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Postal News - January 2005

2006: Feb | Mar | Apr| May| Jun| Jul | Aug| Sept| Oct| Nov| Dec

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2004: Jan| Feb| Mar| Apr| May| Jun| Jul | Aug |Sept| Oct| Nov | Dec   

2003: Jan-June 2003| July-Dec. 2003

Bigger Raises Expected Under USPS Performance Pay-"The first pay raises for postmasters and other Postal Service managers under a new performance-based pay system will likely be larger than raises and bonuses under past systems.."... "NAPUS said discussions with postmasters who have been told what their raises will be indicate that most raises will be larger than the 2.5 percent to 3.5 percent bonuses managers typically received under the previous Economic Value Added program." |

 Princeton NJ REC to Close July 8th-According to a APWU Steward at the Princeton, NJ Remote Encoding Center, " We also are slated to close on July 8th, with most of our careers moving out as early as March 5, 2005. There are 77 careers, myself included, who will be losing their jobs in this "postal downsizing" not to mention the TE's who will be also jobless. Good luck to all those in Duluth (MN) & the other REC sites who may be announced to close in July. "|

USPS to continue down server consolidation path-The Postal Service replaced all of its technology two years ago, reducing the number of servers to less than 4,000 from about 20,000. But now USPS chief technology officer Robert Otto wants to consolidate even further

Consumer-Grade Surveillance at the Post Office? "In an interesting turn, consumer electronics company Hop-on.com, which produces "disposable" cell phones and low-end cell phone accessories including a cell phone holder designed to look like thong underwear, has landed an order for its consumer surveillance systems with the USPS. This wireless system (model 2145), which has a small IR-system on the camera for night-time views, is decidedly consumer grade, the kind of thing that a paranoid homeowner might set up in his/her own home. In summary, SIW thinks that this system would be perfect for a homeowner who wants to see what that "bump-in-the-night" coming from their living room is, but as far as corporate security at a USPS facility, we simply have to ask what's really going on here? " |

Proposed Discount for Large mailers Provokes Union Ire- APWU rips labor rules in Bush Reform proposal "In a memo outlining priorities for new legislation, administration officials are advocating greater flexibility in negotiating worksharing agreements, which allow the agency to offer discounts to large mailers for presorting mail and other tasks normally done by postal workers."|

New Jersey postal worker dies after truck crash -A USPS driver was pronounced dead shortly after he crashed a mail truck into a row of hedges. While the fatal accident remains under investigation, police believe the victim experienced a medical problem just prior to driving the postal service truck off the road, police said

Home delivery encouraged in Guam-U.S. Postal Service is encouraging the community to take advantage of the free home delivery services it has offered since the 1970s, said Guam Postmaster General Tony San Nicolas. The Postal Service is expanding its home delivery service to most of the villages on the island. Exceptions include a few central and southern villages, in which mail is delivered by a contracted carrier to cluster-boxes stationed around those villages.

Mail Carrier Sometimes a Lifesaver-15 postal employees honored yesterday in the U.S. Postal Service's annual Heroes & Hard Workers awards presented during a luncheon at Papa John's Cardinal Stadium. Winners were selected from the 10,300 employees in the postal district that covers Kentucky and Southern Indiana, with awards based on attendance, attitude, appearance, performance, customer relations and safety. Recipients got a certificate and a star-shaped trophy |

Congressional shuffle could affect federal workers' interests-Both the House and Senate are in the midst of reorganizing committee structures to reflect the priorities established when Congress passed last year's massive overhaul of the U.S. intelligence community. In the House, Northern Virginia's Rep. Tom Davis will return as chairman of the powerful Government Reform Committee. Davis indicated that his committee would tackle areas such as postal reform, executive-branch reorganization authority, the presidential appointment process, streamlining federal law enforcement pay and classification reform

Seattle Postal Carrier Brutally Attacked While Delivering Mail-Police say a group of five to seven teenagers kicked, punched and beat the letter carrier. Good Samaritans helped the man make it to the hospital which was just a block away. By Friday, the injured postal carrier is still at home unable to return to work. |

Mail Carrier, FedEx courier friendly bet on wearing shorts in winter-For the last two years, U.S. Postal Service mail carrier Don Axe and FedEx courier Pat Marino have had a gentleman's bet: Who could weather the West Michigan winter the longest -- in shorts

Reward offered in Postal Clerk's Hijacking, Robbery-The Postal Service is offering a $25,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of a man police say hijacked, robbed a postal clerk at gun point  as he walked to his minivan in the parking lot.. A man approached the clerk, displayed a small semi-automatic handgun and demanded his car keys. When the clerk attempted to close the door of the van the man struck him in the left eye with the gun and entered the vehicle. The man also took $30 from the victim. At the time of hijacking, the postal clerk had in the minivan $710 in post office funds intended for deposit, and $2,000 in stamps belonging to the Postal Service. Those items have not been recovered. |

Toddler Found Wandering In The Cold by Postal Worker-a little boy was found wandering near an wearing nothing but a t-shirt, diaper and no shoes. Harold Billings, a postal worker, spotted the child on his way to work. He says the child was crying, shivering and too young to speak. Knowing something was wrong, Billings took the child inside to get warm. He then called police and CBS 6

 Scarlet Letter Scare-"Fetching her mail last Friday turned into a nightmare for Joan Donnelly, whose letters and catalogues were dripping with fresh blood when she pulled them from her mail slot. Horrified, Donnelly scrubbed the wet blood from her hands and chased down the postman, whose "bleeding, raw hands" were dripping, she said. It was like a scene out of 'Psycho'. The postman allegedly told her he has a skin condition and that the post office was aware of his circumstances.'" |

DMA Statement: Rate Increase Rumors Just Speculation -DMA issued statement clarifying clarifies rate increase rumors.

