Postal News


Postal NewsNov 14 2007 10:33 am

 When the U.S. Postal Service announced in April it would be closing its Beaumont Regional Encoding Facility, almost 1,000 workers knew their jobs were in jeopardy. Some went to the main Beaumont post office on Walden Road - and their jobs could be in peril again, along with those of regular employees, as the office tries to cut 15.  Job security still eludes some postal employees

Also see Beaumont postal center shut down

Postal News& postal& mail& priority mail boxesNov 06 2006 11:06 am

Priority Mail boxes and envelopes available at Post Offices and online

Washington, DC — Any weight, any state.

That’s the simple message and the simplicity of shipping holiday gifts with a Priority Mail Flat Rate Box.

Ship letters or packages in an average of two to three days with Priority Mail Flat Rate Envelopes and Boxes. For one low rate, ship as much as can be properly secured in a flat rate envelope or box to any U.S. destination. Saturday and residential deliveries at no extra cost.

“If it fits, it will ship,” said Nick Barranca, vice president, product development. “Flat Rate boxes and envelopes take all the guess work out of mailing this holiday season. Customers pay the same price no matter where they’re shipping.”

The Flat Rate Box must close securely and retain its shape when taped with adhesive. The shape of the box can’t be changed or enlarged to fit its contents.

Other shipping options include:

Priority Mail service delivers in two to three business days. The Postal Service also offers flat-rate priority boxes and envelopes. Customers pay one price regardless of weight or destination.

Express Mail service delivers overnight, guaranteed, 365 days a year to most U.S. cities. Express Mail delivery to most major American cities is scheduled for Christmas Day.

Global Priority Mail service is designed for delivery in four to six business days to more than 50 countries. Economical way to send packages weighing up to 4 pounds.

Global Express Mail service is guaranteed to be delivered in three to five days to nearly anywhere in the world. Now available to businesses in the Pacific Rim through an agreement with postal administrations for Australia, China, Hong Kong, Japan, the United States and the Republic of South Korea.

Global Express Guaranteed is a date-certain service that delivers in one to three days to thousands of destinations in more than 190 countries.

Premium Forwarding Service lets customers take their mail with them. Mail is forwarded weekly to a temporary address for up to a year.

The peak mailing day is expected to be Monday, Dec. 18, when an estimated 280 million cards and letters will be mailed, nearly three times that of an average day.

 

Postal News& USPSAug 24 2006 02:56 pm

August 24, 2006 — For six decades, the US Postal Service and Highlights for Children, Inc. have delighted young readers in America by delivering 1 billion copies of Highlights for Children magazine to help children become their best selves.
 
This achievement was celebrated today as both organizations presented the Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum with one of the very first copies of the magazine, printed in June 1946, and a copy from the 1 billionth print run of the August 2006 issue, printed in June. The magazines will be preserved at the museum where they will complement the museum’s existing anthology of significant postal history, publications and philatelic collections.
 
With more than 2 million subscribers, Highlights for Children (http://highlights.com) provides a monthly collection of fiction, nonfiction, crafts, puzzles and activities. The publication also includes a mix of letters, drawings, questions and poems submitted by its readers.  Each issue delivered by a US Postal Service letter carrier helps encourage children to develop a lifelong love of reading and learning.
 
“The US Postal Service is proud to join the Highlights for Children, Inc. team and the National Postal Museum to commemorate the billionth delivery in a continuing partnership that has promoted literacy and learning among American children for six decades,” said Postmaster General John E. Potter.
 
“Reaching this milestone has been a true partnership between Highlights for Children, Inc. and the US Postal Service. When I think about the number ‘1 billion,’ I think of the 1 billion times a US Postal Service letter carrier has placed a copy of Highlights for Children magazine into a family’s mailbox and the 60 years of work Highlights for Children, Inc. and the US Postal Service have accomplished together,” said Kent S. Johnson, Chief Executive Officer, Highlights for Children, Inc.
 
Joining Potter and Johnson at the ceremony were Christine French Clark, editor of Highlights for Children magazine and Allen Kane, Director of the National Postal Museum.
 
