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Postal News from February 2007:

Postal News for February 28, 2007

A voluntary separation offer made by UPS to a small group of corporate employees has been accepted by 194 individuals. The offer was extended in December to employees who were age 50 or older with at least 10 years of service. Normal retirement age at UPS is 65. As a result of the acceptances, UPS will record a one-time charge to expense of approximately $80 million during the first quarter of 2007. The company expects to generate a positive return on the program after two years. The buyout offer was part of an on-going effort to consolidate corporate support functions in such areas as network planning, procurement, human resources, finance and sales.

According to The Argus, "Gemini Press in Dolphin Way, Shoreham, is donating five per cent of the price of its first order from every new client this year to the Woodland Trust's Tree for All project. Director Nigel Holmes said the industry had a "negative image" in terms of its environmental impact because of the materials used in the printing process. But he said his company was doing its best to change that image."

From PR Newswire: "Authentidate Holding Corp. , a worldwide provider of secure enterprise workflow management applications, today announced that the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Tampa Division, dismissed with prejudice a patent infringement case against the company filed by TimeCertain, LLC, in August 2005. The claim by TimeCertain alleged that Authentidate Holding Corp. and its products and systems incorporating secure time stamping technology, including but not limited to the USPS Electronic Postmark, infringed on certain TimeCertain patents."

According to QAS, "Direct marketers in the US will be breathing a small sigh of relief after the Postal Rate Commission recommended a lower than expected rate increase. The Postal Service in the US had been targeting a substantial increase in mailing costs, which would have had a significant impact on the direct marketing sector. However, the commission recommended rates that were in many cases lower than those wanted by the Postal Service. However, the need to maintain high standards of data quality so as to make the most from direct marketing campaigns remains an important matter, particularly as the commission's recommendations still show an increase. The Postal Service will still be seeing an increase in its rates, meaning the need to reduce losses from dirty data is still high on the agenda of those considering a direct marketing campaign."

The Federal Times has reported that "The U.S. Postal Service has dropped plans to consider closing nine mail processing centers, the latest in a series of cancellations of planned or potential postal facility shutdowns. USPS last year announced an effort to streamline the operations of 675 mail processing facilities around the country, and in July released a list of 139 locations under consideration for closing. In the consolidations, post offices would generally stay open, but first-class mail sorting, which is labor-intensive, would move to regional facilities. Officials say the shift will cut costs and improve efficiency as the volume of personal mail falls. But the plan faces opposition from the American Postal Workers Union and some members of Congress. Although USPS cannot lay off employees, the shift would ultimately reduce the number of postal workers and would eliminate jobs in some districts. Opponents also say the consolidations slow mail delivery."

You can find a listing of the complete references that are a part of the Postal Regulatory Commission's R2006-1 recommended decision on the PRC web site.

From the U.S. Postal Service: "Sessions on Pricing Changes, New Postal Law Highlight National Postal Forum."

DM News has reported that "The Magazine Publishers of America unveiled its “Magazines 24/7” Digital Conference today. It announced that 155 magazine digital initiatives have been activated. Last year, MPA members introduced online social networks, enabled user-generated content and created new blogs, mobile applications, podcasts and video content for Web sites and cell phones."

CEP News (Courier-Express-Postal), published by the MRU Consultancy, has reported that:

2006 was a good year for Norway's Posten AS. "Last years figures prove that the post was able to successfully carry out its strategy of profitable growth in the Nordic region", said CEO Dag Mejdell.
Austria's Osterreichische Post is currently the object of countless rumours and speculations. Apparently, foreign investors have acquired a considerable equity sta- ke. Rumour also has it that between them, several American funds have already acquired a vetoing stock and intend to present their own candidate for the supervisory board at the posts AGM in April.
Following a first round of wage negotiations, France's La Poste has announ- ced an increase in wages for 2007.
The German and British mail markets are becoming increasingly important to TNT. The letter monopoly will be abolished in both countries at the end of the year. This would give TNT the opportunity to compensate for a decline in mail operations at home.
Poczta Polska (PP) achieved a profit of almost 77m euros last year, according to the Polish News Bulletin.
Poste Italiane's CEO Massimo Sarmi has made another public plea in favour of floating the post.
Switzerland's trade union Kommunikation has accepted the redundancy scheme negotiated with the post in connection with the YMAGO restructuring project.
Two brands and one company determined to become Number One among intelligent logistics companies by 2010. This is Finland Post Cooperations definition of its goals, contained in the annual results report for 2006
TAT Express, the troubled subsidiary of France's La Poste, is the new co- operation partner of express operator Trans-o-flex.
Pos Malaysia Bhd wants to keep its stake in CEP operator Transmile Group Bhd.
E-commerce is becoming increasingly important for international post companies. This was the message from UPU to around 30 electronic services experts gathered for a workshop last week.

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.)

B2B has reported that "Despite the growing shift of marketing dollars to online vehicles, ad revenue and ad pages for business publications held steady in 2006. Ad revenue was up 0.61% from 2005, while ad pages rose 0.68%, according to a report released last week by American Business Media’s Business Information Network."

The Guardian has reported that "The postal regulator launched a withering attack on Royal Mail's management yesterday after the state-owned company said it should be given much more freedom to raise stamp prices and cut back services. Postcomm said Royal Mail was blaming the regulatory structure as a "smokescreen" for its own lack of progress in tackling high labour costs and made clear it would have little sympathy for a price rise of 6p for first and second class stamps. Royal Mail said it needed the price rises to fight private-sector competition." See also the Belfast Telegraph and The Independent.

From PR Newswire: "comScore Networks, a leader in measuring the digital age, today released the results of a study analyzing usage of online bill payment services at leading banks. Bank bill pay is defined as paying a bill online from a checking, savings, or money market account using the functionality in the bill pay portion of the bank's Web site and where the recipient of the money is not the bank itself."

AMEInfo has reported that:

As the Corvallis Gazette-Times has asked: "What does it say that the U.S. Postal Service actually rolled out its idea for a “forever” stamp in May 2006, and it’s only now being delivered as news? (See www.usps.com/communications/news/ press/2006/pr06_031.htm). And what does it say that people are heralding this development as a big convenience and savings to your average Joe consumer? Perhaps it’s proof that the Postal Service is hoping consumers buy their sizzle and don’t notice the missing steak. The real news is that the Postal Service has proposed the second postal rate hike in 14 months. The last one went into effect in January 2006. This one could go into effect in May."

The Star News Group has reported that "Australia Post had denied allegations they are not keeping their promise to provide full postal services at the Healesville Walk PostShop. Australia Post state communication manager Janice Macini said that “anything at all to do with mail is still available there. The only things they don’t have are as many non-core products such as greeting cards which are available at other outlets.”

As ThisIsMoney noted, "We don't often hear regulators opening public fire on their clients. But the Royal Mail's call for a further 6p rise in the price of a stamp has Postcomm chairman Sir Nigel Stapleton in a fury. He notes that since single delivery in 2004 every efficiency initiative has been absorbed 'by higher wage rates or increased pension costs'. The leadership of Allan Leighton (who wants out) and chief executive Adam Crozier has failed to bring its costs under control. It has raised prices by 4% but has only made 1% extra revenue, hardly a winning formula. This, Stapleton argues, is a 'key threat' to universal service.

According to one DM News writer, "Yes, the proposed rate hike will make postage more expensive. However, focusing on postage – a relatively small part of the spending equation – rather than inefficiencies that span the entire mail stream reminds me of the joke about the person who orders a hot fudge sundae and asks the waiter to hold the cherry, because he’s on a diet. Progressive companies have already begun to implement ways to improve their mail stream management practices, to make mail communications less costly and more effective than before and help reduce the impact of postage increases in the process." [Yeah, but even more progressive companies are considering seriously getting OUT of the mail.]

According to Business First, "A newly formed labor organization seeking to dethrone the International Brotherhood of Teamsters as representatives of package handlers and drivers at United Parcel Service Inc. is causing a stir at UPS facilities across the United States. Representatives of the Association of Parcel Workers of America were in Louisville June 4 to promote the organization to Louisville's UPS workers. It was the third such meeting the group has held in Louisville, said APWA president Van Skillman, a tractor-trailer driver for UPS in Greensboro, N.C."

The Associated Press has reported that "Like many companies across industries, FedEx Corp. is capping the traditional pension plan offered for most of its employees. Instead it will offer a cash balance plan, which lets workers take benefits with them if they leave the company."

Check out PostInsight for "A Review of Price Elasticity Models for Postal Products" (Alan Robinson) and"The Influence of Government Laws and Regulations on Mail Volumes" (Anna Owsiany). Check also Financing Postal Universal Service: An Initiative to Sustain the Debate in the European Parliament. Funding Universal Service Obligations in the Postal Sector

According to The Intelligencer, "Postal Service officials shouldn’t put their stamp of approval on a sleazy strategy recommended by a special commission that has proposed several rate increases. It involves a so-called “forever stamp” that, in our opinion, is an attempt to foist an expensive “bargain” off on consumers."

The Financial Times has reported that "The Royal Mail became embroiled in a row with its regulator on Tuesday, after the postal operator was accused of “using an attack” on price controls as a “smokescreen” for its own failure to control costs. Postcomm reacted furiously to Royal Mail’s call for a radical relaxation of regulatory controls, including an end to the cross-subsidisation by business users of stamped mail, on which the operator loses 6p an item. The regulator rejected Royal Mail’s argument that price controls were making it impossible for it to compete in the UK’s liberalised market and hence threatening its ability to fund the legal “universal service obligation” to deliver to every address in the UK."