DMA: Rate increase 'may be as low as 6 percent'-"Jerry Cerasale, the DMA's senior VP-government affairs, said the USPS in March might request a 6 percent across-the-board rate increase with implementation on Jan 1, 2006. "By the end of December, the USPS was $700 million above plan in net income. The greatest generator of that was a 14% increase in standard mail volume," Cerasale wrote. The USPS may have a $1 billion surplus as a result of the revenue boost, he said." |

USPS Transformation Efforts and Long-Term Outlook Still on GAO High-Risk List-In this 2005 update for the 109th Congress, GAO presents the status of 25 high-risk areas identified in 2003  warranting attention by the Congress and the Bush administration. The report concludes that although USPS has taken steps to address its problems -- underlying conditions that led to the high-risk designation continue to exist. The report further states: " The Service has recently cut costs and improved productivity, but it is not clear how the Service will realign its outdated infrastructure and modernize its workforce policies and practices to achieve additional long-term productivity gains. Highlights of GAO Report-PDF|| GAO Report-PDF |

 GAO puts 25 programs on high-risk list

Commentary: Stop the US Mail! "When we end the Postal Service's government-backed monopoly, private carriers will deliver better alternatives..."the USPS raked in a $3 billion profit in fiscal 2004 (untaxed) and plans to raise its rates, again, in 2006. The price hike is needed to cover the rising labor costs that make up a majority of their $65 billion in operating expenses. "The Ludditious American Postal Workers Union has time and again fought labor-saving technologies that would increase efficiency. And postal workers' wages seem to stay above those of average factory employees. The USPS monopoly means no shareholders to complain, and no lawyers to file class actions against it." |

NALC: Management Bonuses a Factor in Cancellation of Route Inspection Memos (pdf)-"Blinded by flawed technology and cowed by hard-core regional renegades, the Postal Service unilaterally canceled the USPS-NALC"  route inspection MOU that enabled local management and union leaders to work out effective, innovative agreements on route inspections.  Young asserted that "Management bonuses may be at the heart of the decision to scuttle the route inspection memos." USPS Headquarters officials want to capture potential “savings” spotted by the badly distorted Delivery Operations Information System (DOIS). They are convinced 2,000 routes can be eliminated by reaping DOIS “undertime.” “We know DOIS data is flawed and is routinely manipulated,” Instead, the chief operating officer of the Postal Service asserted that no route should have more than two hours office time, given the Service’s gains in DPS percentage other efficiencies now available to carriers." |

 University of Phoenix Partners with USPS   -In September 2004  the University of Phoenix, a for profit company, paid the US Dept. of Education a $9.8 million fine the largest of its kind for hard sell recruiting tactics that a 45 page report by DOE said ranged from illegal to unethical. Also in two other cases UOP settled with DOL for $6m  for unpaid overtime and $4m to settle a long-running audit. |

- University of Phoenix USPS degree program

- Student-recruitment tactics at University of Phoenix blasted by feds

Postal Inspector Sentenced for Mail Fraud-A U.S. postal inspector has been sentenced in Camden, N.J., for a mail fraud scheme involving credit cards, the Justice Department said Friday. The inspector, Frank Aversa of Ridgewood, N.J., was sentenced to 10 months in prison, fined $10,000 and ordered to pay $16,000 in restitution for his guilty plea in August 2004 to a charge of defrauding the United States. |

USPS Must Post OSHA Injury/Illness Summaries on Feb 1st-"Beginning February 1 employers must post a summary of the total number of job-related injuries and illnesses that occurred last year.. The summary must list the total numbers of job-related injuries and illnesses that occurred in 2004 . The form is to be displayed in a common area wherever notices to employees are usually posted. Employers must make a copy of the summary available to employees who move from worksite to worksite and employees who do not report to any fixed establishment on a regular basis |

- ELM: USPS form used in lieu of OSHA's

- Commentary: Workers, watch out: new OSHA chief has a slippery record

Tracking Postal trucks -U.S. Postal Service officials have awarded a three-year $4million contract to I.D. Systems to provide wireless location-tracking of USPS' vehicle fleet. Unisys will provide help-desk services and user support as a subcontractor. Over the duration of the three-year contract, the USPS could deploy the system at up to 460 facilities of varying sizes.  Postal Service Vice President Thomas G. Day said “This wireless system provides real-time information for managing our vehicle fleet in a safe, efficient and cost effective strategy. The results from this system will aid postal managers in increasing operational efficiency while sustaining a safe work environment, which are goals in our blueprint for the future, the Transformation Plan.” |

- ID Systems Press Release

U.S. Postal Service to suspend operations at Hazard (Neb) Post Office-- "The post office will be closed indefinitely after Friday because a qualified worker has not been found to fill the vacant position, U.S. Postal Service officials said. Residents were told about the pending closure about two weeks ago. Several people in the community of about 65 residents 28 miles north of Kearney are fighting the suspension, fearing it will lead to the office being closed permanently. At an informational meeting Tuesday night, the postal service's Edward Goforth said suspensions periodically occur when there is no staff available to cover an office. For now, residents must put up their own mailboxes by Saturday."

Corporate America Pays Bush's Inaugural Party Bill-Rival express deliverers, FedEx Corp. and UPS Inc. , each donated $250,000 to the inaugural committee. UPS says it has given generously to inaugurals before and spokesman David Bolger said the company is showing a bipartisan spirit. But UPS and FedEx have strong interests in trade, security and regulatory policies, like new shipping routes, overseas competition and the overhaul of the U.S. Postal Service.  |

- see list of other donors

Princeton NJ REC to Close July 8th-According to a APWU Steward at the Princeton, NJ Remote Encoding Center, " We also are slated to close on July 8th, with most of our careers moving out as early as March 5, 2005. There are 77 careers, myself included, who will be losing their jobs in this "postal downsizing" not to mention the TE's who will be also jobless. Good luck to all those in Duluth (MN) & the other REC sites who may be announced to close in July. " |

Jury says postal workers must share lottery prize -A jury has found that a Mega Million lottery winner must split the $175,000 prize with 20 fellow postal employees who accused him of cheating them out of their share. Only six Olmsted Falls postal workers sued Stephen Kyle for a piece of a $175,000 winning lottery ticket. If all 20 stake a claim, each will be eligible to receive $8,750, before taxes. Three of the pool members who testified on Kyle's behalf during the two-day trial said they weren't interested in the money. But they may change their minds now that a jury has ordered Kyle to slice up the cash pie.

