
This Month in the Postal World:
April 30, 2012
At the Postal Regulatory
Commission: Chris
Laver has been named as the new executive assistant to Postal Regulatory
Commissioner Mark Acton. Since joining the Postal Regulatory Commission Office
of General Counsel in 2008, Mr. Laver has occupied key roles in numerous
important dockets at the agency including serving as the Public Representative
in two of the Commission's nature of service review cases and acting as lead
attorney in advising the PRC concerning such varied topics as Standard Mail
and the Freedom of Information Act. Mr. Laver's broad experience at the
Commission also includes drafting and implementing regulations under the
Administrative Procedures Act, authoring advisory memoranda for Commissioners
and the General Counsel, and assisting in crafting many of the Commission
reports. Prior to his service at the PRC, Chris Laver was an Associate in a
private legal practice in Cincinnati, Ohio. He attended law school at the
University of Cincinnati and has a bachelor's degree with focuses in economics
and finance from the University of Melbourne in Australia.
Courier, Express, and Postal Observer: Microsoft
(MSFT) and Barnes and Noble (BKS)announced today that Microsoft will invest
$300 million and take a 17.6% equity stake of the spin-off of the digital and
college businesses of Barnes & Noble. The investment along with the
placement of a Nook Application in Windows 8 creates three major platforms for
the distribution of digital content. This provides Windows 8 tablets and smart
phone an application that makes them competitive more competitive with those
from Amazon and Apple. At the same time, this action raises question about the
future of the Android operating system unless equipment manufacturers tie
themselves to the digital marketplaces offered by Apple, Amazon, or Barnes
& Noble/Microsoft. With this investment and the incorporation of the Nook
application into Windows 8 only Apple and Microsoft will have an operating
system platform, with a common app environment that covers an individual's or
corporation's range of computing needs from a desktop to a smart phone. For
the courier express and post industry, this investment raises an interesting
question abouts the future of printed periodicals and catalogs as well as the
potential impact of the expanding tablet market on parcel deliveries
The U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector
General invites you to comment on this week "Pushing the Envelope" blog
topic: The Costs, Should They be
a-Changin'? The U.S. Postal Service and its
customers have raised concerns regarding the accuracy of the postal cost
system, which hasn't changed in many years. Suggested improvements may require
a significant amount of resources. At a time when the Postal Service is under
substantial fiscal stress, should it be spending money to improve its cost
systems? Let us know what you think on our blog. New audit projects have been started
on the external website.
Post & Parcel: SingPost saw its group
revenues increasing by 2.2% last year, as growth in its logistics and retail
operations countered declining sales in its traditional postal services, but
inflationary costs and investments ate into profits for 2011.
BBC: A new
report recommends using post offices in Northern Ireland to their full
potential. The postal watchdog, Consumer Focus Post, has said a face-to-face
service is essential for the many customers who do not use the internet. It
believes the executive and local councils should realise the opportunity post
offices provide. The report says more government services should be offered
through the post office network.
Mayo Today: Mayo Fine Gael TD Michelle Mulherin is calling on the Board
of An Post to publish its plan for the provision of postal services to rural
areas, including the number of post offices it plans to take out of the
network in the short to medium term.
Denver Post: The plan adopted by the U.S. Senate to address
the Postal Service's serious financial problems falls short of the reform
really needed to make the agency solvent. Even worse, it will actually hamper
efforts by the Postal Service's management to radically overhaul its
operations, a necessity for an agency losing $25 million a day. We think the
House should reject much of the plan and adopt more robust budget-balancing
strategies favored by management of the struggling agency. Read more:
Editorial: Return postal plan to sender.
Philadelphia Daily
News: In the digital age, “snail mail” is no longer as critical as it
once was. And the Postal Service, like everything else, must change to meet
the times. But the current crisis facing our national postal system ' and by
extension the rest of the country, no matter how we pay our bills or get our
magazines ' has essentially been manufactured by Congress. So Congress needs
to fix it. Now.
Post & Parcel: Retailers and customers
demand a range of delivery options and greatly improved in-transit information
("track and trace"), if they are to have more confidence in selling and buying
online. Uncertainty about delivery, whether ensuring delivery at a convenient
time and place or tracking delivery progress, is a critical risk factor for
those involved in e-commerce, with consumer surveys showing that nearly half
of consumers may be deterred from shopping online because of delivery
concerns.
Post & Parcel: PineBridge Investments, the
global multi-asset class investment manager and Integer.pl Group, the leading
independent Polish postal group operating under the InPost brand and other
courier & postal brands, today announced a joint investment to develop and
roll-out an innovative parcel system, EasyPack, in Europe and CIS countries.
Daily Mail: Royal Mail faces a
mass exodus of angry customers as the price of a first class stamp soars by
more than a third to 60p from today. A first class stamp The price rises come
amid a financial crisis in the organisation, which claims it needs extra cash
in order to maintain the universal service of delivering to every home for a
standard price. Its troubles began with the opening up of the postal system to
competition, which allowed rival firms to grab lucrative business
accounts.
Liverpool
Daily Post: Royal Mail has defended stamp increases, pointing out that the
new 50p second class rate will still be the lowest in Europe. The price is
rising from 36p, while first class stamps will increase from 46p to 60p, which
will be in the bottom half of most prices in other European countries. Chief
executive Moya Greene said the new prices were "incredible value for
money", with first class stamps around half the cost of posting letters
in France and Germany.
Courier, Express, and Postal Observer:
Section 201 of S.1789, The 21st Century Postal Reform Act, purports to save
overnight delivery. However, a closer look at the language of this section of
the bill shows that an overnight delivery commitment will truly be available
to fewer customers than most members of the Senate think. In particular, First
Class single-piece mailers will see little benefit from the delivery standard
provisions in S.1789 that were designed to ensure overnight service as they
are unlikely to tender their mail to the Postal Service before the critical
entry time required to ensure delivery overnight.
April 28, 2012
The Scotsman: The postal regulator has proposed a cap on prices
that Royal Mail can charge for second class large letters and small parcels,
saying it wants to protect vulnerable consumers. Ofcom said the “safeguard
cap” on second class letters should be extended to large letters and small
parcels to further protect vulnerable consumers and small businesses.
Wall Street
Journal: China Postal Express & Logistics Co. said Saturday it plans
to raise CNY9.98 billion ($1.59 billion) in an initial public offering ahead
of a listing in Shanghai, which could be the largest offering in China so far
this year.
Bloomberg Businessweek: The rising
price of stamps will force “millions” of U.K. residents to stop using the
postal service, the Daily Telegraph said, citing a Royal Mail memo sent to
members of parliament. The government-owned Royal Mail anticipates a drop of
15 percent in second-class letters and 12 percent in first-class mail when
stamp prices rise on April 30, the newspaper reported. The increased price
could “spectacularly backfire” and do “irrevocable damage” to the
Royal Mail, Ian Murray, the shadow postal affairs minister, said in an
interview with the paper.
Businessweek: The bipartisan group of U.S. senators
who crafted a bill to rescue the U.S Postal Service can take pride in at least
one achievement. In the hopes of pleasing as many people as possible, Tom
Carper (D-Del.); Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.); Susan Collins (R-Me.); and Scott
Brown (R-Mass.) produced a piece of legislation that has alienated most of the
agency's interest groups. The Postal Service's employee unions vehemently
oppose Donahoe's restructuring scheme, which would have almost certainly meant
staff reductions. But they don't care for the bill, either. They wanted
Congress to do away entirely with the retiree health-care prepayments. The
bill doesn't go nearly that far. “It does not provide sufficient relief,”
American Postal Workers Union President Cliff Guffey said in a statement.
“As a result, the USPS will not have access to the capital it needs to meet
the challenges of the future.” In his own statement, National Association of
Letter Carriers President Fredric Rolando concurred. “We're disappointed,”
he said. “Keep your chins up, brothers and sisters. This fight to save
America's Postal Service is far from over.”
The
Street: Let's skip the suspense right away: FedEx(FDX) founder and CEO
Fred Smith is the most likely person to become America's next vice
president.
April 27, 2012
Washington Post:
Several measures that could have big consequences for federal workers began
moving through Congress this week, including bills requiring employees to
contribute more to their pensions and offering buyout and early-retirement
incentives for 100,000 postal workers. It could be months before any of the
changes become law, and some may not make it through the House and the Senate.
But they reflect a growing sentiment, particularly among Republicans, that
cutting government costs will involve more austerity for its workforce.
Tony
Hammond was confirmed as Commissioner of the Postal Regulatory Commission
by the Senate last night. Congrats!
Wall Street Journal: Taxpayers got routed in the Senate on
Wednesday when a $34 billion bailout of the U.S. Postal Service was approved
on a vote of 62 to 37. The postal unions were the big winners. They held off
reforms that would have meant layoffs and benefit restructuring, at a minimum.
The Postal Service is expected to lose as much as $12 billion this year. By
some estimates, it will need to reduce its work force, which currently numbers
530,000, by some 100,000 employees to have any hope of breaking even.
Amazingly, even the postal management complained that the Senate bill
"does not provide the Postal Service with the speed and flexibility it
needs to achieve the $20 billion in cost reductions" that it must make in
coming years.
CNN: And it's looking increasingly unlikely that the
House and Senate will agree on a plan to save the Postal Service by May 15,
when a moratorium on closing postal processing plants expires. The Postal
Service Board of Governors, the panel that runs the service, issued a
statement late Wednesday, saying the Senate bill "falls short" and
"would not enable the Postal Service to return to financial
viability." Rep. Darrell Issa of California, who has authored a House
plan to save the Postal Service, called the Senate bill "wholly
unacceptable." Aides say Republican leaders don't feel pressured to take
up the House bill right away, because they're not worried about postal
closures. In fact, the House legislation paves the way for more closures, as
well as the end of Saturday service. Without congressional help, the Postal
Service will pursue its own plans to cut Saturday service, delay mail delivery
and close hundreds of postal processing plants and post offices, triggering
thousands of job cuts nationwide. The recession, declining mail volume and a
congressional mandate to prefund retirement health care benefits have put the
service in a bind. It reported a $5.1 billion loss for the year ended Sept.
30.
Scoop: A large group of senior delegates from the
Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union (EPMU) who work across the New
Zealand Post Group, are holding a summit in Wellington next week with the
company's executive management team in response to looming changes in the
postal industry.
Omaha
World-Herald: Sen. Tom Harkin was among the 62 U.S. senators who approved
a bill Wednesday to help the struggling U.S. Postal Service ' but more can be
done, the Iowa Democrat said. What is really needed, Harkin said, are ways to
increase postal revenue. For example, he said, rural post offices could set up
shop in convenience stores. Retired postal workers could be encouraged to work
a few hours weekly to avoid closing smaller offices, he said. Years ago,
people could put money in postal savings accounts, which no longer exist.
Deseret News:
Earlier this week the Senate passed a bill that would give $11 billion to the
service for buyouts and early retirement incentives, hoping to alleviate one
of its biggest expenses ' personnel costs. It would ignore the changes that
are desperately needed in an agency that loses about $25 million each day and
has an accumulated debt of more than $13 billion. The Postal Service is indeed
the victim of some personnel problems that would kill a private business. For
example, its union contract prohibits layoffs.
AllAfrica: The
government is to set up a new committee next week, made up of key players in
the postal and courier sector in order to come up with a solution for the
defunct national addressing system formed two years ago.
Democrat Herald: What
does the Saturday mail bring? Once or twice a year, at the most, it brings an
Oregon election ballot. Those could easily be timed to arrive on Friday. Or
Monday. Or any day. Voters get about two weeks with the ballots in their
hands, so one day more or less won't make any difference at all. What part of
the mail that arrives on Saturday could not wait until Monday to be delivered?
If it's bills, they'll wait. If they can't wait, then the creditors can just
mail them a day sooner. And if some enterprise desperately needs to have its
message delivered on Saturday, it can contract with a delivery force, like
that of a newspaper, for instance. The upside of no mail on Saturday: You can
leave for the weekend without worrying what's waiting in the box while you are
gone.
BBC:
Price cap for parcels proposed by mail regulator Ofcom A price cap already
exists on regular letters sent second class. The cap on prices that
Royal Mail can charge for second-class post should be extended to large
letters and small parcels, the regulator has proposed. Ofcom said that half
the amount spent by the average family on postal services was the cost of
sending large letters and small parcels. It said that the price limit would be
linked to the price rise allowed for regular second-class stamps.
Post & Parcel: Russian Post is
launching a pilot programme in the Moscow area in which managers within the
company's head office will take personal charge of individual post offices.
The state-owned postal service hopes the personal patronage system will boost
the quality of customer service in 500 post offices in the Russian capital,
and increase customer satisfaction. If successful, the pilot will be rolled
out across the country. Each manager will take personal responsibility for
supervising a post office, bringing the management skills from head office
directly to the front-line retail outlets. They will identify operational
weaknesses in the post offices they sponsor, make recommendations for
improvement and monitor the resolution of issues. Post office “chiefs”
will monitor operations at the retail outlets against certain parameters such
as for customer communication, appearance and speed of service.
Post & Parcel: As of today, Portugal has
opened its postal market to full competition, a year and four months later
than required by the European Union. Law No. 17/2012 came into effect today,
allowing private sector companies to provide postal services in competition to
the universal service provider, CTT Correios de Portugal. The regulations set
a new legal framework in which CTT will continue to provide the universal
service across the country until 2020, delivering postal correspondence,
books, newspapers and periodicals up to 2kg in weight and parcels up to 10kg
in weight. The provision of direct mail will fall outside the scope of the
universal service, CTT said.
Post & Parcel: Ireland's An Post
said its operating profit dropped by 62% in 2011 compared to the year before
as mail volumes declined 7%. In the year that Ireland's postal market opened
to full competition, a 7% decline in core mail volumes contributed to a 23.5%
drop in mail volumes since the peak in 2007, and the company is predicting
another 7% decline in 2012. Mail revenues totalled EUR 535m, down 3% on 2010,
with An Post currently facing legal action from regulator ComReg for failing
to meet required delivery quality standards. An Post cut EUR 15.4m from its
labour costs during 2011, with 300 jobs eliminated by voluntary exit schemes.
The company has now reduced its workforce by 1,100 since 2008, and is planning
to cut a further 1,500 full-time equivalent jobs by 2016.
Newsmax: Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe said it's
urgent for the U.S. House of Representatives to act by next month on
legislation to stem U.S. Postal Service losses running at $25 million a day.
Donahoe and the Postal Service's board hasn't embraced the Senate's version,
passed April 25, because it would delay closing mail facilities. He said early
House action is necessary so the two chambers can arrive at a compromise. The
board criticized the Senate bill for delaying cutting a day of mail delivery
each week and for keeping open “unneeded facilities.” House
Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, a California
Republican, is the sponsor of the House's postal legislation. He called the
Senate measure “a special-interest spending binge that would actually make
things worse.” The “wholly unacceptable” bill would keep more than 100
“excess” facilities open, he said in an e-mailed statement April 25.
Issa's proposal would create a board modeled after the Defense Department's
base-closing commissions to oversee postal closures. Maine Republican Susan
Collins, a co-sponsor of the Senate legislation, said on April 25 that she
encouraged Issa to get his version to the House floor “as quickly as
possible” so the chambers can negotiate in a conference committee.
From the Federal
Register: Postal Service RULES Picture Permit Imprint
Indicia , 25082–25083 [2012–10014] [TEXT
] [PDF]
The Mainichi Daily News: A House of Councillors committee
passed a bill Thursday to review the full privatization of Japan's postal
services spearheaded in 2005 by then Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi so that
it would leave the state's influence over postal banking and insurance
services. The ruling Democratic Party of Japan, the main opposition Liberal
Democratic Party and the New Komeito party supported the bill, which is
expected to be enacted into law Friday with approval in the upper house
plenary session.
Otago Daily Times: Posties are predicting job cuts after New Zealand
Post said it was considering halving the number of days mail is delivered
because of the decline in the amount of mail it handles. New Zealand Post says
immediate changes are needed to cope with "irreversible'' falls in postal
revenue.
Business
Recorder: Pakistan Post and Western Union have signed the renewal of a
money transfer agreement.
Washington Post: Sen.
Carl Levin (D-MI) -- "The U.S. Senate ' one-half of one branch of our
government and an institution crucial to resolving serious issues before our
country ' is routinely described as dysfunctional, gridlocked and broken. We
feel obligated to do something about it. That's why we went to the Senate
floor last week to encourage our colleagues to embrace a classic virtue:
self-restraint."
Washington Post: There are three
ways to evaluate the Senate's newly adopted plan to deal with the financial
crisis at the U.S. Postal Service (USPS), which is losing more than $20
million per day and has almost exhausted its $15 billion credit line from the
Treasury. By a more important measure, what the
Postal Service actually needs to be solvent, the Senate bill falls
disastrously short. In February, USPS management spelled out a
five-year plan to cut $20 billion in costs and restore long-term viability. In
fact, the legislation makes some of them harder to accomplish. Albeit in
exaggerated form, the Postal Service exemplifies much of what ails the
American public sector. For Congress, the effort to bring this proud but
technologically obsolescent entity into the 21st century is a dress rehearsal
for the broader task of putting all necessary public services on a financially
sustainable footing. The results so far are not encouraging.
Bloomberg: United Parcel Service Inc.,
the world's largest package-delivery company, fell the most in four months
after first-quarter profit trailed analysts' estimates amid slowing growth in
overseas shipping.
Courier, Express, and Postal Observer: Mother Jones
has a brief assessment of S.1789 in Kevin Drum's Blog. The posts reviews the
key sections of the legislation like most stores do but he goes further. He
asks a fairly innocuous question. Why won't Congress allow the Postal Service
charge a single piece First Class rate more in line with what other posts
charge? His answer: ”We are ruled by idiots.”
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle: The rapid evolution
of online communications has been breathtaking. For the U.S. Postal Service,
though, it has been devastating. The proliferation of email has produced a
corresponding decline in snail mail. And now the Postal Service is facing
bankruptcy unless drastic action is taken soon. Among the proposals under
consideration are ending Saturday mail delivery and the elimination of 3,600
unprofitable post offices nationwide – including 80 in Montana. That will be
a hardship for the communities those post offices serve. Some residents of the
most remote parts of Montana could be forced to drive many miles to retrieve
their mail. That will mean mail will be collected less frequently or at a
considerably higher cost. But the reality is the world has changed for mail
delivery. And the Postal Service must make adjustments. It cannot be a drain
on federal coffers simply because it is a longstanding and cherished
tradition. Times change; the Postal Service must change with it. And that
means those of us who depend on this service must make some adjustments too.
[EdNote: Hey, have you talked with your senators?]
WDEL:
Senator Carper hopes his House colleagues will vote soon on their version of a
bill designed to save the Postal Service. Carper tells WDEL News he met
Thursday with California Republican Congressman Darrell Issa to urge passage
of the House bill so a conference committee can hammer out a compromise
measure.
The Star: New Zealand Post is looking at cutting back its delivery
services from six to three days a week and reducing staff numbers as it seeks
to weather a sharp and ``irreversible'' downturn in postal revenue.
Investor's Business Daily: This week the
Senate passed a postal bill that throws billions at the beleaguered monopoly
but does nothing to fix it. If Congress can't even manage to get this reform
right, the country is doomed. To get a sense of how out of whack lawmakers'
priorities are these days, consider that Congress has for years made naming
post office buildings its most crucial task -- passing more bills to do that
than anything else. All this happened while the U.S. Postal Service was
careening toward bankruptcy. And now, with that fate imminent, the Senate
passes a bill that would make it virtually impossible for the USPS to shut
these -- or any other -- post offices down, no matter how little used they are
or how much money they lose. The bigger issue is this: If lawmakers don't have
the stomach to let even a few post offices close because doing so might
inconvenience some voters, what's the chance that they will ever be able to
reform the nation's entitlement programs, or fix the tax code, or do other the
other things needed to wean millions of Americans off their growing dependence
on government? [EdNote: Postage denominated in drachmas, I tell you,
drachmas.]
The latest issue of the

House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform: House Oversight
and Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., made the
following statement upon the passage of the Senate attempt at postal reform,
S. 1789:
“Instead of finding savings to help the Postal Service survive, the Senate postal bill has devolved into a special interest spending binge that would actually make things worse,” said Issa. “Simultaneously harming taxpayers and the Postal Service's shrinking customer base, the Senate bill includes a $33 billion dollar taxpayer funded bailout while increasing USPS debt by nearly $1 billion dollars.” Issa continued: “While the Postal Service is actually trying to shutter some facilities it does not need, the Senate bill forces the Postal Service to keep over one hundred excess postal facilities open at a cost of $900 million per year. Worst of all, the Senate bill does not stop the financial collapse of USPS, but only delays it for two years, at best, when reforms will only be more painful. The Senate's approach is wholly unacceptable.”
The House Oversight Committee has advanced legislation that would resolve the Postal Service's financial crisis. H.R. 2309, the Issa-Ross Postal Reform Act, would give the Postal Service the freedom to realign its network with America's changing use of mail and mandate that USPS cut costs instead of dodging obligations to employees, retirees, or taxpayers. The House legislation directs USPS to consolidate excess facilities through a GAO-recommended process similar to the military base closure commission. Click here for more information on the Postal Reform Act.
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission: Docket No.
MC2012–13: "The United States Postal Service hereby requests
that the following changes be made to the market-dominant and competitive
product lists: (1) remove Parcel Post from the market-dominant product list;
(2) add a nearly identical product, titled “Parcel Post,” to the
competitive product list, and; (3) leave Alaska Bypass Service, which is
currently part of Parcel Post, on the market-dominant product list, as
outlined in the proposed Mail Classification Schedule (MCS)
language."
April 26, 2012
Atlanta
Journal-Constitution: UPS is seeing more gains in lightweight shipping,
including a program that delivers packages to the U.S. Post Office for the
last leg of delivery, saving shippers money. But increased lightweight
shipping on next-day air means UPS is making less money on those packages than
if it were shipping larger, heavier items.
Letter from Ralph Nader: Ralph Nader has told Postmaster General
Patrick Donahoe that "You are actively presiding over the demise of one
of our country's greatest foun
ding institutions. What you are known for
is a repeated demand to cut services and raise rates – a surefire way to
destroy the USPS on the installment plan, a strategy that any business
executive knows sets an accelerating downward course. You have failed in your
promise to focus “on selling the business” which you announced you would
do when you escalated to your present position. We do not see Mr.
Donahoe getting his assistants and encouraging its thousands of postmasters to
speak out and stand up for an expanding, innovative, entrepreneurial postal
service. Instead, our feedback from the field is that your constant refrain of
cutting services and raising rates, together with huge losses of experienced
employees, has produced an emerging perilous and costly drop in morale. In a
phrase, you are not up to the job!"
BusinessWire: As today's customers are reshaping
how they use technology to access and print digital content, FedEx Office® is
committed to providing professionally-printed materials through its digitally
connected network of retail locations. As the leading provider of printing and
shipping services, FedEx Office takes in more than 40 percent of its print
business from the web and is continuing to invest in its cloud-based and
mobile platforms to meet increased customer demand for convenient and flexible
printing solutions. “Our continued investment in technology-based print
solutions provides customers with simple, customized solutions for the full
range of their on-the-go printing needs'everything from banners, flyers,
presentations and more” Among the company's digital offerings is the
award-winning FedEx Office® Print & Go, a self-service printing
technology that allows customers to use their Web-connected devices or USB
flash drives to access and send digital files for on-demand printing at more
than 1,800 retail stores. FedEx Office Print & Go now works with Breezy®,
enabling users to submit print jobs from their mobile devices. At the FedEx
Office Print & Go self-service digital screens, customers enter a unique
retrieval code to select, preview and print documents, or can choose to have
their print jobs produced by professionally trained team members at the
full-service counter. The company also recently made significant advancements
to FedEx Office® Print Online, an intuitive print management solution with
advanced preview, cloud storage and ordering features for convenient
printing.
Now hear this: "This Week In
Postal".........the latest podcast posted now!
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DMM Advisory: IMb™ Services Update
PostalOne! ® Major Upgrade Outage - The major database technology upgrade will be completed during an extended maintenance window from 6 p.m. CDT on Saturday, April 28, 2012, through 6 p.m. CDT on Sunday, April 29, 2012. During the outage, PostalOne! and Mail.XML® will be unavailable, including FAST® and eDOC Web Services.Saturday, May 5, 2012 through Sunday, May 6, 2012 should be considered the contingency weekend for the April 28-29 outage if issues result in a rescheduled upgrade.
PostalOne! TEM Major Upgrade Outage - The major database technology upgrade will be completed on the Test Environment for Mailers (TEM) during an extended maintenance window from 4 p.m. CDT Saturday, May 5, 2012, through 8 a.m. CDT Sunday, May 6, 2012.
Business Customer Gateway Outage - The Business Customer Gateway upgrade to Oracle 11 will be deployed to the Production environment on Sunday, May 6, 2012, from 4:00 am to 8:00 am CDT during the scheduled maintenance window. During this upgrade, all USPS services accessed through the Business Customer Gateway, including PostalOne!, FAST, Mailer ID and Program Registration will not be available.
From the MTAC First-Class Mail leadership:
"In mid-March the USPS presented a webinar on changes planned for the
release cycles, which includes new changes to labeling list management, etc.
Many within First-Class Mail were either not able to attend, or unaware of
this session. I requested the USPS present a follow-up webinar. Please share
this webinar opportunity with your FCM Association memberships –all are
invited to attend this session planned for May 2nd at 2PM ET. We will also be
discussing this change during our upcoming MTAC FCM Focus Group sessions. If
you have any questions please let me know. Thank you! Sharon J. Harrison"
Engadget: A joint venture of Canadian carriers Rogers, Bell and
Telus called EnStream is in final talks with the country's leading banks
(likely CIBC, TD, RBC, Scotiabank and BMO) to bring a mobile wallet solution
to the Great White North within six months. The system, which was demoed at
the CWTA Wireless Showcase last September, enables mobile payments by storing
a user's financial credentials on the SIM located inside their NFC-capable
phone. It aims to replace credit and debit cards at first -- perhaps even
driver's licenses and loyalty programs down the road. Carriers plan to charge
banks a flat rate instead of a per-transaction fee.
Canada.com: A private member's
bill that returned Monday to the House of Commons may have had more than one
library user excitedly checking out books and DVDs from their local library.
The bill would, if passed, make it cheaper for libraries to mail materials
through Canada Post The bill from Conservative Merv Tweed would provide “a
reduced rate of postage for library materials lent by a library to a borrower,
including by means of an interlibrary loan,” the bill reads, and
“guarantee a postal rate for libraries or interchanges and to provide books
to Canadians at a reduced postal rate,” Tweed said when he re-introduced the
bill. It would also expand the definition of “library materials” to
include everything from books, magazines, records, to CDs, CD-ROMs,
audiovisual cassettes, DVDs and other audiovisual material.
New Zealand Herald: New Zealand Post is looking at cutting back
its delivery services from six to three days a week and reducing staff numbers
as it seeks to weather a sharp and "irreversible" downturn in postal
revenue.
From the Federal
Register: Postal Regulatory Commission NOTICES New
Postal Product , 24996–24997 [2012–10023] [TEXT
] [PDF]
Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Soon after backers
of a major Postal Service reform bill pushed their plan through the U.S.
Senate, the Postmaster General gave the effort a big thumbs down, saying
Senators are blocking too many of his plans to save money.
"Unfortunately, action by the Senate today falls far short of the Postal
Service's plan," read a statement from the Postal Service Board of
Governors. "We are disappointed that the
Senate's bill would not enable the Postal Service to return to financial
viability," the board added. Also blasting the Senate's effort
was a key House lawmaker. "The Senate's approach is wholly
unacceptable," said Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), who is leading reform
efforts in the House. "Worst of all, the Senate
bill does not stop the financial collapse of USPS, but only delays it for two
years, at best, when reforms will only be more painful," said
Issa.
Express: More stamp
price rises could follow after the boss of Royal Mail warned its business
faced a “spiral of decline”. Chief executive Moya Greene said competition
from private delivery companies like TNT was an “immediate threat” to the
future of Royal Mail. She fears they may cherry-pick the most lucrative
routes, leaving it to deliver to unprofitable areas and leading to a more
expensive service. The warning comes as customers prepare for Monday's price
hike, which will see first-class stamps soar from 46p to 60p, and second-class
from 36p to 50p. The price increases follow operating losses of £41million at
Royal Mail in 2011.
PRNewswire: The following statements are in response to today's
vote by the U.S. Senate to approve S 1789, the 21st Century Postal Reform Act.