Aspen Times has reported that "A proposal to allow Coloradans to bar junk mail from their mailboxes is headed for the shredder. Facing opposition from businesses, unions and postal workers, state Rep. Sara Gagliardi said Tuesday she planned to ask that her bill be killed and that all parties work together after the session ends to try to reach a compromise. “My main concern is jobs. I’m concerned about jobs for postal workers, small businesses and print shops,” said Gagliardi, a nurse and member of the Service Employees International Union." See also CBS4Denver.

The St. Louis Business Journal has reported that "After nearly a month of speculation about the identity of its new, large customer, Talx Corp. confirmed Tuesday that it signed a contract to provide employment verification services to the U.S. Postal Service."

AllAfrica.com has reported that "The Cameroon Postal Service (CAMPOST) still owes its clients CFA 56 billion. The said sum was announced yesterday by the Minister of the Economy and Finance, Polycarpe Ahah Abah, at a press conference which followed the official handing over of the management of the parastatal to a Canadian technical entity, Tecsult International. According to the terms of contract binding the government and Tecsult, the financial and postal departments of CAMPOST are expected to be effectively revamped within two years, giving priority to the payment of arrears owed clients and the rapid modernisation of the postal and affiliated services."

Gulf News has reported that "Emirates Post has commissioned two aircraft to begin an international courier service by mid-March, a top official said. It is expanding into the air courier business and will begin operations next month, Abdullah Ebrahim Al Daboos, director-general of Emirates Post, told delegates at a logistics conference in Dubai yesterday. The postal service, which is also planning an initial public offering, will procure a third plane in the next six months to complete its overall plan of a full fleet of planes in the next five years."

Postal News for February 27, 2007

According to one Lexington Institute writer, it may be a "good time to take the post office private."

According to Media Daily News, "magazines and other periodicals distributed via mail are facing higher costs and potentially thinner margins as a result of new postal rate increases, but the hike is not nearly as bad as some publisher industry executives might have feared. "As postal rate cases go, this has been a tough one, with even more varying points of view than in recent cases," Gordon Hughes, president-CEO of American Business Media, said Monday in a statement released by the trade association following the Postal Regulatory Commission's decision to boost rates as much as 18.3%."

If you had to judge solely on what has been published in the general press regarding the impact of the Postal Service's proposal for and the Postal Regulatory Commission's recommendations regarding new rates, you'd have to conclude that the creation of "the Forever stamp" has been the cat's meow. It's been a hoot to see how editors across the nation have sought to characterize this news, but this headline absolutely takes the cake: "A Stamp As Durable As Diamonds." Puh-lease! Gimme a break!

The Financial Times has reported that "Royal Mail is to call for a 6p rise in first and second class stamp prices under a radical relaxation of regulatory controls the state-owned postal operator will argue is necessary to its survival. Businesses would also lose the legal right to have franked mail delivered to every address in the UK according to the proposals, which Royal Mail will this week put to Postcomm, its regulator. Royal Mail wants this “universal service obligation” (USO) to apply to stamped mail only. The operator is also calling for an end to all regulatory controls on bulk business mail, such as lucrative junk mailings." See also Forbes.

The New York Post has reported that "Cops have disconnected an identity-theft ring that brazenly snagged $300,000 worth of popular and pricey Sidekick cellphones, and then dispatched them around Brooklyn via crooked UPS drivers, The Post has learned. The scam unraveled after United Parcel Service noticed a large number of the phones - made famous when an Internet hacker got into Paris Hilton's and stole her stored celebrity numbers - were all tracked back to the same driver's route, authorities said."

Multichannel Merchant has reported that:

The Times has reported that "Royal Mail has left it too late to become an international business, the chief executive of its main rival said yesterday. Peter Bakker, head of TNT, the Dutch postal business, said that it would be difficult for Royal Mail to catch up after years of expansion by other operators such as his own company, Fed-Ex and DHL. “It is probably too late for them now. If you went back to 1985, everyone would have said that Royal Mail was the best mail business. The Government should have allowed privatisation then,” he said."

According to The Guardian, "The biggest private post competitor to the Royal Mail is ready to roll out a door-to-door letter delivery system in cities across the UK, bringing staff in an orange uniform shoulder to shoulder with postmen and women dressed in the familiar blue and red. TNT of the Netherlands said it would take a final decision over the next couple of months when it had gained final data from its trials in Glasgow and Manchester but was now "hopeful" that it would proceed with its plans for the biggest ever challenge to Royal Mail's position."

The American Postal Workers Union has told its members that "The APWU — along with individual customers and small businesses — achieved a significant victory Feb. 26, when the Postal Regulatory Commission announced its recommended decision on a USPS request to increase rates: The PRC rejected the Postal Service’s proposed rate structure, and instead endorsed an APWU suggestion to increase postage for individual first-class letters to only 41 cents, instead of 42 cents as the Postal Service requested."

Postal News for February 26, 2007

PostCom Members!! The latest issue of the PostCom Bulletin is available online. This one provides a summary of the PRC's recommended decision and charts that show the percentage rate increases recommended by the Postal Regulatory Commission for key classes, subclasses, and services. PLEASE NOTE THAT AS OF MARCH 1 THE NAME AND PASSWORD NEEDED TO GAIN ACCESS TO THE RESERVED AREAS ON THIS SITE WILL CHANGE. ACCESS WILL BE PROVIDED TO MEMBERS WHOSE 2007 DUES HAVE BEEN PAID.

The Postal Regulatory Commission has issued its recommended decision (Vol. 1 and Vol. 2) regarding PRC Docket No. R2006-1. The PRC has approved the Postal Service's request for the creation of a "forever stamp." The PRC recommended rates that are either equal to or below those requested by the USPS, while still providing the Postal Service with sufficient revenue to meet all its needs. The PRC has recommended a 2 cents rather than 3 cents increase in the price of a First-Class stamp. The new First-Class Mail stamp will be 41 cents. The Commission adopts the Postal Service's proposal for Standard Mail shape-based rates.

The PRC's press book is available on this site.
The summary of the Postal Regulatory Commission's R2006 rate decision has been posted on this site.
Also posted on this site are some key quotes from the PRC's recommended decision.

Here are the rate charts as they appear in the PRC's recommended decision.

PostCom members!! Here are some charts that show the percentage rate increases recommended by the Postal Regulatory Commission for key classes, subclasses, and services.

To compare these recommended rates with those proposed by the Postal Service, please refer to the charts posted elsewhere on this site.

ElectricNews.net has reported that "SmartCentric is to upgrade the software of An Post's PostPoint service which allows consumers to make electronic payments in local shops."

The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette has reported that "Bank of America this month announced that beginning in March customers who have cellular Internet access can use their phones to pay bills, transfer funds, review account balances and perform other online banking chores. The bank will join Wachovia as the two major financial institutions offering online banking via cell phone. Such services would augment the growing popularity of Internet banking, which is used by an estimated 42 million households nationwide. Bank of America’s free service will be launched next month in Tennessee, then rolled out nationwide later this year."

Al Bawaba has reported that "Continuing its efforts to offer high quality services to customers, Empost, the UAE’s national courier company announced the launch of its Cargo and Logistics service offering air, land and sea freight operations through the Logistics division of Empost. This service will enable Empost to expand into a higher degree of customer services and will surely improve the level of proficiency."

According to Business Week, "UPS's innovation is an example of how technology can help companies capture institutional knowledge about their customers. Before, when a truck loader or driver walked out the door, the package- loading techniques or route tips they'd developed over the years usually walked out with them. Now that knowledge is accessible in a central system. That eases the burden on substitute drivers and shortens the training time for new ones, lessening the chances of a lapse in customer service. There's no question the new system has enabled UPS to run its routes more efficiently. In November alone the company's drivers logged 3 million fewer miles than they did the year before."

As Australian IT has noted, "Australia Post has strictly mandated delivery timetables but, until last year, the way letters and parcels passed through most of its vast network was all but invisible. To solve the problem the postal service turned to radio frequency identification (RFID), a technology it had worked with on international mail runs, Australia Post network services performance manager Alan Smith says. "We were looking at our existing mail monitoring methodology and how that had gone over the years and, as part of our involvement in the International Post Corporation, we had worked with RFID," Smith says. "We saw the opportunity to apply that to our domestic mail services."

The Warsaw Business Journal has reported that "TP is one of the first big customers of Polish Post (PP) to defy the latter's monopoly by placing a growing number of orders with one of its emerging rivals, Kraków-based InPost. Although PP will retain a legal monopoly of the zł.2.5-3 billion market for letters of up to 50g until the end of next year, a number of competitors encroach on its business by using disproportionately weighty envelopes."

The Communications Workers Union (CWU) has reported to its members that "A two year campaign by the Communication Workers Union for better protection of Postal Delivery staff has resulted in the agreed introduction of a new "Walk Safe" anti-violence and assaults Policy and procedures to deal with the growing problem of violence and assaults on Mail delivery staff. This is the first ever such Policy in the UK Mail service."

From PR Web: "Omniplanar, Inc. announced today that it is launching a new bar code image decoding software engine, Volo™ designed specifically for the needs of the Document Processing and Enterprise Content Management (ECM) industries. Volo instantly auto-discriminates between most popular bar code symbologies, including traditional linear (1D), stacked, matrix (2D) and postal bar codes. For the full set of bar code symbologies supported visit http://www.omniplanar.com/volo.php.

According to Forbes, "Deutsche Post World Net AG's rivals have warned the government against extending the incumbent postal service's mail delivery monopoly beyond 2008."

The National Association of Major Mail Users (NAMMU) has told its members that "The NAMMU Canadian Mailers on-site meeting with the United States Postal Service (USPS) in Buffalo, New York, on March 6, will be hosted by Ms. Kimberly Peters, District Manager. Canadian mailers are appreciative of this positive response to their request for a meeting to discuss the business impact of USPS data access restrictions planned for August 2007. Jim Wiseman, Transcontinental (RBW-Owen Sound), has been instrumental in setting up this session and proposing the agenda to be covered. Discussion will also include address correction proposed changes beyond 2007, providing an opportunity for feedback on directional thinking. Registration is closed, however, interested NAMMU members may obtain highlights from this session by contacting: executive@nammu.org."