 Executive Appointment:. Susan LaChance has been appointed Acting Vice President, Diversity Development, replacing Murry Weatherall, who retired from the Postal Service Jan. 3. LaChance, who is Selection, Evaluation and Recognition Manager, has been responsible for national implementation of several key programs -Pay for Performance, Voice of the Employee Survey and new entry-level selection criteria. (source: USPS)

Lessons Learned: Letter Carrier Fired After Falsifying Delivery of Registered Mail (pdf) -USPS removed the employee for improper conduct after he lost a registered letter then falsified an address and forged a signature to show that he had in fact delivered the registered letter. In a letter of decision, dated March 3, 2003, the agency concluded that "Honesty is an essential requirement of your position. Failure to be honest has a negative effect on the efficiency of operations. The Postal Service requires an honest and efficient work force. You have failed to meet this very basic requirement." The MSPB declined his petition for review. The District Court found that the postal service proved that the employee lost the registered letter and falsified the record regarding the disappearance of the letter. Therefore, the Court affirmed the removal. |

Religious Tensions Erupt at Funeral for Slain Mail Handler and Family -""Police have made no arrests and have not gone into any detail about a possible motive for the gruesome slayings of Hossam Armanious, his wife, Amal Garas,  and their two children who were found early Friday morning bound in their  home with numerous puncture wounds to their throats and bodies. Garas worked as a mail handler at the Domenick V. Daniels Processing and Distribution Center in Kearny, NJ for the past 10 months, said George Flood, a spokesman for the U.S. Postal Service. Her family immigrated to the United States in 1997 from Egypt, where Coptic Christians generally live in peace with Muslims."  According to reports, Garas husband Hossam Armanious, a member of the St. George & St. Shenouda Coptic Orthodox Church, had been threatened by a Muslim for proselytizing in Internet chat groups frequented by Coptic Christians and Muslims |
- Authorities reveal details in killing of Jersey City family

- Thousands mourn slain family amid shouts for justice
-
Argument over faiths probed in killing of 4

Familiar Postal Routes May Detour -Rural Mail Carriers Face Changes in a Potential Overhaul of USPS
Things in rural America -- including how people get their mail -- may work a bit differently than elsewhere in the country, but even the nation's back roads cannot escape the economic and cultural impact of changes that may come from a possible overhaul of the U.S. Postal Service that is being considered in Congress. For a decade, the USPS has been closing post offices to consolidate the sorting of mail at regional hubs and adding technology to the way workers handle mail to save the agency money. Those changes alone have already had lasting effects on rural mail service. |

Marina del Rey postal center slated for closure-In a move it says few costumers will notice, the U.S. Postal Service has finalized plans to close its large Marina del Rey processing center and move operations to a facility in South Los Angeles. No jobs will be lost in the move, which is expected to be completed by early summer. The 900 employees from the Marina del Rey plant will be relocated, officials said. |

- previous articles on closure

  Postal Inspectors Protect Mail by Eluding Public Eye -"They are armed, drive cars with sirens and have been instrumental in some of New York's most high-profile cases, including the arrests of junk bond king Michael Milken on insider trading charges and TV evangelist Jimmy Bakker on fraud and conspiracy charges. Members of the oldest federal law enforcement agency in the country, postal police and inspectors remain largely anonymous on purpose. They are the post office's own little FBI." |

USPS Hits Pickup, Service Milestones-"The U.S. Postal Service posted a record monthly package volume of 4 million pieces generated by the carrier pickup online notification program. The other milestone was reaching $100 million in revenue generated by the 2,500 Automated Postal Center machines installed nationwide last year." |

Tennessee Congressman plans to cut postage costs on packages to Iraq -U.S. Rep. Harold Ford Jr., D-Tenn., said Thursday he plans to introduce legislation when Congress reconvenes Jan. 25 to make sure care packages sent by U.S. Postal Service get to combat troops for free. According to a summary of the bill, troops would be given an allotment of special stamps to send to families and charities. The stamps would permit cost-free postage for sending 10-pound packages from families and 70-pound packages from charity and faith-based organizations. No cost to the Postal Service was available Thursday, and the Pentagon could not immediately estimate the weight or volume of the parcels now being sent to combat troops

APWU Looking Forward to Working with Board of Governors-..But....” We are mindful, however, of Mr. (James) Miller’s public statements advocating postal privatization and his assertions that postal workers are overpaid,”  in a 1985 article for the Cato Institute, titled End the Postal Monopoly.." APWU President William Burrus said. Miller also wrote in an essay titled "It’s Time to Free the Mails (pdf)" in 1988, that OMB was accused of trying to "micromanage" USPS. Miller is also  a counselor for Citizens of a Sound Economy (CSE.org).   Burrus also said last year that another BOG member (Carol) Gallagher’s appointment  was bad news for postal workers. “If postal reform is considered by Congress again in 2005 as we expect, Ms. Gallagher’s presence on the Board could be an important factor when new legislation is drafted”  |

- NALC challenged Miller’s appointment in 1985 to OMB Director’s position

 