Highlights for Children magazine has been providing “Fun with a Purpose” to children, families, schools, libraries and professional offices nationwide. Through the art of letter writing, children send the editors more than 30,000 letters, drawings, questions and poems each year. Highlights for Children editors respond to every letter received. The publication has been printed by Quebecor World, Inc., in Clarksville, TN, for the past 49 years.
 
Highlights for Children, Inc. (http://www.Highlights.com) has focused on helping children become their best selves for generations. Highlights magazine celebrated the printing of its one-billionth copy and its 60th anniversary in June 2006.
 
On the Web, http://www.HighlightsKids.com offers interactive content related to each issue of the magazine, as well as independent activities such as “Click-and-Play Hidden Pictures(R),” e-cards, games, craft activities, “Mystery Messages,” jokes, and riddles.
 
Devoted to “Fun with a Purpose(R),” Highlights for Children also offers children, parents, grandparents, and educators a broad range of products including the Highlights for Children Book Clubs (Puzzlemania(R), Mathmania(R), Which Way USA?(R), Top Secret Adventures(TM), and Hidden Pictures Playground(R)). Highlights Catalog (http://www.Highlights.com) selects quality toys, games, craft activities, puzzles, and other products for children. Corporate offices are in Columbus, Ohio, and the editorial offices are in Honesdale, Pa.
 
The National Postal Museum is devoted to presenting the colorful and engaging history of the nation’s mail service and showcasing the largest and most comprehensive collection of stamps and philatelic material in the world. The museum is located at 2 Massachusetts Ave. N.E., across from Union Station. The museum is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. For more information, visit the museum’s Web site at: http://www.postalmuseum.si.edu.
 

Postal News& postalJun 29 2006 06:47 am

WIRELESS AMBER ALERT PROGRAM LAUNCHES
Cell phone text alerts now available

If you’re a wireless subscriber, you now can help the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children search for abducted children. A new initiative created jointly by the Center and the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association allows you to receive Wireless AMBER Alert text messages.

AMBER stands for “America’s Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response,” and the alerts have been highly successful. By rapidly broadcasting descriptions of abducted children and suspected abductors to millions of Americans, the program increases the chances of finding missing children. More than 240 children have been safely recovered since AMBER Alerts began in 1997.

With nearly 200 million wireless phone users in the country — more than 60% of all Americans — Wireless AMBER Alerts have the potential to dramatically increase the number of people on the lookout for an abducted child.

It’s easy to sign up to receive Wireless Amber Alerts as cell phone text messages. If your wireless phone is activated for text messaging, visit www.wirelessamberalerts.org, or your wireless carrier’s website. Enter your 10-digit wireless phone number and up to five ZIP Codes for which you wish to receive alerts. You will receive only alerts for your specified areas, targeted geographically by the law enforcement agency issuing the particular alert.

 The service is voluntary. There is no charge to sign up and, in most cases, no charge to receive the text message alerts. Check your wireless carrier’s website or customer service office for details of your coverage.

The Postal Service has long been a supporter of AMBER Alert and other child protection programs. With thousands of concerned employees acting as the eyes and ears of their communities nationwide, it’s a natural fit for USPS to partner in this effort. Wireless AMBER Alerts offer another way to assist.

For more information, go to www.wirelessamberalerts.org.

source: U.S. Postal Service - www.usps.com

Postal NewsMay 24 2006 04:46 pm

From National Postal Museum: The National Postal Museum is reaching out to an international, online audience of philatelists, historians, educators, students, and the public in a bold way. Arago™, the Museum’s new educational and research Web site, will present the collections in a context-rich setting with full color images and zoom-in capability. The Web site will go live May 28, 2006.

Named after French scientist Francois Arago (a friend of Smithsonian benefactor, James Smithson), the Web site - like Arago the man - advocates using modern technology to disseminate information to the public. In fact, Arago™ goes even further. It supplements existing collections information with collected knowledge from registered volunteer subject specialists willing to help research or review the museum’s sundry objects. The museum offers an open invitation to specialists to continue making Arago a critical online resource. For information on this exciting volunteer opportunity, please visit: Arago™ Research Participant Program.