Transport Intelligence has reported that "The new slimmed down TNT Group has released its first annual set of results since selling its Logistics division, showing increases in revenues and profits. Overall these are a strong set of figures from a business that has recovered its poise after several difficult years." See also DutchNews.

According to the Belfast Telegraph, "A Europe-wide enforcement network is being set up to stamp out phoney email and postal promises which con the vulnerable into parting with money for non-existent benefits."

The Hindu has reported that "Postal employees at the three-day biennial divisional conference of the National Federation of Postal Employees that was inaugurated in the city on Sunday vowed to oppose any attempt to privatise postal department."

Postal News for February 25, 2007

Joplin Daily has noted that "a 1977 graduate of the former Joplin Parkwood High School, who spent the past 21 years working in a variety of congressional staff and federal administrative jobs in Washington, was recently appointed head of the commission that oversees the delivery of the U.S. Mail. On Monday, the Postal Regulatory Commission, chaired by Joplin native Dan G. Blair, will make a recommendation on whether to raise the price of a first-class stamp, as well as other services offered by the U.S. Postal Service, and grant all or part of the Postal Service's requested $78 billion in new revenue." The Joplin Daily also has an audio interview with Chairman Blair posted on its site.

The San Francisco Chronicle has reported that "International courier UPS receives an average of more than one San Francisco parking ticket every hour, giving the company the unenviable distinction of being the city's No. 1 parking violator. Last year, United Parcel Service paid $673,334 in fines for 11,788 tickets -- an average of one ticket every 45 minutes throughout the year."

The Independent has reported that "The Royal Mail, which earlier this month revealed an 86 per cent plunge in profits, is spending hundreds of thousands of pounds installing television screens in every delivery and sorting office in the country. Management will use the screens to convey information and updates on the company's performance to staff, including speeches by chief executive Adam Crozier and chairman Allan Leighton - prompting wags inside the state-controlled postal group to dub it "Allan Leighton Direct" and to compare it to George Orwell's Big Brother."

According to the Harrow Times, "staff at a Harrow Post Office are protesting against what they describe as cramped and unsafe working conditions."

NewIndPress has reported that "Postal employees staged a dharna here on Friday protesting the reported move of the authorities to merge divisions, close down offices and outsource postal functions. The agitating employees threatened to launch an indefinite strike in March if the decisions were implemented by the authorities."

 

Postal News for February 24, 2007

PostCom Members!!...The latest issue of the PostCom Bulletin is available online. In this issue:

Are you still not a PostCom member? Do you actually realize you are missing postal information that is vital to your business? Find out more about joining PostCom now!

PostCom Members!!...The latest issue of PostCom's PostOps Update has been posted on this site. In this issue:

Are you still not a PostCom member? Do you actually realize you are missing postal information that is vital to your business? Find out more about joining PostCom now!

From Business Portal 24: "Following the demands of the users, the worldwide address service (service d'adresse mondial, SAM) adds support for the two special postal services "Registered item" and "Airmail". The worldwide address service is a convenient way to print out a postal address, especially addresses written in a language not using Latin letters, such as Japanese or Russian."

KXAN-TV has reported that "Spurred on by angry consumers, legislators in several states have filed bills that would drastically cut back on junk mail. Colorado consumer Linda Rubright says, "We have a do-not-call registry that's wildly successful. Why couldn't we have a do-not-junk-mail registry that would serve the same purpose?" As you can imagine, direct-mail companies have an answer to that question."

Japan Post Corp. said Friday it will be able to reprogram its information system in time for the privatization of postal services, wiping out concerns that the 10-year process may be delayed from its scheduled launch in October, the Kyodo news service reported.

Postal News for February 23, 2007

The Tecumseh Herald has said that "the Post Office wants you to look out for identity theft."

Les Echos has reported that "La Poste, the French postal service operator, has offered employees in France a 0.6 per cent pay increase in May, followed by a 0.9 per cent increase in July. It has also announced an increase by 2.18 per cent or 40 euros in the bonus paid annually to all staff."

In a letter to U.S. Postal Service General Counsel Mary Ann Gibbons, Association for Postal Commerce General Counsel Ian Volner wrote:

As I am sure you are aware, there is a great deal of concern in the mailing community about the recent – and escalating – state legislative initiatives to pass Do Not Mail legislation. A coalition has been formed to address this issue. While there are tactical and political issues, there is also a fundamental constitutional issue. On behalf of PostCom, I am writing to set forth our views on the constitutional question which should be at least as important to the Postal Service as it is to mailers. In brief, it is our opinion that these statutes would be unconstitutional, and we urge the Postal Service to help us make this argument to the states....

There is no doubt that Do Not Mail statutes have the potential to drastically reduce the volume of mail across a number of classes carried by the Postal service....Laws allowing postal customers to "opt-out" of the delivery of unsolicited mail could make it impossible for the Postal Service to achieve self-sufficiency....Essentially, state Do Not Mail statutes would make it impossible for the Postal Service to operate as currently envisioned by Congress....

Because of the extent of the financial burden these laws would impose on the Postal Service, Do Not Mail laws would violate the Constitution's Supremacy Clause....

While we believe that these Constitutional arguments are sound, state Do Not Mail laws will nevertheless be enforced until challenged in court. The coalition, of which PostCom is a participant, is therefore seeking to prevent these laws from being enacted. We believe that the Postal Service's voice would be an important ally in this battle. We ask that you instruct the Law Department to assist us in this endeavor. 

The Guardian has reported that "The privateers in Britain's postal industry are no doubt cock-a-hoop that the Mail Competition Forum has persuaded the European commission to investigate the government-backed finance package for Royal Mail, writes industrial editor Mark Milner. If the package is blocked on the grounds that it constitutes state aid, rather than commercial support from the company's only shareholder, Royal Mail's modernisation plans will be significantly weakened."

UPS and Airbus have signed an agreement yesterday that sets out a timetable for deciding the status of UPS's order for the freighter version of the A380. The agreement specifies changed delivery dates for the A380F and provides for possible termination of the original purchase agreement by either party later in 2007.

Graphic Ghana has reported that "Ghana Postal Company Ltd yesterday launched its same day delivery services for Accra, Tema and six regional capitals as a means of further improving its services to the public."

Reuters has reported that "Postal services firm Pos Malaysia and Services on Friday named Idrose Mohamed as its new managing director."

The Globe and Mail has reported that "Canada Post says it will cost more than $500-million to carry out the Conservative government's order to fully protect rural mail delivery. It's a complex project that will involve assessing the needs of about 835,000 customers over a period of more than five years, said post office spokesman John Caines. "This is going to be a huge cost," he told The Canadian Press. In addition, Canada Post will find $30-million over two years to maintain a fund that subsidizes postage for domestic magazines."

FijiLive has reported that "Post Fiji outlets across the country have begun selling Pacific Blue flights to and from Fiji from today giving locals easier access to the airline's fares."

In a letter written to "Our Friends at the Alliance," U.S. Postal Service chief financial office Glen Walker wrote:

Your special report on February 15 regarding the Postal Service press release on our first quarter financial results was certainly cleverly written and the many home spun idioms sprinkled throughout the article were entertaining. But the suggestion that our release was "singing the blues" is simply not borne out by the facts....These are not "dancing numbers" manufactured for some nefarious purpose....Boring as it may be, we have to deal with reality. We owe it to our stakeholders to fairly present the financial position of the Postal Service, and we will continue to do so.

According to DM News, "The diligence the U.S. Postal Service is taking to interpret the new postal law and communicate its effects to its customers became clear at the quarterly meeting of the Mailers' Technical Advisory Committee. Linda Kingsley, the new vice president of strategy and transition at USPS, announced that the agency is working closely on the bill and has published a new Web page at www.usps.com/postallaw. It will give visitors updates on any changes the agency has made to the new law."

The Postal Regulatory Commission has received a request of the United States Postal Service for a recommended decision to establish classifications and fees for premium stamped stationery and premium stamped cards (Docket No. MC2006-7).

As PC Magazine has noted, "All of the hype surrounding new communication technologies like podcasting may make you wonder why you bother paying attention. But like blogging, podcasting is a relatively easy way to increase consumer awareness and create an open dialogue between your customer and your brand, ultimately creating loyalty....Podcasting can be an effective, and cost-efficient, way for your small business to deliver messages."

According to Blackberry Blast, you can keep track of your packages with TrakPak! TrakPak allows you to track packages right on your BlackBerry, from four major shippers: UPS, USPS, FedEx, and DHL. Simply enter your tracking number, select the shipper and away you go. TrakPak will lookup the tracking information and display it on your screen.

Postal News for February 22, 2007

At its Mailers Technical Advisory Committee meeting, the USPS gave an update on its Flats Sequencing System (FSS) initiative. Rosa Fulton, USPS FSS Exec. Director, reported that the USPS currently plans to begin its Phase 1 deployment of FSS in September 2008. The USPS' presentation provides a list of the USPS facilities that currently are slated to receive FSS machines during the Phase 1 deployment (which the USPS reported will run from Sept 2008 until Sept 2010). A full recap of the USPS' presentation will be provided to PostCom members in the next issue of Post Ops Update to be distributed tomorrow.

Monday's the day!! The Postal Regulatory Commission will announce its Recommended Decision to the Board of Governors of the U.S. Postal Service at 11 AM, Monday, February 26, 2007 in its Hearing Room located at 901 New York Avenue, NW, 2nd Floor, West Tower, Washington DC.

The presentation given by USPS chief financial officer Glen Walker has been posted on this site.