E-NAPUS Legislative Newsletter (PDF) -Miller assumes stewardship with the Republicans commanding a 5-2 majority. There are two Board vacancies and the ratio does not include the Postmaster and Deputy Postmaster General. The Postal Reform Act of 1970 limits the number of Governors from one party at five. However, it is important to note that ever since the Act established the Board, its activities have been devoid of partisan politics. Nonetheless, the change in the Board’s leadership and composition places almost every star in alignment for postal reform. All the major institutional players are reading from the same playbook. The same political party controls the White House, the House of Representatives, the Senate, and the USPS. A decade ago, Chairman Miller expressed strong support for privatizating the USPS, and repealing its monopoly. However, his statements as a Governor have not reflected his past views. At his April 2003 Senate confirmation hearings, James Miller testified that he intended to take a “fresh assessment of the USPS. He recognized that institutions change and that indeed the USPS changed since the time when he expressed his criticisms of it. In addition, on Tuesday, the new chair expressed his appreciation for the hard and dedicated work that postal employee perform and commended PMG Potter for his stewardship of the USPS

 USPS Approves ON-CARD, a Reverse Telemarketing Solution |

APWU: AFL-CIO Plans Aggressive Agenda for 2005 - AFL-CIO has begun to outline an ambitious agenda for 2005. Activity will focus on three major issues: the fight against the privatization of Social Security, which Bush has identified as his highest domestic priority this year |

- Debate Over Restructuring AFL-CIO - Burrus Update

- Debate Over Privatization of Social Security Begins-Democratic leaders and their political allies, including labor unions and the AARP, already have begun their offensive against Bush's proposal.

Four Santa Ana Postal Clerks Placed on Leave After Audit-"Four postal workers at the Spurgeon station in Santa Ana (CA)  were placed on administrative leave Thursday after auditors found procedural errors in the handling of postal funds, officials said. The four counter employees were "walked off the floor" said Rick Maher, spokesman for the postal service. The action was the result of a routine audit, he said. "All of these employees handle postal funds," he said. Postal inspectors were at the station and determined that no crime had been committed, he said. He did not know whether money was missing. The placing of the workers on leave will not affect station operations, he said." OC Register |

 2 Former Maryland Postal Workers Sue Lawyers for Failed Claims Against USPS- Two Postal Workers are accusing a Maryland law firm of legal malpractice in handling their federal claims against the Frederick branch of USPS. |

USPS Chooses WageWorks to Provide Commuter Program to All Postal Employees--Wageworks announced today that USPS is working with to provide a commuter program to its entire career workforce. The WageWorks Commuter Program saves employees up to 40 percent on commuting costs by giving them a convenient way to pay for public transportation, parking and vanpool expenses with pre-tax income. Over 700,000 USPS career employees across the country will be eligible to participate in the program when the phased implementation is completed.| 

APWU Clarifies Tax-Break ‘Commuter Program-" APWU has received numerous inquiries about the USPS-Wageworks timetable. The initial phase began last fall and has been limited to management employees working at USPS headquarters in Washington. Phase Two, now expected to launch in February, will include all career employees in the Capital Metro Area, comprising the Washington and Baltimore metropolitan areas as well as Richmond, VA. USPS and Wageworks officials hope that all career employees will be eligible by the end of the summer."(1/11)

The Next American Idol-Fla. Rural Carrier Associate  Vonzell “Baby V” Solomon hopes to go from delivering letters to delivering a winning performance in this year’s edition of American Idol -the nationally broadcast television program that features performers from around the country vying for the honor of being selected as the “American Idol.” | 

APWU: Postal Service to Increase Employee Identity Security-"In another step taken by the Postal Service to increase employee identity security, the eRMS IVR system and Call Center Agents will no longer take your Social Security Number when you call to request an unscheduled absence. Effective January 23, 2005, the IVR system and Call Center Agents will begin accepting your Employee ID instead of your SSN when you call to request an unscheduled absence. If you do not know your Employee ID, it can be found on your earnings statement each payday. It is the third entry from the left of the statement on the top line. This is an important identification number for Postal Employees to remember, as it is used to access other self-service systems, such as PostalEase."  |

Pittsburgh region post offices putting up 'no cell phone' signs-"The bottom line is service. How can you serve your customers effectively if you have to make 10 people wait while someone's talking on their cell?" said Diana Svoboda, spokeswoman for the Pittsburgh region of the U.S. Postal Service, where a smattering of branches have decided to put up "no cell phone" signs. "When a customer on a cell phone says, 'Wait a minute, wait a minute,' it detracts from the customers in line behind them," she added.  |

 UPS, FedEx, DHL Raise Rates -Rate increases for United Parcel Service Inc. and FedEx Corp. will take effect today. Rates for UPS Ground, UPS Next Day Air, UPS 2nd Day Air, UPS 3 Day Select and international services will rise 2.9 percent. UPS Hundredweight Service, an alternative to services offered by less-than-truckload carriers, will rise 5.9 percent.|

Vote-by-Mail Only Picking Up Steam: "Oregon's vote-by-mail system has proved reliable and popular" especially in this year's presidential election." Vote-by-mail provides an automatic paper trail. Mailed ballots are not forwarded by the post office. The answer to the nation's voting anxiety is not a national standard that imposes new rules on an outdated system of polling places. The answer is vote-by-mail" |

- Voting By Mail In Oregon - How it Works

- Initiative Launched to Make Arizona Vote-By-Mail Only State

Postal Surveillance Cameras Swiped-The two new cameras, one inside the post office and another on the loading dock area, were stolen two days before Christmas and had yet to be activated.|

Postal payroll checks lost in the mail

Question from reader : Did any postal employee receive their paystubs? |

How to Protect the Aging Work Force-In part one of her series, ergonomics expert Cynthia Roth examines the physical changes facing aging workers and their impact on the workplace Example: Employees who must work outdoors may also face exposure to the cold. Prolonged exposure to freezing temperatures can result in health problems as serious as trench foot, frostbite and hypothermia. Workers in such industries as the postal service, etc. need to be especially mindful of the weather, its effects on the body, proper prevention techniques and treatment of cold-related disorders. |