Postal News& ScamsMay 02 2006 01:50 pm

PC World Reports:The U.S. Postal Inspection Service is conducting a review of Listing Corp., a company whose mailed marketing pitches look like domain-name invoices.

When the mail carrier delivered what looked like a Web-domain-related bill for $60 from a company called Listing Corp. last year, the San Diego chapter of the American Society for Industrial Security immediately sent in the money.

The document, sent via the U.S. Postal Service, was actually an advertisement for Listing Corp.’s services. For an annual fee of $60, the company said, it would submit the nonprofit’s Web site to 20 unspecified major search engines and later e-mail a quarterly “search engine position and ranking report.”

But ASIS hasn’t heard from Listing Corp. since it paid the firm in November 2005.

http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,125366,00.asp#

Postal News& postal& Post OfficesApr 09 2006 04:23 pm

USPS is offering extended hours on tax day at some locations. Click here to find out if your post office is offering extended hours.

This year your Tax return is considered filed if postmarked by April 17.

If you live in Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont, or the District of Columbia April  your tax return must be postmarked by April 18.
In the Columbus Ohio area 9 locations will stay open until midnight for last-minute tax filers on April 17. “Because April 15 falls on a Saturday, the Internal Revenue Service is allowing people to mail income-tax returns on the next business day, said Lue C. Terry, spokeswoman for the Columbus district of the postal service. Some living in the Northeast may mail their tax returns on April 18 because a state holiday in Massachusetts will affect an IRS processing facility there, the IRS said.” Columbus Dispatch

The U.S. Postal Service in Montgomery (Alabama) is prepared to stay open late to accommodate last-minute filers. To offer additional service to customers, the window service at the General Mail Facility, 6701 Winton Blount Blvd., will remain open until 8 p.m. on April 17. Also, mail may be deposited at this location until midnight and still receive the April 17 postmark. Montgomery Advertiser

Postal News& USPSMar 23 2006 02:24 pm

USPS announced that the U.S. Postal Service Governors on Wednesday made Parcel Service Return (PRS) a permanent mailing option. The Board of Governors voted to make the change effective on April 2, 2006.

According to USPS, Parcel Return Service was “Launched as a two-year experiment in October 2003, the service offers a cost-effective way for merchants to obtain items their customers choose to return. It provides added convenience to customers through a specially designed, prepaid return label that can be included in the original packages, mailed to customers, or made available for a customer to download via the Internet.”

Postal News& USPSMar 21 2006 12:43 pm

(GCN) “The U.S. Postal Service is seeking industry input for a commercially available payroll tax payment and reporting software system. In a recent notice, USPS said the software must be able to import payment data from its current system and provide check payment information to the service’s Accounts Payable division through an automated payment calendar. The software must meet all government payroll tax mandates for deposits, quarterly and annual returns, and electronic filing and reporting requirements, the notice said. Interested vendors should submit product information to the Postal Service by April 14.” -end- GCN

 Notice Description

Payroll Tax Payment and Reporting Software
The Postal Service is seeking sources for a COTS payroll tax payment and reporting software.     Software must be capable of importing payment data from our payroll system and providing EFT and Check Payment information to Accounts Payable, utilizing an automated payment calendar. Package should produce electronic and paper returns as required by Federal, State and Local tax jurisdictions. Must satisfy all government payroll tax mandates for deposits, quarterly and annual returns and e-filing/reporting requirements. Product should provide capability to automate related payroll payments such as unions and charities and provide automated balancing features.     See attachment on additional requirements.  No solicitation is available. This synopsis is for informational purposes only.

Postal News& Letter Carriers& postalMar 20 2006 02:24 pm

From KHOU-TV 11 News Staff Reports:

Police were called to the 6600 block of Park Lane in southeast Houston Monday afternoon where a mail carrier was allegedly forced to strip at gunpoint. One suspect waited in a vehicle while two others allegedly approached the male postal worker with a rifle and ordered him to remove all of his clothing. The suspects fled the scene with the man’s clothes after a neighbor saw the confrontation and asked what was going on.  The neighbor called 911 and provided the nude man with some of her husband’s clothes.

 Postal carrier robbed of his clothes in bizarre attack  (see video of carrier

Next Page »