From Business Objects: "Are you ready to face what is perhaps the most complicated rate case in over five years? Do you realize that the shape of your mail piece is now more crucial than ever in order to achieve postage discounts? And are you aware that in addition to a rate increase, we are going to face the most significant changes to address quality requirements? Despite passage of the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act, the USPS is still moving forward with a rate increase—targeted for May 6, 2007. Join Gene Del Polito, Ph.D., president of the Association for Postal Commerce, and Chris Lien, Business Objects commercial mail market director, as they discuss this most significant rate increase of the new millennium. Learn about the impact these changes will have on your postage, your customers, and your bottom line. REGISTER NOW."

The Associated Press has reported that "German postal company Deutsche Post AG, the parent of express shipper DHL, said Thursday that full-year net income fell 14 percent after the company reduced its stake in Postbank, cutting the amount of income it receives from the business."

From eMediaWire: "The Remote Control Mail service gives people a way to access their postal mail from anywhere in the world - at any time - via email. It's changing the way people recieve their postal mail, much like mobile phones did for telephone calls. The company has just closed a $2.84M convertible note financing round. Keiretsu Forum Angels provided majority of funding."

As DM News has noted, "The Direct Mail Coalition is continuing its fight to stop states from adopting legislation that would tax postage by claiming it does not meet contract law principles. States may tax postage as a result of an optional provision in the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement, which lists postage as a delivery charge. Created by the Streamlined Sales Tax Project, the agreement took effect Nov. 1. It lets remote sellers collect taxes on sales to people in member states that occur via the Internet, telephone or catalog. DMC co-founder Melanie Hill, a sales tax expert with Dow Lohnes Price Tax Consulting Group, Greenville, SC, said the taxation of postage purchased in this fashion ignores contract law and Uniform Commercial Code principles." [PostCom is a member of this coalition.]

According to Denmark.dk, "E-mail's pokey cousin - the old fashioned letter - is still most people's preferred way to receive important information." See also the Copenhagen Post.

The Associated Press has reported that "EU regulators said they would investigate how Britain funds its postal service, Royal Mail PLC, to check if the government offered loans on favorable terms." See also Sky News and The Times.

In the latest version of USPSNewsLink, PMG Jack Potter told his employees that "Under the new law, we all have to start thinking of the Postal Service as a business. That's because we won't be operating under a "break-even" requirement any more. Just as a private-sector business can make a profit, the Postal Service is now able and encouraged to retain earnings ? a real incentive to keep our own costs below inflation."

DM News has reported that "The buzz at the quarterly Mailers' Technical Advisory Committee meeting yesterday at postal headquarters was a surprising announcement by Postmaster General John E. Potter: The agency will expand its Move Update rules to include advertising mail and change the frequency of the program. Under current rules for Move Update, which is designed to reduce undeliverable-as-addressed mail, First-Class mailers can receive automation or presort rates when they update addresses every 180 days using the Address Change Service, NCOALink or another USPS-approved service. Now the program will be expanded. "We are going to put out a Federal Register notice and move the requirement to three months rather than six months, and we are going to do it for advertising mail as well," Mr. Potter said. He said the agency would give mailers 180 days to implement the new rules after they are finalized via the Federal Register."

The Financial Express has reported that "Encouraged by the proposed Rs 4,000-crore technological revamp of the Indian postal department, IDBI Capital Market Services (IDBI Caps), the broking arm of the IDBI Ltd, has pitched in for taping the department's 54,000 branches for offering online stock broking services."

MAILCOM Update: The 27th Annual Conference & Exhibition, May 8-11, 2007, Atlantic City Convention Center. Register By March 9 And Save $80! 

 


Postal News for February 21, 2007

CEP News (Courier-Express-Postal), published by the MRU Consultancy, has reported that:

Increasing mail and parcel volumes brought Swedens Posten AB a consi- derable turnover rise in 2006.
Last year, the Finnish post achieved a 15% turnover growth to 1.55bn euros and saw its operating profit drop by 9% to 89m euros. Last week, Suomen Posti Oy confirmed a slump in operating result due to higher mail delivery costs and a drop in returns from information logistics.
Norway's Posten AS is currently struggling to meet EU mail service quality standards.
Postal paradox in Italy: Poste Italiane's CEO Massimo Sarmi is one of very few advocates of market liberalisation, according to media reports. Earlier this month, Mr Sarmi told the Italian parliament that the post was prepared for the 2009 market liberalisation.
Sweden's Svensk Kassaservice could be wound up next summer. The Swedish post would thus cast off its loss-making payment service.
Switzerland's official price surveillance has authorised an increase in paying- in fees at post office counters. The authority deems the 50% increase from 60 to 90 centimes as not improper. Due to the decrease in payments made at post office counters, the post was losing between 12 and 22 centimes with each transaction.
Hungary's Magyar Posta Zrt. plans to close 103 post offices this year. Another 1,000 branches are due to be sold or outsourced during 2008.
A survey commissioned by the post companies of France, Belgium, Luxem- bourg, Italy, Spain, Greece, Poland, Hungary and Cyprus - all of whom are oppo- sed to the 2009 market opening - highlights the importance of a letter monopoly for the quality of the universal service. Carried out by British business consultancy firm Oxera, the survey concludes that the monopoly ensures a better universal service.
60,000 GBP or approx. 91,000 euros is the award offered to British sub- postmasters who are prepared to wind up their business. This proposal by Royal Mail has been put to the government for decision by March.
Following a trial period, the Spanish post has now equipped 2,000 postmen throughout the country with PDA computers.
A person buying 1,000 euros worth of TNT shares at the beginning of 2006 enjoyed a 26.3% yield. The share price alone went up by over 24% in 2006. The situation was very different with UPS: the 1.8% yield was only acceptable to hardened investors, while shares in FedEx (5.4%) and Deutsche Post (15.2%) were likely to put a smile on their owners face.
Belgian operator Kiala (2005 turnover: 20.6m euros), which aims to develop a European network of parcel collection points, managed to get out of the red in 2006.
DHL's Indian subsidiary Blue Dart is planning to set up an import service for the Indian subcontinent.
DHL employees at Zaventem in Belgium have accepted the redundancy scheme drawn up for when the head office moves to Leipzig in Germany in 2008.
DHL is heading for a considerable extension to its logistics capacity in Du- bai. The companys surface is set to expand from currently 85,000 to 300,000 square metres.
Deutsche Post AG wants to cast off its name and start operating as DHL AG as soon as possible. This rumour, which has circulated among specialists in matters post and stock exchange for some time, was recently fuelled further: at the Bonn post tower, the Deutsche Post headquarters, one of the traditional post horn logos is now being replaced by a DHL logo. A Deutsche Post representative said the logo replacement was paying tribute to the fact that DHL was the posts international flagship. Also, DHL CEO John Mullen had moved in and taken up position at the headquarters.

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.)

From the USPS DMM Advisory: "The Postal Regulatory Commission and the Postal Service invite you to a conference to discuss how the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act could increase the Postal Service's ability to meet customer needs. By focusing on the issues important to customers, the conference will continue the dialogue recently initiated by the Postal Regulatory Commission in its rulemaking process. Click here for agenda and registration.

The BBC has reported that "Rural areas of Cumbria will be among the hardest hit by planned closures of thousands of UK post offices, according to a Conservative MP. About 2,500 post office branches are to shut, after the government said it was cutting the level of public subsidy. Post office staff and users have called for consultations and reviews on the closures, mainly in rural communities."

Business Wire: "Group 1 Software, Inc., a Pitney Bowes Company (NYSE:PBI), today announced that its Data Quality Connector™ 2.10 has achieved "Certified for SAP NetWeaver®" status. The solution has been certified by SAP AG for the Business Address Service Duplicate and Error Tolerant Search (BC-BAS-DES 4.6) integration scenario, which ensures total data quality. This certified integration confirms that the Data Quality Connector meets requirements for connecting to the SAP NetWeaver platform.>

According to the Orange County Register, "the League of California Cities, is lobbying the Legislature for a pilot program that would let counties test all-mail elections."

The following reports have been posted on the U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General website today. If you have additional questions concerning a report, please contact Agapi Doulaveris at 703.248.2286.

Press Release: "DHL, the worldwide leader in international express and logistics services, selected the Quintiq real-time advanced planning & scheduling solution to improve its dispatch process and customer service for the European Express business."

Employee Benefits has reported that "DHL Express has launched a flexible benefits scheme for its 12,500 UK employees in the latest phase of its move to total reward."

The Polish News Bulletin has reported that "According to preliminary results, Poczta Polska (PP) made profits of ZL300 million and increased its income by 7 percent, despite a wave of postal worker strikes lasting several days, which disrupted the company's activity. The company is worried by the delay in privatisation and the approaching liberalisation, which will cause PP to lose its monopoly on delivering letters lighter than 50 grams."

NALC President William H. Young and union legislative leaders from all 50 states swept through offices of House and Senate members this week to bring them up to date on issues critical to letter carriers in the 110th Congress, especially the Postal Service's plans to outsource delivery work through expanded use of Contract Delivery Services. The NALC state chairs were in the nation's capital for the entire week for annual training sessions and a full schedule of lobbying their respective senators and representatives.

According to the Aurora Sentinel & Daily Sun, "Everyone hates junk mail. No one enjoys finding their mailbox stuffed with phony mortgage deals, pizza parlor menus from across town or coupons for velvet paintings. But trying to apply a phone solution to a postal problem is useless, unenforceable and probably illegal. And you don't have to answer the mail. Those are just some of the problems with House Bill 1303, the Colorado Mail Opt out List Act, introduced last week. It would be convenient for a newspaper to support a provision that creates havoc for a competitor, but it would be irresponsible."

According to Valleywag, "Kindly postal expert Bill Henderson has been downmoted from the COO slot at Netflix, taking on the likely specious title of "strategic advisor."