Statement of the Board of Governors of the United States Postal Service
The Board, in working with management, has spent the past two years preparing a comprehensive business plan to make the Postal Service viable so it would not become a liability to the American people. This plan was validated by outside experts. We stand behind this plan, and we are convinced it is the right approach. Unfortunately, action by the Senate today falls far short of the Postal Service's plan. We are disappointed that the Senate's bill would not enable the Postal Service to return to financial viability. A strong Postal Service is important to the health of the entire mailing industry and the Postal Service's ability to finance universal service for the American public. Given volume losses we have experienced over the past five years along with expected future trends, it is totally inappropriate in these economic times to keep unneeded facilities open. There is simply not enough mail in our system today. It is also inappropriate to delay the implementation of 5-day delivery when the vast majority of the American people support this change. Failure to act on these changes will ensure that the Postal Service's losses will continue to mount. We remain hopeful that Congress will ultimately produce legislation that will enable the Postal Service to return to financial viability.
Patrick R. Donahoe Postmaster General & Chief Executive Officer of the United States Postal Service
"We appreciate the hard work of the Senate in addressing postal issues, and we believe that there are important and valuable provisions contained in the legislation. We would have preferred the Senate allow the Postal Service to move further and faster in addressing its cost reduction goals. "Today the Postal Service incurs a daily loss of $25 million and has a debt of more than $13 billion. Based on our initial analysis of the legislation passed today, losses would continue in both the short and long term. If this bill were to become law, the Postal Service would be back before the Congress within a few years requesting additional legislative reform. "The Postal Service does not seek to be a burden to the American taxpayer, and we believe such an outcome is entirely avoidable. The Postal Service has advanced a comprehensive five-year plan that would enable revenue generation and achieve cost reductions of $20 billion by 2015 ― restoring the Postal Service to long-term profitability. "The plan we have advanced is a fair and responsible approach for our customers, our employees and the communities we serve. We are hopeful that the legislative process will continue and that enacted legislation will put the Postal Service on a sustainable path to the future."
Democratic
Underground: The Senate passed an amended version of the 21st Century
Postal Service Act (S. 1789) on April 25 by a vote of 62-37. “Although the
bill is flawed, the amended version is far better than the original,” said
APWU President Cliff Guffey. “That is a result of the tremendous effort of
APWU members, postal customers, and elected officials who appreciate the
importance of the Postal Service to American life.
New York Times: Fredric V. Rolando, president
of the National Association of Letter Carriers, said the unions would now turn
their attention to the House, where postal legislation is pending. “We are
very disappointed that the Senate approved such a flawed bill, but we are
determined to continue the fight for legislation that will provide a path to
long-term viability for the Postal Service,” Mr. Rolando said. The House
bill differs substantially from the Senate version. It would create a
commission much like the one that studied and recommended military base
closings to oversee the shutting down of post offices and processing centers.
It would also allow the Postal Service to end Saturday mail delivery without a
two-year delay.
ENews Park Forest: U.S. Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) today
released the following statement after the U.S. Senate passed comprehensive
legislation to reform the postal service by a vote of 62 to 37. Durbin also
offered an amendment - that was accepted into the bill - which protects
facilities the Postal Service recently concluded to be efficient by requiring
a new audit before the Postal Service can move forward with plans to close or
consolidate that facility.
“Over the last year, the Postmaster General has produced many desperate scenarios including the closure of nine Illinois processing facilities and more than 250 post offices. Today the Senate produced a bipartisan plan that will steer the Postal Service away from the worst scenario and help it adapt to current economic realities. “Our bipartisan plan is far from perfect, but it will protect Illinois postal jobs and is far better than the Postmaster General's alternative. The bill will help the Postal Service reduce long-term costs, increase efficiency and grow into a 21st century service provider. “The Senate has done its part, now it's time for the House of Representatives to act and pass legislation before the moratorium expires on May 15th. In the meantime, I will do everything I can to prevent good-paying Illinois jobs from leaving our state.”
NBC Politics: The
effort to keep the Postal Service from being forcibly downsized faces an
uncertain future in the House where the leading Republican on the postal
issue, House Government Reform and Oversight Committee chairman Rep. Darrell
Issa, R- Calif., has offered a bill very different from the Senate's version.
Issa's bill would create a task force along the lines of the Base Realignment
and Closing Commission on military bases, which would get rid of redundant
post offices and processing facilities.
Sen. Thomas
Carper (D-DE): – Upon passage of the 21st Century Postal Service Act,
Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), co-author of the bill and chairman of the Senate
subcommittee that oversees the U.S. Postal Service, released the following
statement:
"The financial situation facing the U.S. Postal Service is dire, but it is not hopeless. The time to act is now, and this legislation will provide the Postal Service with much needed flexibility so it can right-size, modernize, and remain competitive for decades to come. Sens. Lieberman, Collins, Brown and I have worked together to address the concerns raised by many of our Senate colleagues in a responsible manner. Our bill ensures that the Postal Service will receive the resources it needs to survive, while addressing legitimate concerns raised by communities affected when postal facilities are closed or consolidated. Our bill asks for shared sacrifice from postal management, postal employees, postal customers and even members of Congress. Make no mistake: these sacrifices are necessary to ensure that the Postal Service can become and remain financially solvent. I look forward to working with my colleagues in the House of Representatives to address the challenges facing the Postal Service. It is my hope that they move forward expeditiously with consideration of Postal reform legislation. We can solve this problem if we work together and remain committed to preserving this invaluable American institution for generations to come."
PRNewswire: Catalyst Paper will host the 15th Print Delivers
event in San Francisco on Wednesday, May 23, 2012 at the City Club of San
Francisco from 2:30 to 6:30 pm for top advertising agency executives and
media/marketing decision makers. This event showcases experts from major
companies who will present case studies, research, and examples of how print
energizes multi-channel marketing and targeted campaigns.
The Moral Liberal: Closing a post office is never
a popular move. To some extent, there is a kind of reverse NIMBY (“Not in my
backyard”) effect at work: No one wants to lose the perceived benefits of a
local post office. For small communities, there is a symbolic benefit to
having a post office to call their own. And for Members of Congress, post
offices are perhaps the oldest form of pork. Many Members have been re-elected
based on bringing in a post office'which often ends up bearing his or her
name. Few see an electoral advantage in closing an obsolete facility. But
despite this political popularity'or perhaps because of it'many of the
nation's 27,000 post offices are simply not needed in order to provide
service. Fully 80 percent of post offices lose money. The problem is getting
worse.
Washington Post: Small business owners have long been
enormously reliant on the Postal Service, in many cases to both deliver the
goods and materials they need to run their companies as well as ship their
products out to their customers. The Senate proposal offers an alternative to
what many consider more costly changes, like eliminating Saturday service,
delaying the delivery of first-class mail and ultimately shuttering hundreds
of offices resulting in the loss of thousands of jobs. But the bill faces a
number of hurdles in the opposite chamber, particularly when House Republicans
note the $33.6 billion price tag attached to the measure.
Washington
Post: Congress moved one step closer Wednesday to overhauling the
cash-strapped U.S. Postal Service by approving sweeping reforms to rebalance
the mail agency's finances and help cut the size of its delivery network. The
bipartisan measure passed 62 to 37 and would give the Postal Service nearly
$11 billion to offer buyouts and early retirement incentives to hundreds of
thousands of postal workers and to pay off its debts. Revised estimates on how
much USPS owes to federal worker pension accounts have determined that the
agency has overpaid its obligations to the fund over several years. The
measure also would permit the end of Saturday mail deliveries in two years,
only after USPS determines it is financially necessary. The Postal Service
also could move forward with plans to shutter thousands of post offices and
hundreds of mail distribution centers ' but senators placed several
restrictions on when, where and how outposts in rural communities could be
closed. The bill also modifies mail service standards to ensure that the
Postal Service preserves the overnight delivery of mail sent to nearby
communities, but allows USPS to slow the delivery of mail destined for
destinations farther away. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), lead sponsor of a
competing postal reform measure in the House, called the Senate bill “wholly
unacceptable” because it delays the Postal Service's ability to quickly
close unprofitable post offices and processing centers.
April 25, 2012
Pickeringchatto: The American Postal Network,
1792–1914 Editor: Richard R John 4 Volume Set: 1920pp:
January 2012 978 1 84893 115 2: 234x156mm: 625.00
"The American postal system is widely regarded as a prototype of modern governmental organizations. It is also considered to be a precursor for a number of large-scale businesses and was central to the communications revolution of the nineteenth century. This four-volume reset collection documents the history of this remarkable institution, locating it within the wider administrative network that coordinated the circulation of people, information and goods. It involved several modes of transportation and communication (steamboats, railroads, telegraphs) and linked the many mass distributors of print media and consumer goods. The pamphlets in this collection document major controversies over communications policy. They link the postal system with debates on cultural values, economic development, political corruption and public finance. The sources in each topic are organized chronologically and set in context with extensive editorial commentary. The collection will be of interest to specialists in the history of law, economics, business, politics and communication as well as historians of the long nineteenth century."
The Senate has passed S.
1789 with those approved amendments noted below by a vote of
62-37. (Italicized items signify amendments that were defeated.)
Action taken Wednesday
Action taken Tuesday
Courier, Express, and Postal Observer:
Today, eBay reminded its sellers that beginning the first of May it will
reclassify USPS First Class Mail delivery as a standard service in all
listings that state that First Class mail is the delivery method. eBay first
announced this move in February and described the change as a way to set
“the right buyer expectation regarding USPS First-Class service.” The
timing eBay's move corresponds with the Postal Service's expected
implementation of new slower service standards for First Class
Parcels.
Post & Parcel: The US Senate has
voted against setting up a receivership-style commission to force changes and
cutbacks at the US Postal Service. [EdNote: And NALC is telling its members
to OPPOSE S. 1789? Something doesn't square here.]
Post & Parcel: The Brazilian government has
authorised Brazil's Post and Telegraph Company to provide third party products
and services through its post offices, clearing the way for it to enter the
mobile phone market. The Ministry of Communications said the state-owned
company would be able to expand the traditional portfolio of services
available through its retail outlets through business partnerships.
Post & Parcel: The new president of
Spain's loss-making postal service Correos, Javier Cuesta Nuin, has said his
company is planning to cut 1,900 to 2,000 jobs this year, after cutting twice
that number last year. Appearing before Spanish lawmakers in the Budget
Committee last week, Cuesta said the cuts were necessary for the survival of
the company in a “very difficult economic environment”. With declining
demand for mail services in a market that has been fully open to competition
since January 2011, Cuesta said efforts to increase revenues in recent years
had not been enough to stem the company's losses.
Washington Post: Final passage of [S.1789] is expected Wednesday [today].
The issue then moves to the House, where a Republican-backed proposal under
consideration differs considerably from the Senate because it includes
provisions establishing an independent financial control board to review and
overhaul USPS finances. An attempt Tuesday to add the oversight panel to the
Senate measure failed overwhelmingly.
Roll Call: Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid (D-Nev.) on Wednesday sang the praises of the bipartisan majority of
senators who allowed work to continue on a postal reform bill, and said
finishing the bill on Wednesday will show the House that the Senate can do
"big things."
CEP News
(Courier-Express-Postal), published by the MRU
Consultancy, has reported that:
That's just about the limit: PostNL's CEO Harry Koorstra stepped down with immediate effect. 'The co-operation with the Supervisory Board has been very cumbersome of late', the official statement reads. He and the board had 'differences in opinion about how to serve best the various stakeholders' interests'. 'Under these circumstances, I cannot and will not work', the announcement further stated. Koorstra stressed that he left the company without any compensation.
Posten Norge has failed with its appeal against a fine imposed by the ESA ('EFTA Surveillance Authority').
China's express and postal services saw considerable growth this year, too.
Who owns the postal codes? Canada Post now wants to resolve this question through a court. The post sued Ottawa based one-man company Geolytica, which amongst other things provides the free download of Canadian postal codes via its website http://geocoder.ca.
Poste Italiane remained Europe's second largest postal operator in 2011 despite slightly decreased revenues.
In the light of impending losses in the three-digit-million area Correos plans mass redundancies.
The consultations on the redraft of the Swiss postal law were closed on Monday.
The Russian post felt obliged to deny rumours about the resignation of CEO Alexander Kisselyov. The official memorandum states that Kiselyov's will be in place until 2014 and only the regulatory authority could terminate the contract ahead of time. However, the authority 'has stated no such intentions'.
After Deutsche Post appealed against the EU-Commission's order to repay state aid at the beginning of April (CEP-News 16/12), the German government now also filed a similar lawsuit with the EU Court of Justice.
The regional court in Aschaffenburg passed a landmark decision for the entire German logistics industry. On Tuesday Germany's Association of Courier, Express and Postal Service Providers (BdKEP e. V.) reported that the court decided that subcontractors in the parcel business are entitled to receive the diesel surcharge which is levied on shippers.
FedEx' tax ratio in the USA came under fire again. Senator Bernie Sanders (Vermont) criticised that the integrator spent over 38.6m euros on lobbying between 2008 and 2010, but only paid federal tax bills of 28.1m euros. Last year activists from the left leaning non-profit organisation Citizens for Tax Justice already pointed out that FedEx' low tax burden was unacceptable given profits of over 4.8bn U. S. Dollars between 2008 and 2010.
InPost, a subsidiary of Polish mail service Integer.pl, agreed on a strategic partnership with Neopost.
The Norwegian post remained on its shopping spree in the logistics industry. At the beginning of this week it was disclosed that Posten Norge took over forwarding firm Fredrikstad Transport & Spedisjon (FTS) which is based in the vicinity of Oslo. FTS primarily specialises in cross-border shipments and their distribution in Norway.
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Cycleon, a Netherlands-based reverse logistics specialist, opened a new office in Singapore.
The Brazilian post has been authorized to offer products and services from third-party providers in its post offices nationwide. ECT Correios received the necessary permittance from the responsible ministry of communications last week. The earnings from the utilisation of its infrastructure will be invested to improve basic postal services.
The MRU, founded in 1992, is the only consultancy in Europe, which has specialised in the market of courier-, express- and parcel services. For large-scale shippers and CEP-services in particular, the MRU provides interdisciplinary advice for all major questions of the market, as there are for example market entry, product design, organisation, and EDP.To learn more about the stories reported above, contact CEP News. (We appreciate the courtesy extended by CEP News to help whet your appetite for more of what CEP offers.)
National
Association of Letter Carriers: The NALC has argued for months that S.
1789 would fail to preserve the long-term viability of the Postal Service
because it embraces the downsizing plans of Postmaster General Pat Donahoe. By
voting against an amendment offered by Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM) to preserve
six-day delivery (by a vote of 56 to 43) and by voting to slash federal
employee workers' compensation benefits (by a vote of 53 to 46), the Senate
has failed to improve a deeply flawed bill. Tell your senators to vote
“NO” on S. 1789.
The Star-Ledger: What many observers fail to give weight to,
though, is just how burdensome the terms are under which the postal service is
forced to operate. Congress has the obligation to change those terms if it
wants the U.S. Postal Service to perform as a modern business. It isn't a
level playing field, not at all. Every effort the postal service has made to
generate business (e.g. online bill paying; shipping certain products;
providing new services; banking; phone cards, money transfers; email accounts)
either private companies objected (e.g. Internet industry; banks; FedEx) or
Congress itself (prompted by the lobbying crowd) put a stop to it, forcing the
postal service to abandon the effort.
DutchNews: Members of the executive board at postal delivery
firm PostNL will not get a bonus this year, new CEO Herna Verhagen is quoted
as saying by the Financieele Dagblad.
The Atlantic: This week
the U.S. Senate is debating the 21st Century Postal Act of 2011, a proposal to
reform the U.S. Postal Service and change the way the USPS does business in
order to make it more profitable. [It] will not solve the fundamental problem:
Congress assumes that this vital government service will somehow become
profitable. The critiques and suggestions offered as solutions for what ails
the Postal Service see the problem only in terms of commercial and financial
concerns.
Washington Post: The final bill (S. 1789) is expected to pass
the Senate but faces an uncertain future. The House has yet to begin
consideration of a different version of a postal bill, which seeks to create a
national commission that would make major decisions on postal cuts and make it
easier to eliminate Saturday delivery. The commission, which would have
authority to do away with no-layoff clauses in postal employee contracts, is
fiercely opposed by postal unions. “This of course kicks the can down the
road,” complained Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who unsuccessfully pushed for a
commission in the Senate bill. He argued that the current bill failed to
address longer-term fixes, instead hiding behind studies and reviews that
unnecessarily delayed major decisions. “We'll be on
the floor in two years addressing this issue again, because it is not a
solution.” Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe also has criticized
the Senate bill as a short-term answer. Noting that more people every year are
switching to the Internet to send letters and pay bills, he has called the
Postal Service's business model “broken.” The
agency has estimated that the Senate bill would only provide it enough
liquidity to continue operating for two or three years.
Government Executive: A measure
that would have required eligible postal service employees to retire without
buyout incentives failed in the Senate on Tuesday. The amendment, introduced
this week by Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., would have reduced the cash-strapped
agency's expenses by reducing its large percentage of retirement-eligible
workers. It failed in a 33-65 vote.
Bloomberg Businessweek: A Senate
bill to overhaul the cash- strapped U.S. Postal Service would make it more
difficult to shutter post offices considered too costly to maintain. The
legislation would create an appeal process to let customers protest plans to
close individual offices. The Senate began voting today on proposed amendments
to the bill, S. 1789, including at least eight that would delay decisions on
shutting down postal sites.
ABC News: "Thieves Follow FedEx, Snatch
Packages"
Oman Daily
Observer: Moving with changing times, the state postal authority, Oman
Post has introduced e-Post initiative, the first-of-its-kind in the world
yesterday. Under this, both digital as well as printed mail will converge into
one unique digital address and each individual, both national and expatriate,
will be given a distinctive identity free for life. These identity will offer
the person convenience and hassle-free transactions and will also move along
with the person in whichever part of the country he/she is living. Developed
by Oman Post in collaboration with Vantage Post Technologies BV of the
Netherlands ' a global leader in digital document portals ' ePost also offers
every individual a virtual post box as well.
April 24, 2012
Action taken thus far in the Senate's consideration
of S. 1789, a postal reform bill. (Italicized items signify defeat.)
The Senate will resume business on S. 1789 tomorrow at 2 p.m.
The Hill: Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz)
said Tuesday that the U.S. Postal Service needs adapt to 21st century
technologies in the same way it did when Americans started moving by rail.
The Economist: Walk into a post office in Europe or Asia and
you're likely to see a range of services on offer, from banking to insurance
to retailing. But in America, Congress has stopped the postal service from
entering many of these fields, claiming the agency has an unfair advantage
over the private sector due to its monopoly on first-class mail. Private
businesses have also objected, running to legislators when the service
encroaches on their turf. The first paragraph of this New York Times article
offers a telling example. Today the Senate took up legislation aimed at saving
the postal service. The measure will do no such thing. It cuts in half the
number of mail processing centres the service wanted to close, and delays the
closing of underused post offices. It also postpones a decision on whether to
end Saturday delivery, which ought to be the first reform the service enacts.
The service will recoup some $11 billion for overpayments into a generous
pension fund, but that may only prolong its decline. A number of amendments
have been proposed, many watering down an already timid bill. What the Senate
bill (and a more far-reaching bill in the House) really does is reinforce the
fact that the postal service is not a genuine business. For no business has a
535-person board of directors that is more responsive to political pressure
than market forces.
Red State: Earlier in the day, Senator Sessions tried to
raise a point of order against the bill, noting that it would violate the
Budget Control Act by increasing the debt through reduced funding in the
treasury. This is yet another example where Republicans could have blocked a
bad piece of legislation by denying Democrats the 60 votes they needed to
waive the point of order. But with the help of 9 Republicans, they defeated
the point of order and proceeded with debate on the bill that will likely
pass. Later on, Senator McCain proposed a substitute amendment (S. 1625),
which would create a new postal oversight board (similar to BRAC) to close $3
billion worth of facilities over a two-year period and seize financial
authority over the Postal Service if it defaults with more than a $2 billion
deficit for more than two years. It would also allow them to make reforms,
such as ending Saturday delivery. This will ensure that the USPS either
succeeds on its own merits or becomes a private entity – free of government
regulations, but also free of its government-sponsored monopoly on first class
mail. The bill closely mirrors the Issa-Ross bill in the House. Yet, once
again 16 Republicans joined with Democrats to defeat this modest reform
bill.
Post & Parcel: Jersey Post is increasing its
postal rates to respond to changes in Royal Mail rates, changes to UK tax
rules and the continuing decline in mail volumes. The company is raising the
price of a local letter delivery from the first and second class rates of 37p
and 45p to a unified service rate of 45p. Deliveries to the UK, other Channel
Islands and the Isle of Man increases 5p to 55p, a 10% increase. Rates to
Europe will go up 22% to 60p, but rates for international letters actually
decrease 7% to 80p. The price changes, which also affect parcels and other
services, go into effect from May 8, 2012.
PR Newswire: The Board of Governors of
the U.S. Postal Service will meet May 4 in open session at Postal Service
headquarters, 475 L'Enfant Plaza, SW. The public is welcome to observe the
meeting beginning at 8:30 a.m. in the Ben Franklin Room on the 11th floor. The
Board is expected to discuss the following items: Minutes of the previous
meetings Remarks of the Chairman of the Board Remarks of the Postmaster
General and CEO Committee reports Financial update (the second quarter 10-Q
financial results will be available on May 10) Quarterly report on service
performance Tentative agenda for the June 14, 2012 meeting in Washington, DC
Open session meetings of the Board of Governors are available on live audio
webcasts at
http://about.usps.com/news/electronic-press-kits/bog/welcome.htm. Three
hours after the conclusion of the open session meeting, a recorded audio file
will be available for listening. In compliance with Section 508 of the
Rehabilitation Act, the audio webcast will be open-captioned.
To Mailers' Technical Advisory Committee
members: Today, the U.S. Senate began debate on Senate bill S. 1789, known
as the 21st Century Postal Reform Act, and which you may have heard about
recently in the news. The bill has many provisions and amendments and is still
under discussion. To help keep you informed about the process, the Postal
Service is sharing with you information that was given to the bill's four
Senate sponsors earlier today. Senators Joseph Lieberman, Susan Collins, Tom
Carper and Scott Brown had requested details on what a potential mail
processing and distribution network would look like if modeled under the
proposed service standards contained in the bill to maintain overnight service
for intra-SCF volume. In response to the Senators' request, the Postal Service
provided a modeled network scenario. The model provided is the best estimate
available on which processing plants and facilities would be needed, based
solely on the proposed legislation. Further refinements to the model may
possibly be necessary. Details about the modeled network request may be
appearing in the news media. The Postal Service therefore wishes to clarify
that the information provided to the Senate does not represent a new Postal
Service proposal, and should not be interpreted as a new Network
Rationalization plan. The facilities on this list could be subject to change
based on a House version of the legislation, and the outcome of the subsequent
committee process. Debate on the Senate bill is continuing through today, and
the legislation is not final. In addition, the legislation being considered
would not become final in its present form; even if this legislation were
approved by the Senate today, action would still be required in the House of
Representatives, and a final bill would have to be signed by the President.
The Postal Service will provide more information as it becomes available.
Reason: Ah, election year. When a young old senator's thoughts turn to
seniors, local businesses, and other special interests. The U.S. Postal
Service (USPS) can't go on this way. Something's gotta give if the USPS is
going to meet pension obligations and generally stay afloat. There are only so
many times you can increase the price of a first-class stamp before post
office closure, Saturday delivery termination, of slower delivery have to be
seriously considered. So what has the Senate decided to do? Today, the World's
Greatest Deliberative Body, will get down to the important business of holding
a bunch of votes on amendments to the postal reform bill explicitly designed
to give members from rural districts and areas with lots of seniors plausible
deniability come Election Day
Atlanta Journal Constitution: It's not too often that we
have legislation on the floor in the Congress where those of us in the Press
Gallery aren't quite sure what will happen when the votes are counted - and
that is true on a major postal reform bill now before the Senate. Votes on a
series of amendments begin today, as the Senate could vote to keep Saturday
mail delivery, get rid of it immediately or after a several year period - and
that's not the only unknown. Also up in the air are amendments that would
block, delay or slow down planned closures of well over three thousand local
post offices which the Postal Service wants to get rid of in order to save
money. Among the 38 amendments to the "21st Century Postal Service Act of
2012" (S. 1789) that could be voted on Tuesday afternoon and evening, there
are some which try to limit the scope of the bill. With all Senators certainly
hearing complaints from back home about threatened closures of post offices
and mail delivery facilities, it's hard to predict the outcome of some of
these votes. And that doesn't happen too often in the U.S. Congress.
Bluefield Daily Telegraph: The U.S. Senate is
expected to take up a critical amendment today which, if approved, would
ensure that 3,700 postal facilities, including 150 in West Virginia currently
targeted for closure, would remain open for at least another two years. The
additional time would allow the Postal Service to consider better cost-saving
measures.
Washington
Post: Even if they don't tote mail bags, federal employees across the
government would feel the weight of the Postal Service legislation being
considered by the Senate. Among a slew of provisions and proposed amendments
are some that would affect all federal employees. Included are those that
would fundamentally alter the structure of the Federal Employees Health
Benefits Program (FEHBP), reduce some workers' compensation payments and limit
agency spending on conferences. The largest component of Donahoe's "Plan to
Profitability" would have a significant impact on health insurance for federal
employees no matter where they work.
The Albany Herald: When the going gets tough in Congress, the
tough lawmakers get going ' on their campaigns. And that's about it. One trait
of Congress that has been proven time and again is that when it comes to the
job of working within a budget, it has no stomach for it. As long as there is
a line of credit that will fund programs, tax breaks and perks that make the
voters back home happy, America's lawmakers ' the vast majority of them, at
least ' are more than content to secure their future by placing their nation's
future at risk. They hope you won't remember that when you get their campaign
circulars thinly disguised as "reports from Congress" over the next few weeks
(mailed for them for free, by the way, despite the financial crisis facing the
U.S. Postal Service), listen to their recorded campaign pitches when your
phone rings at suppertime, suddenly see photo ops of them all over the
district, and see their names on ballots this summer and in the fall. And if
voters do have short memories and refused to hold their elected officials
accountable, nothing will change.
Alaska Dispatch: The Postal Service
wants to rapidly shrink its network, cutting costs by $20 billion or more by
2015. But Congress wants to slow the consolidation. The squeeze puts postal
customers in a difficult spot. Do they want a leaner system? Postal Service
closings? And possibly slower delivery? Or do they want one that relies on
taxpayer funding? The future of the US Postal Service (USPS) might not seem
like a burning issue to many Americans, whose mailboxes are stuffed with
unwanted catalogs and credit-card solicitations. But the network lies at the
heart of a nearly $1 trillion mailing industry that delivers materials,
packages, and bills for businesses large and small and reaches into virtually
every corner of American life. It delivers almost 40 percent of the world's
mail, maintains nearly as many retail locations in the United States as
McDonald's has restaurants worldwide, operates one of the world's largest
civilian fleets, and generates annual sales that outrank all but 34 Fortune
500 companies. How do you reform such a gargantuan institution to ensure
profits? You shrink it.
Reuters: Lawmakers will fight to save
post offices and other U.S. Postal Service facilities from closure as the
Senate gears up to vote on amendments to a bill to overhaul the struggling
mail agency. The Senate plans to begin voting on Tuesday on amendments to a
bipartisan bill that would allow the agency to tap into a retirement-fund
surplus and end Saturday delivery after two years. But rural-state lawmakers
argue that the bill does not do enough to scale back the Postal Service's
plans to close thousands of money-losing post offices and hundreds of mail
processing facilities starting in mid-May. The desire to protect beloved
postal facilities and jobs in their states has led some lawmakers to threaten
voting against the bill, indicating a potentially tricky path forward for
postal legislation.
Th
e Barbados Advocate: THE global financial crisis calls for businesses to
find new and innovative ways to stay relevant and one of the ways that post
offices can do this it through direct mail. This is coming from Joel
Brathwaite, Postmaster General at the General Post Office who delivered
remarks at the opening ceremony of the Direct Mail Workshop recently at the
Divi Southwinds. "The current adverse economic climate and the unreliable
nature of financial forecast give rise to contraction in businesses, which
have indirectly impacted on the Post. All businesses today are challenged to
find new ways to stay relevant in the current fast-placed business
environment. Finding new ways to do business is mandatory for every entity
that serves customers. For the Posts, around the world, direct mail provides
an opportunity to increase existing volumes, and by extension improve the
bottom line". He said that this is because direct mail and direct marketing
have the faculty to enhance development in traditional and value added postal
products like letters, parcels and logistics. Therefore, it is important that
the participants develop an understanding of these skills during this
workshop. Brathwaite stated that the direct mail system in Barbados "is still
in a developmental stage," and therefore, it he hopes that by participating in
this workshop, postal workers would develop more knowledge and capabilities in
best practice solutions so that they can improve the activities across the
Caribbean and further develop their own postal business.