Mailman stops fleeing offender-A Man on trial sprinted out of the court room and ran into mailman Ed Smith, who was delivering mail to the upstairs offices. “I dropped my tub of mail and I grabbed hold of him. I was still able to protect the mail,” Smith said. “After that I proceeded with my duties. Nor rain, sleet or any escaped convict will stop the mail.” |

Snow may not  keep mail carriers from their appointed rounds-but  howling winds and blinding snow just might. - Snowstorms that are blasting the  Northeast, Midwest, Northern Nevada and other parts of the US does not make it easier or safer for mail delivery. Travel was slowed to a crawl at best across wide areas of the Northeast as a huge snowstorm whipped up blizzard conditions with wind gusting to 60 mph

- Through rain and sleet (but not big snow piles)

- USPS: Delivery Should Return to Normal Today -"Despite severe weekend snowstorms that closed airports and caused flight delays in much of the Northeast, a U.S. Postal Service official said yesterday that mail delivery should be back on track today."

Calif. Evangelist says donations lost in mail-A national evangelical group in Orange County (CA) says several months of donations were thrown away because of a post office error, but officials dispute the ministry's claims. According to the evangelist 'novice' postal employees in Rancho Santa Margarita accidentally routed Christian Research Institute envelopes with contributions and requests for materials to the wrong post office box.|

Canadian postal workers challenge NAFTA -A challenge to the North American Free Trade Agreement gets underway in an Ontario court Monday, with plaintiffs arguing they are trying to protect Canada's public services. The challenge, launched by the Council of Canadians and Canadian Union of Postal Workers, arises from a $200-million claim against Ottawa by giant U.S.-based  UPS |

Your Turn: U.S. Postal Service does their job-"While I support Julia Bourque's crusade to save the environment, she should watch who she flings accusations at and blames when doing so. In her article "Wrapped Up in Excess" she called the Postal Service a company guilty of "wasteful packaging." I find it hard to believe that such a well-established company could be as big, bad and wasteful as she leads. So, I did a little research and, I think that the USPS (United States Postal Service) said it best itself." From electric vehicles to windmills, from straw buildings to environmentally benign adhesives, we're serious about protecting the environment...We operate more than 20,000 recycling centers, and we're the nation's largest user of recycled motor oil and retreaded tires. Our stringent purchasing requirements resulted in the purchase of more than $200 million worth of products with recycled content-items we use every day in processing the mail, like pallets and trays, and things our customers use every day, like stamp products and mailing envelopes...We're also proud to drive the nation's largest fleet of alternative-fuel vehicles (AFVs) that operate on clean-burning compressed natural gas or electricity. More than 7,500 Postal Service vehicles have been converted to compressed natural gas, and we've purchased 21,275 flexible fuel vehicles that can run on ethanol or gasoline." "I again applaud Bourque's passion for the environment and agree with her that things need to change, but let us not make enemies with companies that already are doing their part."

UPS Fades as Global Rivals Deliver -Investors will be listening closely to decipher whether Brown's poor 4th quarter was a blip, or a sign it is being outflanked by its rivals. Shares in UPS have dropped nearly 10 per cent since the warning. UPS blamed bad weather in the US during the peak Christmas season and a sharper than expected drop in business following the holiday. But when FedEx boasted of a "strong holiday season" and reaffirmed its bullish financial targets, analysts warned that Brown's problems could be more deep-rooted.  

UPS 4th Quarter Shows 10% Revenue Gain.-UPS Inc.  reported a slim 1.3 percent increase in its fourth quarter profit, saying it was disappointed with its domestic ground volume for the last three months of the year but was heartened by strong overall sales

UPS looks beyond rocky Q4 operations |

Oklahoma Mailman dodges bullets, delivers mail-Jan. is a big month for mail and Mike Rigdon has been really busy lately. So busy, in fact, he was running late last week. And, by chance, he witnessed a crime in progress and went after the criminal. Rigdon chased the crooks until they started shooting at him. |

Mailman Ends 33-year Postal Career Wearing Tuxedo-After 33 years of delivering mail, Joe Davidyock waltzed out in classic fashion. He wore a tuxedo to celebrate his last day of deliveries recently, impressing scores of Bay Street shop owners before bowing out to an eagerly awaited retirement. |

Elimination of the TSP Open Seasons: July 1, 2005-Public Law 108-469, which was signed into law on December 21, 2004, eliminates the Thrift Savings Plan open seasons and the restrictions on contribution elections which are tied to open seasons. The Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board will implement this law on July 1, 2005. After the close of the current TSP open season (December 31, 2004), there will be one more open season, April 15 through June 30, 2005. This means that participants may file contribution elections with their agencies or uniformed services at any time beginning April 15. Through June 30, these elections will be processed under the current rules. Beginning July 1, contribution elections will be processed under the new rules — that is, the elections must be made effective no later than the first full pay period after they are filed.

-Defeating the darkness: Postal worker addresses loss of vision with aplomb-Thirty years ago, a doctor told Frank Facio he had retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a hereditary eye disease that would eventually take his eyesight. Since then, he's gone from having bad peripheral vision to not being able to see figures at night to now having almost no vision at all. But despite not being able to see, Facio hasn't quit his job at the Post Office in Carmel Valley, CA. As the automatic sorter fills the machines with letters, Facio takes them out and places the mail in plastic bins behind him. He keeps his work area labeled with braille numbers so he knows exactly what goes where.