From PR Newswire: "The U.S. Postal Service will issue a souvenir sheet of two 84-cent international letter rate stamps to commemorate International Polar Year 2007-2008. The souvenir sheet will be available on Feb. 21 at http://www.usps.com/shop and through 1-800-STAMP-24, not at Post Offices."

According to Auckland.stuff.co.nz, "A smelly 'fart bomb' had postal staff and firefighters holding their breath today when it burst at a postal sorting centre on Auckland's North Shore. The fart bomb was a giveaway in an internet magazine but when other postal items were placed on top of the magazines being posted out, the sachet bomb burst and released its contents shortly after daybreak."

The Times of Oman has reported that "A meeting of AGCC states postal administration began here yesterday and will last for two days. The meeting discussed customs procedures conducted in each state to prepare a scenario for unified procedures that will meet the needs of the postal administration at the council states. Delegates reviewed opinion of post administration on the meetings held with authorities responsible for customs administration in their countries; customs procedures being adopted to inspect postal dispatches, parcels and their clearance in implementation of the postal monitoring committees' decision at the AGCC states during its 17th meeting held in Dubai in November last year."

According to the Christian Science Monitor, "According to Herodotus, in ancient times men and horses, stationed at intervals, delivered messages. I don't know if combustion caused delivery problems for this Persian pony express. But the US Postal Service might want to add a small disclaimer to the famously boastful and generally accurate description about its services adapted from the Greek historian: "Neither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor gloom of night – only fire – stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds."

Press Release: BCC Software, a BÖWE BELL + HOWELL company and a leading developer of highperformance solutions for professional mailers, announces the availability of the VisionSensor TM 2020 and 2030 barcode readers. The VisionSensor 2020 and 2030 can instantly scan and interpret all commonly used postal codes—including POSTNET™ and PLANET ® barcodes, and the new USPS ® Intelligent Mail ® (formerly 4State Customer) barcode—plus an array of 1D and 2D barcodes found in business and industry.

Postal News for February 20, 2007

According to Process & Control Today, "India's third-party logistics (3PL) market is all set to experience a period of explosive organic growth, going by independent market analyst Datamonitor's (DTM.L) latest research. The report, "India Logistics Outlook 2007," predicts high double-digit growth rates for both outsourced and contract logistics in India. With India's gross domestic profit (GDP) growing at over 9% per year and the manufacturing sector enjoying double digit growth rates, the Indian logistics industry is at an inflection point, and is expected to reach a market size of over $125 billion in year 2010."

The Irish Times has reported that "An Post has offered to pay 12 million to its 1,300 postmasters as part of a move to end a long-running stand-off with the Irish Postmasters' Union (IPU) over pay and the future of the post office network." See also the Irish Independent.

The Chicago Tribune has reported that "Cook County Assistant State's Atty. John A. Reich said a drug-sniffing dog spotted the suspicious cardboard box Thursday at a Chicago-area United Parcel Service facility. Company officials contacted police, who opened the package and discovered the marijuana. Authorities resealed the package and an undercover police officer delivered it to Lloyd Friday afternoon, according to court records. "The defendant did accept the package, sign for it and open it," Reich said. Lloyd was arrested a few blocks from his home shortly after the box was delivered."

From eMediaWire: "Webplus, Inc., a leading provider of small business solutions, announced today that it's Shipping Sidekick (www.shippingsidekick.com) shipping rate comparison website has joined the eBay Developers Program to further develop Shipping Sidekick for use by eBay sellers."

Tech2 has reported that "innINDIA.com, an India-centric portal, has launched an Indian Postal Code Search Service, with the help of the web services offered by Department of Posts, Government of India."

What Every Mailer Must Know to Prepare for the USPS Rate Case Date: Tuesday, February 20th, 2007 Time: 2:00 EST REGISTER!

According to the Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier, "That small square on the upper right-hand corner of an envelope might be a pair of smiling sweethearts, a posing pet, a classic car or business logo. This trend has the blessing of the U.S. Postal Service. Three vendors --- Stamps.com, Zazzle.com and Endicia.com --- are contracted by the Postal Service to print customized postage for first class, priority and Express Mail. Cost ranges from 24 cents to $4.05, according to Nick Barranca, vice president of Postal Service product development."

The Kansas City Star has reported that "Clay County authorities have charged a 24-year-old man with possession with intent to distribute more than five grams of marijuana. Postal authorities alerted police that they were to deliver two packages — one 33 pounds and the other 19 pounds — to Francesco-Tomas Soltero of Phoenix at a hotel room in North Kansas City Friday. North Kansas City police went to the hotel with a police dog that indicated that the packages held an illegal substance. The Clay County Drug Task Force obtained a search warrant and found marijuana."

From CCNMatthews: "The Royal Mail's first stamp issue of 2007 was to celebrate the 1960's music phenomenon, The Beatles. To acknowledge their international impact, Canada Post will be selling two United Kingdom products at select Post Offices in late February. Offering Britain's newest stamps in Canada will allow the memorabilia market to join in the excitement of stamp collecting. Designed by Michael Johnson, the Beatles set features six era-defining album sleeves, brought together on six stamps. The titles are: With The Beatles, Help!, Revolver, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Let It Be and Abbey Road."

Caboodle.hu has reported that "The Hungarian Postal Service (Magyar Posta Zrt.) is planning to close 103 post offices before the end of the year, and sell another 1,000 in 2008. Magyar Posta Assistant CEO László Szivi said that offices will also be closed where the volume of traffic does not justify their existence. With the retreat of the company, a full liberalization of postal services can be expected by 2009. There are nearly 100 companies in Hungary registered to perform postal services, including several global firms, many of which are believed to be planning a further expansion of their operations once liberalization occurs."

UNI-Europa Postal stepped up its advocacy campaign on the proposal for a new postal directive in Brussels 7-8 February 2007 when UNI Postal's Head of Department, John Pedersen, met with a number of individual MEPs to opposition to the proposed revision of the postal directive, which would open the way to a full-liberalised European postal market by 2009. The Commission's proposal contains two objectives: Full Market Opening in 2009 and maintenance of the universal postal service (affordable access for everybody everywhere to quality postal services) and at uniform tariffs.

Transport Intelligence has reported that:

The CEO of DPWN, Klaus Zumwinkel, has been touring North Asia this week and outlining his company's investment plans for the region. Reports from Japan indicate that Klaus Zumwinkel has stated that DHL will invest Y1.1bn ($100m/€66m) at its facilities in Kansai International Airport in Osaka and Central Japan International Airport near Nagoya. This is in addition to the already announced decision to establish a distribution hub in Ichikawa near Tokyo for the DHL Express business.
DHL Exel Supply Chain is constructing a new distribution centre for mail-order customers in Ludwigsau near Bad Hersfeld. The centre will deliver to customers in Germany and Europe starting summer 2007. Construction is expected to start at the beginning of February this year. The new distribution centre will be operated by DHL subsidiary GPL a mail-order logistics company handling bulky and transport-sensitive goods. GPL has belonged to the contract logistics division of DHL since 2005 and has been under the umbrella brand of DHL Exel Supply Chain since the beginning of the year.
Palletways Europe Ltd has acquired the Italian operation it licensed out in 2002. The development forms part of Palletways strategy to provide a dedicated and integrated pan-European network for the express delivery of small consignments of palletised freight and now means that the company controls all its networks in the UK and mainland Europe, which today comprise some 250 plus depots and 8 hub facilities, handling circa 20,000 pallets every day.

Postal News for February 19, 2007

The Government Accountability Office has published its latest report on the Postal Service, this one dealing with fuel. In it, in part, it said:

The U.S. Postal Service (the Service) is dependent on fuel to support its mail delivery and transportation networks, as well as to heat and operate the over 34,000 postal facilities it occupies....The Service's transportation and facility fuel costs have grown in recent years as fuel prices, particularly for gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel have increased....hile fuel costs have directly pressured its financial condition, increasing compensation and benefits were the primary driver of the $3.4 billion operating expense increase in fiscal year 2006. The Service absorbed fuel cost increases through cost containment efforts and increased revenues from the January 2006 rate increase, allowing it to achieve net income for the year. Nevertheless, the Service remains vulnerable to fuel price fluctuations, due in part to its purchasing process, which involves buying fuel as needed, often at retail locations. The Service is challenged to control fuel costs due to its expanding delivery network and inability to use surcharges....

Be sure to read "The Strange Story of Postal Reform" by Professor Murray Comarow.

As WABC-TV has reported, "His job was to deliver packages to waiting customers. But one man is accused of selling those packages right off the back of his delivery truck. And now, police believe there are several other UPS deliverymen involved in the same scheme."

British authorities early Monday arrested a suspect in connection with a series of parcel bombings across Britain that injured several people in recent weeks, police told CNN. The man was held in Cambridge, eastern England, in connection with seven attacks which targeted businesses linked to forensic science laboratories and traffic enforcement.

EUX.TV has reported that "French police raised a nuclear, radiological, bacteriological and chemical (NRBC) alert Monday at the Canadian embassy in Paris when a female employee became ill after accepting a postal object, police sources said.

According to the El Paso Times, "More than two weeks after nine tons of stolen U.S. mail was discovered at the home of a Juárez postal employee, not much has been done to assure El Pasoans that their mail to Juárez is safe. The mail 300 bags was found at the house of Juan Manuel Vargas Lopez, the Juárez postal employee entrusted to pick up local mail at the border and deliver it to Juárez recipients. Many envelopes were open and an unknown amount of money in cash, checks, money orders and U.S. Social Security benefits was missing."

Techworld has reported that "Prepaid credit cards for those without bank accounts and teens without self-control have been available in the United States for years. Now, Visa New Zealand, in cooperation with that country's postal service, is taking the concept to a new level that promises a measure of protection from online identity theft, but also the prospect of abuse by young people looking to access adult services, and criminals needing a cloak of anonymity."