Post & Parcel: DHL Express says it has invested in its
operations in the Chicago area of the United States in order to
"significantly" enhance its international pick-up and delivery services.
Government Executive: Sen.
Rand Paul, R-Ky., has offered an amendment that would prohibit collective
bargaining, while Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., is seeking to limit executive
compensation. Paul also put forth an amendment that would provide merit pay
for the postmaster general and limit the authority of USPS to award
bonuses.
Washington
Post: The U.S. Postal Service would like Congress to allow changes to the
mail delivery schedule and other reforms to better control costs, but a set of
proposals expected to come to a vote Tuesday could place even more
restrictions on when, where and how Americans receive their mail. The Senate
plans to vote on dozens of amendments designed to overhaul the Postal Service,
by providing nearly $11 billion to fund the buyouts of hundreds of thousands
of employees and, eventually, ending six-day-a-week mail delivery. The
proposals could also establish new service standards and revamp how the USPS
sets aside money for its retirees. Unlike most issues under consideration this
year on Capitol Hill, overhauling the Postal Service does not break along
traditional partisan or ideological lines. Lawmakers who normally work closely
together ' including Sens. Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John McCain
(R-Ariz.) ' find themselves on opposing sides of the debate.
The Hill: Sen. Bob
Corker (R-Tenn.) on Monday said he is putting forward an amendment to a postal
reform bill that would end what he calls the "corporate welfare" associated
with current law that requires the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) to provide some
services to companies at a loss. "Current law… actually mandates that the PO
provide some services at a loss," Corker said on the floor. "It is
unbelievable the calls we've been receiving in our office that basically point
to the tremendous corporate welfare that is in existence." Corker said it
makes "very little sense" to continue to require this corporate welfare to
companies, and said his amendment to the 21st Century Postal Service act, S.
1789, would eliminate current law that limits the ability of the USPS to raise
the price of some services. Corker criticized S. 1789 for calling for a
two-year study on stopping Saturday delivery. "We don't need a study to tell
us what we already know," he said. "The post office needs flexibility in its
delivery schedule." His language would also eliminate the "no layoff" clause
for postal workers in future contracts, and kill language mandating that the
fringe benefits of postal workers meet the standards of benefits in 1971.
April 23, 2012
Courier, Express, and Postal Observer: The Hill
has reported that Federal Employees will likely see an increase in their
health insurance premiums if Postal Service employees and retirees are removed
from the Federal Employee Health Benefit Program. The increase in premiums for
Federal Employees suggests that current law effectively transfers funds from
the Postal Service, and its ratepayers, to the Office of Personnel management
to cover costs of health benefits for federal employees. While the size of the
total subsidy is unknown, the information that the Hill article presents
suggests that at a minimum, the Postal Service's participation in FEHBP
reduces every Federal employee's premium by at least 2%. Ending this subsidy
would seem to be a good idea for both mailers and postal employees and would
remove another transfer from the Postal Service to the federal government.
Nationa
l Newspaper Association: "The National Newspaper Association urges your
support of S. 1789, the 21st Century Postal Act. A substitute amendment to be
proposed by its sponsors strengthens this bill. It will give the Postal
Service tools for restructuring and inject much needed certainty into the $1.1
trillion mailing business. NNA, a 126-year-old organization, represents 2,350
community newspapers. Our newspapers use the mail to serve America's
neighborhoods and small towns. Pew Research Center studies indicate that an
overwhelming majority of Americans--both over and under 40--depend on local
newspapers for political, educational and shopping information. The failure of
the Postal Service to deliver newspapers and the news would put many
communities at risk. It casts a shadow over the practice of democracy in
America."
The Guernsey Press: AN UNNAMED
Guernsey-based retailer has reportedly looked into sending goods to customers
in the UK via Germany to avoid being taxed on small goods, it has been
claimed. A report in the International Tax Review magazine states that the
company was thinking of using the method to try to get around the UK's recent
decision to shut down Low Value Consignment Relief to the Channel Islands,
which allowed fulfilment firms to sell goods under £15 to the UK VAT-free.
The magazine said that such a move would be fraud. But a Guernsey Post
spokeswoman said the company was not aware of local businesses using the
practice.
Rolling Stone: In 2006, in what
looks like an attempt to bust the Postal Workers' Union, George Bush signed
into law the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006. This law
required the Postal Service to pre-fund 100 percent of its entire future
obligations for 75 years of health benefits to its employees – and not only
do it, but do it within ten years. No other organization, public or private,
has to pre-fund 100 percent of its future health benefits. This is a classic
example of private-sector lobbyists using the government to protect its
profits and keep prices inflated.
Pioneer Press: Public health experts
will test in the Twin Cities next month whether mail carriers can quickly
distribute medications during a simulated emergency. On Sunday, May 6,
personnel from the U.S. Postal Service will deliver a simulated supply of the
antibiotic doxycycline to some 37,000 households in four ZIP codes across the
Twin Cities metro. The target ZIP codes include portions of St. Paul, North
Minneapolis, Robbinsdale, Crystal and Golden Valley, according to a statement
from the Minnesota Department of Health. Only residential addresses will
receive the simulated antibiotics, which will take the form of an empty pill
bottle. People living in the 55101, 55102, 55411 and 55422 ZIP code areas will
be notified of the exercise a few days before the event takes place.
Las Vegas Review-Journal: In the wake of
the rabid overspending for the GSA's 2010 Western Regions Conference, the
Senate is poised this week to approve new controls on meetings sponsored by
federal agencies. But they are not expected to make a lot of noise about it.
An amendment by Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., has been accepted by Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., for consideration as part of a U.S. Postal Service
reform bill, with debate expected on Tuesday. But Roll Call reported this
morning that Coburn's amendment likely will be passed by unanimous consent,
avoiding a recorded vote and potentially more speeches about the now-infamous
$823,000 conference that might embarrass Las Vegas, where it was held. An
amendment that seeks to rein in spending on conferences figures to pass
overwhelming one way or the other, after taxpayers were treated to stories
this month about semi-private catered in-room parties, $75,000 bicycle
building team exercise and spending on commemorative coins and yearbook-style
mementoes at the General Services Administration conference at the M Resort in
Henderson.
Mornin
g Star: Greek postal workers' union leader Georgios Vasilopoulos warned on
Monday how much the financial crisis had shattered his country and attacked
its workers. Unemployment was at an all-time high, with more than 50 per cent
of young people without a job, while wages had been slashed by up to 32 per
cent. "Through hundreds of legislative changes, the authorities are
demolishing the institutional framework of industrial relations and have
deregulated the labour market," he told delegates in Bournemouth. "In public
services, the state has violated all collective bargaining to reduce wages and
abolished decades worth of national agreements. "And in February, a new law on
postal market was passed to begin the deregulation of our national postal
service."
Federal News
Radio: An amendment to a Senate bill restructuring the U.S. Postal
Service's financial framework would institute new agency reporting
requirements for retiring federal workers, anticipating a "deluge of
retirees," from USPS. Sens. Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.),
introduced last week an amendment to the 21st Century Postal Service Act of
2012 (S. 1789), that requires the Office of Personnel Management to take new
steps to chip away at a longstanding backlog of federal retirement claims. In
a floor speech Monday, Warner said his office has received hundreds of
requests from federal retirees who have faced long waits and "inordinate
hardship ... while their retirement paperwork moves through the system." And
the retirement backlog could grow larger. Much of the larger postal reform
bill's cost-savings stem from reducing its workforce, in part through early
retirements. All told, the bill sets a goal of reducing the USPS workforce by
18 percent, which would add nearly 100,000 applications to the retirement
pipeline.
Huffington Post: Death, or at least a near death
experience, is the likely outcome of S.1789, the bill to downsize the Postal
Service that the Senate is scheduled to vote on Tuesday night. The bill would
end Saturday delivery and also raise the target delivery time from 1-2 days to
2-3 days. The idea is that people won't generally care if a letter takes 3
days rather than 2 to reach its destination. While that is probably true, this
will certainly increase the frequency with which a letter takes a week or more
to reach its destination, and people do care about and remember these
instances. This additional delay is likely to seriously reduce the standing of
the Postal Service in most people's eyes, leading to a further erosion of
business. The certain effect of this bill is to cut 100,000 jobs over the next
three years. This is somewhat better than the 200,000 job loss that would
result from a bill being pushed by Representative Darrell Issa and the House
Republicans, but any final bill is likely to end up somewhere in the middle.
If we assume 150,000 lost jobs, that is equivalent to more than 5 weeks of job
growth at the March rate.
news.gnom.es: The Senate will resume debate on
postal reform Tuesday, considering several amendments to its bill that would
affect workers' pay and benefits. Measures that would prohibit collective
bargaining at the U.S. Postal Service, require retirement-eligible employees
to retire, and increase the amount workers contribute to their health benefits
and life insurance are among the 39 amendments the Senate plans to vote on as
part of the 21st Century Postal Service Act (S. 1789). Other amendments would
limit executive pay at USPS, remove language scaling back workers'
compensation benefits, and curtail the amount agencies can spend on government
conferences. Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., is shepherding a few amendments to S.
1789, including one that would force the Postal Service to dismiss workers who
are eligible for retirement to reduce expenses. The legislation in its current
form allows USPS to offer buyouts to eligible employees to reduce personnel
costs, but Coburn believes requiring eligible workers to retire is a smarter
and more cost-effective downsizing strategy. "S. 1789 would provide buyouts '
essentially cash bonuses or years of service credits ' to encourage postal
employees to decide to retire," said a summary of the amendment from Coburn's
office. "But there is a real risk that these buyouts will go to workers who
would already be planning to retire anyway. That is, these buyouts may
essentially be retirement gifts to already retiring workers." Coburn's office
cited USPS data stating that 30 percent of its current workforce is eligible
to retire.
Roll Call: Efforts to downsize the U.S. Postal Service
will face a series of hurdles today when the Senate votes on up to 39
amendments to the chamber's postal reform bill, including a proposal to limit
spending on government conferences in the wake of the recent General Services
Administration scandal. "I hope once we work through the amendments ... we
will see a strong bipartisan vote to modernize the Postal Service and save
this important institution from insolvency," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
(D-Nev.) said, adding that he expects the measure to pass.
Sen.
Jeff Sessions: U.S. Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL), Ranking Member of the
Senate Budget Committee, announced today that he will be raising a budget
point of order against S. 1789, the postal reform bill. The Congressional
Budget Office has scored the bill as adding $34 billion to the debtby 2022,
spending more than the spending levels set in place by the Budget Control
Act-levels set in law as the condition for the $2.1 trillion debt limit
increase. The point of order has a 60-vote threshold to waive.
The U.S. Postal Service Office of
Inspector General invites you to comment on the following: This week's "Pushing the Envelope" blog topic:
Should the Postal Service Post its Rates in Post Offices? Many
consumers don't know the prices for services offered when they visit the post
office. Posting rates for common services would allow customers to make
informed decisions and allow mailers to make price comparisons. How can the
U.S. Postal Service present prices in the most effective way? Let us know what
you think on our blog.
New Audit Projects. New audit projects have been started on the
external website.
New York Times: How vital is the United States Postal Service?
The Senate is attempting to answer that this week as it debates the service's
obvious need to drastically reform its business model in the age of electronic
communication. Postal officials say they must close about 3,700 underused post
offices (there are 32,000 nationally) while offering alternative services
through local businesses. They also want to consolidate hundreds of regional
processing centers and eliminate Saturday mail deliveries. Lawmakers in both
houses, fearful of constituents' wrath, would prefer to procrastinate as
usual. But the quasi-independent service ' which receives no revenue from the
federal government but is subject to tight oversight from Congress ' has set a
May 15 deadline to begin making cutbacks if it is to avoid bankruptcy.
Swazi Observer:
Government is expected to soon establish an independent regulatory authority
for postal services in Swaziland. The newly unveiled draft policy states that
government must prepare the legal framework to separate postal services from
telecommunications, establishing the postal business as a wholly owned,
financially viable corporation like SwaziPost, thus enabling them to enter
into commercial areas.
Washington
Post: On Tuesday, the Senate is set to vote on up to 38 amendments to a
major bipartisan bill that would reform the Postal Service, including
proposals to end six-day mail delivery, continue six-day mail delivery,
require USPS to wait two more years before closing small rural post offices,
and to close post offices on Capitol Hill. As we've noted before, the issue is
tricky to track because it doesn't break down along traditional partisan or
ideological lines. Instead, postal reform pits lawmakers from smaller rural
states against colleagues from larger, more urban areas. Lawmakers who
normally work closely together ' such as Sens. Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.)
and John McCain (R-Ariz.) ' are on opposing sides of the issue. Senate leaders
may trim the list of amendments to 20 or fewer by votes beginning Tuesday.
Lieberman, Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) and Sen. Susan
Collins (R-Maine) negotiated late last week to permit votes on the amendments
as a way to keep skittish colleagues happy and to allow at least a few of them
the opportunity to say they tried to protect small post offices, the concerns
of senior citizens and home-state businesses that rely on or profit from the
mailing industry.
April 22, 2012
Bloomberg: PostNL NV (PNL)'s German
TNT Post unit and other postal companies operating in Germany plan to set up a
joint delivery network to challenge market leader Deutsche Post AG (DPW),
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported in a preview of an article that will
be published tomorrow, citing TNT Post. Discussions between the potential
participants to establish a "nationwide alternative network" in Germany are
"well under way," the German newspaper cited TNT Post Deutschland Chief
Executive Officer Mario Frusch as saying. Deutsche Post controls about 90
percent of Germany's postal market, the newspaper said.
BBC: Postal workers say
privatising the Royal Mail would be a disaster and have pledged to step up the
fight against a sell off.
Evansville
Courier & Press: A Courier & Press analysis of U.S. House records shows
seven Tri-State area congressmen spent $548,229 on such mail last year after
March 31. They are among all House members who spent $6.9 million between
April 1 and Dec. 31, 2011, the only period for which the House has provided
mail-only information for individual members. Some of that taxpayer money goes
to partisan political consultants. Bucshon and former Democratic Rep. Brad
Ellsworth, who represented the 8th District before him, paid such consultants
to help produce their mailings.
Business Wire: Quad/Graphics, Inc., a global provider of
print and related multichannel solutions, has entered into a strategic
partnership with Manipal Technologies Ltd. (ManipalTech), India's largest
print services and end-to-end business solutions provider. Under the
agreement, Quad/Graphics has purchased a minority interest in Manipal
Technologies, expanding Quad/Graphics' geographic reach to Asia, and
broadening its product and service scope.
PRWeb: Planned price rises by Royal mail will see the
cost of a first class stamp rise from 46p to 60p at the end of this month.
Reviews by Ofcom, pressure on the mail service and continued financial losses
have led to the product-wide price hike. The cost of sending a parcel of up
750g will increase from a variable cost with a minimum of £1.58 to a flat
rate of £2.70 per parcel, a potential rise of more than 70%. The changes,
which come into force at the end of this month, could cause disaster for many
small businesses and sole traders. The prices of larger parcels up to the
maximum of 20kg remain unchanged, so those paying for furniture delivery for
example will not be hit by the price rises. The Federation of Small Businesses
revealed that some 84% of small firms are dependent on Royal Mail for their
postal needs meaning that overheads could soar for a huge number of UK firms.
For those businesses that rely on the postal service for high volumes of
direct marketing and delivering products the direct impact will be difficult
to bear meaning the cost may have to be passed to already squeezed
consumers.
Times Herald-Record: Despite the popularity of
electronic communications in the digital age, direct-mail advertising has
shown remarkable resilience as a popular and even growing marketing tool for
businesses interested in narrowing their target for customers. Marketing
companies find that overloaded electronic mailboxes and the prevalence of spam
filters are partially responsible for boosting the advantages of direct
mail.
Bangor Daily
News: Both Maine's U.S. representatives and one senator offered words of
encouragement to postal employees attending the Maine State American Postal
Workers Union Convention on Saturday morning and promised to fight to keep
Hampden's mail distribution plant open. Reps. Mike Michaud and Chellie
Pingree, along with a representative from Sen. Olympia Snowe's office, vowed
to continue to work against the planned consolidation of the U.S. Postal
Service Eastern Maine Processing and Distribution Facility, arguing that the
plant is vital to mail service in rural Maine. Republican Sen. Susan Collins
also has expressed her opposition to the consolidation of the Hampden plant
both publicly and in a letter to U.S. Postmaster General Patrick Donahue.
Pingree and Michaud said they would fight to preserve a six-day mail delivery
schedule.
April 21, 2012
Courthouse News
Service: Providers of postal meters must notify the U.S. Postal Service of
any cyber attacks to their systems, according to new rules effective May 21.
Providers have had to disclose all results of any testing on the security or
revenue protection features, capabilities, or failings of any postal meter,
and all potential security weaknesses or methods of tampering with the system.
The new rules apply the same standard to cyber attacks against the provider's
systems.
The Independent: Cash-strapped Posta Uganda is on the
verge of losing vital aid from a United Nations agency that helps improve
postal services in poor countries because of alleged corruption in the
parastatal. Although the money involved, US$ 76,747 (approx. Shs 190 million)
is not a lot compared to amounts usually associated with corruption in Posta
Uganda, the loss of the UN aid would cut off vital support which was only
secured four years after a long struggle. The aid was given to Posta in 2009
by the Quality of Service Fund (QSF) of the Universal Postal Union, which is
the UN body that coordinates the postal service worldwide.
Courier,
Express, and Postal Observer: One of the major criticisms of the Postal
Service is its inability to innovate. While management deserves some of the
blame, operating under a law that prohibits almost every "non-postal" product
or service severely limits its ability to innovate in ways that every
modernized post world-wide has done. With these restrictions, it is not
surprising that the Postal Service's "Plan for Profitability" focuses on cuts
in service quality and increases in prices as a means to improve postal
profitability as nearly all innovative options are not even on the table for
consideration by Postal management. [EdNote: The
Postal Service's inability to innovate is akin to the teenage boy who fails to
date. The whole idea of being told "no" is so frightening, the
question to date (or innovate) never gets asked. What the Postal Service needs
to do is grow up.]
Pakistan Observer:
Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani on Friday approved creation of 63 posts
for Postal Circle of Balochistan at the Pakistan Post Office Department to
facilitate the expansion of postal network in Balochistan.
Dead Tree
Edition: The longstanding problems of inaccurate pension estimates and
slow pension payments for Postal Service and federal employees may finally be
addressed by Congress. Sen. Mark Warner Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) has proposed
an amendment to the postal-reform bill in the Senate that would require
monthly reports on the accuracy and timeliness of pension estimates, the
backlog of retirement applications, and the status of the retirement systems
modernization project.
New York Times: Well before online bill
paying was popular, the Postal Service in 2000 began operating a secure system
that would have allowed it to remain the primary conduit for most Americans'
monthly payments. Getty Images But the Internet industry objected, and
Congress successfully pressured the Postal Service to abandon it. The same
pattern has repeated several times over the last decade, with the Postal
Service identifying a way to cope with the decline of traditional mail, only
to have companies ' and ultimately Congress ' object. The agency's troubles,
which could result in the closing of thousands of post offices and hundreds of
mail processing centers as early as next month, have many sources. Some are
the inevitable result of technological changes, and others are the result of
missteps by the Postal Service. Now, with the volume of traditional mail
plummeting and with the agency on the brink of running out of cash, the Senate
is debating a bipartisan bill that would let it enter into several new lines
of business, like shipping beer and wine. And it would create a chief
innovation officer to identify new lines of electronic business. The Senate is
expected to vote as early as next week on whether to advance the
legislation.
ABA Journal: "Ratio of Lawyers to
Americans Is 1 to 257" The legal profession may be a victim of
its own success. From 1940 to 1960, lawyers were losing ground as their
inflation-adjusted income eroded, Bloomberg News reports, citing information
from an upcoming book on law firm economics. The situation changed in recent
years, with revenues at large firms outpacing inflation, the story says. If
combined revenues at the 50-top grossing firms had increased at the rate of
inflation from 1985 to 2010, the total revenue number would be $6.9 billion in
2010. In reality, it was $48.4 billion. Bloomberg interviewed Michael Trotter,
an Atlanta corporate lawyer who wrote the upcoming book, Declining Prospects.
"Hourly rates just went up and up," Trotter told the wire service. According
to Bloomberg, "fancy lawyers charged whatever the market would bear." The
Bloomberg article attributes problems in the legal profession to a variety of
factors. "There's more at work here than the Great Recession," the story says.
"Inept management and the weakness of the partnership model have also played
crucial, if lesser known, roles. And as unsettling as this shakeout will be
for employees of many large law firms, it's one that is overdue."
DMM Advisory:
Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
' Implementation of Full-Service Intelligent Mail Required for Automation
Prices
National
Association of Letter Carriers: NALC opposes S. 1789 as currently drafted
and will urge senators to vote "NO" on Tuesday unless three amendments are
adopted: The Udall Amendment (#2043) to strike the authorization to eliminate
Saturday delivery in two years; The Shumer Amendment (#2050) to preserve
door-to-door delivery for 35 million to 40 million households that would be
phased out under S. 1789 as drafted; and The Akaka Amendment (#2034) to delete
the draconian reform of the federal workers compensation system (FECA) and
replace it with the NALC-supported FECA reform bill (H.R. 2465) that already
has passed the House of Representatives.
PIWorld: Postal recipients want the envelope. While the
battle rages for customers in mail boxes and email inboxes, the Nielsen
information and media company confirms the unique advertising effects of an
envelope...even in this digital era. Today, recipients of advertising expect
on the one hand the value of a real envelope and on the other hand the
personal touch of an email. The demands placed by advertisers on the envelope
have increased through the efficiency benefits which electronic communication
offers: speed is of great importance. Customers' attention is gold currency
these days. Direct, goal-orientated and individualized offers raise the
chances for advertisers to be noticed. The envelope is most effective in
drawing attention and generates the highest number of readers compared with
the standard envelope, the self-mailer, the wrapper and the email. Printed
envelopes were opened and their contents read by 84.5 percent of recipients,
which made them the most opened advertising (vs. standard envelopes'75.6
percent, self-mailer'71.4 percent and wrapper'71.2 percent). While all postal
mailing versions lead to readers informing themselves more about the product
to a similar extent, the printed envelope outshone the competition in one
specific way: no other mailing version was valued as highly.
Meetings Focus: At least three
bills introduced this week'in the wake of the GSA scandal'would dramatically
slash federal agency funds for conferences and off-site meetings while making
it easier for Congress, watchdogs and the general public to track federal
spending. An amendment set for consideration as part of a massive bill
reforming the U.S. Postal Service would require government agencies to
justify the cost and locations of any off-site meetings and to provide
quarterly reports detailing the number of federal employees and other guests
invited to the conference. The Conference Accountability Amendment, introduced
Thursday by Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), would cap agency spending on a single
conference at $500,000 unless the agency is a primary sponsor.
The Hill: For a year in which the campaign is supposed to be
slowing legislative work, it sure is getting busy in Congress. The House meets
next week to consider no less than four cyber-security bills, and the Senate
will occupy itself with dozens of amendments to a postal reform bill.
Washington Post: Sen. Bernie Sanders
(I-VT) -- "Unfortunately, except for its secondary headline "The time
for real postal reform is now," The Post's April 15 editorial "Dead letters"
was completely wrong. We do need real postal reform, but we can do it without
eliminating up to 200,000 jobs."
The Examiner: U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) on Thursday slammed FedEx
for spending $50.81 million on lobbying from 2008-10, compared with paying
federal tax bills of $37 million. The reason FedEx lobbies and makes political
contributions is to defend itself against regulations and legislation that
would do harm to its business, the company says. "FedEx actively
participates in the political process with the ultimate goal of promoting and
protecting the economic future of the company and our stockholders and
employees" the company states in its policy on campaign contributions.
"We are subject to extensive regulation at the federal and state levels
and are involved in a number of legislative initiatives in a broad spectrum of
policy areas that can have an immediate and dramatic effect on our operations.
Through our participation and that of our employees, we promote legislative
and regulatory actions that further the business objectives of FedEx and
attempt to protect FedEx from unreasonable, unnecessary or burdensome
legislative or regulatory actions at all levels of government."
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DMM Advisory: Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking ' Implementation of Full-Service Intelligent Mail Required for Automation Prices. Our Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to encourage Full-Service Intelligent Mail barcode (IMb ®) adoption by making it a requirement for automation rates, beginning in January 2014, appears in today's Federal Register. We are very interested in your feedback, which can be mailed or delivered to Manager, Product Classification, U.S. Postal Service, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW, Room 4446, Washington DC 20260-5015 or emailed to mailingstandards@usps.gov with the subject line "Full-Service January 2014." You may inspect and photocopy all written comments at USPS® Headquarters Library, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW, 11th Floor N, Washington DC between the hours of 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, by appointment only, arranged in advance by calling 1-202-268-2906. Comments are due no later than June 4, 2012. The Federal Register notice provides advance information to help mailers prepare and plan for the transition to Full-Service (use of unique Intelligent Mail barcodes applied to letters, postcards, flats, trays, sacks, and containers such as pallets and submission of electronic mailing documentation). Mailers are encouraged to provide information about any possible challenges as well as costs and benefits of moving to Full-Service.
April 20, 2012
Daily Finance: Citing examples drawn from
postal systems around the world, the National Association of Letter Carriers
(the postal workers' union) argues that the only way to close the gap between
the USPS's costs and the revenue it brings in is to raise the price of a
postage stamp. According to the NALC, the 45-cent price Americans pay to mail
a first-class letter is "among the lowest" in the world -- and they
have a point. While it's true there are countries that charge less than what
we pay here, for the most part, those countries are islands such as Bermuda
and the Caymans -- places so small that most letters could be delivered by
paper airplane. Examining just "real" countries, though, if you
compare the costs of mailing a letter within the U.S. to what our neighbors to
the north pay, you'll find Canadian mail is about 20% more costly than our
own. Frenchmen pay two-thirds more for a first-class postage stamp, while in
Germany the cost is 82% higher -- and that's just the start. Japan charges
twice as much as the USPS, while the Danish fork over three times as much as
Americans to send a letter.
The Hill: The 39 amendments that the Senate
will vote on Tuesday are all related in some way to Postal Service reform. For
the most part, Democrats are submitting amendments that would make it harder
to close post offices in order to save the mail service, while Republicans are
proposing a range of amendments aimed at cutting mail service costs and
curtailing rights for unionized employees.
Post & Parcel: Russian Post is
working to step up its customer service standards, particularly for small and
medium-sized businesses. The company is planning on introducing special areas
within its post offices for SMEs and corporate customers, which it believes
will also help cut waiting times for other customers. It is also prioritising
a new system of uniform customer service standards across the country, and
will be using ideas like a "mystery shopper" scheme to ensure quality control.
And, Russian Post said it is also looking to further develop its hybrid mail
capabilities for business customers. It will take forward efforts started in
2010 to provide a network of print facilities so that businesses can send mail
electronically, to be printed locally to recipients, who would receive it as
physical mail. The Post said hybrid mail would mean sending letters
"significantly faster" than the conventional means, since it would bypass much
of the postal processing network.
LifeHealthPro: Members of the Senate are
showing bipartisan interest in changing U.S. Postal Service benefits programs
as they try to shore up Postal Service finances. The bill also could let the
Postal Service work with unions and the U.S. Office of Personnel Management
(OPM) to get postal workers out of the Federal Employees Health Benefits
Program (FEHBP) and put them in a new, leaner health benefits program.
Policymakers interested in health reform often have pointed to the FEHBP as an
example of what a successfully reformed U.S. health care system could be like,
but Postal Service officials argue that the FEHBP is richer and more expensive
than it ought to be. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates S. 1789
would add $6.3 billion to the federal budget deficit during the 10-year period
starting in 2012. The Postal Service inspector general estimates that, if more
accurate assumptions and scoring rules were used, the bill would cut the real
deficit by about $18 billion.
The Hill: Thousands of
federal workers could see a double-digit jump in their healthcare premiums
under the Senate's postal reform bill. The bill would change the way postal
workers get their health benefits, and those changes could have a ripple
effect across the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP), which
provides coverage for the massive federal workforce and their families. The
postal bill would lead to premium hikes of at least 10 percent in three of the
largest plans in the entire FEHBP, according to an estimate that the Office of
Personnel Management provided to congressional aides.
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission: The
Postal Regulatory Commission today issued Order No. 1320, Docket No.
RM2010-13, evaluating and resolving several key issues related to the
pricing of workshare discounts the Postal Service offers to mailers who
prepare their mail in ways that reduce the Service's sorting and delivery
costs. First, the Commission determined that changing mailing patterns have
caused the need for a new, broader benchmark for calculating discounts for
presorted First-Class Mail. The Commission concluded that the recent shift of
small-volume mailers away from metered mail to "information-based indicia"
mail makes such mail a better benchmark for estimating the savings achieved by
presorting. Second, the Commission found that savings from specific kinds of
worksharing activities which depend on closely-related mailer preparation
activities should be taken into account in the Postal Service's savings
estimates. Third, the Commission discussed the potential benefits of
"bottom-up" costing proposed by certain mailer organizations, and what Postal
Service data would need to be collected to make that costing approach succeed.