Digital Printing: Survival of the Postal Stream Study-Many printers believe that digital color printing experiences more damage than other printed matter. Since USPS equipment cannot differentiate between digitally printed pieces and printing produced by other processes, manufacturers of digital color printing equipment and printers have developed coating strategies to give such pieces more protection. In response to this concern, USPS is working with PIA/GATF (Printing Industries of America/Graphic Arts Technical Foundation) to evaluate the success of these protective coatings in preventing damage in the U.S. mail stream. USPS “Confirm” barcodes will be used to track the path of digital color mail to PIA/GATF headquarters using nine different digital and direct imaging suppliers and various coating technology solutions. The results of the study will be presented at the 2005 Tech Alert Conference, February 6–8, at the Hyatt Regency Pittsburgh International Airport in Pittsburgh, PA.

Membership in Unions Drops Again -In 2004, 12.5 percent of wage and salary workers were union members, down from 12.9 percent in 2003, the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics reported.. The union membership rate has steadily declined from a high of 20.1 percent in 1983, the first year for which comparable union data are available

Newsblurb: Palo Alto (Calif.) artist Samuel Yates plans to follow a postal worker around the city for a year, photographing every house. He will then digitally synthesize the photos and produce "the color of Palo Alto.

 Postmaster General Seeks Employees' Aid to South Asia Victims-"U.S. Postmaster General John E. Potter today called upon the more than 700,000 Postal Service employees nationwide to support disaster relief efforts for earthquake and tsunami survivors in South Asia."|
-
USAID: Relief Organizations Working in the Disaster Area

The Postal Service has a novel approach for undeliverable books-That brand-new copy of the latest Janet Evanovich best seller you eagerly snatched off the public library shelf may have been destined for the dump. Thousands of books on library shelves in South Hampton Roads were actually rescued from the trash. They were mail-ordered by local residents from book clubs and Web sites but for various reasons were undeliverable by the post office. The senders prefer to have them tossed out rather than pay return postage. In a single day, the regional post office in Norfolk can amass up to 500 books addressed to homes and businesses from Virginia Beach to Williamsburg. So the post office donates them. Most go to the local libraries. Some go to other nonprofits, such as homeless shelters, the veteran’s hospital and churches

 Postal REC to Close-"Just before their shift began Friday night at the U.S. Postal Service remote encoding center in West Duluth, Sue Johnstone and Clarice Peterson caught the sad news first on TV. By this summer, the facility would be closed and their well-paying part-time jobs would be gone. "|
- U.S. Postal Service to close Duluth REC Center

APWU: Senate Democrats Lose Committee Assignments -

Changes to the newly renamed Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee could be significant for postal workers |

Port of Friday Harbor mail may be in first-class trouble -Methow Aviation of Burlington has a contract with USPS to deliver all first-class mail to Friday Harbor. It hasn’t paid its monthly rent since August. Normally, first-class mail is trucked from the Everett distribution center to the Skagit Regional Airport, where it’s loaded on the plane for the 20-minute run to San Juan Island

Russian Postal Workers Allowed to Carry Weapons - Russia's Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov has signed a resolution allowing postal workers to carry and use weapons, reports the national Government's press center. The Russian Information Technologies and Communications Ministry has been ordered to endorse the relevant instructions and personnel-training programs. The Ministry would also be expected to help prepare postal workers for the use of their standard weapons and non-lethal weapons.

Russian Government to Issue Guns to Postmen

The New Russian Postman: armed and dangerous

01/31/05

Changing of the guard: Postmasters in  2 Illinois towns retiring

Postal Rumor Features 6% Increase
Sidebar: USPS Still on High-Risk List | GAO Report

Snow is not a deterrent for Nassau's new postmaster

Postal Museum's online exhibit honors postal workers

Postal system will survive gloom of online bill payment

 

01/30/05

Mail Carriers Fight Through the Snow

Digital color postmarks create new collectibles

Postmistress retires
Going postal with love| Book:
The Giant Hug

 

01/29/05

USPS Cincinnati District seeks applicants for carriers

 

01/28/05

Waite Park (MN) P & DC gets  anthrax detector for mail in some cities

E-NAPUS Newsletter: Is good news bad for reform? (pdf)
Mauricetown postmaster starts new career
French postal workers say it is too cold to deliver mail
USPS keeps up with the times
UPS to Implement Management Hiring Freeze

Syracuse P&DC Achieves OSHA Recognition

Postal service, U.S. military team up to get mail to S. Korean troops in Iraq

 

01/27/05

USPS to purchase Wireless Surveillance Systems

Direct Mail Readership Rises

USPS: Beware of work-at-home scams
Don't forget your postal carrier during heavy snow
Cepheid announces additional biohazard contract
Love Bouquet Stamp Perfect Way to Send Love

Mail Remains the Preferred Way to Send Valentine's Day Greetings

Convenience store clerk charged with groping mail carrier  (scroll down)-An Edmond convenience store employee has been charged with a felony count of sexual battery for an act allegedly committed upon his mail carrier. The clerk is alleged to have asked the female postal employee for a hug when she delivered mail to a convenience store.

Colorado and Wyoming post offices ranked as the best overall for mail service out of 80 postal districts nationwide in 2004. The Colorado-Wyoming Postal District achieved a 97 percent on-time performance for local first-class mail delivery during the fourth quarter - the highest score ever for any major district in the United States

 

01/26/05

The Mail Handler - Winter 2005 Issue
Postal worker beaten and robbed

Alleged mail thief bagged

Utahns still angry over receiving Playboy ads in the mail
Police not discounting vendetta in mail handler family's slaying
Carriers face dread letter days
Moreland Named Burlington Postmaster
Retired Letter Carrier Charged With Molesting Girls

Postal workers carry on despite harsh weather, adverse conditions

 

01/25/05

Mike Causey: Five (Sort of)  New TSP Investment Options

Letter carrier aids man, 95, who fell
Postal worker pleased to get pickle

Police seek interview in shooting death of Postal Worker

Former Letter Carrier Pleads guilty to mail theft

 