According to the Jamaica Gleaner, "The Board of the Postal Corporation of Jamaica (Post Corp.) remains focused on its mandate to effect the transformation of Jamaica's postal service into a profitable, modern and efficient entity."

Siber News has reported that "Mail services between Jaffna peninsula and other parts of Sri Lanka are disrupted since January 14, according to residents in Jaffna. More than six hundred mailbags and 5537 bags of parcels including food items have been lying in the Trincomalee main post office for the past 30 days waiting to be transported to Jaffna by sea, postal sources said. See also TamilNet.

AMEInfo has reported that "The Sri Lankan Minister for Posts and Telecommunications, Mr. Rauff Hakeem, discussed potential areas of cooperation between the UAE and Sri Lanka in the postal field, while meeting a delegation of Emirates Post in Dubai."

Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung has reported that "DHL, the express delivery subsidiary of German postal service operator Deutsche Post, is planning to extend its logistics capacity in Dubai by more than 300,000 sq m during the next few years. DHL's logistics operations in the Arab emirate currently cover around 85,000 sq m. DHL already employs roughly 10,000 staff in the Middle East."

 

Postal News for February 18, 2007

As the Business Standard put it:"India Post gears up to revive courier biz."

Postal News for February 17, 2007

The Financial Times has reported that "The BRC endorsement follows BT's decision last month to award TNT Post a three-year £90m contract, the largest postal contract signed since postal services were deregulated in 2004. TNT also signed a £23m contract last month with Centrica, the energy supplier, to deliver 170m items of mail a year. The announcement will concern ministers already alarmed at the steady flow of business away from Royal Mail, which Alistair Darling, the trade and industry secretary, recently identified as "a matter of great concern". Mr Darling warned Royal Mail last month that "fundamental changes" were necessary if the group were to remain competitive and prevent further erosion of its former monopoly position."

According to the Toronto Sun, "While neither rain nor snow nor dark of night shall keep postal carriers from their appointed rounds, technology is threatening to make the postal service obsolete. In an era of BlackBerries, instant messaging, cellphones, video blogs, and electronic delivery of magazines and newspapers in various forms over the Internet (including Sun Media's Canoe website), getting a letter or a magazine in the mail these days seems almost quaint and old-fashioned. So it was strange in a way to read the report from the C.D. Howe Institute this week recommending that Canada Post be privatized. Canada Post is "anachronistic and incapable of responding to the worldwide changes that are transforming the postal sector," says the report. "Without reform, the postal service risks costly decline." Any good conservative in Canada would agree that it's well past time to end the public-sector monopoly on Canada Post. But it might also be well past time to privatize it, given the technological upheavals that are transforming modern society."

The Times Herald has reported that "Residents in a southside Port Huron neighborhood are asking the city to help them get their mail back. The Port Huron branch of the United States Post Office earlier this week stopped delivering mail to certain homes in the 1000 block of Division Street because of a Rottweiler at one of the homes. Postmaster Robert Wagenaar said the dog's owner has been notified several times to control the dog and keep it inside during mail-delivery hours. On Tuesday, Port Huron Animal Control Officer Dan Woodruff was called to the street, because the dog allegedly chased a mail carrier. Wagenaar said the dog has sat in the street and growled at postal workers several times. "This dog is a problem dog," Wagenaar said. "We have to feel satisfied that the danger has been eliminated (before mail is delivered again)." In response to the postal service's decision, several residents on the street have signed a petition and given it to Woodruff, asking the city for help controlling the dog." [How 'bout controlling the owner?]

Postal News for February 16, 2007

The latest issue of the PostCom Bulletin is available online. 

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Don't miss out at Marketing Day at the National Postal Forum Tuesday, March 27, 10:00am – 3:30pm At the Washington , DC Convention Center.

According to PostCom's Gene Del Polito writing for Catalog Success, "it's time to get yourself ready for the Postal Service's new addressing certification requirements."

The top honor in an international advertising competition is included in the half dozen awards recognizing outstanding creativity and promotional campaigns by the U.S. Postal Service.

From PR.com: "innINDIA.com has launched a "Indian Postal Code Search" Service with the help of the web service(s) offered by Department of Posts, Government of India. With this service (http://www.innindia.com/services) users may search from around 50,000 postal codes spread across India over 28 states and 7 union territories."

The Financial Times has reported that "The Bush administration is to increase pressure on Tokyo to ensure US companies do not lose out in the privatisation of Japan Post, the world's biggest financial institution, even as a senior Japanese official yesterday called US concerns "a misunderstanding".

From the Federal Register: "The Postal Service proposes new requirements for containers used for mailing adult chickens. Currently, we require all mailable adult fowl other than chickens to be mailed in containers approved by the manager of Mailing Standards. With this proposal, we intend to require adult chickens to be mailed in approved containers also. Comments on or before March 19, 2007."

WhatTheyThink has reported that "NAPL, the trade association for excellence in graphic communications management, is partnering once again with the Mailing & Fulfillment Service Association (MFSA), to present The Fulfillment Conference. Scheduled for April 25-28, 2007, in Louisville, KY, this year’s Conference will show attendees “How to Win the Race with Fulfillment Services” through a comprehensive program that includes sessions on all aspects of running a successful and profitable fulfillment operation."

The Denver Post, in an editorial, wrote that "A bill to create a "no junk mail" list that was introduced Monday in the Colorado legislature by Rep. Sara Gagliardi, D-Arvada, will appeal to many of us who have been inundated with direct-mail appeals for risky mortgages. But the measure is a needless restriction on a form of free speech guaranteed by the First Amendment, and it should be killed. Gagliardi cites the state's successful no-call list as a model for her effort to create a similar list that citizens could opt into to avoid commercial mailings. But unsolicited phone calls and a letter in your mailbox are worlds apart."

Tiscali Finance has reported that "TNT Post, the UK arm of Dutch mail group TNT NV , said on Friday it had formed a strategic partnership with the British Retail Consortium (BRC) to offer postal services to its members." See also The Scotsman.

Cayman News Net has reported that "The Cayman Islands Postal Service (CIPS), along with some companies, has made the process of finding postcodes much easier. ECay and the new Buzz telephone book have included postcodes in all addresses. Postcode locators can be found in the Caribbean Publishing telephone book and in all post offices."

Postal News for February 15, 2007

AllAfrica.com has reported that "stiff international competition is forcing Africa's postal service providers to reinvent themselves to remain relevant communication market players. Speaking at a nine-day cost accounting seminar that started on Tuesday at the Grand Imperial Hotel in Kampala featuring several countries, the Minister of State for Information and Communication Technology, Mr John Alintuma Nsambu, called on the African postal industry to be dynamic to accommodate challenges of market liberalisation, globalisation and technological advancement."

Hemscott has reported that "The Royal Mail's decision to close its final salary pension scheme to new entrants has drawn a furious reponse from unions and raised the spectre of strike action to oppose the move."

Mile High News has reported that "The Postal Service is against a no-junk-mail bill introduced recently to the Colorado General Assembly by Rep. Sara Gagliardi, D-Arvada. If it passes, a no-junk-mail list would be created in the state, and many companies — including the Postal Service — would be hurt by it, opponents say."

In its communication with its members and newsletter readers, the Alliance of Nonprofit Mailers wrote: "The Alliance is compelled to speak out on topics of significance to nonprofit mailers. Last Friday, February 9, the Postal Service issued a press release claiming they lost $2.7 billion in the first quarter of Fiscal Year 2007 and is on track to lose $5.2 billion by the end of the fiscal year. For an organization not known to be forthcoming with bad news, this claim of financial woe got our attention at the Alliance. After a careful examination of the facts, we came to the conclusion that this Postal dog won't hunt. This Postal dog can't compete with James, the Westminster Best in Show English Springer Spaniel."

The Washington Times has an interesting piece on postal collection boxes on display at the National Postal Museum. [These days the Museum may be the only place you can see 'em.]

In its latest report, the Institute for Research on the Economics of Taxation has asked: "Most private-sector businesses would be delighted to be able to count on a steady, moderate increase in customers year after year. The U.S. Postal Service, in contrast, complains that its rising customer base is a crushing financial burden. Can the Postal Service’s attitude – so different from that found in the private sector – be right?"

Yokwe has reported that "The Ministry of Finance, in response to problems within the Marshall Islands' post offices, has initiated corrective measures to mitigate "critical issues facing our Postal Service." Minister of Finance Brenson Wase detailed the restructuring in the following special to the Marshall Islands Journal and Yokwe Online: One of the urgent challenges for the Republic of the Marshall Island’s Postal Service has been to strengthen the internal management and financial controls. In order for the controls to function effectively and efficiently, we realized that we needed to have a system set up by professionals. In July 2006, a Memorandum of Agreement was initiated and signed between the Marshall Islands Postal Service and the Ministry of Finance."

Dow Jones has reported that "German postal services company Deutsche Post AG (DPW.XE) plans to invest more than $110 million in its Chinese express and logistics business in the next years, Chief Executive Klaus Zumwinkel said Wednesday in Beijing. With the investment, Deutsche Post's logistics unit DHL Worldwide Express Inc. wants to defend its market-leading position in China and is expecting strong growth, Zumwinkel said. As of now, DHL already invested nearly $1 billion in China and neighboring countries, more than half of investments in the Asian-Pacific region that total $1.7 billion."

Aftenposten has reported that "Post dated back to Dec. 8, 2006 can still be found in large piles at the central sorting office in Oslo's Skøyen district. Part of the problem is incomplete destination information. But the delay is also due to substitute carriers who don't know their routes, staffing problems and poor internal communication, newspaper VG reports. To fulfill their licensing obligations Posten must deliver 85 percent of first class post the day after it was sent, and according to their own statistics just 75 percent of this type of post is arriving on time."