The Commission also found that the Postal Service saves some collection costs
when First-Class Mail belonging to the new benchmark category is converted to
the presort category.
Read the order here: Order No. 1320 - Order
Resolving Technical Issues Concerning the Calculation of Workshare
Discounts
![]()
Attention PostalOne!® Users:
PostalOne! ® Maintenance Outage ' from 4 a.m. to 8 a.m. CDT on Sunday, April 22, 2012, to prepare for a major database technology upgrade. PostalOne! ® Major Upgrade Outage ' The major database technology upgrade will be completed during an extended maintenance window from 6 p.m. CDT Saturday, April 28, 2012, through 6 p.m. CDT Sunday, April 29, 2012. During this outage,
PostalOne! and Mail.XML® will be unavailable, including FAST and eDOC Web Services. If the April 28-29 upgrade has to be rescheduled, it will occur on the weekend of Saturday, May 5, 2012, through Sunday, May 6, 2012.
PostalOne! TEM Major Upgrade Outage! - The major database technology upgrade will be completed on the Test Environment for Mailers (TEM) during an extended maintenance window from 4 p.m. CDT Saturday, May 5, 2012, through 8 a.m. CDT Sunday, May 6, 2012.
The Postal Service would like to hear from the
mailing industry about our plans to encourage Intelligent Mail barcode (IMb)
Full-Service adoption by making it a requirement for automation rates,
beginning in 2014. In addition to having discussed these plans at MTAC and
various association meetings, and hosting a listening session at National
Postal Forum, we have issued an Advance Notice published today in the Federal
Register seeking formal comments:
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-04-20/html/2012-9537.htm
Mailers' comments will give the Postal Service important insights regarding the perceived challenges involved in moving to Full-Service adoption, including the anticipated cost of moving to full participation, and what the actual costs have been for those already using this offering. The Postal Service would also like to hear about the steps it could take to assist mailers with this move, and the potential benefits of Full-Service adoption, including, for example, the retirement of permit fees, Mail Anywhere/Pay Anywhere capabilities, Seamless Mail Acceptance, and eInduction. The Postal Service needs input from all mailers – current Full-Service users as well as non-users – to help inform the plan to require IMb Full-Service for automation discounts. The Advance Notice lists specific topics on which the Postal Service would like mailers to comment during the 45-day comment period (ending June 4, 2012). Please take this opportunity to share your comments about the plan, and encourage other mailers to respond, to help the Postal Service understand industry concerns and develop appropriate ways to address them. Comments and questions can be emailed to mailingstandards@usps.govv using the subject line ``Full-Service January 2014 ," or mailed to: Manager, Product Classification U.S. Postal Service 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW., Room 4446 Washington, DC 20260-5015
Logistics Manager: DHL was included in the Times' top fifty
employers for women, and about 21.3 per cent of its 35,000 UK employees are
women.
South Florida Business Journal: Fort
Lauderdale fuel company SMF Energy is under federal investigation for years of
over-charging the U.S. Postal Service for its products, according to court
documents filed in SMF's Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company has admitted the
problem and handed control over to a chief restructuring officer, Soneet
Kapila. But its acknowledgment came after the investigation began.
Wall Street
Journal: Shares of Dutch postal service PostNL NV fell Friday after its
chief executive unexpectedly resigned citing disagreements with the board. The
exit of Harry Koorstra is clear negative, brokerage Rabobank said in a note.
"Koorstra was an excellent executor on the strategic, political and
negotiating front. Given the difficult situation around pensions,
restructuring and labour unions, his departure raises the risk for
PostNL," it said. Rabobank rates the shares at hold with an EUR5.20
target price. Another brokerage KBC Securities said the loss of Koorstra could
dent the business in the short-term. The challenges the business faces include
getting its parcels and international activities back to profitability, a
return to a cash dividend, and the restructuring of the Dutch Mail activities
for future growth, it added.
Federal Times: As its workforce shrinks, the U.S. Postal
Service's reliance on employee overtime is surging. Last year, the mail
carrier spent some $3.3 billion on overtime pay, up more than one-third from
$2.4 billion in 2009, according to figures provided by the Postal Service's
inspector general. During the same period, the number of career postal workers
dropped about 10 percent from 623,000 to 557,000. But a large amount of that
overtime is unauthorized, a new inspector general's report indicates.
Courier, Express, and Postal Observer: Section 101 of
S.1789, the 21st Century Postal Service Act of 2011, requires the Office of
Personnel Management to both 1) calculate the surplus in the Federal Employee
Retirement System Account (FERS) account and 2) transfer that amount to the
Postal Service for each of fiscal years 2011 through 2014. To minimize the
impact on the Federal budget, the bill restricts the use of these funds to
payments of other Postal Service obligations to the Federal Government. While
this is a step in the right direction it is not a permanent solution and will
need to be addressed by a future Congress The problem with S.1789 is that it
asumes that the FERS surplus is a short-term problem. However, there is no
reason to suspect that overfunding the FERS account will end in in 2014
especially with the FERS contribution rate rising to 11.9% in FY 2012.
The latest issue of the PostCom
Bulletin is available online. In
this issue:

Forbes: "One Man's War On Junk
Mail"
A new report has been posted on the U.S. Postal
Service Office of Inspector General website (http://www.uspsoig.gov). If you have
additional questions concerning a report, please contact Wally Olihovik at
703-248-2201 or Agapi Doulaveris at 703-248-2286. Unclaimed Funds
(Report Number FF-AR-12-003). Our audit determined the U.S. Postal Service
could more efficiently and effectively collect unclaimed funds as they are not
using all available search methods to collect funds that are due.
Opportunities exist to improve identification and collection of unclaimed
funds by registering as a member of an online searchable database,
incorporating additional search terms, and establishing points of contact with
state treasuries.
Washington
Post: Senators spent most of the week debating a measure to overhaul the
Postal Service by giving it $11 billion to offer buyouts to hundreds of
thousands of employees, to eventually end six-day mail delivery ' if it is is
deemed financially necessary ' and to possibly end delivery of mail to
door-side mailboxes in favor of more centralized locations. Late Thursday,
Senate leaders agreed to a list of at least 38 amendments ' but aides said the
list likely will be shortened to fewer than 20 in time for votes on the
amendments and final passage of the bill next Tuesday. But speed and
flexibility are lacking from several of the amendments proposed this week--
Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.): Don't touch Maryland's mail; Sens. Claire
McCaskill (D-Mo.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and others: Don't touch rural post
offices; Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.): What about
vote-by-mail? Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.): Do what House Republicans want; Sen.
Tom Udall (D-N.M.): Preserve six-day mail delivery; Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.):
Switch to five-day delivery; Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.): Cap postal executive
pay; Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.): Egypt, mailboxes and Capitol Hill post offices.
[EdNote:: Now remember. As you're getting upset, your mother told you long
time ago that lawmaking was like sausage-making, and that you really
didn't want to watch as it was being done.]
Wheeling News-Register: Much like the old
West judges who promised to give defendants fair trials, then hang them, the
U.S. Postal Service decides what it wants to do - then holds public hearings
before going ahead. That has been the pattern during recent years on changes
in the mail service and closing of Postal Service facilities. For that reason,
we doubt a "town hall" meeting next week will have any effect on the
agency's plans to close some post offices in Belmont County.
Billings Gazette: U.S. Senate leaders Thursday reached
an agreement to move forward on a bill to help the financially strapped Postal
Service, including amendments that would protect rural post offices. Votes on
the bill and various amendments are tentatively scheduled next Tuesday,
according to Senate staffers.
The Hill: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) announced that
the chamber had reached a compromise over which amendments would be voted on
to add to the U.S. Postal Reform bill (S.1789) on Tuesday. After
spending most of Thursday negotiating which amendments would be considered,
Reid announced that, with a 60-vote threshold, 39 amendments would be
considered Tuesday to add to the bill. Reid also announced that there would be
a final 60-vote threshold on the actual bill. Most of the amendments under
consideration are related to Postal Reform. A pair of them would end the
service's monopoly on first class mail and prohibit collective bargaining for
union postal service employees, respectively. Another one would bar any
reforms from closing postal service offices. The compromise came after Reid
invoked a procedural measure to block Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) from adding an
amendment to Postal Service reform bill that would have cut off American
funding to Egypt. Reid said Paul's amendment was too broad. Paul's amendment
did not make the list of 39 that Reid announced.
Journal
Star: Nebraska Sens. Ben Nelson and Mike Johanns are on opposite sides of
the postal reform bill that is stuck in the Senate. "Political
obstruction and gridlock in Congress are increasing chances the U.S. Postal
Service will close 3,700 rural post offices across the country, including 90
in Nebraska," Nelson said during a conference call from Washington this
week. Nelson, a Democrat, helped produce the reform proposal that received an
initial 74-22 vote on a motion to proceed. But the bill was stalled when
Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky demanded a vote to attach an amendment
that would cut off U.S. foreign aid for Egypt. Johanns, a Republican, said
Thursday he opposes the bill because it doesn't resolve the postal service's
long-term budget challenges and "shifts costs to taxpayers,"
specifically through incentives that encourage postal workers to transfer from
their own prefunded long-term health care plan into expanded Medicare
coverage.
Post & Parcel: Scandinavian
postal operator PostNord has signed a deal to takeover the operations of a
major regional newspaper distribution company in Sweden.
The Hill: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
(D-Nev.) defended a Senate Democratic proposal to save the U.S. Postal Service
(USPS), and called the House postal reform bill "unacceptable."
WBOC: U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin filed an
amendment Wednesday that would keep the Easton, Md., mail processing center
from moving to Wilmington, Del.
The Moscow
News: Pochta Rossii, the national postal service, has announced a new
media campaign to combat its poor public image. The service has become
notorious for long lines, delays in delivery, and unfriendly and rude staff,
but recurrent allegations of thefts from packages and a recent scandal
involving microfinance lending have further tainted its reputation. The
background of the campaign is the microfinance scandal from February, when
lenders offering small loans at annual interest rates of 3,000 percent set up
shop in post offices. Though the service claimed it was just acting as an
intermediary between the customers and the lender, people were outraged and
said it was simply robbing pensioners who are its most frequent clients and do
not understand all the nuances of crediting. The scandal pales in comparison
with complaints over handling of packages. The Internet is loaded with angry
posts of people who have received stones instead of iPhones ordered at online
shops, or unsealed parcels with some items lacking. Until accusations of
thefts are addressed, generating a positive image will be a very tough
task.
Reuters: Dutch postal group PostNL , under pressure to improve performance
as mail volumes decline, said on Thursday its chief executive Harry Koorstra
has resigned with immediate effect. Herna Verhagen, a member of the board of
management responsible for parcels and international, was named the new CEO.
"Such a decision doesn't get made overnight," Koorstra said in a
company statement issued on Thursday evening. "Co-operation with the
supervisory board has been very cumbersome of late, amongst others in relation
to differences in opinion about how to serve best the various stakeholders'
interests." The former state monopoly is the main provider of postal
services in the Netherlands, where it faces intense price competition and
traditional mail services are losing out to email.
Actmedia:
The National Romanian Postal Company will benefit from a privatization advisor
in a month at the most, and the privatization process of the institution might
be concluded by the end of this year.
MSNBC: The Senate struggled Thursday to push forward a bill
to restructure the U.S. Postal Service, but still lacked accord on which
amendments the senators would be allowed to offer. "We're really very, very
close to getting something done," said Majority Leader Harry Reid Thursday
afternoon. "Our main issue now is whether there will be a 50-vote hurdle or a
60-vote hurdle," he said. Reid warned on the Senate floor Thursday, "Those of
you who are holding up the bill because you don't like it, you may not like
what the result of having no bill is." Leaders of each party were working to
reach a deal to allow votes on a limited number of amendments to the
legislation. If there's no deal on amendments, there will be a vote to move
ahead on the bill Thursday morning and Republicans might block it if they
can't get the chance to vote on amendments they want. An opponent of the
Lieberman-Collins bill, Sen. John McCain, R- Ariz., said, "It is very clear
that Congress and the Postal Service cannot make decisions." The only
solution, he said, would be an independent commission (akin to the Base
Realignment and Closure Commission which closed military bases) to shut down
redundant or money-losing facilities. Mocking the Lieberman-Collins bill's
two-year study of cost control measures before eliminating Saturday mail
delivery, McCain said sarcastically during Tuesday's floor debate, "Now isn't
that marvelous! Two years to study! It's delaying what is absolutely necessary
and that is to have five-day-a-week delivery."
The State Journal: Members of West
Virginia's congressional delegation are doing all that they can to save the
United States Postal Service. The agency, which is hemorrhaging money and has
scheduled the closure of nearly 4,000 facilities' including 150 in West
Virginia ' is "what connects us all," said Sen. Joe Manchin,
D-W.Va., who has voiced his support for Senate Bill 1789.
Government
Executive: An amendment introduced during Senate debate this week would
strip a comprehensive U.S. Postal Service reform bill of language scaling back
workers' compensation benefits. The 21st Century Postal Service Act (S. 1789)
would give workers injured on the job 50 percent of their predisability pay
upon reaching retirement age. Currently, the 1916 Federal Employees'
Compensation Act allows employees disabled on the job 66 2/3 percent -- or 75
percent if they have dependents -- of their basic salary tax-free, plus
medical-related expenses. Many federal recipients, including those past
retirement age, receive the 75 percent rate. About half the federal employees
who currently receive workers' comp are postal workers. Sen. Daniel Akaka,
D-Hawaii, on Thursday proposed an amendment that would replace the workers'
compensation provisions in the postal reform bill with a FECA reform measure
that already passed the House. The House-approved provision would ensure
injuries or illnesses sustained as the result of terrorism are covered as
war-risk hazards; make sure physician assistants and advanced practice nurses
are reimbursed for their services and certify disabled employees for injuries;
streamline the claims process for workers sustaining a traumatic injury in a
designated zone of armed conflict; raise the maximum disfigurement benefit
from $3,500 to $50,000; provide up to $6,000 in additional support for funeral
expenses; and authorize the Labor Department to collect administrative costs
from agencies that employ injured or ill workers.
Heritage Foundation: USPS is pursuing a wide range of
cost-cutting measures. One of these is the closure of underused post offices.
Such restructuring, however, would become more difficult under S. 1789,
authored by Senators Joe Lieberman (I–CT) and Susan Collins (R–ME), which
would further tighten procedural rules for closures while barring any closures
until USPS establishes new service standards for mail, effectively delaying
action for six months. This goes in the wrong direction. Congress should give
the Postal Service more flexibility to reform itself. The Postal Service,
however, lacks the ability to quickly and effectively respond to changing
market conditions. In fact, under current law, USPS is barred from closing any
small post office because it is losing money. Instead, Postal Service rules
and federal law require USPS to weigh four factors in considering possible
closures: the effect on postal employees, the ability of USPS to provide
universal service, the effect on the community and'lastly'the economic savings
to the Postal Service.
April 19, 2012
On March 26, 2012, the Postal Regulatory Commission approved the 2012
Mobile Commerce and Personalization Promotion scheduled to run July-August
2012. For business mailers who qualify, this promotion will provide an
upfront 2 percent postage discount on Standard Mail® and First-Class
Mail® letters, flats and cards (presort and automation only) that
include a two-dimensional (2-D) barcode or print/mobile technology that can be
read or scanned by a mobile device. The
technology must directly lead the person to a mobile optimized website that
allows the purchase of an advertised product or to a unique mobile optimized
and personalized web page. New and updated documents have now been posted to
the RIBBS page for this innovative promotion. Minor changes and
clarifications have been made to the Program Requirements document and they
are reflected in Version 2 that is now available for download from the
following link: (https://ribbs.usps.
gov/index.cfm?page=mobilebarcode). Additionally, we have posted a
User's Guide that mailers can use to register for the promotion on the
Business Customer Gateway beginning May 1, 2012. The Incentive Program
link will not be visible prior to this date. As a reminder, mail
service providers who wish to enroll their customers in this promotion will be
able to register on June 10th. Additional program updates and resources
will be provided as they become available.
The Republic: U.S. Sen. Max Baucus wants
Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe to consult with him before any final
decisions are made regarding rural post office closures.
![]()
DMM Advisory: RIBBS Update
Street Addressing Option for Post Office (PO) Boxes in Competitive Post Office Box Service Locations – A file listing the Competitive Post Office Box service locations that allow an optional street address
There are currently 79 amendments that have been
introduced on the Senate floor to S 1789. I sent the latest S 1789 around
earlier this week, which these 79 amendments are for.
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/L?d112:./temp/~bdanGu3:1[1-79](Amendment
s_For_S.1789)&./temp/~bdLkgC|/home/LegislativeData.php|
KTTS: The
possible demise of many rural post offices in Missouri and around the country
is on the mind of many people these days. A major mail facility in Springfield
will be closing in the coming year, throwing dozens out of work. Missouri
senator Roy Blunt says he and Senator Claire McCaskill will do everything they
can to keep as many post offices open as possible.
Roll Call: "For Some, All Politics Is
Postal"
OpEdNews: Republican leaders in Congress have made
proposals for dismembering the US Postal Service by cutting the number of
delivery days, shuttering processing centers so that it will take longer for
letters to arrive, closing thousands of rural and inner-city post offices and
taking additional steps that would dramatically downsize one of the few
national programs ordained by the original draft of the US Constitution. That
scheme won't be implemented by this Congress. But a half-step in that
direction could be made. Supposedly "centrist" US Senators Tom
Carper (D-DE), Joe Lieberman (I-CT), Susan Collins (R-ME) and Scott Brown
(R-MA) have developed a series of proposals they describe as a
"bipartisan consensus" for a death by slower cuts.
Tulsa World: Finally, as thousands of postal
workers face job losses and uncertain futures, Congress is mulling action to
stabilize the ailing service. It's about time. The Senate is looking at
providing the U.S. Postal Service with a short-term cash infusion to keep it
afloat so that proposals to close postal facilities and alter services can be
reviewed further.
ERR: The national postal service Eesti Post has taken down 328 little-used
drop boxes this spring, which makes up 10 percent of their collection box
network.
Save the Post Office: "How
Network Rationalization speeds up Standard Mail and hastens the demise of
First-Class"
Minot Daily News: The Senate bill would give the
Postal Service an $11 billion cash infusion, while cutting in half the number
of mail processing center closures, slow or stop many post office closings by
forcing the agency to consider the needs of rural communities and requiring
the Postal Service to wait at least two years before reducing mail delivery to
five days a week. No doubt there are post offices and mail processing centers
in the country that could or should be closed, for monetary or efficiency
reasons. But the delays would give the Postal Service the time to more
thoroughly study areas in unique situations, like Minot. At a time when
statistics show northwest North Dakota is among the fastest growing areas in
the nation, closing the processing center in Minot makes no sense. If
anything, the Postal Service should be expanding its services in this part of
the state, in order to make itself a more viable and useful entity to the
growing population and the wave of new businesses making their way into the
state as part of the ongoing oil boom. Let's hope senators are able to be the
voice of reason in this issue, at least where rural states and booming areas
like northwest North Dakota are concerned, where, despite its financial
problems, the Postal Service remains a vital part of everyday life for
residents and businesses alike.
Citizens Voice: U.S. Sen. Bob
Casey has introduced an amendment to a U.S. Postal Service reform bill that
could postpone the loss of 300 jobs in Scranton. Casey's amendment would
continue one- to three-day postal delivery for four years, boosting chances
that up to 2,500 postal jobs in Pennsylvania would not be lost in a
consolidation.
From the Federal
Register: Postal Service RULES Requirements for Authority to
Manufacture and Distribute Postage Evidencing Systems , 23396 [2012–9396]
[TEXT]
[PDF]
Federal News
Radio: Mike Causey on "The Incredible Shrinking Postal
Service."
Associated Press: Federal regulators have
halted a plan to close a small, rural Postal Service station in Yerington this
May.The Postal Regulatory Commission ruled Wednesday that the Postal Service
overestimated when it predicted it would save $210,000 by shuttering the South
Valley Station, and said the agency failed to show the closure wouldn't have a
negative impact on the town and its residents.The Postal Service ordered in
December that the station should close as early as mid-May. The site offers
retail postal services and houses 186 P.O. boxes. It's one mile from
Yerington's main post office.Opponents say the closure wouldn't save on labor
costs because the postmaster would simply be moved to another location, and
wouldn't save on rent because the agency was locked into a long-term
lease.
Charleston
Gazette: Sens. Jay Rockefeller and Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., got behind
amendments to U.S. Postal Service reform legislation on Wednesday to make sure
that 3,700 post offices being considered for closure -- including 150 in West
Virginia -- remain open for at least two years.
PoliticalM: U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., is unconvinced about a
plan backed by Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., to place a two year moratorium on
U.S. Postal Service office closures. Blunt said he wants the USPS, which is
struggling to gain a financial footing as customers are increasingly relying
on electronic communication, to address the fiscal issue now. "I don't want to
kick the can just two years down the road," Blunt told reporters Wednesday.
Tuesday, McCaskill announced an amendment to a Senate postal bill that
includes a two year moratorium on office closures. Attached to the moratorium
would be a set of new criteria for the USPS, after the two years, to follow if
they do decide to move forward on closures. Blunt, however, is in agreement
with McCaskill in opposition to the USPS's earlier proposal to slash rural
facilities. Blunt said he favors the USPS cutting back on hours as a way to
address the USPS's financial woes, not office closures.
Federal News
Radio: "GSA Scandal in Perspective: Azeezaly Jaffer" Azeezaly
Jaffer, the former vice president for public affairs and communications at the
U.S. Postal Service, found himself in hot water after an inspector general
report listed more than $46,000 in questionable spending and allegations of
sexual harassment and other improper conduct, according to a USA Today report.
Jaffer's profligate spending included more than $8,200 at a hotel suite and
nearly $3,500 on a steak dinner. According to The Washington Post, Jaffer
resigned 11 days after the IG's report was released in June 2006, although he
was still able to take a two-month paid vacation that summer. Following the
revelations of Jaffer's profligate spending, USPS issued new expense
guidelines, directing employees not to spend more than $50 per person for
dinner.
Credit Union Times: A 10% increase in postage rates could
cost credit unions $30 million annualized. There's no Call Report data that
quantifies credit union postage costs, but CUNA Vice President of Economics
and Statistics Mike Schenk gathered credit union data for Credit Union Times
in an attempt to quantify how the 21st Century Postal Service Act, which is
currently being debated in the Senate, could affect credit unions. S. 1789
proposes a 12% increase to first class postage stamps, but currently does not
increase business class rates. However, the legislation could pave the way for
future rate increases that would affect credit unions. Schenk said CUNA
estimates that credit unions spent roughly $300 million on postage in 2011, an
amount equal to about 0.03% of assets.
Sun Herald: Today, the Council for Citizens Against
Government Waste slammed S. 1789, the 21st Century Postal Service Act, for
delaying crucial United States Postal Service (USPS) reforms, including the
closure of 3,700 post offices and 250 mail processing facilities, as well as
ending six-day mail delivery.
KTVZ: The
planned closures and consolidations of rural postal facilities throughout the
country poses a particularly serious risk to states like Oregon that rely on
vote-by-mail for their federal and state elections, says two Oregon senators
among those seeking another delay in those moves, at least until after
Election Day. With the presidential election approaching and the United States
Post Office moving forward with plans to close many rural facilities in states
like Oregon and California, Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Jon Tester (D-Mont.) have introduced an
amendment to the postal service bill being debated in the Senate to put a
moratorium on the closing or consolidation of postal facilities until after
the election. The amendment is cosponsored by Senators Baucus, Bennet, Sherrod
Brown, and Boxer.
Bloomberg Businessweek: The Senate's intense debate over the
USPS overhaul on Tuesday shows that lawmakers still disagree on how to address
its fundamental problems. Among the flurry of amendments hashed out was one
that would limit the compensation packages of Postal Service executives.
Another would ban some post office closures in rural areas, while yet another
bars USPS from ending overnight delivery services in certain areas. At least
one proposed amendment had nothing to do with the Service's impending
bankruptcy: Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, son of GOP presidential candidate Ron
Paul, tried to slip in a proposal that would block foreign aid to Egypt. It's
unclear if Congress will reach a compromise anytime soon.
DMM Advisory: Postal Explorer and Mobile Apps. Please go to Postal Explorer® to easily access the latest information about Domestic Mail Manual (DMM®) and International Mail Manual (IMM®) updates, the latest labeling lists (a one click experience), the latest postage statements, and Federal Register notices. In addition, we'd like you to try the mobile application that is linked to the domestic price calculator and international price calculator on Postal Explorer (from your mobile device, go to pe.usps.com, find the domestic or international price calculator near the top of the left navigation bar, and tap it…the app will open automatically for you). This app works for all mobile devices and calculates prices for all domestic and international mailing. Plus we've added the Customs Forms Indicator to the same app. Simple mobile apps designed for your ease of use'try them today.
It cannot be overemphasized that the degree to which service standards will actually change depends upon (a) the outcome of all AMP studies, (b) the amendments to 39 C.F.R. Part 121 that result from the market dominant product service standard rulemaking, and (c) any further modifications that result from consideration of the advisory opinion issued by the Postal Regulatory Commission conclusion of their review. The potential service standards depicted are only illustrative, and are provided solely for the purpose of indicating the nature and magnitude of the service standard changes that could potentially result from the network consolidation plan under review. This should not be interpreted as reflecting that any service change decisions associated with the proposal have been made or implemented. Click here for the Future Originating Service Standards (Market Dominant) text file.
You can still find existing service standard files at https://ribbs.usps.gov/index.cfm?page=modernservice.
April 18, 2012
Press
Release: FedEx Office® is proud to be the first national retailer to
offer small businesses, mobile professionals and on-the-go consumers the
ability to transform digital files into hard copies by sending documents
through Google Cloud Print™ to more than 1,800 FedEx Office stores
nationwide. Combining FedEx Office® Print & Go and Google Cloud Print,
customers can now access and print documents anytime, anywhere.
American Postal Workers Union: Members of the APWU and Mail Handlers Union
rallied in front of post offices around the country Tuesday to alert the
public to looming service cuts if Congress doesn't act to fix the Postal
Service's finances by May 15. That is the day a moratorium on post office and
plant closures expires. The moratorium is intended to give Congress time to
come up with an alternative to the Postal Service's plans to shutter more than
200 mail processing facilities and close over 3600 post offices to save
money.
PostEurop: The social partners of the European Social
Dialogue Committee (SDC) for the postal sector signed a new "Joint Declaration
on Postal Sector Evolution" in the presence of high-level representatives from
the European Commission (DG Employment, Social Affair and Inclusion, and DG
Internal Market and Services) and the members of the SDC, PostEurop and UNI.
Following a successful co-operation within the SDC since 1999, this common
agreement between social partners builds on the findings of "The Social
Observatory of the Postal Sector" and further defines key principles to
accompany change.
The Hill:
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) cited seniors' love of junk mail in
urging passage of a United States Postal Service reform bill. "Madam
President," Reid said to Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), the presiding
officer of the Senate, "I'll come home tonight here to my home in
Washington and there'll be some mail there. A lot of it is what some people
refer to as junk mail, but for the people who are sending that mail, it's very
important. "And when talking about seniors, seniors love getting junk
mail. It's sometimes their only way of communicating or feeling like they're
part of the real world."
Sen.
Bob Corker (R-TN): Some of the proposed amendments to s. 1789 that have
been offered by Sen. Corker:
Courier, Express, and Postal Observer:
The challenges facing the Postal Service is a global story. A recent blog post
on The Safe Shop's blog leaves the impression that the Postal Service's
business strategy will make mail a less attractive option than it now is
compared to either courier or electronic delivery. While this blog will not
likely have much impact on decisionmaking of U.S. mailers, the tone of the
post suggests that the cost-cutting focused strategy has left an impression
that printed-delivery of communications by the Postal Service will be less
effective in the future. It is no wonder that mailers are actively expanding
their use of alternative print-delivery networks and accelerating their switch
to electronic delivery.
Federal News
Radio: This week the Senate is expected to take up legislation to reform
the Postal Service. The bill (S.1789) could close post offices, end
Saturday deliveries and return funds the Postal Service as pre-paid for
retiree health benefits. USPS already has started considering how it would
operate with a slimmed-down workforce. Tony Vegliante, chief human capital
officer for the Postal Service, said there are three ways it is trying to
reduce the number of employees: Attrition, control hiring and voluntary
separation incentives. Tony Vegliante, Postal Service CHCO (photo from USPS
website) Vegliante said the Postal Service has received voluntary early
retirement authority (VERA) from the Office of Personnel Management. However,
it has not yet started offering any buyouts or early outs, he added.