01/24/05

Postmaster Reliefs Will Get a Raise in Pay

Trenton P&DC Update

Virginia teen to be sentenced for attack on postal worker

Mold Shuts Down Post Office in Iowa

Mailman delivers dog from harm

Postal substation closes
OMB: Job competitions saved $1.4 billion last yea

 

01/23/05

Mail Thefts in Tracy (CA) Prompt Postal Service Action

The Check's in the Mail

Grand jury indicts 3 men in stamp scam

Female postal employee charged in gun theft
Letter carrier delivers cheer

Singing Mailman Charm Customers with Song
Memo to direct marketers: Cease and desist

 

01/21/05

Honorary mail carrier delivers from his wheelchair

Canada Post unable to locate $275,000

Photo: All-weather carrier -Mail Carrier John Castillo treks through all the snow and cold weather in Juneau, Alaska

Post Office thanked for aid to Domestic Violence Service Center

Letter: Postal Service on odd tangent
Postal Worker Labeled Sexually Oriented Offender
Carrier arrested for sexual abusing 85 yr. old customer on route

Beware Of Phony Postal Money Order Offers By E-Mail

Advo 1Q Profit Falls on Expansion

AuthentiDate Sees Potential For Growth in Electronic Postmark

Explicit ad in mail angers recipient

E-NAPUS Legislative Newsletter: Inaugural Ball and Crawl (pdf)

Horsemen gallop into postal service history

Presidential Libraries to be Celebrated on Stamp Aug. 4-

Post office handles mail that chirps, clucks and coos-Mike McCleery walked into the Payson Post Office and asked if he could mail 45 live pigeons. Serenaded by the murmuring sounds of cooing pigeons, customers looked on with expressions of bewilderment. But for postal workers, this little-known part of their job is routine.

 

01/20/05

Periodicals Mail, Merchandise Can Be Sent at Parcel Post, BPM Rates

Valet Postal Service, Not Actually But Close
USPS Offers Support Ruling for Personal Information, Standard Mail

Fulton postmaster calls it a day

More family time for retiring postmaster

Commentary: To Phase or Not To Phase (rates)
Rural Town Gets New postal route added

Stamp Collecting in an E-Mail Age
Postal Bulletin: Use of leave on a worked holiday,  new semi-clear mailbags...

 

01/19/05

Carrier saves resident's life

USPS Delivering Flyers Of Missing Kinston Women

USPS issues Final Rule on Periodicals Mail

Letter carrier delivers good cheer
NALC Latest Bulletin

More family time for Retiring Iowa Postmaster
Pension Issues Cloud Postal Reform Debate (pdf)

Gene Del Polito: It's Time To Get Involved
French Postal Workers Kick Off Strike
Canada Post ad competition may have been biased

 

01/18/05

Barstow's stray dog problems worsen after 3 dogs attack carrier

Postal Carriers Go Bowling for MDA

Who has the coldest job?
Canada Post rate hikes take effect
Japan's PM to press ahead with controversial postal reform

 

01/17/05

Residents angry about unreliable mail service from private contractor

Man charged with assaulting postal carrier, cop
Postmaster specializes in service

Postal rule puts fly in research ointment
UPS Vs. FedEx Vs. DHL
UPS unit talks the talk

Universal Postal Union gets new chief, ready to keep letters coming in digital age

Postal Worker, activist's 1963 slaying in Alabama remains a mystery-One newspaper columnist described William Moore as "a post office worker trying to save the world single-handed." Moore was on a one-man crusade to protest segregation when he was shot to death along an Alabama road nearly 42 years ago. His case remains unsolved. In 1963, he set out on a walk across Alabama to Mississippi, where he intended to hand deliver a letter to the governor asking that segregation be ended. Moore, who was white, wore a sandwich board with the words "Equal rights for all" when he was gunned down in Alabama's Etowah County in April 1963
 

01/16/05

Postal Worker found dead inside burned house by co-worker

Postal station to close its doors at the Carnegie Library in Oakland

Postal worker says she will appeal harassment lawsuit

Postmaster at Gypsum ends 30-year career
Mail handler and family slain in New Jersey
Post office at heart of tsunami relief

Through rain and sleet (but not big snow piles)-Postal Service stops delivery at some mailboxes- Since Jan. 8, Jerry Jorgenson of Logan has seen UPS delivery drivers, garbage trucks and snowplows make the rounds through his west Logan neighborhood. He hasn't, however, seen any letters, bills or advertisements make their way into to his white mailbox, nor has he heard from the Postal Service about why nothing has arrived.
 

Banda Aceh: Mail that may never be read-The pile of mail had been delivered to the largest post office in Jalan T. Hamzah Bendahara 33 at 2am on Dec 25, just hours before an earthquake and tsunami struck the region. An estimated 80,000 people were killed in the tragedy. Now, instead of delivering mail, Baharuddin’s 10 postal trucks are being used to distribute clothes to displaced survivors living in scattered makeshift refugee camps over the past week.

 

01/14/05

Mail and movies combine at store
Mail carriers brave cold routes


01/13/05

Canadian Postal Union Takes NAFTA to Court-

Post Office Offering Inaugural Collection

Woman checks mail in the nude
Mailed ads not junk to public
Alert postal worker reports home on fire

Man pleads guilty to throwing rocks at Bryan post office

 

01/12/05

New Jersey residents lobbying to cut postage on packages to GIs

Postal Service planning for new jobs in South Carolina

Potter: USPS Delivered Amid Snow, Ice Storms

Postal service eyes rule change

Bryant retires as Demotte postmaster
Riceville postmaster eyes southern retirement
UPS Issues Profit Warning

01/11/05

 USPS Board of Governors Elect Leaders

- Ex-budget director to lead postal board

Board of Governors and its members

Earlier closing and drop off times mean faster postal service

USPS to spend $82 million on new mail-processing site in Maine

Despite 'Perfect Storm' USPS Delivered, Says Potter
Justices let stand lawsuit against gun maker in letter carrier's death

Four indicted in Oakland Letter Carrier attack

Gummed stamps a thing of the past

Biohazard System Being Installed in Kansas City Postal Facility
Nonprofit group gets USPS contract for 6 million plastic bulk mail totes
Still Inefficient, Mismanaged and Free-Spending
Postal Museum to Sell Excess Revenue Stamps

 More than 130,000 cards sent to sick 14-year-old


01/10/05

 Readers Challenge Wisdom of Using TSP as Model for Social Security Accounts -readers think the White House is mixing apples and oranges when it suggests that the Thrift Savings Plan could serve as a possible model for personal investment accounts in Social Security.

