gas card theft
One Texarkana couple apparently
thought they had found a way to beat the high cost of filling
their gas tanks, but the consequences may net them both some
time in prison, according to federal officials. Former postal
contractor Paul Gregory, 40, and his wife, former postal
employee Millie Gregory, 43, used two stolen U.S. Postal Service
Voyager gasoline credit cards to charge more than $45,000 for
gas purchases in Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana, court documents
state. Not only did the pair fill their own cars with gas but
the tanks of others as well, documents state.
|
PMG ON NPR. PMG Jack
Potter appears on National Public Radio’s (NPR) “Justice
Talking” program to discuss the future of USPS. NPR will
release the pre-recorded segment Monday, Oct. 8, at 3:45
p.m. Check local program listings for broadcast in your
area
Piece Count Recording System - PO 610-2007-1
|
Postmaster
delivers on his dream
USPS sells out on zip code
Stamp vending machines removed from post office
Postal Clerk Convicted of Stealing UBBM
USPS: New Standards for Mailing Lithium Batteries
|
October 4, 2007-
Letter Carrier’s Uniform Available
As Halloween Costume
The first official letter carrier
[toddler] Halloween costume is now available. Featuring a shirt with an
embroidered USPS logo, pants with a side stripe, an EVA foam hat
and a mailbag with metallic stripe and USPS logo, this costume
is 70/30 poly/cotton and machine washable. It’s available in
sizes 2 – 4 and retails for $34.99, but you can get it online at
$28.99. Go to:
www.halloweenexpress.com for purchase. Give employee
coupon code 5C88A0 for 10 percent off your total order (any
items) until Oct. 15. Unlimited uses per person on the code and
no minimum purchase requirement. Hurry, while supplies last!
|
Eagan
Tells USPS to Complete Road
"Eagan has
a message for the U.S. Postal Service: Finish this road. Or
else. Citing concerns about truck traffic, the City Council
voted Monday to oppose long-running plans for a major addition
to the Postal Service bulk-mail facility off Lexington Avenue
South. The 92-acre site sits on a break in Denmark Avenue, and
the city is demanding that the Postal Service fill in the break,
at a cost of $1.2 million."
Michael
Matuzek, a Postal Service consultant based in Denver, said he
saw no reason why the Postal Service would pay $1 million to $2
million for a Denmark Avenue connection when it has no plans to
use it.
|
Post office pair call it a career after 35 years
Norris postmaster honored for 45 years of service
Ceremony to honor end of Railway Post Office
APWU:
Union Election Results to Be Posted on Web Site
Postal station closes after audit
Postal
Inspectors Warn: Watch Out for Scams
|
October 3, 2007-
Connecticut APWU Wants Anthrax Answers
"A Connecticut postal workers union is demanding an update
from federal authorities investigating the 2001 anthrax attacks
that killed an elderly Oxford woman and four other people
across the country. The Greater Connecticut Area Local of
the American Postal Workers is asking the state's congressional
delegation to press the Justice Department and FBI about the
investigation. The union represents 5,000 postal workers.
"It happened to kill two of our people," said local union
President John Dirzius, referring to postal workers in Washington,
D.C., who died of inhalation anthrax. "And yet, we still don't
know who did it."
|
Pricey plane tickets for government officials usually unjustified
The latest GAO report noted that
several government entities are not subject to government
rules on premium-class travel - among them, the U.S. Postal
Service, Federal Reserve and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
- opening up more opportunities for unnecessary waste. Those
entities often allow members of their board of governors to
travel business or first class for shorter flights overseas
and sometimes domestically."
Millions Wasted
on Gov't Travel
|
APWU noted for its strong turnout at Jena 6 rally
|
Congressman
calls for updated equipment at post office
CIO INSIGHT Interviews Retiring
USPS CIO/CTO Otto
|
PA: Postal truck crash closes turnpike
near Carlisle
USPS extends Move Updates to include standard
mail
Package gives scare at Post Office
Slain postal worker's girlfriend decries
'rumors and lies'
Local Convenience Store Starts Postal Service
Oregon: Feds receive complaint about Forest
Grove Post Office
Postal Service
to launch check fraud alert campaign
|
October 2, 2007-
USPS Cuts $8 Million from $20 million ‘Kelly Girl’ Arbitration
Settlement
From PR
reader: "National Business Agent Steve Zamanakos submitted
those employees identified by the Union to be included in
this monetary settlement to the U.S.P.S. area representative.
The U.S.P.S. omitted approximately 50% of the names submitted
reducing the award to $11,892,000.00 from the $19,717,431.00
original award. This is another attempt by the Postal Service
not to give our bargaining unit employees what they deserve.
Steve Zamanakos is taking this back in front of the arbitrator
at the end of November."
Arbitrator Henderson
ruled the Employer violated the Collective Bargaining
Agreement when it hired over 200 “Kelly Girl” employees to
work at the Phoenix Telephone Center in April 1996. The APWU
argued the Telephone Center should have been staffed by Level
6 Phoenix Clerks. The arbitrator agreed with the Union.
|
Veterans Preference and the U.S. Postal Service
The following is
a Memorandum sent to an House Committee on Oversight and Government
Reform by the Congressional Research Service regarding veterans
preference. The memorandum is in response to House Committee's
request for information on veterans preference and the U.S.
Postal Service.
|
Verizon
Deploys $25 Million Satellite Network for USPS
Verizon
Business will provide a new custom satellite network to the
U.S. Postal Service (USPS), enabling it to reliably and cost-effectively
deliver voice and high-speed data to areas where wireline
or wireless access is unavailable or too costly. The network,
formally known as a VSAT (very small aperture terminal) satellite
system, will provide point-to-point communications for about
5,000 Postal Service sites in the continental United States,
Hawaii, Alaska and Puerto Rico, and backup connectivity for
a number of larger USPS sites. In addition, Verizon Business
will provide more than 20 mobile satellite communications
kits for the U.S. Postal Inspection Service's incident response
vehicles. "
|
APWU Health
Plans Deserve a Good Look
Thanks for saving the post office
Scout renovates
post office as Eagle project
APWU: Postal Nurses Contract Talks Continue
Retiring postmaster
fascinated with stamps
Jonesboro Woman
Attacked Inside Post Office
Omaha Teen Accused Of Shooting
Postal Worker Charged As Adult
|
October 1, 2007-
Supreme Court
to Hear Postal Worker’s Retaliation Case
Myrna Gómez-Pérez, a window clerk
from Puerto Rico, filed a lawsuit in District Court claiming
that the U.S. Postal Service retaliated against her because
she filed an EEO complaint alleging discrimination on
the basis of age. The First Circuit Court of Appeals held
that the ADEA does not provide a cause of action for retaliation
by federal employees. USPS attorneys argued that "All collective
bargaining agreements incorporate that prohibition against
retaliation. They also prohibit discipline that is "punitive"
and not "for just cause." In granting certiorari, the U.S
Supreme Court has agreed to address whether the federal-sector
provision of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act,
29 U.S.C.A. 633a, prohibits retaliation against employees
who complain of age discrimination.
|
Microsoft Technology Innovation
Helps Bring Postal Industry Into the Electronic Age
Earth Class Mail unveils a novel
solution, built on the Microsoft .NET platform, for securely
delivering postal mail via the Web, taking another step along
a technology path that can help transform service delivery
in postal organizations worldwide.
|
Rural Mail
carriers to honor veterans
Postal worker retires after 36 years
Loose change won't buy a stamp anymore
UNI Supports NALC's Fight Against Outsourcing
Europe looks at scrapping
remaining postal monopolies by 2011
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