Environmental Leader: DHL Global Forwarding will rely more
heavily on rail in Germany to transport containers to sea freight terminals in
an effort to cut its carbon emissions.
Time: As the U.S. Postal Service
increasingly promotes its new direct mail program, one group is trying to stop
that mail from ever reaching your mailbox. If you've noticed an increase in
junk mail lately, you're probably not imagining things. The post office has
been intensifying its promotion of Every Door Direct Mail (you may have seen
the ads), a program that has already generated $180 million in sales in its
first year. And that probably means only one thing: expect more of it. That's
why Catalog Choice, a non-profit organization that helps consumers opt-out of
receiving unwanted catalogs, coupons and fliers, is now trying to suppress the
post office's newest program. To combat direct mail, Catalog Choice has
started an online petition called Citizens for Mail Choice, which seeks to
allow customers the option of opting out. The petition, which started Friday,
already has around 35,000 signatures.
Federal Times: Well, that didn't take long. Less than a month after
National Association of Letter Carriers President Fredric Rolando said the
union was "committed" to reaching agreement on a new labor contract through
mediation, it's now headed to binding arbitration with the U.S. Postal
Service, according to a release posted on a USPS site. The arbitration process
will wrap up later this year, the Postal Service said.
|
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CEP News
(Courier-Express-Postal), published by the MRU
Consultancy, has reported that:
Scrap the paper! As one of the first governments worldwide Norway has announced that all communication between public services and citizens is to be handled via the internet in the future. Digital communication should be the norm said Norway's prime minister Stoltenberg in Oslo on Wednesday last week. He added that all citizens could opt-out of this form of communication and still receive paper based mail.
Dutch key account customers complain about PostNL's worsened service.
Just a few months after Swiss Post launched a personalised newspaper its apparently becoming a flop.
Deutsche Post will take action against the EU-Commission's order to repay state aid.
Post Danmark's e-service portal e-boks is still set for growth. Last year some 3.5m Danes (+17%) received 185m documents via the portal, up 16% from the previous year. Revenues rose considerably (11.5m euros, +16.4%) while the operating result (EBIT) stagnated at 2.9m euros (-1%).
French La Poste's CEO Jean-Paul Bailly announced a set of measures of 10 points in connection with the suicides of employees (CEP-News 12/12). First La Poste allotted a special budget of 20m euros which will be used to improve labour conditions after consultations with employees were held. Furthermore, the post plans to hire 1,000 additional workers to reduce work strain. Moreover, the place of work for employees should not be more than 30 kilometres away from their homes. La Poste will also appoint a contact person for each 100 employees and suspend all restructuring measures until the already announced talks with the unions on this matter are completed.
Last year the Lithuanian post came into the black for the first time since 2007.
UPS has to brace itself for opposition from the unions concerning the takeover of TNT Express.
Austrian Post announced the acquisition of the domestic fulfilment company Systemlogistik Distribution GmbH.
Apparently, Spanish Correos slid deep into the red on decreasing revenues in 2011.
The pension fund deficit is becoming a major issue for Canada Post.
Swiss companies will be able to send pay slips with IncaMail, Swiss Post's e-mail service, in the future. Last week Swiss Post announced that the most important service providers on the Swiss market have integrated IncaMail into their software.
The MRU, founded in 1992, is the only consultancy in Europe, which has specialised in the market of courier-, express- and parcel services. For large-scale shippers and CEP-services in particular, the MRU provides interdisciplinary advice for all major questions of the market, as there are for example market entry, product design, organisation, and EDP.To learn more about the stories reported above, contact CEP News. (We appreciate the courtesy extended by CEP News to help whet your appetite for more of what CEP offers.)
North Platte Telegraph: Susan Rangel is a supporter of an
amended version of U.S. Senate Bill 1789, and made her support known on
Tuesday. Rangel is president of American Postal Workers Union Local No. 619,
and the APWU believes that SB 1789 is "unacceptable in its current
form" and should be amended. In its current form. Among other provisions,
the amended version of the bill, as supported by the APWU, will maintain
current services standards, prevent closure of small post offices and protect
six-day mail delivery.
Portland Daily
Sun: "The Postal Service's draconian proposals to close hundreds of
processing facilities would lead to disastrous service cuts," Collins
told the Association of Magazine Media in a speech yesterday. Collins said the
Postal Service should follow a set of standards for closing post offices and
processing plants. Collins told magazine publishers yesterday that the
prefunding of retiree health plans has led to an obligation of $46.2 billion.
"That liability is not going away ' it provides for benefits that have
been promised to postal retirees," Collins said in her speech.
"Nevertheless, the payments for retiree health benefits could be eased,
and our bill would do that. We have included language changing the structure
of these payments by establishing a 40-year amortization schedule."
Collins explained, "We moved the longer amortization schedule, previously
scheduled to start in five years, to start this year. The bill would also
reduce the requirement for the retiree health benefit fund to fund 100 percent
of the liability in advance to 80 percent. These two provisions will lower the
Postal Service's annual payment for retiree health care by $2-$3 billion,
while still keeping the promises to workers and avoiding a taxpayer
bailout."
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission:
|
| |
|
PROPOSED RULES | |
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Revisions to Procedural Rules , | |
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23176–23178 [2012–9300] | |
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NOTICES | |
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Meetings; Sunshine Act , | |
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23293–23294 [2012–9429] | |
Memphis Business Journal: FedEx Express
, an operating company of Memphis-based FedEx Corp. , is in talks to purchase
TATEX, a French express transportation company. The deal would fit into
FedEx's growth plan for Europe, which is focused on smaller acquisitions. It
mirrors FedEx's plan to acquire Polish courier company Opek Sp.z o.o.
CityBizList: United Parcel Service
Inc. Chairman and CEO D. Scott Davis earned a 21.62
percent raise to $13.05 million last year, according to an SEC
filing. He was paid $10.73 million in 2010.
![]() |
(1) It must ensure the fiscal viability of the U.S. Postal Service, |
Wall Street Journal: See how the price of a U.S. first-class
stamp compares to the equivalent in other countries.
Wall Street Journal: The nation's largest mail-carriers union
wants the U.S. Postal Service to raise stamp prices and expand mail delivery.
In a report to be released Tuesday, it sharply criticizes the agency's own
rescue plan and argues the Postal Service will become profitable only if it
restructures itself like a business.
The Hill: Sen. Joe
Lieberman (I-Conn.) seemed to indicate interest in some kind of middle ground
between proponents and opponents of amending legislation meant to keep the
U.S. Postal Service from going into bankruptcy. "It's not as if there are
not amendments that members of the Senate Democratic Caucus want to offer to
the bill," he said. "There are. There are several of them. And I
know there are several on the Republican side."
Sen. Bernie Sanders: Listen to Sen. Sanders talk about Postal
Reform on the Ed Schultz radio show. ![]()
Hellmail: Moya Greene, chief executive of Royal
Mail, said this week that plans by TNT Post to pilot a London borough postal
service could challenge the sustainability of the Universal Service.
Sen. Thomas Carper (D-DE): Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.),
Chairman of the Subcommittee that oversees the U.S. Postal Service, delivered
remarks on the Senate floor on the 21st Century Postal Service Act (S.1789),
following this morning's introductory debate on a new draft that incorporates
changes suggested by fellow Senators, particularly regarding post office and
processing plant closures and overnight delivery.
Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV): Senator Jay Rockefeller today issued the
following statement on a procedural vote on the Senate postal reform
bill.
"The Postal Service needs to get its financial house in order, and I'm glad that the Senate agreed to start the debate on this issue. I believe that we ought to have a thorough conversation about how to rein in the Postal Service's runaway costs," said Rockefeller. "That said, I do not support this current legislation. I've said time and time again that any legislation must not disproportionately hurt West Virginia's postal facilities, slash jobs, unfairly cut employee and retiree benefits, and take services away from rural communities. My hope is that we can work together to change this bill and better protect West Virginia's jobs and communities."
Government Executive: The debate on
the 21st Century Postal Service Act (S. 1789) is slated to continue in the
coming days, with additional amendments likely to be introduced. The Senate
will vote on the bill after 30 hours of floor debate. Majority Leader Harry
Reid, D-Nev., has told senators that he would like the vote wrapped up by the
end of this week, but it could spill into next week, according to senate aides
with knowledge of the process. The House still is working to gather enough
Democratic votes to pass its major postal reform bill. On Tuesday, the
National Association of Letter Carriers released its own overhaul
recommendations, developed with Lazard Group, an independent advisory firm.
The union, which represents about 275,000 mostly urban letter carriers,
proposed addressing USPS prefunding requirements, growing some of its
services, and raising selected postage and parcel rates. The Senate bill is "a
stop-gap, not a solution," NALC said. "There is little in the proposed
legislation that addresses potential expansion of services, more flexible
product pricing, or necessary changes to the Postal Service's oversight and
governance -- all key elements of a comprehensive plan to create a sustainable
and viable Postal Service," the Lazard Group's white paper stated. Sen. John
McCain, R-Ariz., who proposed legislation in the Senate that is more similar
to the House bill, took issue with the Senate measure's delay on shifting from
a six-day delivery schedule to a five-day schedule and holding off on
closures.
Politico: Long-awaited efforts to
prevent scores of post offices from shutting their doors have run into an
unexpected snag: A fight between Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) over aid to Egypt. It all started when Paul renewed
his efforts to strip $2 billion in foreign aid to Egypt – demanding that it
be considered as an amendment to a bill overhauling the U.S. Postal Service.
But a frustrated Reid balked at that request, saying it was not relevant to
the underlying bill. So Reid took the extraordinary step of blocking all
amendments to the bill and filed a procedural motion to end debate -- just
hours after the Senate voted to begin debate on the measure. The move
effectively dares the GOP to block the bill on procedural grounds ahead of a
May 15 deadline for Congress to act before mailing facilities begin to close
in their home states. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and others expressed their
frustration, saying Reid should allow for a thorough floor debate to iron out
the differences – and that Paul should not hold up the bill with a
non-relevant amendment.
April 17, 2012
Sen. Thomas
Carper (D-DE): Comments on the NALC-Lazard paper on the Postal
Service.
"I welcome the National Association of Letter Carriers' interest in seeking 'outside the box' solutions to the challenges facing the U.S. Postal Service as well as their determination to push the Postal Service to innovate and seek new revenue. I also welcome Lazard's attempt to look at this problem with a fresh set of eyes. Unfortunately, the white paper the NALC and Lazard have issued today is thin on data, analysis, or fresh ideas for modernizing the Postal Service. Rather, it's thick with tired attacks on the Postal Service and mischaracterizations of the bill before the Senate, S. 1789, the 21st Century Postal Service Act – which, I might add, is the only bipartisan proposal in Congress that stands a chance of preventing a total collapse of the Postal Service in the coming months. The NALC's proposal suggests that the Postal Service should avoid tough decisions to adjust its mail processing and delivery network, a network that independent GAO analysts reiterated last week has significant excess capacity. It also argues that more should be done to raise revenue through pricing and aggressive marketing, all while offering no concrete suggestions in this regard and ignoring the significant provisions in S. 1789 and the managers' amendment filed yesterday that have the potential to push the Postal Service to innovate and experiment with potentially lucrative new lines of business. It also, unfortunately, suggests easy and irresponsible ‘band-aid' solutions, like eliminating the requirement that the Postal Service set aside money to meet its retiree health obligations."
From the Coalition for a 21st Century Postal Service:
Sen. Paul objected to the unanimous consent necessary for proceeding to the
managers' amendment this afternoon. There will be a cloture vote, we are told
by the Majority Leader's office, Thursday morningon the managers' amendment
proceeding to the underlying bill.
Now hear this: "This Week In
Postal".........the latest podcast posted now!
National Association of Letter Carriers: "The United States Postal
Service Delivering Change to Revitalize an American Icon"
Coalition for a 21st Century Postal Service: The Coalition for a
21st Century Postal Service supports the Manager's Amendment to S.1789 being
offered by the bill sponsors, and applauds the efforts they and their staffs
have put in to reach a result that takes major steps toward preserving a
useful postal system to serve the mailing public. We strongly recommend a yes
vote for this very constructive substitute. We understand there will be
amendments offered to the substitute. We urge opposition to any that would
direct or cause rate increases beyond the agreed-upon provisions in section
402. Rate increases of any kind beyond the annual CPI increases in current law
will prove toxic to USPS, driving substantial additional mail volume out of
the system, and worsening an already grave financial situation. This will
happen through immediate loss of mail from mailers with no flexibility to add
to their postal budgets – they will put more communications to customers
online. It will also undermine business confidence in the stability and
predictability of rates, a key outcome of the 2006 Act, and cause simple
dispassionate business judgments to do the safe thing and move more mail
online or to other alternatives, causing still more damage over the mid- and
longer term. Again, please vote yes on the substitute as drafted, and no on
any rate increases.
Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs:
The lead sponsors of a reasonable and bipartisan postal reform bill Tuesday
launched Senate debate on a new draft that incorporates changes suggested by
fellow Senators, particularly regarding post office and processing plant
closures and overnight delivery standards.
U.S. Government Accountability
Office: "Challenges Related to Restructuring the Postal Service's
Retail Network" GAO-12-433, Apr 17, 2012
Over the past 5 years, the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has taken several actions to restructure its retail network through reducing its workforce and its footprint while expanding retail alternatives. USPS officials estimated that it had saved about $800 million from reducing the number of work hours dedicated to retail operations. USPS also closed 631 of its post offices, but it did not have cost-savings estimates for these closures. Most of the facilities closed (500) were in response to a postmaster vacancy or the suspension of operations due to an expired lease or irreparable damage following a natural disaster. Fewer closures (131) have resulted from nationwide reviews that USPS initiated in 2009 and 2011. USPS has also restructured its retail network by expanding alternatives through self-service options as well as partnerships with other retailers.
Members of Congress, the Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC), the USPS Office of Inspector General (OIG), customers, employee associations, and some community residents have raised concerns about USPS's retail restructuring initiatives. The concerns include
- access to postal services, including community residents' ability to obtain retail services, the adequacy of retail alternatives, and changes to delivery services;
- the impact of facility closures on communities;
- the adequacy of USPS analysis of facilities facing closure and the reliability of USPS data, particularly the accuracy of USPS cost savings estimates;
- the transparency and equity of USPS closure decisions;
- the fairness of USPS's facility closure procedures; and
- changes in who can manage a post office.
PRC, USPS OIG, and GAO have recommended improvements to address some of these issues. In particular, GAO has recommended that USPS develop a plan that addresses both traditional post offices and retail alternatives and ensures that USPS has a viable strategy for effectively adapting its networks to changing mail use and maintaining adequate service as it reduces costs. USPS officials have said they are in the process of addressing these recommendations.
USPS faces challenges, such as legal restrictions and resistance from some Members of Congress and the public, that have limited its ability to change its retail network. For example, USPS is supposed to be self-financing, but it is also restricted by law from making decisions that businesses would commonly make, such as closing unprofitable units. Additionally, some Members of Congress and the public have challenged USPS's plans to close retail facilities in their districts or communities. Certain policy issues remain unresolved related to what level of retail services USPS should provide, how the cost of these services should be paid, and how USPS should optimize its retail network. Pending legislation takes differing approaches to addressing these policy issues. If Congress prefers to retain the current level of retail service and associated network, decisions will need to be made about how USPS will pay for these services, including through additional cost reductions or revenue sources.
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission: Docket No.
R2012-7. The Association for Postal Commerce filed with the Postal
Regulatory Commission comments on the anticipated USPS proposal regarding
rates charged for those who elect to participate in the picture permit indicia
program.
Sen. Thomas Carper (D-DE):
Today, Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), chairman of the subcommittee that oversees
the U.S. Postal Service, released the following statement reacting to a new
Government Accountability Office (GAO) report examining the Postal Service's
extensive retail network. The report was jointly requested by Sen. Carper and
Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.). Sen. Carper's statement follows:
"With today's report, the Government Accountability Office has again confirmed much of what we already knew – the U.S. Postal Service has more work to do to implement a strategy that effectively optimizes its retail network to reduce costs, reflects declining mail volumes and maintains necessary access to retail service. Of the nearly 32,000 retail facilities operated by the Postal Service, approximately 80 percent of them do not generate sufficient revenue to cover their costs. Yet despite sharp declines in customer visits and diminishing mail volumes, the number of postal retail facilities has remained largely constant.
"Many people, including some of my colleagues in Congress, strongly believe that closing postal retail facilities is the wrong approach. I would agree that the kind of mass closings proposed by the Postal Service in recent months would be ill-advised. In fact, the Postal Service should actually be seeking ways to provide increased retail access in some communities through alternate retail options, such as automated kiosks and partnerships with other businesses. That said, the Postal Service is losing billions of dollars annually while mail volume continues to decline. Change must happen. And I've long maintained that if something is worth having, it is worth paying for. If we want to require the Postal Service to maintain retail facilities, we have to figure out a way to reduce costs elsewhere or raise revenues. The bill being considered by the Senate would help the Postal Service do that with post offices, encouraging them to work with individual communities to find cheaper, potentially more convenient ways to offer retail access to postal customers.
The vote to permit
Senate floor consideration of S. 1789 was passed 74-22. Next stop, full Senate
consideration and debate.
U.S. Court
of Appeals: "We grant the petition for review and remand to the
Commission for a definition of the circumstances that trigger § 101(d)'s
failsafe protection, and for an explanation of why the particular remedy
imposed here is appropriate to ameliorate that extremity. See Public Citizen,
Inc. v. FAA, 988 F.2d 186, 197 (D.C. Cir. 1993) (requiring agencies to
"adequately explain [their] result[s]"). We have also considered the other
contentions of the petitioner and intervenors and reject them."
S. 1789: A section-by-section analysis of the revised S. 1789 has
been posted on this site.
Wall Street Journal: The nation's largest mail-carriers union
wants the U.S. Postal Service to raise stamp prices and expand mail delivery.
In a report to be released Tuesday, it sharply criticizes the agency's own
rescue plan and argues the Postal Service will become profitable only if it
restructures itself like a business. The National Association of Letter
Carriers also indicated it would be willing to ask its nearly 300,000 members
for more "tough sacrifices" to get the Postal Service out of the
red. It didn't specify what concessions it would seek from members. The report
says, the agency should raise its stamp prices, which are among the lowest in
the world, and find new ways to profit more from its built-in advantage as the
only entity to reach every American home every day. It should also replace its
multilayered governance system with a corporate- style board of directors
whose members have entrepreneurial experience.
Courier, Express, and Postal Observer: Making the
business-to-consumer e-commerce market work requires making the delivery
experience better and less expensive than it is now. The biggest problem
couriers are working to solve is missed deliveries that require a second or
third delivery attempt or pick-up from a depot once a missed delivery notice
goes out. Missed delivies raise shipping costs and make buying online less
convienient. In the United States, both FedEx and UPS allow shippers to send
parcels to retail locations rather than have them sent to their home address.
The Postal Service has just started a test of GoPost parcel lockers that will
offer customers a 24-7 option for parcel pick-up near their home. However,
many if not most customers still want their parcels delivered to their home
address and parcel lockers only work for deliveries that include a parcel that
can fit into one of the individual lockers.
Dutch News: Postal company PostNL has halted the revamp of its
delivery operations following problems and complaints in Noord-Brabant and
Utrecht, where the new system is being tried out, Nos television reports. The
company is now planning to consult workers and unions before resuming the
operation, Nos says. The plan involves replacing the current 163 local
delivery centres with nine centralised locations. On Monday the AD reported a
number of large companies had complained about late or missing post following
the reorganisation, including online retailer Bol.com, ABN Amro bank and a
number of health insurance companies.
Boston Globe: Faced with a $5.1 billion loss
last year, the Postal Service is considering slowing first-class mail
delivery, closing 3,700 of more than 32,000 post offices, and shuttering 223
of more than 400 mail-processing plants (including 43 post offices and five
plants in Massachusetts). The closings could be finalized as soon as May 15.
If no changes are made, the Postal Service, which generates its own funds and
uses no taxpayer dollars, estimates its net loss will reach $21 billion by
2016. Members of Congress have introduced bills to address these money woes,
and Congress has final say on some actions, including a proposal to end
deliveries on Saturdays. The changes could have a profound effect on the
Postal Service's 546,000 employees.
Korea
Times: In 1979 the international express mail service (EMS) available
through the Korea Post was used about 600 times. Since that debut year the
figure has exploded by some 10,000 times to reach 5.97 million in 2009, rose
to 6.23 million in 2010 and 6.92 million last year. The country's state-run
postal service is set to top 7 million items of mail sent express this year in
just over 30 years. A few factors such as cutting-edge info-tech systems,
advanced global networks and the best customer services are responsible for
the feat. ``The usage of EMS jumped 10.8 percent last year from 2010 and we
think it is quite an exploit to chalk up a double-digit growth in a somewhat
saturated market,'' a Korea Post official said. ``We could achieve such
success because we offer the highest quality mail services at affordable
prices. We will continue to sharpen our competitiveness in order to stay
ahead.''
Washington Post:
The Senate is slated to resume consideration of legislation Tuesday that would
significantly overhaul the operations and finances of the U.S. Postal Service
as the struggling agency nears the end of a self-imposed moratorium on closing
post offices and processing facilities. The bill set for debate in the coming
days is co-sponsored by Sens. Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.), Susan Collins
(R-Maine), Tom Carper (D-Del.) and Scott Brown (R-Mass.) and would delay the
Postal Service's move to a five-day delivery schedule for at least two more
years while requiring the agency to downsize, rather than close, most of the
processing facilities it wants to close. In recent weeks, the bill has been
changed to address the concerns of several senators ' mostly from smaller,
rural states ' regarding how and when the Postal Service can shutter small
post offices. As broadly described by Senate aides familiar with the bill,
USPS would have to work with affected to communities to determine what type of
postal retail service best meets local needs ' perhaps a traditional post
office, or placing postal workers at a kiosk within a large nearby
supermarket. The bill also permits affected areas to appeal a decision to
close a post office to the Postal Regulatory Commission. The bill also permits
USPS to change its current first-class mail delivery standards from a "one to
two day" schedule/guaranttee to a three-day schedule. But USPS still would be
expected to ensure overnight first-class mail delivery in some areas, the
aides said. Finally, Saturday mail delivery service would be scrapped only
after the Government Accountability Office conducts a thorough study and
determines that the Postal Service has no other way of cutting a considerable
amount of operation costs.
From the Federal
Register: Postal Service NOTICES Meetings; Sunshine Act ,
22823–22824 [2012–9394] [TEXT]
[PDF]
Hellmail: The Estonian advertising market as a
whole, grew by 9.4% last year with Estonia Post's direct mail sales growth up
19% compared to 2010.
Politico: Sen.
Tom Coburn is leaving virtually no one unscathed in a blistering new book in
which he accuses both parties of hypocrisy and failed leadership in dealing
with the country's mounting debt problems. Above all else, Coburn pins
everything to one big problem: Lawmakers in both parties who spend their
careers in Washington trying to stay in power rather than making politically
treacherous decisions on cutting entitlements and raising revenues. He says
voters should eject about half of his Senate colleagues from office each cycle
to "change the direction of the country."
The Hill: After having failed to move the
"Buffett Rule" forward Monday evening, the Senate plans to take up a
postal reform bill, S.1789, Tuesday morning when it resumes. The chamber will
resume consideration of the bill at 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday. Specifically, the
Senate will consider a motion to end debate on a motion to proceed with the
bill. On Thursday, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) called on
Congress to try and avoid cuts to the U.S. Postal Service. Republicans have
called for some funding cuts for the service, which would result in closing a
number of offices around the country. Democrats, meanwhile, want to
restructure the mail service to try and avoid as many cuts as possible.
Newsday: Starting next year, people waiting for their
Social Security checks won't need to keep peering out the window for the
carrier. The money won't be coming by mail. The federal government is phasing
out paper checks for all benefit programs, and it's about time. About 90
percent of recipients already get their money electronically. Now the rest
will have to switch over too, getting their funds either via electronic
deposit or on a rechargeable debit card by March 2013. Fewer and fewer bills
are paid, or even received, by mail. Letters have given way to texts and
emails. Now the federal government is turning its back on the mailbox. The
USPS must evolve, and Congress needs to empower that change, rather than stand
in the way.
The Senate is expected to
take up the issue of postal legislative reform today. A copy of
a revised S.
1789 has been posted on this site.
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The latest issue of PostCom's PostOps Update has been posted
on this site. In this issue:
Press
Release: "Postal Service Contracting: What Every Contractor Should
Know" Early Registration Extended to April 27
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission: Commission
Public Meeting, Wednesday, May 2, 2012, at 11 a.m., Commission Hearing
Room, 901 New York Avenue NW, Suite 200 Washington, DC 20268–0001
American Postal Workers Union:
On Tuesday, April 17, the American Postal Workers Union (APWU) and the
National Postal Mail Handlers Union (NPMHU) will conduct rallies and
informational leafleting at post offices around the country to highlight an
urgent message: Congress must act now to avert a Postal Service disaster. A
moratorium on the closure of post offices and mail processing plants expires
on May 15, 2012, and postal officials have said they intend to begin
consolidating more than 200 mail processing facilities and 3,600 post offices
if Congress fails to act by the deadline.
WPTZ: As early as this week, the Senate
could take up a bipartisan bill that offers buyouts to senior employees, cuts
worker compensation benefits and makes it possible to end Saturday service in
two years. The House could start work on a different postal bill in coming
weeks
The U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General
invites you to comment on this week's "Pushing the Envelope" blog topic:
KXLH: The United States Postmaster General is standing
by his salary, despite ongoing hardships for the U.S. Postal Service. U.S.
Senator Jon Tester (D-MT) has criticized the Postmaster for accepting an
$800,000 compensation package while many rural post offices face closure. The
Postmaster was in Helena recently to talk about the agency's budget and
addressed the allegations. Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe said,
"People can have opinions on that. From a stand point of my salary, I
make about four times what a letter carrier would make. If you would compare
that to any other organization in this United States: CEO paid to the front
line, very few places is it anywhere near four to one." Tester has
formally asked Donohue to take a pay cut.
The Telegraph: TNT
posties take on Royal Mail in London trial. The Royal Mail is to receive its
first direct challenge in postal home deliveries in its 360-year history as
rival TNT Post UK draws up plans to target major British cities.
HR Magazine:
The French Post Office, La Poste, the second largest European postal operator
has streamlined its HR processes giving more control of data to employees.
Keen to improve the standardised wage, salary and accounting processes, La
Poste has given business users control over rules and business processes. La
Poste processes large volumes of data. Given ever-increasing constraints, fast
data processing is essential for generating accounting information and for
financial management.
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission: Postal Regulatory Commission Congressional Budget Justification (Performance Budget Plan) Fiscal
Year 2013
Norwich Bulletin: As Congress reconvenes
this week following the Easter recess, we'd like to remind Connecticut's
delegation that time is slowly slipping away and action is needed to avert
further financial losses for the U.S. Postal Service.
eWeek: Among adults who do not use the Internet, almost half said the main
reason they don't go online is because they don't think the Internet is
relevant to them. Where's the surf? One in five American adults does not use
the Internet, according to the latest report from the Pew Internet Project.
Senior citizens, those who prefer to take our interviews in Spanish rather
than English, adults with less than a high school education and those living
in households earning less than $30,000 per year are the least likely adults
to have internet access, the survey found. Among adults who do not use the
Internet, almost half have said that the main reason they don't go online is
because they don't think the Internet is relevant to them. Most have never
used the Internet before, and don't have anyone in their household who does.
About one in five say that they do know enough about technology to start using
the Internet on their own and only one in 10 said that they were interested in
using the Internet or email in the future.
Washington Post: Shipping via USPS provides us a huge
competitive edge and enables us to get products out to customers six days a
week in a very cost-effective manner. Once someone places and pays for an
order, we ship it out immediately. If someone places an order late Friday, the
product will still ship on Saturday. If Saturday shipping via USPS is no
longer an option, an order that was paid for on Friday won't go out until
Monday. This takes away a huge part of what sets us apart from our competitors
who mainly ship Monday through Friday.
Washington Post: The gap between revenues and
costs for the USPS has widened with the extensive increase in technology and
use of the Internet. Individuals as well as firms, now utilize online billing
services, electronic deposit and e-mail, as opposed to ‘snail mail' '
increasing the decline in the volume of mail. The decreased volume translates
into greatly reduced revenue for the USPS, and since postal costs are fixed
(carriers still have to stop at each address, even though delivering fewer
pieces of mail), the future of our postal system hangs in the balance. The
elimination of Saturday mail delivery to home and business addresses is part
of a proposed plan that the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has formulated as an
alternative to significantly increasing postage rates, or requesting a
government bailout, to relieve its deficit. For the USPS plan to be put into
action, Congress would have to agree not to enact legislation that requires
mail to be delivered six days a week.