As letter carrier's career ends, so does partnership with Max the dog-Max is a dog gone postal. The hardworking canine has accompanied Benton, ILL. letter carrier Caryl Lindsey on her five-mile route for more than three years . Wherever Lindsey went, the dog was sure to go. And when they finished the route in the late afternoon, the devoted dog would head home -- another job well done

McHugh Gives Postal Reform Fast Start

Davis, Colleagues Reintroduce Landmark Legislation to Overhaul Failing USPS

Democrats Are United in Plans To Block Top Bush Initiatives

Postal veteran reunites with sorters
New Post Office at Notre Dame
'He's Our Mr. Mercer' postmaster retires after 42 years

Hamlin (NY) postmaster prepares for retirement

Postal geography mix-up hits Ascension Island
UK Postal Services May Be Subject to VAT
UK Dems warn scandal of post office closures will get worse
Islanders suffer Royal Mail postal blunder

 Disgruntled contract drivers deliver trouble to FedEx

 

01/09/05

Postmaster's last delivery after 46 years with USPS

Postal Worker killed in collision is identified

Dear Abby: Report old 'Miss Nosy' to postal inspectors

$10 Million Raised by 9 /11 'Heroes' stamp will be distributed after OMB approval

APWU: USPS May Terminate AMC, AMF Leases- APWU  has received notices of "management’s intent to look at all Air Mail Facility and Air Mail Center leases. There may be a drive to terminate such leases and move the affected operations. If any excessing materializes" members will be informed. - American Postal Worker


01/08/05

Safety Concerns Leads to Relocation of Yorkville Post Office

Car driven by 80-yr. old crashes into New York Post Office

$50,000 reward offered in robbery of Maryland mail carriers |

 

01/07/05

Postal worker killed in vehicle crash near Lincoln, CA.
Reward Offered for info on El Cerrito (CA) Post Office Robbery
Waiver of Signature Option Eliminated From Signature Confirmation
Late holiday packages may mean money back

APWU Tsunami Relief Efforts
Mail carriers need clear paths for delivery
3 FedEx workers accused of stealing from packages

Postal Service ends sale of 9/11 flag-raising stamp

Postal Inspectors check card sent to Pevely mayor

Post-office bandits arrested after stickups at Quebec outlets
Medication in the mail closes Carolina post office

01/06/05

Latest Postal Bulletin: Tax Info, EMA Route Schedule, WebVAR and more...

Honeywell Helps USPS Deliver $4.1 Million in Annual Energy Savings

Police: Man plucked mail from Tarpon Springs box

Democrats to Force Debate on Ohio Election Results

- Preserving Democracy: What Went Wrong in Ohio
A Status Report of the House Judiciary Committee Democratic Staff
|

 

01/05/05

Hamilton post office to reopen Feb. 28

A mail break: Postmaster will retire this month

Collins Re-elected as Chairman of Homeland Security, Govt. Affairs Committees

Legendary Singer Marian Anderson Returns to Constitution Hall on Stamp

Hunt For Post Office Robbers

The Nigerian Reshipping Scam

Former Postal Worker Pleads Guilty to Child Porn Charges

USPS Board Of Governors To Meet January 11th in DC

USPS Final Rule: Authorization to Manufacturer and Distribute Postage Meters
Postal carrier delivers woman from danger

Postman stamps his retirement papers
Reward offered for information about post office robbery suspects

Postmaster's personal touch lauded

Caltech's Feynman part of new US stamp series

Letter Carrier and Author of US Military History

 

01/04/05

Labor councils, Teamsters jump into debate on AFL-CIO’s future

Unions to focus on organizing in the new year

Postal Security: Identification now required for post office box users

Former telemarketer to plead guilty to fraud

Florida Postal Worker Takes Home $35 million in Lotto Win

Privatization of Deutsche Post continues

Congress Returns, Postal Reform Awaits

Postal Workerss peek for mail cheats


01/03/05

Seneca's pioneering postal worker stepping down

Asheville's first 'lady mailman' calling it quits-These days no one looks twice at a female letter carrier, but back in 1968 a "lady mailman" was cause for double takes and whispers. Judy Morris broke ground when she started delivering mail for the U.S. Postal Service, which was an all-male operation in Asheville, NC

 

01/02/05

Trenton P&DC Update by APWU Local President Bill Lewis

Jaffer: Rumor of Imminent Postage Rate Increase, USA Today

Postal Worker shares light moment commentary:  Winter Mourning

New Link: APWU, Columbus Ohio Area Local 232

Postman delivers wonderful Christmas gift for autistic child

NALC Branch 1111 News (Bay Valley District): Limited Duty Letter Carriers Scheduled for Fitness for Duty Exam and may be required to pay $400 fee if late or miss scheduled appointment. (gif)

 

01/01/05

Appointed rounds end for 'John the mailman'

Crabtree Post Office Robbed

Letter Carrier's newborn last hurrah for 2004
Unshoveled walks make jobs harder for carriers
Refunds due customers for not-so-Express Mail

Retiring mail carrier gets residents' thanks

Postal Service to deliver newspaper
Postmaster hanging up mail bag

 

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