MSN Money is quoting the Financial Times as reporting that "The Bush administration is set to increase pressure on Tokyo to ensure US companies do not lose out in the privatisation of Japan Post, the world's biggest financial institution."

From eMediaWire: "USPS Regulation changes in the Spring of 2007 will be transforming the mail preparation method once again. In 1996, Mail Classification Reform was implemented, with new categories and mail classes introduced to meet customers' needs and simplify postal operations. These categories described the type of communication, delivery speed and the extent of sorting. The cost structure for these various services encouraged mailers to prepare proper addresses, use barcodes and presort their mailpieces for faster processing and lower costs. Mailers who were running the most efficient mailing operation possible were able to save more on postage with worksharing discounts and smart addressing."

The Hindu has reported that "Come next festive season, you could most probably pick up your favourite greeting card from a neighbourhood post office and send them to near and dear, then and there. With formalities for a tie-up between the Department and Posts (DoP) and Archies Greetings and Gifts Ltd., progressing well, from next 'Friendship Day', falling on August 7, the facility could be introduced in post offices in Tamil Nadu including those in rural areas, R Shankar, Southern Regional Manager, Archies, said. "Once found successful, this could be replicated in other states," he said."

U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas) and a bipartisan coalition of 24 additional Senators today introduced legislation to extend the sale of the highly successful Breast Cancer Research Stamp for two additional years beyond the current expiration date of December 31, 2007. Since the stamp first went on sale in 1998, the U.S. Postal Service has sold more than 747 million stamps, raising $53.76 million for breast cancer research.

The U.S. Postal Service has published its revised standards for the implementation of new rules following R2006 on its website at http://www.usps.com/ratecase/UpdatedProposedStandardsforDomesticMailingServices.htm. These are in response to comments we received on previous versions.

The U.S. Postal Service has published a letter regarding the next round of CASS software updates.

Postal News for February 14, 2007

At its February meeting, the Board of Directors of the Association for Postal Commerce have elected the following as directors of the association:

CEP News (Courier-Express-Postal), published by the MRU Consultancy, has reported that:

According to news agency APA, international investment bank Morgan Stan- ley last week threw 1.1 million Osterreichische Post AG shares on the market.
Last Wednesday Post Danmark declared its withdrawal from the joint ven- ture Morgendistribution Danmark A/S, which was only founded last year.
"I hope that Parliament will ratify the basic principles proposed by the Commission." In an interview with the CEP News, Markus Ferber of German Christian- Democratic Union CSU and also European Parliament correspondent, referred to the vo- ting in the European Parliaments Transport Committee on 8 May and on 6 and 7 June in CEP NEWS - the only weekly information service dedicated to the express and postal industry plenum.
Nobody knows whether Deutsche Posts CEO Klaus Zumwinkel has ever heard of Griesheim, Petershagen or Herdecke. But that could soon change, as 3 out of 7 iq letternet GmbH partners hail from those three villages and iq letternet GmbH is determined to become one of Deutsche Posts most notable rivals. The company wants to achieve a 500m euros turnover by 2010, a representative told »Dow Jones Newswires« (13.02). iq letternet was set up by six so-called letter shops, which receive consignments from business customers as electronic files, print them out and them have them delivered.
Reduce costs, get closer to customers and venture into new business fields - this is how Deutsche Posts CEO Klaus Zumwinkel describes his companys defense strat- egy in the face of competition from private operators pushing into the market.
In China, Shandong Post is the first province post to separate its adminis- tration from the operating business. The step is seen as highly important in terms of separating China's state-owned posts administration and its operations.
Reportedly, Poste Italiane's website is one of the most popular websites among digital fraudsters. According to media reports, 8 website clones were found within one week, one of which was on a server in Germany trying to steal account informa- tion from Bancoposta customers ("phishing").
Last month, DHL was granted permission by the Italian Cartel Office to take over part of TNT AvriL A new subsidiary was founded under the name of DHL Automotive to deal with inbound logistics services for FIAT.
CTT Expresso managed a 5% increase in turnover to 79m euros last year. The CEP subsidiary of Portugals Correios de Portugal enjoyed a strong increase in international outbound mail.
Use your corner shop to collect and drop off parcels? This option is becoming increasingly popular with European post operators and CEP service providers, offering low overheads and staffing costs, an existing infrastructure and long opening hours in the interest of customers. Both Switzerlands Schweizerische Post and La Postes subsidiary Chronopost are now using this option.

 

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.)

The DM Bulletin has reported that "TNT Post, the UK postal service, has launched an advertising and mailing campaign with a text response and mobile download element."

The Daily News has reported that "Arrangements are being made to introduce new systems by the Postal Department to develop the Posts and Telecommunications sector. The Postal Department is to introduce national express mail, EMS, international express mail, post fax service, Fax money order service, retail post service, business mail and the telemail service under this programme. The national express mail system is expected to deliver mail and parcels within the country in 24 hours. The mail addressed within Colombo and suburbs will be delivered within two hours."

The Board of Directors of UPS announced the nomination of a new director to stand for election at the annual shareowners' meeting in May. The new candidate is Gary L. Crittenden, executive vice president and chief financial officer of the American Express Co. He assumed those positions in June 2000 and is a member of the American Express Global Leadership Team, the company's senior-most management group. Crittenden serves as a key advisor on strategic and financial matters worldwide as well as representing American Express to investors, lenders and rating agencies.

According to one Globe and Mail commentator, "In the case of Canada Post, privatizing the service might produce competition and improved service in high-volume urban markets. But the post office has a mandate to deliver the mail -- what there is left of it -- to everyone everywhere at the same cost. Any privatization of the service would lead to one of two results: Canada Post would be forced to service rural areas at public expense while private companies horned in on the profitable parts; or rural users would be forced to pay the full cost of delivering their mail."

According to Daily News & Analysis, "The Department of Posts will be launching its international money order service in March, which will enable money to be received at any place in the country from select countries within 48-72 hours."

Gulf Times has reported that "Q-POST has asked companies to adhere to government guidelines on sending notices to shareholders for their annual general assembly meetings. Director of operations of the postal corporation Sheikh Abdulaziz bin Mohamed al-Thani said yesterday that Law No. 5 of the Ministry of Trade and Economy, enacted in 2002, stipulated that companies must send their invitations to shareholders for annual general assembly meetings only by registered mail and not by ordinary post."

According to the Los Angeles Times, "The U.S. Postal Inspection Service is alerting financial firms of potential danger from a would-be letter bomber after companies in Kansas City, Mo., and Denver were targeted with explosive devices and threatening notes, an agency spokeswoman said Monday. Working with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the inspection service is trying to obtain contact information for thousands of financial companies to warn them of the threats, spokeswoman Wanda Shipp said. "The events may be linked, and the recipients were probably not selected at random," a postal advisory reads."

Asahi Shimbun has reported that "Japan's postal service, which has been a government enterprise for the past 136 years, will be privatized in October.

Welcome to PostCom Radio
Postal Podcast Number 11
Join PostCom President Gene Del Polito, USPS Chief Marketing Officer Anita Bizzotto, and National Postal Forum Executive Director Mike Genick in a preview of what attendees can expect at the March 25-28, 2007 National Postal Forum in Washington, DC.

Left to Right: DelPolito, Genick, Bizzotto

Business World has reported that "Research released by An Post shows that households with internet access are the heaviest senders and receivers of mail in Ireland."

The Virgin Islands Daily News has reported that "U.S. Postal Service and Homeland Security's Customs and Border Patrol officials plan to meet with St. Croix residents on Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss concerns over mail delivery."

The Wall Street Journal has reported that "Postal reform has stalled in many countries, but last week Singapore proved a happy exception. The city-state committed to open its market for "basic mail" service to foreign and domestic competition. If only more countries would give a similar stamp of approval to free markets in mail."

The planned implementation by USPS of data access restrictions in August 2007, impact any Canadian organization that needs to update addresses in the United States. Through various Councils and their initiatives, NAMMU is actively pursuing a positive resolution(s) for all types of members. A recommendation to have an on-site meeting with USPS representatives of a major Canadian mail entry point was agreed by members as an important step in the understanding/ resolution process. With thanks to Jim Wiseman, Transcontinental RBW, Owen Sound, a NAMMU Canadian mailers meeting will be held March 6 in Buffalo, hosted by Ms. Kimberly Peters, District Manager. Click here to review agenda.

IT Jungle has asked: "Do you deal with customers in the Canada? If you do, you probably want to know exactly where they are, to minimize costs. WorksRight Software, which develops address verification software for the U.S. and Canadian marketplaces, last week announced a new edition of its OS/400-based software for assigning and validating Canadian postal codes, called CPC. WorksRight's CPC product serves several functions, and is typically used to eliminate data entry errors and boost customer service. The software includes a searchable database that returns city names, province names and abbreviations, area codes, latitude and longitude information, time zones, and daylight savings time indicator, based on postal data. It also includes the capability to calculate the airline distance between two postal codes, or return a list of the 10 nearest company locations when a customer's address is input. These are just some of the functions of CPC that are accessible directly through the product's menu or directly from an application using APIs."

Postal News for February 13, 2007

From the Postal Regulatory Commission: On March 13, 2007 the Postal Regulatory Commission and the U.S. Postal Service will hold an all day summit on "Meeting Postal Customer Needs in a Changing Regulatory Environment."

ElectricNews.net has reported that "Minister for Communications, Marine & Natural resources, Noel Dempsey, has tabled plans to introduce some form of standard postcodes by 2008. Recommendations due soon from the National Postcode Project Board (NPPB) are expected to set out the format of the proposed codes which are being designed to improve efficiencies in sorting mail, and are also seen as facilitating the entry of new players into the Irish postal market if it is liberalised in the future. "Businesses need the Government to publish as soon as possible the details of the proposed postcode system. We cannot afford for any confusion to arise and an awareness campaign about the new postcode system for both consumers and the business community should be a priority for the Government," said Lorcan Lynch, director of marketing for information solution consultancy Experian.