Washington Post: From a straight-forward business
perspective, my eyes were opened when I learned that the U.S. Postal Service
has about 6,000 delivery bar code sorters and many of those machines are only
being used about a third of the day, instead of the full 16 to 20 hour days
for which they were designed. From that angle, closing some offices,
consolidating work and cutting labor hours to meet the shrinking market make
great business sense.
Washington Post: "Postal Service must trim fat to stay financially
viable." The U.S. Postal Service is under pressure to cover its
costs, not make a profit – but breaking even can be hard to do. The
emergence of the Internet, e-mail and mobile technology as well as the
economic slowdown have all led to the need for changes in the structure and
method of snail mail delivery. To remain viable and provide its still valuable
service, the agency must make adjustments.
Your highway to intelligent mail services.
April 16, 2012
Washington Post: Our companies design, develop, manufacture, market and
sell compact footwear across the world, and we use the U.S. Postal Service
every day to provide all of our domestic shipping to our online customers. So
we rely on the postal service to help meet our customers' needs as well as
maintain our margins for shipping our goods. Learning to maneuver and getting
the best rates for the type of shipment was all part of the learning curve,
and we found that the USPS offers the best price of all the shippers to move
products like ours.
Wall Street Journal: Deal activity in Europe's
logistics sector is heating up, as United Parcel Service Inc.'s UPS +0.18%
purchase of smaller rival TNT Express NV last month demonstrated that players
in this industry are starting to spend. The €5.16 billion ($6.75 billion)
move by UPS to ramp up its operations in Europe through the largest deal in
its 105-year history has created a parcel shipper with more than $60 billion
in annual sales and places considerable pressure on arch rival FedEx Corp. FDX
-2.01% FedEx earlier this month bought privately held Polish shipping company
Opek in order to push its European expansion plans. Financial details of the
transaction weren't disclosed, but FedEx said the purchase gives its
express-shipping business access to a ground network in Poland with an
estimated $70 million in annual revenue. Analysts said the recent deal
activity suggests that cash-rich companies in the logistics sector are looking
to put their money to work.
Calculator.co.uk: It was confirmed
by Royal Mail that they are indeed imposing a cap on how many stamps shops
could buy because they are claiming that retailers are exceeding their limits.
The Shadow Postal Affairs Minister, Ian Murray, has stated his intention to
send a letter Ofcom in regards to what he calls "shameless profiteering" by
Royal Mail at the public's expense. Mr. Murray further claims that the rise in
the cost of postage is disproportionate and its impact on low income consumers
and small businesses will be significant. He understands that those who will
be impacted most would want to stock up on stamps before the announced price
rise. He feels that the rationing of stamps prior to the price increase is
directly opposed to the spirit in which prices were deregulated by Ofcom.
Salem-News: Congress should consider privatizing USPS. Congress can learn
from other countries where the private sector has taken large ownership stakes
in their postal services. For example, 69 percent of Germany's formerly
government post office Deutsche Post is now privately owned, deliverying 70
million letters in Germany, six days a week and doing it at a profit. Through
its DHL International arm -- purchased in 2002 -- Deutsche Post AG also
operates express service in about 170 countries. In the Netherlands, 100
percent of its formerly government post office is privately owned as TNT Post.
The British government is considering selling off to private investors its
ownership of the Royal Mail where at least 10 percent of the shares may be
reserved for postal employees, which would have the benefit of reducing the
unions' incentive to take actions negatively affecting the company's bottom
line. With privatization, Congress would end its micromanagement of the USPS;
eliminate the complex laws and regulations on delivery schedules, price caps,
restrictions on facility shut-downs; and other business decisions.
Unfortunately, Congress will again attempt reform, rather than consider
privatization.
Washington Post: Starting next year, the
check will no longer be in the mail for millions of people who receive Social
Security and other government benefits. The federal government, which issues
73 million payments a month, is phasing out paper checks for all benefit
programs, requiring people to get payments electronically, either through
direct deposit or a debit card for those without a bank account. The
government's switch to electronic payments also comes with a side effect: less
business for the U.S. Postal Service, an agency that is already facing big
budget problems with the rise of email and electronic bill paying.
Washington Post: Business mailers
fret that eliminating mail processing centers could raise their costs; ditto
various publishers. The fact that, without reform, the costs would get shifted
to someone else, quite possibly taxpayers, seems not to trouble them. Postal
unions cling to contracts that require only modest employee contributions to
health care, make it essentially impossible to lay off many workers and forbid
transferring employees to new jobs more than 50 miles away. Last, but not
least, members of Congress defend their districts' postal facilities, no
matter how underutilized or inefficient. For years Congress has kicked this
particular can down the road, but time is running out. There are two competing
bills, one in the Senate and one in the House. The House bill is much more
realistic: It would overcome political resistance to closing facilities by
appointing a commission similar to the one that trimmed excess defense
installations, allow USPS to move more quickly to five-day delivery and bar
no-layoff clauses in labor agreements.
April 15, 2012
Save the Post Office: A hundred years ago
this Sunday, the Titanic collided with an iceberg and sank in the icy waters
of the North Atlantic, causing the deaths of over 1500 people. Researchers
have recently announced a new theory on the cause: Unusual weather conditions
produced a false horizon that hid the iceberg from view. In other words, a
mirage. The leaders of the Postal Service are under the influence of their own
form of hubris. They're always right "because they said so," and they've
convinced themselves that the only way to deal with declining mail volumes is
by radically downsizing the workforce. They are even willing to cause
self-inflicted damage by implementing plans they know will drive away billions
of dollars of business. The officers at the helm seem determined to sink the
Postal Service. Their business plan will send the Postal Service into a
downward spiral of falling revenues and deeper and deeper cuts. But it's full
speed ahead, and nothing will steer them in another direction, even though
it's clear they are heading straight toward an iceberg of their own creation.
NBCMontana:
Senator Jon Tester announced the Postal Service will not close mail processing
centers in Butte, Helena, Kalispell or Wolf Point during the state's primary
election season. Tester said it will help prevent problems with absentee
voting, but said he'll keep working to make sure the post offices stay open
permanently.
The
Japan Times: The Lower House on Thursday passed a bill to revise the
privatization scheme of the Japan Post group. The bill was jointly submitted
to the Diet on April 3 by the Democratic Party of Japan, the Liberal
Democratic Party and Komeito. It represents a rare case in which consultations
among the three parties in the divided Diet has produced a bill. The Diet is
expected to enact it by the end of the current Diet session, which ends on
June 21. It is hoped that the bill will improve the Japan Post group's overall
services.
Pakistan Today: The newly appointed
Director General Pakistan Post Syed Ghulam Panjtan Rizvi has officially
assumed the charge of his office. In an introductory meeting with staffers of
Pakistan post, he emphasized the employees that a bit improvement and devotion
to duties can bring the Postal Department in perfect competitive balance with
the private courier companies.
Washington Post: From town halls to job fairs
to meet-and-greets with voters during Congress' two-week recess, Democrats and
Republicans focused on the budget in a preview of the seven-month campaign to
November. The economy and jobs are voters' priorities, and how the budget
debate plays out could prove critical in the fall, with control of the White
House, Senate and House at stake.
April 14, 2012
Fog City Journal: While the USPS is structured like a
business, Congress often prevents it from actually operating like a private
company, such as taking actions to reduce costs, improve efficiency, or
innovate in other ways. The agency is also obligated by statute to provide
mail services to all Americans, irrespective of where they live and the cost
of serving them. It is required to deliver first-class mail at a uniform price
throughout the nation. Is it any wonder why the USPS is in debt? The USPS
fiscal year 2011 debt was $13 billion and in the first quarter of fiscal year
2012 it had a $3.3 billion operational loss. The USPS can borrow money from
the U.S. Treasury but its debt limit is set at $15 billion by federal statute.
Thus, the USPS will no longer be able to absorb operational losses by the end
of this year.
April 13, 2012
Town Hall: The post office is in dire
straits. An aging workforce, generous retirement benefits, and an
increasingly-electronic communications world mean that the USPS is looking
down a long corridor of red ink. (Sounds familiar when thinking about the
government.) Regardless, the postal unions are in denial about this. With an
eye to preserving incredibly generous public union benefits, they've been
running advertisements across the country advocating for a solution from
Congress.
Press Release: –
ProList, Inc., a Maryland based
direct marketing service provider announced today the launch of a new business
venture, SnailWorks™, an integrated direct marketing platform. Concurrent
with the announcement was the unveiling of a new website,
www.MySnailworks.com. The service is designed to allow mailers to coordinate
traditional direct mail efforts with new media such as email marketing, web
landing pages, and mobile marketing. Direct mail projects set up in the
SnailWorks system will be tracked as they travel through the Postal Service,
using Intelligent Mail, and when each mail piece is delivered, that event will
"trigger" other follow-up efforts such as email, telemarketing, or text
messaging. The system will also host and track web and mobile-based landing
pages that prospects will be able to access from the direct mail or follow-up
efforts.
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Attention PostalOne! Users:
Business Customer Gateway Outage ' The Business Customer Gateway production environment will be unavailable on Sunday, April 15, 2012, from 3 a.m. to 5 a.m. CDT. During this time, all USPS services accessed through the Business Customer Gateway, including PostalOne! ®.FAST®, Mailer ID, and Program Registration, will be unavailable.
PostalOne! ® Microstrategy Maintenance Outage - The PostalOne! ® Microstrategy reporting environment will be unavailable from Saturday, April 14, 2012, 8 p.m. until Sunday, April 15, 2012, 8 a.m. CDT for a major database upgrade. During this time internal users will not be able to access Verification and Performance Reports and external users will not be able to access Mail Quality Reports. Report updates will process after the upgrade, internal reports will be current by 1 p.m. CDT Sunday, April 15, 2012 and Mail Quality Reports will be current by 8 a.m. CDT, Monday, April 16, 2012.
PostalOne! ® Maintenance Outage - from 4 a.m. to 8 a.m. CDT on Sunday, April 15, 2012, and Sunday, April 22, 2012, to prepare for a major database technology upgrade. April 15, 2012 patch Release 30.0.1 will be deployed to correct known issues. Mail.dat client software will be available for download (optional).
PostalOne! ® Major Upgrade Outage - The major database technology upgrade will be completed during an extended maintenance window from 6 p.m. CDT on Saturday, April 28, 2012, through 6 p.m. CDT on Sunday, April 29, 2012.
During these outages, PostalOne! ® and Mail.XML will be unavailable, including FAST® and eDOC Web Services. Saturday, May 5, 2012 through Sunday, May 6, 2012 should be considered the contingency weekend for the April 28-29 outage if issues result in a rescheduled upgrade.
| |
PostCom welcomes its newest member (actually, a returning member): FedEx SmartPost 16555 W. Rogers Drive New Berlin, WI 53151 represented by Dennis L. Oates, Vice President, Postal Operations & Engineering. |
The Wenatchee World: The top U.S. Postal Service
official on Thursday took his case for rural post office closures straight to
those it will hurt most, telling residents in Montana's capital and one of its
smallest towns that thousands of post offices nationwide must be shuttered to
cut costs.
Bowling Green Daily:
With a May 15 deadline looming, the American Postal Workers Union is
pressuring Congress to pass legislation that would allow the U.S. Postal
Service to fix some of its problems. U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell's spokesman,
Robert Stuerer, said the senator's office has received multiple calls on the
issue. "Sen. McConnell (R-Ky.) has heard from constituents on both sides of
the legislation. He understands the important services local post offices
provide in rural areas of our commonwealth and wants to ensure we reform the
United States Postal Service in a responsible and sustainable fashion,"
Stuerer said in an email to the Daily News. "Sen. McConnell met with U.S.
Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe to discuss the challenges faced by the
Postal Service and the effect that post office closings and consolidations in
Kentucky could have on our local communities and people across the
Commonwealth. As the Senate prepares to debate the issue, Sen. McConnell will
review the final legislation following the amendment process."
Washington Examiner: If you
have followed the debate over how to reform the Postal Service, you're
probably aware that the government-employee unions representing postal workers
have been fighting hard against big cutbacks. If you think about it for a
minute, you would probably guess that FedEx and UPS have an interest in a
reduced Postal Service, or at least one that doesn't expand so as to compete
with these private carriers in areas like shipping alcohol. But you probably
didn't think to wonder how much the envelope industry is lobbying on this. In
short, the envelope lobby is against the unions in seeking cutbacks in the
labor force, but also against the private carriers in that they don't want the
Post Office to reduce services.
OpenSecrets.org: Watching paint dry might sound more exciting to some
Americans than overhauling the postal service -- until they realize that post
offices will be closed, Saturday delivery is on the chopping block and other
things they take for granted are up for debate.
Toronto Sun: Can you copyright a postal code? Canada
Post thinks so. The Crown corporation is suing a geocoding website for
providing a free online database of Canadian postal codes, which it says
infringes on its copyright. But Geolytica, which runs the site, said it built
its collection for postal codes without any help from Canada Post's official
database. "This brings us here. Having to face a Crown corporation with
deep pockets in federal court, over something we have created but which they
believe otherwise," wrote Geolytica founder Ervin Ruci on the site's
blog. "Fighting for principle is expensive, and we will do it."
Canada Post charges companies approximately $5,500 a year for the same
information. The statement of claim filed by Canada Post said it's losing
potential clients and revenue. Geolytica argues it used crowdsourcing to build
its own databse, which means the information was generated by the site's own
users and staff, not through Canada Post.
DMM
Advisory: IMb™ Services Update
Business Customer Gateway Outage ' The Business Customer Gateway production environment will be unavailable on Sunday, April 15, 2012, from 3 a.m. to 5 a.m. CDT. During this time, all USPS® services accessed through the Business Customer Gateway, including PostalOne! ®, FAST®, Mailer ID, and Program Registration, will be unavailable.
PostalOne!® Microstrategy Maintenance Outage ' The PostalOne!® Microstrategy reporting environment will be unavailable from 8 p.m. Saturday, April 14, 2012, until Sunday, 8 a.m. CDT April 15, 2012 for a major database upgrade. During this time, internal users will not be able to access Verification and Performance Reports and external users will not be able to access Mail Quality Reports. Report updates will process after the upgrade ' internal reports will be current by 1 p.m. CDT Sunday, April 15, 2012, and Mail Quality Reports will be current by 8 a.m. CDT, Monday, April 16, 2012.
PostalOne! Maintenance Outage ' from 4 a.m. to 8 a.m. CDT on Sunday, April 15, 2012, and Sunday, April 22, 2012, to prepare for a major database technology upgrade. On April 15, 2012, patch Release 30.0.1 will be deployed to correct known issues. Mail.dat® client software will be available for optional download.
PostalOne! Major Upgrade Outage ' The major database technology upgrade will be completed during an extended maintenance window from 6 p.m. CDT Saturday, April 28, 2012, through 6 p.m. CDT Sunday, April 29, 2012. During this outage, PostalOne! and Mail.XML® will be unavailable, including FAST and eDOC Web Services.If the April 28-29 upgrade has to be rescheduled, it will occur on the weekend of Saturday, May 5, 2012, through Sunday, May 6, 2012.
FAST Deployment - Release 20.1 ' FAST Release 20.1 will be deployed to the Production environment on Sunday, April 15, 2012, between 3 a.m. and 8 a.m. CDT. The FAST Online Application and Web Services messaging will not be available during this time. All FAST Web Services messages received during the deployment will be queued and processed after it is completed. Direct questions or requests for additional information to the FAST Help Desk by email FAST@usps.gov or phone 1-877-569-6614.
BusinessWire: QuadDirect, a division of Quad/Graphics, Inc.
(NYSE:QUAD - News) is completing installation of a new "Press-Plus" solution
for inline direct mail production that promises higher response rates and
improved ROI. Its modular component approach allows clients greater direct
mail capabilities and flexibility, while retaining the speed and efficiencies
of inline production. The system can be customized to produce more
sophisticated direct mail pieces using the latest response-driving ink-jet and
finishing techniques. Inline mail sorting helps shorten production cycles and
lower costs overall compared to prior systems.
The News
Journal: The U.S. Government Accountability Office took another close look
at our postal system and -- surprise -- it found that the nation needs a new
way of looking at mail delivery. The new GAO report came in response to a
request by Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., and Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Rep.
Darrell Issa, R-Calif. Congress has been struggling with a reorganization bill
that would allow the U.S. Postal Service to adjust to a totally new business
environment. First-class mail, the prime financial support of the service, is
declining far more quickly than many thought. The Postal Service wants
congressional authorization to make needed changes in structure, facilities
and workforce. Otherwise, the Postal Service is bound to start costing
taxpayers billions of dollars in unneeded costs. A Senate bill would provide
employee buyouts and would delay a decision to move to a five-day delivery
system. The House bill would create a commission to make decisions on facility
closures and deliveries. Certainly, a compromise can be reached. However, the
separate bills are not the problem. Congress being Congress is the problem. If
Congress prefers to ignore reality, Congress had better find a way to pay for
its fantasy.
Malta Today: A survey by the Malta Communications Authority has
found 68% of large bulk mailers rate the overall quality of postal services
provided by MaltaPost as very good, while 48% of those interviewed claim to
have seen an improvement in the services currently provided.
The Telegraph: Royal Mail stamp price Q&A What
is happening to the price of stamps?
The Sun: Post Offices are
rationing stamps as hordes of Brits rush to stockpile them ahead of price
hikes later this month.
Balkans.com: The privatisation of Romania's postal company will be
completed at the end of this year or the beginning of 2013, not in June 2012,
as initially agreed with the IMF, which is an unrealistic deadline,
Communications Minister Razvan Mustea said April 12. "Posta Romana is the
largest employer and a very important company for the state, which owns 75% of
its capital. I do not want the privatisation done at just any price and under
just any terms. We want to find a serious investor for Posta Romana. When this
process is completed, the state will remain a majority shareholder, owning 51%
of the capital," Mustea said, Mediafax quoted.
The latest issue of the PostCom
Bulletin is available online. In
this issue:

NPR: Letter
carriers say the latest legislative fix about to come before the US Senate
could devastate the mail service as we know it. Senate Bill 1789 is meant to
improve the US Postal Service. But the National Association of Letter Carriers
says it will lead to drastic cuts– eliminating Saturday delivery and phasing
out door-to-door service in two years, unless the postal service starts
showing a profit. The letter carriers say that's unlikely. The postal service
itself isn't taking a stance on this particular law.
The Hill: Some lawmakers in both parties have
criticized the current postal reform proposals in both chambers, and have also
lashed out at USPS for proposing to close processing facilities in their
states or districts. Postal unions have joined some of those officials in
calling on the USPS to find more solid fiscal footing by expanding their
services, not consolidating them. And groups like the Coalition for a 21st
Century Postal Service ' which represents, among others, magazines and
newspapers ' have said they would oppose proposals that raise postage
rates.
MetroNews: Postal workers across West Virginia are calling on U.S.
Senators Jay Rockefeller and Joe Manchin to vote against the postal reform
bill.
ENews Park Forest: U.S. Senator
Dick Durbin (D-IL) today said the Postal Service cannot cut its way to a
solution that protects jobs, reduces costs and maintains service. Instead, the
Postal Service which employs more than 30,000 people in Illinois must work
with Congress and the American people to address its financial problems.
Durbin, who worked to secure a five-month moratorium on postal facility
closures, also noted that the U.S. Senate is expected to debate comprehensive
reform legislation within the next few weeks. "I share the National
Association of Letter Carriers view that we need to create a long-term
business model that will reform and grow the Postal Service to meet the needs
of Americans in the 21st century. Any legislation that aims to do this
deserves consideration in Congress before the moratorium on closures ends next
month.
Government Executive: A Government
Accountability Office report released Thursday offered support for several
controversial provisions of a major U.S. Postal Service reform bill backed by
House Republicans. The watchdog called for "dramatic changes" in the USPS cost
structure and efforts to "bring down costs related to excess and inefficient
network resources." The report also backed another much-debated provision in
the Issa bill that would create an oversight panel, similar to the Defense
Department's Base Closure and Realignment Commission, through which lawmakers
could exert greater oversight over closure and consolidation decisions.
KTIV: The Postmaster General says if the U.S. Postal
Service were a private company, it would be in the middle of bankruptcy
proceedings, right now. The agency reported a $5-billion loss in the last
fiscal year, alone. Officials say "doing nothing is not an option."
Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa is all to familiar with possible post office
closures, and the layoffs that would follow. "We have to pass this bill
or there's gonna be a lot of drastic things done to the postal service,"
Grassley said. The motivation here is a May 15th deadline. That's when a
postal service moratorium on closing post offices and processing centers
expires. By the way, Grassley said he supports the bill as it's written.
April 12, 2012
Post & Parcel: Dutch material
handling systems manufacturer Vanderlande is supplying a new sorting system
for a new Norway Post parcel-sorting plant. The company said today will be
installing a new "Posisorter" system at the new sorting terminal in
Fredrikstad, about 100km south of Oslo. Norway Post is aiming to co-locate
parcel processing operations with pallet processing systems in the plant.
Sen. Susan
Collins (R-ME): "GAO rightly identified that the Postal Service has a
labor force sized for a time before email, online bill paying, and its massive
volume declines. That's why our bipartisan bill allows for compassionate buy
outs and rightsizing the workforce. I hope that our bill will soon be debated
in the Senate. Given the dire financial situation of the Postal Service,
changes are needed and quickly," said Senator Collins.
RT:
If you are expecting parcels from abroad, be assured you should finally
receive them soon. The Postal Service, which has been overloaded, says it is
getting on top of the backlog. Yesterday, the Postal Service announced it had
dozens of tons of cargo stuck at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport. Large amounts
of cargo from the US were held up at Turkish customs before being forwarded to
Moscow. This overloaded the airport's capacity, driving it to impose an
embargo. Deliveries from Hong Kong, China and South Korea have been
particularly affected. Russia's postal service has long been known for its
unreliability and delays.
Canada NewsWire: The Hon. Steven Fletcher,
Minister of State (Transport), and Canada Post President and CEO Deepak Chopra
today revealed the strategic role a $200-million processing plant now under
construction will play as the gateway for e-commerce shipments from Pacific
Rim economies entering Canada's largest home delivery and retail network. By
2014, the 700,000-square-foot Canada Post Pacific Processing Centre at the
Vancouver International Airport will connect e-commerce merchants and
consumers, the fastest-growing sector of the delivery business.
Post & Parcel: US postal
regulators are looking into streamlining the way they review major service
changes at the US Postal Service, in the light of rapid changes in the
communications arena. Facing criticism last year for taking 12 months to
assess proposals by USPS to eliminate Saturday deliveries, the Postal
Regulatory Commission has also faced pressure this year to speed up its review
of big changes to US First Class Mail standards. The ongoing Commission review
of mail standards is likely to take until July, but warnings from postal
unions claim that mail standards could start to change as early as next
month.
CBS News: The top U.S. Postal Service
official on Thursday took his case for rural post office closures straight to
the people it will hurt most, telling Montanans that up to 3,600 small post
offices around the country need to be shuttered as part of cost-cutting moves.
Rural residents who traveled to Helena to meet Postmaster General Patrick
Donahoe answered right back, telling him they depend on their post offices. In
a report released Thursday, federal auditors stressed that "dramatic
changes" were needed to stem the Postal Service's mounting debt and that
the agency's proposal to close mail processing centers, estimated to save
roughly $3 billion a year, was an important part of accomplishing that goal.
The report by the Government Accountability Office also noted that the
proposal to close mail centers faced tough obstacles due to opposition from
local communities to the job losses and cutbacks in service. Labor agreements
also make layoffs and forced employee transfers difficult. The report
expressed support for elements of a House postal bill that would set up a new
commission to make major decisions on postal cuts, including reducing mail
delivery to five days a week. It said that if Congress opted to delay or
prevent the closing of mail processing centers, lawmakers would have to find
ways elsewhere to significantly cut postal costs. "We cannot allow
political interests to trump our responsibility to restore the Postal Service
to solvency and protect the taxpayer from picking up the tab for surplus
facilities," said Rep. Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee and a sponsor of the House bill.
U.S. Government Accountability
Office: "Mail Processing Network Exceeds What Is Needed for Declining
Mail Volume"
"Developing an optimal mail processing network will require both congressional support and USPS leadership. Moreover, we have previously reported that Congress and USPS need to reach agreement on a comprehensive package of actions to improve USPS's financial viability. In these previous reports, we provided strategies and options that Congress could consider to better align USPS costs with revenues and address constraints and legal restrictions that limit USPS's ability to reduce costs and improve efficiency. Consequently, we are not making new recommendations or presenting a matter for Congress to consider at this time. Without congressional action to help USPS address its financial problems, USPS will be limited in the amount of rate increase it may seek and may fall even further into debt. USPS had $2 billion remaining on its $15 billion statutory borrowing limit at the end of fiscal year 2011. It is now abundantly clear that the postal business model must be fixed given the dramatic and estimated decline in volume, particularly for First-Class Mail. If Congress prefers to retain the current delivery service standards and associated network, decisions will be needed about how USPS's costs for providing these services will be paid, including additional cost reductions or revenue sources." [EdNote: To quote Casablanca's Captain Renault--"I'm shocked! Shocked, I tell you....."]
Senator Thomas Carper (D-DE): Today, Sen.
Tom Carper (D-Del.), chairman of the subcommittee that oversees the U.S.
Postal Service, released the following statement reacting to a new Government
Accountability Office (GAO) report on overcapacity at the U.S. Postal Service
and efforts to consolidate its mail processing network. The report was jointly
requested by Sen. Carper, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Rep. Darrell Issa
(R-Calif.).
"Today's report confirmed much of what we already knew – that the U.S. Postal Service has gone to great lengths to reduce the number of mail processing centers it maintains in order to adjust its operations to reflect the changing demand for the products and services it offers. To date, the Postal Service has consolidated dozens of facilities, particularly Airport Mail Centers, saving billions of dollars annually. Yet despite these efforts, the Postal Service still maintains far more processing capacity than it needs to meet current demand in a cost effective manner. Many in Congress strongly believe that the Postal Service's most recent proposal to close more than 200 additional mail processing facilities is the wrong approach. At the same time, the Postal Service is losing billions of dollars annually and mail volume is continuing to decline. I've long maintained that if something is worth having, it is worth paying for. If Congress wants to require the Postal Service to maintain additional mail processing facilities, we have to figure out a way to reduce costs elsewhere or raise revenues." [EdNote: If you don't do something substantive about reducing costs, don't even think about raising rates. Mail volume and revenue will leave, and you'll STILL have to figure out what to do about costs.]
Dead Tree Edition: Decreasing demand for
publication papers in the U.S. is apparently having a counterintuitive result:
higher prices. Or, at the least, higher minimum price levels during down
markets.
Post & Parcel: Austrian Post is
getting into the business of outsourced fulfillment with the planned
acquisition of Vienna-based firm Systemlogistik Distribution GmbH. The postal
service said the targeted company has two sites in the Austrian capital,
providing services for business customers including order processing, storage,
picking, packing and store returns.
Brand
Republic: The figures are based on data from Royal Mail, which has
recently broadened its definition of direct mail and changed the method it
uses for estimating the average cost of each mailed item. The AA/WARC headline
prediction of an 18.4% rise in direct mail spend this year is based on the
difference between 2012 figures defined on the new more generous basis, and
2011 figures defined on the former basis. However, on a like-for-like
comparison with 2011, the 2012 prediction is for a drop of
"approximately" 1%, according to WARC data editor Suzy Young.
PR-USA.net: Open Solutions Inc.®, the leading provider of
collaborative enterprise technology to community-based financial institutions
worldwide, recently signed a strategic alliance agreement with DST Output, a
leader in producing and delivering multi-channel customer communications. The
agreement calls for DST Output to provide print and electronic document
composition and delivery services for banking statements and notices. These
services will be available to Open Solutions' global client base of more than
3,500 clients, including some of the top credit unions in the country.
Legalbrief Today: A former US Postal Service manager pleaded guilty in
federal court last week to committing wire fraud and conspiring to violate
federal conflict of interest laws, attorneys said.
The Mainichi:The House of Representatives on Thursday passed a
bill to review the privatization of Japan's postal services spearheaded in
2005 by then Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. See also Japan Times.
April 11, 2012
Welcome to PostCom RadioWe Don't Need No Stinkin' QR Code. We Can Do All That and More With IMb Join PostCom President Gene Del Polito and Address Vision General Manager Shahrom Kiani in a discussion of the power and utility of using the IMb as a more convenient and cost-effective alternative to the QR Code. |
TechCrunch:
Sincerely, the startup behind a range of photo-printing and greeting card
mobile apps, including Postagram, PopBooth, Sincerely Ink and Dotti, is today
rolling out a major update to its Postagram product which will introduce post
office tracking for its cards as well as scannable QR codes – which the
company is cleverly not planning to refer to as "QR codes" (too geeky) in its
communications with customers. More importantly, Postagram is the first of the
company's apps to gain access to "Sincerely Magic," a new feature that will
help build a connected database of the apps' users across all Sincerely
products. The feature will allow users to send cards via snail mail to anyone,
even if they only know their email address.
Press Release:
UPS has announced UPS CrossBorder Connect™, a ground freight service between
the United States and Mexico designed to significantly ease heavyweight
freight supply chain challenges for companies investing in cross-border trade.
The service bundles UPS's transportation and customs brokerage expertise north
and south of the border to boost speed to market, drive cost efficiencies and
reduce supply chain risk.
Post & Parcel: British postal
company UK Mail Group has won a two-year contract for its hybrid mail service,
imail, with public healthcare agencies in southern England.
Courthouse News
Service: The U.S. Postal Service must better explain why it authorized an
airline to deliver certain freight across otherwise unreachable parts of rural
Alaska, the D.C. Circuit ruled.
NBCMontana:
U.S. Senator Max Baucus is pushing to keep post offices around Montana open.
He spent the day working with employees at the Missoula mail processing
center. Over the next few days Baucus is spearheading meetings to give
Montanans the chance to tell U.S. Postal Service officials what they think
about closures. "It makes no sense to just wholesale, slash and cut rural post
offices. The postal service is $15 billion in the hole if all…the ones that
are on the chopping block, were all closed, that would save only about $240
million, so it makes no sense," Baucus said. Postmaster General Patrick
Donohoe will be coming to Montana to hear what Montanans think tomorrow, in
Helena and Ingomar, north of Billings.
Institute for Research
on the Economics of Taxation: "Why The U.S.
Postal Service Is In Greater Financial Trouble Than Most Foreign Posts ' The
Role of Postal Retiree Health Care Benefits"
Practical e-Commerce: "The Future of
Regulated Mail, and Ecommerce Shipping"
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PostCom welcomes its newest member: BMC Software 8401 Greensboro Drive McLean, VA 22102 represented by Colleen E. Sanford Client Executive |
Wall Street Journal: "Overpaid Public Workers: The Evidence Mounts "
Several new government studies make it harder for unions to deny the need for
reform. The Bureau of Economic Analysis has announced that, beginning in 2013,
the National Income and Product Accounts of the United States will calculate
defined-benefit pension liabilities'and the income flowing to employees in
those plans'on an accrual basis that reflects the value of benefits promised,
regardless of the contributions made by employers today. The bureau's
reasoning is a 2009 research paper stating that "if the assets of a defined
benefit plan are insufficient to pay promised benefits, the plan sponsor must
cover the shortfall. This obligation represents an additional source of
pension wealth for participants in an underfunded plan." At current interest
rates, this adjustment would roughly double reported compensation paid through
public pensions. The Congressional Budget Office endorsed a similar approach
last month in a new report on federal employee compensation. The report'which
congressional Democrats reportedly hoped would debunk our 2011 paper on
federal pay'found that the federal retirement package of pensions plus retiree
health care was 3.5 times more generous than private-sector plans,
contributing to a 16% average federal compensation premium.
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ThomasNet: MultiTrac® offers
web-based tracking, measurement, and reporting tools for all outbound and
inbound mail. Product helps clients manage marketing campaigns, synchronize
multichannel campaigns, reconcile postage account transactions with USPS, as
well as manage postal expenses. It also allows address change information to
be received electronically, and for timed emails to be automatically sent to
any mail recipient based on mail tracking information and delivery.
The News-Herald: A postal pallet theft at Printwell
Printing was foiled by an employee who spotted something amiss the morning of
March 24. The employee saw a man loading postal pallets onto the bed of a
white 1995 Ford Ranger at the building, 26975 North Line Road. About 20
pallets had been loaded onto the bed when the employee used his car to block
the truck by pulling in front of it.
The Jakarta Post: PT Pos Logistik Indonesia, a
subsidiary of state-owned postal firm PT Pos Indonesia, will be the subject of
an initial public offering (IPO) next year. "Out of six subsidiaries, only PT
Pos Logistik Indonesia is ready for an IPO in 2013," PT Pos Indonesia retail
and property director Setyo Riyanto said during a business gathering in
Surabaya on Tuesday, Antara news agency reported. The postal firm has
appointed Ernst and Young as an IPO consultant.
Mainichi Daily News: A House of Representatives committee passed
a bill Wednesday to revise the privatization of the postal system as proposed
by the ruling Democratic Party of Japan and two major opposition parties. The
lower chamber of the Diet is expected to approve the bill and send it to the
House of Councillors on Thursday.
ERR
: Itella Smartpost is opening a postal service between Estonia and Finland on
Thursday. Clients will now be able to use self-service parcel machines to
dispatch post between Estonia and Finland. The company has 50 machines in
Finland and 52 in Estonia. Clients will also have access to all Finnish post
offices through the service.
From the Federal
Register: Postal Service
NOTICES Meetings; Sunshine Act, 21819 [2012-8868][TEXT]
[PDF]
Saginaw News: As protesters prepare to demonstrate in
front of lawmakers' offices across the country to demand changes in a United
States Postal Service reform bill, U.S. Sen. Carl Levin said today he shares
some of their concerns. Levin plans to introduce an amendment to Senate File
1789 that would give the public a chance to first appeal the closure of any
postal facility. The amendment could impact all facilities proposed to be
closed, including two in Saginaw.
April 10, 2012
Idaho Statesman: The 45-cent stamp doesn't go very far
' not against a $9 billion deficit, anyway.And so, the U.S. Postal Service is
in a crisis. When you get down to it, the federal agency has only two options
for erasing a shortfall: reduce services or raise rates. Both decisions carry
the same basic risk: alienating users and pushing them ever more in the
direction of e-mail, texts and social media, where communication is cheap and
instantaneous. When that's the choice, the Postal Service is simply going to
have to close some of its branches, especially in small-town Idaho.
Inquirer News: On its 20th year, the Philippine Postal Corp. seems
set on reestablishing its position in an increasingly high tech world. With a
new logo, new services, and even the promise of a new office, PhilPost
celebrated its 20th corporate anniversary at its headquarters at the Manila
Post Office on Tuesday. Though the Philippine postal office was established in
Manila in 1767, PhilPost only got its name and corporate status in 1992 when
then President Corazon Aquino signed Republic Act No. 7354.
Post & Parcel: Lithuania Post earned
more than expected last year, achieving its first annual profit since 2007, it
said today.
Government Executive: Ever wonder how much union
leaders are paid to represent you? National Journal's latest survey of
compensation for executives in the Washington area includes some federal
employee advocates. Postal employee union leaders did pretty well, the survey
shows. John Hegarty of the National Postal Mail Handlers Union brought in
$347,791 in annual compensation, based on Internal Revenue Service information
available as of March 30 and primarily covering calendar year 2010. Fredric
Rolando of the National Association of Letter Carriers earned $302,165 and
William Burrus of the American Postal Workers Union netted $275,700.
Business Insider: Direct mail does
work. Sure it's hard to track the results, sure it's not as fancy as a digital
campaign, but it does drive sales. Business owners and markets don't down one
method of doing marketing (or anything else), if it works. One type of
marketing might be great for one segment of customers and one particular thing
and one method might be great for something else.
Post & Parcel: Canada Post has launched
a potentially important bid to attract more small and medium-sized businesses
to use the mail for local advertising purposes. The Crown Corporation has
launched a new free-of-charge service online that makes it easier for SMEs to
locate prospective customers among households in their local areas. The
"Precision Targeter" tool allows businesses access to Canada Post's extensive
address database, combined with national census data, to more precisely target
saturation mail campaigns to the best delivery routes for a certain message.
The service also simplifies the process of using the Unaddressed Admail
service to run local marketing campaigns. Aiming at a key segment of the
advertising mail market in regard to potential growth – small businesses –
Canada Post's latest offering mirrors in many respects the Every Door Direct
Mail service being run south of the border by the US Postal Service.
Conference
Registration: "Postal Service Contracting: What Every Contractor
Should Know"
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission:
Voters Legislative Transparency
Project: "ALEC/Koch Cabal Pursuing Privatization of the US Postal Service
for UPS and FedEx." [EdNote: Reminds me of that old Buffalo Springfield
song "♫♪Paranoia strikes deep.
Into your life it will creep. It starts when you're always afraid....♪♫"]
Save the Post Office: Over the past
fifteen months, more than two hundred communities have tried to save their
post office from being closed by appealing to the Postal Regulatory Commission
(PRC). For nearly all of them, the effort was in vain. [EdNote: In vain?
Well, the job of the Commission is simply to administer the law as it is
written.]
ERR: Eesti
Post, the national postal service, is moving more of its offices to shopping
centers. "Our goal is to move our services closer to people. In addition to
other services, shopping centers are a very convenient place for postal
services," said Eesti Post communication director Inge Suder.
CNET: A new study finds
that 20 percent of third grade students have cell phones and 90 percent of
them are online, while 83 percent of children in middle school have one.
[EdNote: I wonder how many know how to write a business letter or diagram a
sentence.]
American Banker: It's probably not an
exaggeration to say that the banking industry relies on the post office more
than any other sector of the U.S. economy. More than half of all statements
and bills sent through the mail come from banks, savings and loans, and credit
unions, according to the U.S. Postal Service. And those 4 billion or so
mailings per year are matched by roughly the same number of advertising offers
from credit-card issuers. That leaves banks with a big stake in the debate on
Capitol Hill over how to reform the Postal Service. According to the Postal
Service, financial institutions mailed more than 19 billion pieces of
advertising between October 2009 and September 2010. Revenue from the
financial industry totaled $7.1 billion, or nearly 11% of the Postal Service's
total commercial revenue. But the move by banks toward paperless statements, a
shift to mailing statements quarterly rather than monthly, and reductions in
advertising budgets have all hurt the postal system's bottom line. Bank
industry officials warn that rate hikes will only give banks and other
industries a greater incentive to find other channels of communication, which
would further undermine the postal system's viability.
Financial Times: The coalition hopes to draw on public
affection for Royal Mail in a stock market flotation, probably in autumn 2013.
But even if it succeeds in selling a chunk of the world's oldest postal
service – the most ambitious privatisation since British Rail – it seems
unlikely to rekindle the frenzy over privatisation shares seen in the
mid-1980s.
ARN: Australia Post Mobile is useful for anyone who spends plenty
of time dealing with our national postal service, especially if eBay or Amazon
are your good friends. The app offers basic essential services, including an
elaborate postage calculator, postcode search, ‘pay a bill', and of course
(and most importantly), the item tracker. There is also a ‘find us' feature
which offers a map with pinpointed office and street posting box locations.
This proves to be particularly beneficial when traveling in unfamiliar
locations. This capability can be viewed as a list also, which is helpful if
your 3G coverage is minimal.
New Zealand Herald: Nearly 30 million fewer letters and parcels
were sent by snail mail in the past year - but a more dramatic decline was
prevented partly by bulk mailouts during the general election. In its
half-year report, New Zealand Post chairman Michael Cullen reported there was
a 7 per cent drop in the volume of mail being sent within New Zealand.
The
Spokesman-Review: Last week a group of Spokane area postal workers and
their backers gathered downtown to voice opposition to plans that would shut
down hundreds of post offices and dozens of processing centers across the
country. The Postmaster General has said those cuts are needed for the
privately funded, non-tax supported Postal Service to eliminate an $8 billion
shortfall in its annual budget. While people debate the issue of whether cuts
at that level are needed, others are concerned that the Postmaster General
will push plans to eliminate Saturday delivery. That concern, however, seems
to be one that won't gain much support in Congress; any initiative to cut
Saturday delivery has to be approved by Congress. Last week, more than 100
members of Congress signed a letter in support of six day mail, rural post
offices and new innovations.
April 9, 2012
The U.S. Postal Service Office of
Inspector General invites you to comment on the following This week's "Pushing the Envelope" blog topic: Some
e-Thoughts on e-Books. Sales of U.S. e-books have slowed considerably
according to marketing research firm, R.R. Bowker. This may indicate the
diversion to digital download is slowing down. Will the adoption of electronic
bills and correspondence also slow down? What effect could this trend have on
large volume postal products? Let us know what you think.
A new audit project has been started on the external website:
Program Management – 12YG022CI000. Currently, the Postal
Service has initiated DRIVE (Delivering Results, Innovation, Value and
Efficiency) to improve business strategy development and execution. It is
based on a methodology used by many corporations to apply strategic and
financial rigor to decision making, and to navigate through significant
organizational changes. DRIVE is focused on a portfolio of 36 strategic
initiatives to meet its performance and financial goals. According to the
Postal Service, DRIVE is a structured approach to organizing operational and
management activities that facilitates cross-functional dialogue and
collaboration, provides streamlined reporting and accountability, and
incorporates measurement, analysis, and evaluation of initiatives. Successful
program management will be needed in order to maintain and track these
initiatives.
Novinite: Bulgaria
holds the dubious honor of having the highest prices of postage in Europe when
compared to the relative purchasing power of the population, a BBC survey has
shown. Posting a letter in Bulgaria only costs BGN 0.85 (USD 0.68) but to most
Bulgarians, that's a lot, BBC has commented as it compared the price of
postage in different European countries. In the BBC's survey of 65 countries
around the world, Bulgaria's postage price ranks third when adjusted to
reflect the local cost of living.
Logistics Week: The UPS Store franchise network has
been honored by the U.S. Postal Service at the National Postal Forum for its
participation in Every Door Direct Mail, which provides small businesses with
a cost-effective way to send direct mail.
Palm Beach Post: The fate of the
U.S. Postal Service lies with a Congress that has done nothing to save the
institution that will lose as much as $18.2 billion a year by 2015 unless
lawmakers act.
Auctionbytes: On April 12, the National Association of Letter Carriers will hold
demonstrations outside of Senate offices across the country in order to
pressure senators to oppose S. 1789, which it believes will be brought up in
the Senate after the Easter recess. Letter carriers say the legislation would
hurt the Postal Service.
Minneapo
lis Star Tribune: The Postal Service pays into several retirement and
health funds. Almost everyone agrees that in the past it has vastly overpaid,
some estimate by as much as $100 billion. One would think it a simple matter
for Congress to allow the USPS to tap into these excess funds to pay current
health benefits. One would be wrong. The Congressional Budget Office counts
the surplus funds as part of the existing budget. This manufactured financial
crisis legitimized the privateers attack on the Postal Service. Proposals
include ending Saturday delivery, which would open the door to private
companies; divesting half the service's physical infrastructure, and even
ending door-to-door delivery.
April 8, 2012
U-T San Diego: Text message spam has started waking Bob
Dunnell in the middle of the night, promising cheap mortgages, credit cards
and drugs. Some messages offer gift cards to, say, Walmart, if he clicks on a
website and enters his Social Security number. Once the scourge of email
providers and the Postal Service, spammers have infiltrated the last refuge of
spam-free communication: cellphones. In the United States, consumers received
roughly 4.5 billion spam texts last year, more than double the 2.2 billion
received in 2009, according to Ferris Research, a market research firm that
tracks spam. Spread over 250 million text message-enabled phones, the problem
is not as commonplace as email spam. But it's a growing menace, with the
potential for significant damage.
The Guardian: The great age of the Post Office is past, here and
indeed all over the world The pillarboxes and phone boxes remain, but as the
letter vanishes as an instrument of meaningful correspondence, so does the
Post Office itself
The Tribune: As if competition by instant means of communication, like
the internet or smart phones, were not enough, postal service in Pakistan
seems to be suffering from other ailments that are perhaps best represented by
the dilapidated condition of letterboxes that can be found scattered around
the city. Nearly half of these letterboxes are currently either broken or in
serious need of repair, and a Pakistan Post official said that they are not
even checked regularly by post office staff.
Morning Sentinel: The U.S. Postal Service should
not close facilities in Hampden or elsewhere around the country until Congress
acts on postal reform legislation, says Snowe. Snowe wrote a letter last week
to U.S. Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe urging him to continue a moratorium
on closures through Aug. 1. The current moratorium ends in mid-May, and the
Postal Service plans to close 223 of its 460 mail-processing facilities
nationwide to cut costs, including its facility in Hampden. It will move that
facility's operations to its processing center in Scarborough. "Moving forward
on this plan before Congress has a chance to act will seriously degrade
service, drive away customers, and establish an untenable business model for
the future -- something that Congress is working to prevent," Snowe wrote.
Collins, one of the authors of proposed Postal Service overhaul legislation,
also has criticized the plan to close Hampden and other facilities, as well as
other Postal Service cost-cutting moves.
April 7, 2012
The Daily
Yomiuri: Sixteen groups including U.S. and European insurance industry
bodies released a joint statement to strongly criticize Japan's bill to review
its postal privatization process. The statement said the legislation ignores
"the longstanding concerns raised by the above international industry
coalition about creating the equivalent conditions of competition in the
insurance, postal, and delivery industries." Among the 16 groups, the
Coalition of Service Industries (CSI) of the United States warned in a
separate statement that reviewing the postal privatization process could
negatively affect Japan's bid to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade
negotiations. The other organizations that adopted the joint statement on
Friday include the American Council of Life Insurers, the American Chamber of
Commerce in Japan, the European Business Council in Japan, and the Canadian
Life and Health Insurance Association.
PC Magazine: A good quote from the Cranky Geek himself, John
Dvorak -- "Just look at what more people use the computer for in the
United States: Facebook, Twitter, e-mail, Web surfing. This is all
time-wasting social crap. I've come to the realization that most people really
do not need a powerful computer in any way because they just surf Facebook all
day. So what if someone does not have a machine? Time spent fretting over any
sort of digital divide, whether international or local, is time wasted. Any
so-called digital divide is a meaningless construction manufactured to draw
attention away from real problems."
The Spokesman-Review: In a little more than five weeks,
on May 15, the U.S. Postal Service will start closing 3,500 post offices and
200 mail-processing centers, many in Eastern Washington and North Idaho. ostal
Service officials committed to a moratorium on closures in December, with the
expectation Congress would take some of the actions needed to stanch annual
losses that have surged to $9 billion. Postmaster General and USPS Chief
Executive Officer Patrick Donahoe on March 27 reiterated to a congressional
subcommittee the urgent need for legislation that will sanction the closures,
permit five-day delivery, and amend earlier legislation that imposes
unrealistic and unreasonable prepayments into Postal Service pension and
retiree health care funds. He also wants authority to create a Postal
Service-sponsored health care plan. That same day, the Senate set aside work
on a rescue package that would have provided most of the relief the Postal
Service says it needs.
Billings Gazette: Postmaster General Patrick Donohoe and Sen. Max Baucus,
D-Mont., will host a community discussion on rural post office closures and
area mail processing facility consolidations at 2 p.m. on Thursday in Ingomar.
Baucus said it's critical for Donohoe to visit with community members in
places like Ingomar before making decisions that would drastically impact
service, jobs and a way of life.
April 6, 2012
Pe
nsions & Investments: Canada Post Pension Plan, Ottawa, returned 0.2% on
its investments in 2011, according to a news release on the pension fund's
website. The returns were lower than the plan's 0.8% benchmark.
PRNewswire: In
speech at Rutgers, NALC President called on Congress to take time to draft
comprehensive reform instead of pushing through flawed legislation. Fredric V.
Rolando, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, said Friday
that Postal Service legislation pending before Congress lacks any long-term
vision and fails to provide for the creation of an effective business plan for
a vital American institution. "What the Postal Service needs most is a new
business model," Rolando said, "built from the bottom up, one that looks above
the immediate financial and structural problems to find opportunities to meet
the evolving needs of the American people in the 21st century."
Attention Postal One! Users:
Business Customer Gateway Outage - The Business Customer Gateway
production environment will be unavailable on Sunday, April 15, 2012, from
3:00 a.m. CDT to 5:00 a.m. CDT. During this window, all USPS services accessed
my mailers through the Business Customer Gateway, including PostalOne!, FAST,
Mailer ID, Program Registration, will be unavailable.
PostalOne!® Microstrategy Maintenance Outage: The PostalOne!®
Microstrategy reporting environment will be unavailable beginning Saturday,
April 14, 2012 at 8:00 p.m. CDT until Sunday, April 15, 2012 at 8:00 a.m. CDT
for a major database upgrade. During the outage internal users will not be
able to access Verification and Performance Reports for Business Mail
Acceptance and External users will not be able to access the Mail Quality
Reports. Report updates will be processed after the upgrade is complete and
internal reports will be current by 1:00 p.m. CDT, Sunday, April 15, 2012 and
Mail Quality Reports will be current by Monday, April 16, 2012 at 8:00 a.m.
CDT.
PostalOne!® Maintenance Outage: There will also be a PostalOne! outage
from 4:00 a.m. CDT to 8:00 a.m. CDT on Sunday, April 15, 2012 and Sunday April
22, 2012 as the database is prepared for a major technology upgrade. While
this outage is occurring on April 15, 2012, Release 30.0.1 will be deployed to
correct known issues. Release 30.0.1 will provide a new Mail.dat client
software for download (optional). During these outages PostalOne! and Mail.XML
will be unavailable including FAST and eDOC WebServices. An extended
maintenance window for PostalOne! will be used Saturday April 28, 2012 through
Sunday, April 29, 2012 to complete the major upgrade. The exact times will
communicated by April 13, 2012.
U.S. Court of Appeals: "In LePage's
2000, Inc. v. Postal Regulatory Commission, 642 F.3d 225 (D.C. Cir. 2011), we
vacated an order of the Postal Regulatory Commission and remanded the case for
further proceedings consistent with our opinion. We now consider a petition by
LePage's 2000, Inc. and LePage's Products, Inc., for attorneys' fees and
expenses incurred in the litigation leading up to our decision. Because we
find that the Commission was not substantially justified in issuing its order,
but that fees and expenses requested for proceedings before the Commission are
not reimbursable, we award a portion of the fees and expenses sought in the
petition for reasons more fully set forth below.
4-Traders: TNT Post Parcels,
part of PostNL Parcels, has completed a major upgrade of its IT environment
with the introduction of 230 handheld terminals in Belgium. Thanks to this,
customers can now track their parcel online anytime of the day. With a uniform
IT environment in Belgium and the Netherlands, TNT Post Parcels can now
operate a platform on which innovative services like Checkout and MijnPakket
(MyParcel), both already available in the Netherlands, can gradually be
offered in Belgium as well.
JD Supra: A recent European Court case has confirmed
that a dominant firm will not breach EU competition law simply by selling its
services below their total cost, as long as the services are charged above
their 'incremental' cost. Furthermore, an abuse of dominance will only occur
where it can be shown that the company intended to remove a competitor from
the market as a result of its pricing strategies. The Court of Justice of the
European Union ('ECJ') has ruled that a dominant postal company (Post Danmark)
which has a universal service obligation may make selective price reductions,
and bring its prices below the level of its average overall costs but not
below its average incremental costs, without infringing Article 102 of the
Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union ('TFEU') prohibiting an abuse
of a dominant position. The court concluded that each case should be judged on
its particular facts but the important question is whether the pricing
strategy has the result or potential, without objective justification, to
remove a competitor from the market.
Mediapost: It's well-documented the
U.S. Postal Service is navigating one tough route in this digital economy.
Questions about the effectiveness of direct mail aren't helping. Not that
those haven't been around, but marketers' interest in social media and other
emerging tactics can't be a good sign about flyers filling mailboxes. One of
the shiny new things is interactive TV (iTV), which cable operators are more
than happy to pitch as a direct mail substitute. Yet, data floating around
this week suggests the direct mail industry and, by extension the post office,
have a good while to keep making money on large postcards advertising large
discounts.
The Daily Caller: Today, the United States Postal Service (USPS)
wants access to one of the federal government's other "trust funds" ' the
federal employee pension fund ' to cover its multi-billion-dollar losses and
incentivize its expensive workforce to retire. The problem is, like Medicare
and Social Security, federal employee pensions are financed by current
contributions from employees and employers (government agencies). Past
contributions weren't saved ' they were spent ' since the funds are money-in,
money-out operations. The Postal Service has too many people, offices and
processing plants for the business it projects to do in the months and years
to come. USPS needs to right-size its network in order to meet demand and
reduce its labor costs.
BBC: The price of a
British first-class stamp is going up by about a third at the end of the
month, from 46p to 60p, and the price of a second-class stamp will rise almost
40%, from 36p to 50p. But the Royal Mail says its "prices are amongst the best
value in Europe". Is this true? If you convert the local price into dollars,
the UK is the fifth most expensive in Europe. The 60p it will soon cost for a
first class stamp is $0.96, behind Finland, Switzerland, Denmark and, in first
place, Norway - where a comparable stamp costs $1.67 (9.5 Kroner).
The latest issue of the PostCom
Bulletin is available online. In
this issue:

Dead Tree Edition: Postmaster General
Patrick Donahoe was named today to Folio: magazine's "2012 Folio: 40" list of
the magazine industry's "most innovative and distinguished professionals." The
Donahoe article, published online today and to appear in an upcoming issue of
the magazine, cited Donahoe's "continued commitment to magazine media, while
also remaining steadfast on the realities surrounding the challenges the USPS
is combating." Donahoe has reassured publishers that the U.S. Postal Service
won't try to solve its financial problems by jacking up their postage rates,
the article said. He's trying instead to cut costs, it added, by reducing the
number of employees and postal facilities and by eliminating Saturday
delivery.
The Hindu:
Deutsche Post DHL, the world's leading postal and logistics group, on
Thursday, said it had acquired the 24 per cent stake held by the Lemuir Group
in their joint venture. With this acquisition, the joint venture, DHL Lemuir
Logistics Pvt. Ltd., becomes a 100 per cent subsidiary of Deutsche Post DHL, a
company release said here. The entity has been renamed as DHL Logistics Pvt.
Ltd.
The Spokesman Review: The postal workers union
will demonstrate this afternoon in Spokane against plans to close some Post
Office facilities. But the notice of that demonstration seems to be a model of
Murphy's Law about things going wrong. First of all, the notice received
Wednesday wasn't sent out by standard mail but by e-mail, which is one of the
reasons postal volumes are down. Second, the first notice had the wrong day.
Well, good thing it was by e-mail, because the union was able to send out a
quick correction saying it was actually today. But that new notice had a
problem itself.
Ozarks First: Sen.
Claire McCaskill talked about ways to keep rural post offices open. Among
other things, she thinks the U.S. Postal Service can shore up budget problems
by charging companies like Fed-Ex and UPS more money when they hire the Postal
Service to make deliveries.
April 5, 2012
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission: System Review Report of the Postal Regulatory
Commission's Office of Inspector General Audit Organization conducted by
the Inspector General of the Federal Trade Commission.
National Association of
Major Mail Users: Last fall Canada Post committed to develop a solution
for BRM card stock that would minimize impacts to customer costs while
enabling machine processing of Business Reply Mail cards. After substantial
testing and analysis, we would like to advise that Business Reply Mail
customers may continue using paper with a weight lower than 160 gm² but not
less than 111 gm². In such cases, Customers must realize that a small portion
of their returned cards may be subject to longer processing times. To improve
performance, we recommend using: optimal card size of 108 mm x 165 mm (4.3 in
x 6.5 in); and grain direction long.
PR Newswire: FedEx Corp.
FDX -0.28% announced today that it signed an agreement to acquire the Polish
courier company Opek Sp.z o.o. (Opek), the latest step in its strategy for
growth in Europe.
PR Newswire: Delivering Shipping Innovation
to eBay Sellers Earns eBay the U.S. Postal Service Partnership for Progress
Award.
DMM Advisory:
IMb™ Services Update
Dead Tree Edition: Flats Sequencing System machines
continue to run much slower than their target speeds and aren't getting any
faster. But they also aren't breaking down as often as they were last year,
according to a Postal Service presentation.
PR Newswire: The Business
Journals today named Apple, Inc. the 2012 Grand Award winner as part of its
ninth-annual American Brand Excellence Awards, which recognize brands that
best meet the needs of small to mid-sized businesses (SMB). This year marks
the second consecutive year that Apple, a pioneer in brand excellence, has
received the award. The Business Journals also awarded Brand Excellence Awards
to companies in six additional business categories:
ChannelNews:
Digital Post Australia's online post box service for Oz announced last month
by a partnership between Computershare, Salmat and US based Zumbox, is hoping
to have the e-postal service established later this year. The system would
allow users to receive and store utility bills and bank statements in an
online post box.
BBC: A man in Cornwall has
set up his own postal service, delivering letters around his local town whilst
riding a penny-farthing. Graham Eccles set up this unique service following
Royal Mail's recent announcement that the price of first-class stamps will
rise to 60p. The man who lives in Bude now delivers mail within his hometown
and the surrounding villages for 25p a letter, more than half the price of
Royal Mail's postage.
From the Federal
Register: Postal Regulatory Commission NOTICES
Postal Service Classification and Price Adjustments, 20656-20657 [2012-8161]
[TEXT]
[PDF]
p>
C
NN Money: Unions and some lawmakers say the U.S. Postal Service's plans to
close plants and post offices would turn customers away and hasten the
service's downward spiral. Now their campaign has been buoyed by revelations
of a survey that the Postal Service commissioned -- and then dismissed and
pushed to make secret. The survey, budgeted to cost up to $435,000, shows
closures and cutbacks would cost $5.2 billion in lost business and result in a
7.7% drop in mail volume. The Postal Service says the survey -- conducted last
summer -- was "seriously flawed" because it was based on the assumption that
slower delivery, an end to Saturday service and postage price hikes would all
happen at the same time. The proposed cutbacks would occur over five years,
according to the service. As a result, the Postal Service ordered a new survey
focused on tracking customer response to slower delivery and plant closures.
It showed the Postal Service losing $1.3 billion in revenue. with a 1.7% drop
in total mail volume.
April 4, 2012
Welcome to
PostCom RadioA Postal Podcast Join PostCom President Gene Del Polito and Experian Senior Project Manager Dylan Purse in a discussion of "making your way in a multi-media marketing world." |
QRCodePress: TNT Post, the
national postal service of the Netherlands, is taking a bold new approach to
its quarterly magazine publication titled "Er is Post!" The post service has
tapped augmented reality developer Layar to make the magazine more
interactive. The magazine is delievered to every household in the Netherlands
every quarter, giving Layar a large audience to reach out to with its
acclaimed technology. Layar claims that every page of the upcoming magazine
will contain an interactive augmented reality experience. Print is considered
an "old world" medium today. Many people believe that print is an obsolete
platform, something that publishers are quick to shrug these accusations off.
Print is, in fact, going through a period of rapid evolution powered by
technologies like augmented reality. Companies like Layar are using the
technology to revitalize print media in the hopes of making it more appealing
to tech-savvy consumers.
Sacramento Bee: Last week the U.S. Postal Service launched its
latest redesign of the popular Click-N-Ship online tool, making it easier and
faster for customers to manage and ship their domestic and international
packages. Customers using Click-N-Ship will see a cleaner, more streamlined
design that reflects the features of usps.com.
CEP News
(Courier-Express-Postal), published by the MRU
Consultancy, has reported that:
The Japanese post is expected to close the current financial year 2011/2012 with losses of around 370m euros. A corresponding business plan for the Japan Post Service Co. was adopted by the government last week.
The fact remains that Austrian Post has to bear all costs for the conversions of residential letterboxes.
A new start-up company in Austria distributes unaddressed advertising mails digitally. The Aktionsfinder GmbH (15 employees) offers leaflets on its website and via a smartphone application on a daily basis.
Ceská posta significantly increased its profits despite a slight decrease in mail volume in the past business year.
Bpost's IPO is getting more unlikely. Even though major shareholder CVC, who holds a 50% stake minus one share since the middle of 2009 is still committed to dispose its stake, an IPO could be less profitable than expected due to the generally tight economic situation.
E-commerce in Belgium is expected to record double-digit growth this year again.
Distansehandel Norge, the association of Norway's mail order companies, established a new trade organisation at the end of February.
French La Poste named the head of the commission which will hold the 'extensive dialogue' - which was announced in the middle of March (CEP-News 12/12) - over labour conditions with the unions and employees.
The MRU, founded in 1992, is the only consultancy in Europe, which has specialised in the market of courier-, express- and parcel services. For large-scale shippers and CEP-services in particular, the MRU provides interdisciplinary advice for all major questions of the market, as there are for example market entry, product design, organisation, and EDP.To learn more about the stories reported above, contact CEP News. (We appreciate the courtesy extended by CEP News to help whet your appetite for more of what CEP offers.)
A new report has been posted on the U.S.
Postal Service Office of Inspector General website (http://www.uspsoig.gov). If you have
additional questions concerning a report, please contact Wally Olihovik at
703-248-2201 or Agapi Doulaveris at 703-248-2286.
Unauthorized
Overtime Usage in Field Operations (Report Number HR-AR-12-003). Our
report determined that the U.S. Postal Service has established procedures to
monitor and control unauthorized overtime; however, managers and supervisors
did not always follow prescribed procedures. We identified issues relating to
Postal Service (PS) Form 1017-B, Unauthorized Overtime Record; PS Form 3996,
Carrier – Auxiliary Control; Time and Attendance Collection System (TACS)
updates; and controls over time cards.
DMM Advisory:
April DMM Update Postal Explorer® (http://pe.usps.compe.usps.com) is your source for up-to-date
mailing standards. The Domestic Mail Manual (DMM®) is fully searchable on
Postal Explorer and features fly-out menus, cross-reference links, and an
extensive subject index. On April 1, we updated our mailing standards to
include the following changes:
Press
Release: Pitney Bowes Inc. has announced that Australia Post has selected
the Volly™ secure digital delivery system from Pitney Bowes Inc. to power
the Australia Post Digital Mailbox service that is planned to roll out to
households across Australia later this year. "All players in the customer
communications delivery value chain will be impacted by digital mailbox
services as volumes shift, the economy changes, and new competitors, partners,
and suppliers emerge," stated Matt Swain, associate director of document
outsourcing at research firm InfoTrends. "With today's announcement, Pitney
Bowes emerges as an international force in the digital mail delivery market
while Australia Post demonstrates its commitment to the space." [EdNote:
The U.S. Postal Service had a chance to adopt Volly quite some time ago, but
it couldn't quite get beyond the mental impediments it had created for itself.
Give me a good idea and there are those at the USPS who can give you a dozen
reasons not to go for it.]
National Association of
Letter Carriers: On April 12, the National Association of Letter Carriers
will hold "Save America's Postal Service" demonstrations outside of Senate
offices across the country. They are designed to put pressure on each senator
to oppose S. 1789. S. 1789 likely will be brought up in the Senate following
the Easter recess, the week that follows the April 12 demonstrations. The
timing and impact of these events will be critical in helping us to stop S.
1789 and save America's Postal Service.
The Globe and Mail: Tablets and
e-readers might be the future of the publishing industry, but the print
magazine is far from a write-off. Canadian publishers lost $50-million in
newsstand sales in the last year, but an industry poll into consumer habits
hints at a brighter future for publishers brave enough to keep investing in
their printed products. Data from the Periodical Marketers of Canada to be
released Wednesday shows those who do read magazines overwhelmingly prefer to
read on paper, despite the ever-widening list of digital alternatives made
available by publishers anxious to keep them reading. The publishers will soon
have an unexpected ally to help them address the problem, at least in the
short term. Canada Post will announce an initiative that would see the postal
service handle digital distribution of magazines so the publishers could focus
on content, rather than logistics.
The
Australian: A FEDERAL judge has rejected Australia Post's attempt to block
an emerging online rival from using a similar name. Australia Post has accused
Digital Post Australia of "cashing in" on its brand name as both companies
seek to launch online digital mailboxes where users can receive and pay their
bills. The postal giant had applied for interlocutory orders to stop DPA using
its name, but judge John Middleton this afternoon ruled the name could still
be used ahead of a full trial.
IsleOfManToday: THE ISLE of Man Post Office has
announced it will increase the cost of postal products and services later this
month. The changes will take effect from April 30. A local letter will rise by
1p meaning the price of a standard letter, up to 100g for Isle of Man
addresses, will increase to 38p. The rate for UK-bound standard letters will
be rising by 3p to 41p. In the UK a first-class stamp will rise from 46p to
60p. Despite this news, the island's postal rates will continue to be one of
the lowest in Europe and the increase is significantly lower than the recent
announcements made by other administrations, claim Post Office chiefs.
Direct Marketing News: Despite Congress's political gridlock, the
U.S. Postal Service (USPS) expects action on a comprehensive postal bill to
address its financial issues on the Senate floor "within the next two weeks,"
said Ron Stroman, deputy Postmaster General at the USPS, during the executive
briefing session at the National Postal Forum (NPF) in Orlando, Fla. Stroman
singled out Nevada Senator Harry Reid as a major supporter in the USPS's
efforts to push the bill to the Senate. "We have a good shot of getting the
House to take action," Stroman said. "If we get that done, we can get to a
conference. In that conference I think we can resolve a lot of our
differences."
Bluefield Daily Telegraph: Why Congress has not
yet passed meaningful postal reform legislation ' particularly in light of the
hundreds of postal facilities targeted for closure ' is baffling. Keeping our
post offices open is an issue after all that most Americans can agree upon and
are supportive of.
Oak Park Journal: Rather than think large and expand the
USPS business plan and profit potential, there are constant demands from the
Right that services be cut, which would only reduce earnings and accessibility
of services to citizens. The internal resources of the USPS could offer
universal access to high-speed broadband, universal email and Internet access,
digital scanning and the forwarding of documents.
Billings Gazette: Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., has
asked the postmaster general to delay closing mail-processing facilities until
2013 to accommodate Montanans who vote by mail. [EdNote: Let me get this
straight. First you tell the PMG you think he's overpaid (even though his pay
fails to match that of a postal CEO outside the U.S.), and then you ask him to
do you a favor. You're kidding, right?]
Hellmail: Following a review of pricing at AN
Post, the rates for posting items weighing more than 50g, including items sent
by Standard and Registered Post services, will change from Tuesday 1st May,
2012. The operator said the majority of letters and postcards would be
unaffected by these changes as the basic 55c stamp rate for posting up to 50g
in weight remains unchanged. Some rates are being reduced, with significant
reductions of up to 50 per cent in tariffs for posting parcels over 5kg in
weight nationally and internationally. The new tariffs, which include a range
of incentives to help SMEs and to encourage online sales, still place An Post
well below the European average in terms of price and amongst the lowest-cost
providers for most services.
Press Release: The
Business Journals announced April 2 that small- and mid-sized businesses had
named UPS and The UPS Store top brands for 2012.
Wall Street Journal: John Fahey says it's time for National
Geographic Magazine to turn a new page. Digital expansion has become the
buzzword for the yellow-bordered flagship of 124-year-old National Geographic
Society, long known for its riveting photography, atlas maps and tendency to
accumulate in readers' basements. Mr. Fahey says he must continue reinventing
the society's oldest asset'stories and pictures'with blogs on the news, a
tiered subscription model and offerings for the iPad, Kindle and Nook readers.
The 60-year-old former chairman and CEO of Time Life Inc. spoke to The Wall
Street Journal about his digital efforts, and why the print magazine may cease
to exist someday.
BurrusJournal: I have
heard the rumble about submitting a Resolution to the national convention to
rescind the action taken in 2010 to confer Emeritus status in honor of my 37
years of service as an officer. I have not decided how I intend to respond,
but in order that there is absolutely no misunderstanding, if there are any
APWU members who believe that I do not deserve the honor, I do not want the
title. Of the billions of web sites available for inspection, bigoted bullies
chose to access burrusjournal.org read it and take exception to its contents.
One would think that if they disagree with the contents they would use their
time in a more productive way, but they read it and pass judgment. Being
incapable of defending a contract that reduces the wages of the next
generation of postal employees by 25% and receiving nothing of value in return
they desire to stifle debate and threaten retaliation for those who dare
dissent. I reject any expectation that I owe a debt of support to the
architects of this sell out that exceeds my debt to future employees.
Business Daily
Africa: A change of guard is looming at the financially troubled Postal
Corporation of Kenya (PCK) following the board's decision not to renew chief
executive Hussein Ali's contract which is set to expire in September. The
parastatal's board met last Thursday to review the performance of
Major-General (Rtd) Ali and concluded that he had failed to meet the threshold
of 70 per cent needed to retain him at the helm of the parastatal.
Post & Parcel Americans sent nearly
two billion fewer letters in the three months up to the end of December 2011,
compared to the same period the previous year.
April 3, 2012
U.S. Court of Appeals Decision
regarding Northern Air Cargo, et al.v. United States Postal Service and
Peninsula Airways,Inc.,
DMM Advisory:
USPS Package Intercept™ Phase Two. On Wednesday, March 28 the
Federal Register published our Domestic Mail Manual (DMM®) final rule that
implements the second phase of USPS Package Intercept™ service, introducing
an electronic process for commercial customers to request USPS Package
Intercept and other related features. The implementation date is June 24,
2012. This final rule invites customers to comment on or before June 15, 2012.
The complete final rule Federal Register can be found on the Federal Register
website at http://www
.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-03-28/pdf/2012-7356.pdf and will be available
soon on the Postal Explorer® website at pe.usps.com.
F
ederal Times: The U.S. Postal Service spent more than $717 million on
unauthorized overtime pay in the past two years, a new audit has found. The
agency's inspector general found that lax controls over time cards at some
post offices and mail processing plants contributed to the problem. "These
conditions created opportunities for employees to receive overtime without
prior approval, clock-in for work before their scheduled tour began, and
clock-out after their tour ended," the report said.
"This Week In Postal"
In-Style.....A Feminine Perspective.
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News (and tweets) from the National Postal Forum in Orlando:
Infoprint: Should printers fear digital
mailbox services? Digital mailbox services will grow to be an important
delivery and payment channel that billers, service bureaus, and vendors will
need to develop a strategy around. In fact, we estimate that digital mailbox
services will deliver two billion paperless transactional documents to U.S.
consumers in 2015 – representing seven percent of all transaction documents,
19 percent of all paperless delivery, and $323 million in transaction document
delivery fees alone.
Multichannel Merchant: The theme of this year's
National Postal Forum here at the Gaylord Palms Resort & Convention Center is
innovation and technology. There's even an Innovation & Technology Pavilion
inside the exhibit hall. The first session I went to this morning was called,
"Innovations in Technology & Delivering Product Information," but when I
reached the session room I was told there was no room. Many others wanting to
attend this session on mailing innovations and technology were also shut out
of the session. When I tried going to another session at the same time that
too was "sold out" with standing room only. One attendee said: "I didn't pay
$800 to come down here and get shut out of these sessions." It was an overly
packed house for Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe's opening session today,
but there were no warnings of the breakout sessions being overcrowded.
Attendees are arriving early for these sessions, I was told, so I'll need to
arrive plenty early to get a seat in the afternoon sessions I hope to attend.
It's great for the U.S. Postal Service and the National Postal Forum that
there is so much interest in the forum and these breakout sessions. It's also
ironic because so many trade conferences we attend have dwindled in size in
recent years and exhibit halls have been sliced in half. But not here at
National Postal Forum 2012.
Yahoo! News: Neopost Limited announced today that there
are practical ways to mitigate the recently announced Royal Mail price
increases without damaging your business.
Direct Marketing News: The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) officially
announced at the National Postal Forum in Orlando, Fla., the pilot program of
its GoPost parcel delivery lockers, which the USPS began implementing in
Northern Virginia in February. While customers typically have packages
delivered either to their homes or their work addresses, GoPost, situated in
areas with heavy foot traffic, provides a third option. Customers sign up for
the service online, decide which GoPost location they want to pick up their
package, and are given a keycard and PIN to open the locker when the package
is delivered. Customers are notified of the package's delivery through text or
email.
Direct Marketing News: The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) maintains
an ongoing push to use better data and technologies to improve services amid
digital competition, said Patrick Donahoe, Postmaster General and CEO of the
USPS, during the keynote at the National Postal Forum in Orlando, Fla., on
April 2. "I don't think we're old school, nor do I think we can afford to be,"
Donahoe said. "We need to change and evolve. I think of mail as a data and
technology center." He added that mail, unlike other marketing channels like
digital, print and television, is chiefly about driving ROI. "When it's
targeted," he said, "it gets to every household. It is the best way to drive a
consumer purchasing decision, the best way to get people to go to the website,
and to connect with customers to strengthen brand relations."
PRWeb: "Pass the Post
Provides a Cost Cutting Business Solution With its Latest Relaxed Pricing Amid
Price Lifts on Mails and Packages"
MarketWatch: Dutch package company TNT Express NV ,
which has agreed to be acquired by its U.S. rival United Parcel Service Inc.
UPS -0.06% , said Monday that first-quarter operating results were hit by
pricing pressure and declining volumes as it grapples with tough trading
conditions in Europe.
Wall Street Journal: How many times have we heard that
this was the worst recession since the Great Depression? That may be
true'although the double-dip recession of the early 1980s was about
comparable. Less publicized is that our current recovery pales in comparison
with most other recoveries, including the one following the Great Depression.
The current recovery began in the second half of 2009, but economic growth has
been weak. Growth in 2010 was 3% and in 2011 it was 1.7%. Who knows what 2012
will bring, but the current growth rate looks to be about 2%, according to the
consensus of economists recently polled by Blue Chip Economic Indicators.
Sadly, we have never really recovered from the recession. The economy has not
even returned to its long-term growth rate and is certainly not making up for
lost ground. No doubt, there are favorable economic numbers to be found, but
overall we continue to struggle. Threats of higher taxes, the constantly
increasing regulatory burden, the failure to pursue an aggressive trade policy
that will open markets to U.S. exports, and the enormous increase in
government spending all are growth impediments. Policies have focused on
short-run changes and gimmicks.
Wall Street Journal: Express
Scripts Inc. and Medco Health Solutions Inc. won government approval Monday
for their $29.1 billion merger, setting the stage for the creation of a
massive new pharmacy-benefit manager that could alter how, and possibly where,
patients get their prescription drugs. While Express Scripts and Medco don't
run brick-and-mortar pharmacies, they operate their own mail-order
facilities.
Direct Marketing News: While the overall mood at the 2012 National
Postal Forum is upbeat and optimistic, if I were less charitable, I would say
the real theme isn't as much "Technological Innovation" as it is "Change or
Die."
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission:
Quarterly Statistics Report http://www.prc.gov/docs/81/81820/Quarterly%20Statisti
cs%20Report%20Quarter%201,%20FY%202012.pdf
April 2, 2012
A
dvertising Age: Last month, digital executives from Hearst's 20 or so
titles were summoned for an important meeting at the company's Manhattan
headquarters. The pressing subject was Pinterest, how all Hearst's magazines
are using it, and how they could leverage the platform. Attendees also spent a
fair bit of time examining competitors' "pinning" strategies. Pinterest, the
social site that lets users post images from the web to their personal
"pinboards," has been around since 2010. But brands and publishers' notice of
it has been increasing, partly because every image "pinned" links back to its
source, offering new traffic to anyone who can capitalize. And the potential
was made especially clear when Time Inc.'s Real Simple recently said Pinterest
had sent more traffic than Facebook to its site. Real Simple, which has about
206,000 likes on Facebook, already has almost 60,000 followers on
Pinterest.
New York Times: On Monday, the Association of
Magazine Media will announce a set of voluntary guidelines developed by
representatives from the magazine publishers Bonnier, Condé Nast, Forbes,
Hearst, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Meredith and Time Inc. The guidelines
will cover how magazines measure their tablet editions, the vocabulary used in
those definitions and time frames for when reader data will be released. The
measures include the total number of a publication's digital issues and the
number of readers by issue. They will also count the number of times a reader
opens a tablet issue (called a session), how much time that reader spends
reading each issue and the average number of sessions per reader per
issue.
American
Recycler: The U.S. Postal Service saved more than $34 million and
generated $24 million in 2011 by reducing energy, water, consumables,
petroleum fuel use and solid waste to landfills, conservation efforts
encouraged by the Go Green Forever stamps. The Postal Service recycled 215,000
tons of material, which saved $14 million in landfill fees and yielded $24
million in new revenue. Employee lean green teams were key to helping the
Postal Service achieve the savings and revenue, part of which included more
than a $20 million decrease in supplies spending from the previous year. Lean
green teams help identify and implement low- and no-cost sustainable practices
to help the Postal Service meet the following goals by 2015: (1) Reduce
facility energy use by 30 percent. (2) Reduce water use by 10 percent. (3)
Reduce petroleum fuel use by 20 percent, and (4) Reduce solid waste by 50
percent. The Postal Service plans to deploy lean green teams nationwide in
2012 to help achieve these goals.
Something from
one of our correspondents: Talk about precious cargo. When the U.S. Post
Office Department, as it was called from 1828 to 1970, introduced its parcel
post service in 1913, no one anticipated that among the routine shipments of
produce and eggs would be a kid'let alone two. Unlike the appalled postmaster
general, who would soon outlaw the practice, the parents of 5-year-old May
Pierstorff had no qualms about affixing postage to their bundle of joy in
1914. After all, she was under the 50-pound weight limit, and the 53 cents in
stamps stuck to her coat sleeve was a whole lot cheaper than the cost of a
train ticket to her grandparents' house. "May actually rode in a mail car like
all the other packages for the 73-mile journey from Grangeville, Idaho, to
Lewiston, Idaho," says Nancy Pope, a historian at the National Postal Museum.
The second child was referenced in the postmaster general's policy memo, Pope
says, but that's all we know about the little tyke. Tracking, you see, wasn't
introduced until 1999.
Rep. Gerry Connolly: "Connolly and Young Call on Congress to Develop
21st Century USPS Business Model More than 100 Members of Congress sign letter
in support of 6 Day Mail, Rural Post Offices, Innovation."
At
the Postal Regulatory
Commission:
Po
tomac Local: Virginia Congressman Gerry Connolly was joined by more than
100 members of Congress in calling on Speaker John Boehner and Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi to maintain robust mail service, including 6 day delivery and
rural post offices, and develop a transformational 21st Century business model
for the USPS. Republican Don Young of Alaska joined Connolly in circulating
the letter.
The U.S. Postal Service Office of
Inspector General invites you to comment on the following: This week's
"Pushing the Envelope" blog topic:
What should be done about overfunding? This is our fifth and final topic in
our "Five Elements of a Postal Solution" blog series. Join us this week as our
three guest bloggers share their views. This week we have Roger Kodat, former
Department of the Treasury official; Jim Sauber, Chief of Staff at the
National Association of Letter Carriers; and Elmar Toime, former Chief
Executive of New Zealand Post, as our featured guests. See what they have to
say and share your own thoughts on our blog. A new audit project has been
started on the external website:
Negotiated Service Agreements (NSA) –
12WG006EN000. Negotiated Service Agreements (NSAs) are customized and
mutually beneficial contractual agreements between the U.S. Postal Service and
individual mailers. These agreements provide customized pricing incentives or
other arrangements justified by a shift in the mailer's business strategy and
mail operations. Through NSAs, customers receive incentives for meeting
criteria specified by the Agreement and to increase their use of the mail as a
marketing tool, thereby creating more volume and net revenue for the Postal
Service as their business grows. According to the Postal Service, experience
shows that working directly with mailers present opportunities to improve
processes and streamline internal systems and handling methodologies. This
helps to identify potential new products and services that may benefit
mailers, reduce expenses, and improve service, not only for the NSA partner
but for other postal customers as well. Our objective is to obtain information
about the NSA process, identify the systems used to monitor performance, and
determine if there are areas which warrant further detailed audit work.
U.S. Postal Service: A map
of the National Network Optimization program has
been posted on this site. A spreadsheet of the proposed destination service areas also has
been posted here.
CNBC: The UPS Store® network today
announced a new relationship with AARP, offering its members valuable
discounts at the more than 4,300 The UPS Store locations nationwide. Now AARP
members can save 15 percent on the full retail price of eligible products and
services while saving 5 percent on UPS shipping services.
PR Newswire: In
a keynote address to open the National Postal Forum in Orlando, FL, Patrick R.
Donahoe, Postmaster General and Chief Executive Officer of the U.S. Postal
Service, today discussed the transformative power of technology and innovation
in the mailing industry. Speaking at the nation's largest annual gathering for
the mailing industry, Donahoe described a technology and data-centric mailing
industry poised to benefit from innovations to increase the value of mail for
both senders and receivers. "As an industry, we have to retain what
differentiates mail and physical delivery, and bring it into the future," said
the Postmaster General. "It's astonishing how much is changing in the ways
people communicate. Mail has to be a part of these changes."
Federal News
Radio: The Congressional Budget Office estimates a postal reform proposal
in the House would save about $20 billion through 2022. The bill (H.R.2309) '
introduced last summer by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) ' would eliminate
Saturday mail delivery, close mail processing facilities, increase postal
employees' contributions to their health and life insurance premiums, and
allow the Postal Service to use nearly $11 billion in surplus retirement
contributions.
Post & Parcel: US Postmaster
General Patrick Donahoe said today that the mailing industry had to "embrace
change" to strive for a more dynamic future, but that USPS would build on its
key strength – its delivery network.
The OIG blog "Pushing the Envelope"
What should be done about overfunding, overpayment, and other unfunded
federal mandates?
![]()
News (and tweets) from the National Postal Forum in Orlando:
Federal Times: It's no secret that
the U.S. Postal Service is looking at shutting more than 3,200 post offices as
part of a major downsizing initiative. Less known is that 20 privately run
post offices are also on the chopping block, but in this case because of a
labor agreement with the American Postal Workers Union. Under its latest
contract with the APWU signed last year, the Postal Service agreed to close 20
"contract postal units" (CPUs) or else insource the work "as soon as
practicable." Those units are in New York, Texas, Florida,Puerto Rico and
several other states. Given that there are more than 3,000 contract postal
units nationwide, it's not clear why these were singled out, but several
Republican members of Congress aren't happy about it. The 20 CPUs in question
provide "handsome levels of revenue" to the Postal Service "in a more
cost-effective manner than traditional post office facilities," Reps. Gus
Bilirakis and Steve Southerland, both of Florida, and John Carter and Ted Poe
of Texas wrote in a letter earlier this month to Postmaster General Patrick
Donahoe and APWU President Cliff Guffey. [EdNote: Ok. Which "underpaid" Member
of Congress will volunteer to resign his or her seat and take on the job of
Postmaster General. The good news? You might be paid more. The bad news?
You've got 535 "congressional directors" who believe they know how
to do the job better than you, and they'll interfere in just about anything
you want to do. Anyone foolish enough to try?]
BusinessWire: Click2Mail, an industry leader in
cloud-based hybrid mail services (
The Press-Enterprise: The United States Postal Service faces
many daunting challenges, the salary of the postmaster general not being one
of them. Still, Congress may soon consider legislation to drastically cut USPS
executive salaries. The service needs a business visionary to return it to
both profitability and relevance and should pay what is required to attract
top executive talent. Congress should therefore defeat this short-sighted
measure.
Delmarva Daily
Times: The U.S. Postal Service is looking for ways to make ends meet in an
increasingly hostile economic environment. From a business standpoint, it
makes no sense to take austerity measures that will slow delivery times and
further alienate already dissatisfied customers who complain about slow
deliveries; this is a recipe for failure.
Washington Post: This was
supposed to be the week Congress finally got down to the business of fixing
the U.S. Postal Service. It didn't happen. A Democratic attempt to tie
Republicans to big oil companies, lingering issues with federal highway
funding and the start of the annual budget process tied up most of the week,
upending plans to begin debate in the Senate over a bipartisan plan to
overhaul how USPS manages and delivers the mail. There will be roughly one
month left when the House and Senate return from their two-week Easter and
Passover recess to complete postal reform before the end of a moratorium on
closing up to 223 processing centers and thousands of post offices. At the
request of lawmakers, USPS agreed to wait until May 15 to begin the closings
process, which is expected to start in late May, be suspended in late August
for the election and holiday-mailing season and then resume again next
January. The sites set to close employ thousands of people, and Sens. Barbara
Mikulski (D-Md.), Joe Manchin (D-W. Va.) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), among
others, are especially concerned with the fates of processing facilities in
their states, because many workers may lose jobs or be assigned to neighboring
states.
Human
Events: It's another month in Washington, and it's yet another bailout.
This time, taxpayers will be tapped for another $41 billion to subsidize the
United States Postal Service, a flagging entity that is struggling against the
tide of modern technology, despite its competitive advantage in the
mail-carrying business.
Attention
PostalOne!® Users:
PostalOne!® Release 30.0.0 deployment was
completed on schedule today, April 1, 2012 at 9:00 a.m. CDT including a new
client version of Mail.dat available for download that is required for use
with this release. There was an issue with
electronic Verification System (eVS) data maintenance that is being resolved.
That issue status is being communicated to eVS mailers in a separate email
notfication. Reminder: Test Environment for Mailers (TEM)
PostalOne! Release 30.0 will deploy to the Test Environment for
Mailers (TEM) on Monday, April 2, 2012. PostalOne! TEM will be
unavailable from 4:00 a.m. through 4:00 p.m. CDT. If you have any additional
questions please contact the Help Desk at 800-522-9085.
April 1, 2012

News from the National Postal Forum in Orlando:
The Times of India:The department of post (DoP) is planning to set up
1,000 automated teller machines (ATMs) across six states --Assam, Uttar
Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu -- under its ongoing
modernisation plan, according to a top official.