Business News Americas has reported that "Brazilian bank Bradesco doubts the federal government will renegotiate its Banco Postal joint venture with national postal service Correios, Bradesco CEO Márcio Cypriano told reporters."We never doubted the government would uphold the contract," he said. Communications minister Hélio Costa backtracked last week on a previous announcement the government would cancel the Postal joint venture with Bradesco, which runs until 2009, and said the government would only review the contract. Costa said Correios has to cover all costs associated with Postal, while Bradesco keeps the profits."

From Business Wire: "Group 1 Software, Inc., a Pitney Bowes Company has announced the launch of the Address Quality Hub™, a new address cleansing software platform that improves mail deliverability and maximizes postal discounts for users of CODE-1 Plus® and Finalist® CASS™ software. The new platform is beneficial for all businesses that utilize the mailstream for customer communication, as they face increases in postage costs in August 2007 when the U.S. Postal Service® implements more stringent postage discount rules designed to reduce undeliverable-as-addressed (UAA) mail. Under these rules, part of the R2006-1 USPS® Rate Case and new CASS requirement, CASS Certified™ software will be required to perform DPV™ processing, which is expected to reduce the number of ZIP + 4® coded addresses that are eligible for postage discounts."

Press Release: "Come learn more at National Postal Forum - Visit Window Book in booth #623 Mark your calendar for a special session: PostalOne!® & FAST: Cut Paperwork & Automate Drop Ship Appointments. Jeffery Peoples, CEO, Window Book, Inc. and Robert Galaher, Manager Mailer Enterprise Integration, USPS® will be speaking at this informative event. Don't miss it!"

Il Sole 24 Ore has reported that "With Omnia Network preparing to list on the Milan stock exchange at the end of the month, the Italian corporate services and customer relations outsourcing specialist has unveiled plans to become the leading competitor of post office Poste Italiane. Once the flotation has been completed, the company will underwrite a 4m-euro capital increase to create UniPosta."

The Evening Echo has reported that "Experian, the global information solutions company today urged Irish companies to prepare for the introduction of postcodes in 2008. The company advised that when postcodes are introduced in Ireland, it could lead to confusion and problems for businesses when communicating with their customers via the postal service." See also Ireland Online.

Newsmax has reported that "The U.S. Postal Inspection Service is alerting financial firms of potential danger from a would-be letter bomber after companies in Kansas City and Denver were targeted with explosive devices and threatening notes."

The National Association of Major Mail Users has reported that "The National Executive Board (NEB) of the Canadian Union of Postal workers (CUPW) and Canada Post Corporation have reportedly reached an agreement in principle for a new collective agreement to cover the 48,000 members of the urban operations unit. The four year collective agreement would remain in effect until January 31, 2011, provided the terms are ratified by the CUPW membership. Voting will take place locally over the coming weeks."

The American Postal Workers Union has reported that "The National Labor Relations Board issued a complaint against DHL on Jan. 30, accusing the company of “interfering with, restraining, and coercing employees in the exercise of their rights” to a union-representation election at DHL Express in Wilmington, OH. The charges are based on allegations made by the APWU in an Unfair Labor Practice filing in November. APWU representatives and activist workers have been trying to organize approximately 3,000 ground workers at the global delivery company’s plant for two years."

 

Postal News for February 12, 2007

The U.S. Postal Service’s San Francisco and Los Angeles International Service Centers (ISC) are being recognized for achieving the highest international standards of excellence in mail processing. Each center will receive a Certificate of Excellence from the International Post Corporation (IPC), a cooperative association of 23 national postal administrations and operators from North America, Europe and the Pacific. The Certificate of Excellence is awarded only to international mail facilities that demonstrate top levels of quality, efficiency and teamwork while meeting customer needs.

The Express & Echo has reported that "There are renewed fears of further postal strikes in Exeter after it emerged a worker had been sacked following last year's wildcat dispute. Royal Mail has admitted that one person has been dismissed and another two given final warnings and transferred to other sorting offices. Now the Communication Workers Union says it will hold a ballot on industrial action if its sacked representative is not reinstated."

The Wilmington News Journal has reported that "Union Network International (UNI) wants to help grow labor unions at DHL's three principal air hubs. The three hubs are in Leipzig (Germany), Hong Kong and Wilmington. The UNI is an international trade union founded in January 2000, created in response to changes going on in the global economy. There are about 15 million members in UNI's approximately 900 unions."

The Canada NewsWire has reported that "As change sweeps the postal sector, major reforms are due at Canada Post, according to a C.D. Howe Institute study released today. In Rerouting the Mail: Why Canada Post is Due for Reform, authors Edward M. Iacobucci and Michael J. Trebilcock, Professors in the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, and Tracey D. Epps, Lecturer in Law, University of Otago, recommend that Canada Post, the government-owned monopoly, should ultimately be privatized, with an eye to improving postal performance. The authors say Canada's current postal system is anachronistic and incapable of responding to new challenges, such as the ubiquity of Internet communication, advances in retail services and logistics, and increasing competition from domestic and foreign competitors in numerous market segments. The authors recommend a measured transition for Canada Post, with the federal government introducing competitive deregulation on a gradual basis to allow Canada Post and its workforce to make the required transition. Ottawa should also establish a regulator to oversee the system, a complaints bureau for citizens and consider subsidies, if required, to maintain universal postal service. Without reform, the postal service risks costly decline."

Graphic Arts Monthly has reported that "The U.S. Postal Service launched a new, proprietary service that will allow businesses to track mail and speed service to customers. Called "Intelligent Mail," it's like having a global positioning system (GPS) for mail, says Postmaster General John Potter, noting that the technology's centerpiece is a standardized barcode for use on letters and large envelopes as well as each mail container."

From PR Newswire: "SteelCloud Inc., a leading engineering and manufacturing integrator of network centric and embedded computing solutions today announced that the U.S. Postal Service has informed the Company that the option portion of a previously awarded contract to provide specialized servers will be rebid due to an internal Postal Service procedural problem. It is SteelCloud's understanding that a new RFP will be issued at the beginning of March with a final decision on the matter anticipated by the end of that month."

From Business Wire:

Be sure to check out the upcoming exhibits at the National Postal Museum.

The latest copy of the National Association of Postmasters of the U.S. electronic governmental affairs newsletter is available on the NAPUS web site.

9News.com has reported that "This week at the State Capitol, lawmakers will consider a bill aimed at putting an end to unwanted junk mail. Representative Sara Gagliardi is expected to introduce a bill that would create a "no junk mail list." She talked about her proposal Sunday afternoon on the steps of the Capitol. Under the measure, consumers could opt out of receiving junk mail. If companies send mail to a person on the list, they would be fined. Supporters say a junk mail ban would cut down on identity theft, possible fraud and help the environment."

The Rocky Mountain News has reported that "A news conference called Sunday to promote a bill that would allow consumers to opt out of receiving junk mail was enlivened when a representative of the U.S. Postal Service showed up to challenge the bill's sponsor. But one woman's junk is another man's livelihood. Al DeSarro, a spokesman for the U.S. Postal Service, said so-called direct mail comprises 50 percent of the mail delivered by the post office. He said Gagliardi's bill might cost thousands of postal workers their jobs and would hurt businesses that use the mail to reach new customers. "We have thousands of organizations in Colorado that use mail to advertise and communicate," DeSarro said. "Consider the effect on your local video store and hair salon. This is an infringement of commerce and free speech." DeSarro said that junk mail is recycled easily, helping to alleviate environmental concerns." [Whoa! The Sleeping Giant has awakened. Congratulations. It's about time...and thanks.]

The Hindu has reported that "As part of its efforts to tone up its operations in the city, the Postal department has decided to prune the number of postal delivery areas."

According to the Indian Express, "In a bid to cut down losses and achieve a higher degree of competitiveness, the Department of Post has put together an ambitious action plan to connect most of its major post offices across the country. The Department is planning to invest Rs 6,000 crore for the technology upgradation across its postal network."

The East Valley Tribune has noted that "In a time when neighbors are strangers and fences are friends, U.S. Postal Service uniforms visibly identify letter carriers as familiar public servants who may enter private property. But many postal workers in Tempe no longer wear uniforms when they deliver letters and pick up outgoing mail. This includes older neighborhoods, where letter carriers must walk onto front porches because mailboxes are near the front door."

Postal News for February 11, 2007

UK Fundraising has reported that "The Royal Mail is offering free copies of "Direct Mail For Dummies®" which "provides the practical help and techniques you need to make mailshots work for you and your business". The 132-page book - it isn't simply a PDF - includes tips and techniques for direct mail success, and is aimed at those with little or no experience of direct mail. The title covers planning, execution and management of a successful mailshot. Appropriately for the Royal Mail, "it explains why direct mail is so successful and shows you how it can benefit your company in terms of customer relationships and your bottom line." [Editor's Note: For beginners, it's an excellent text.]

The Guardian has reported that "Britain's postal union is warning that it could cut funding for the Labour Party if the government supports Royal Mail plans to close the company's final salary pension scheme."

According to the Voice of America, "Taiwan says it will stick to its decision to drop the word “China” from the names of state enterprises in favor of “Taiwan, ” despite criticism from the United States. Taiwan is changing the name of its state-run postal, petroleum and shipping companies."

Arabian Business has reported that "Investors from the GCC look set to begin a mad dash to acquire a foothold in Jordan’s economy as the Hashemite Kingdom invites offers for private companies to take a stake in key infrastructure projects. Mohammad Abu Hammour, the head of Jordan’s Executive Privatisation Commission, said the “public private partnership” strategy to be launched in March would outline opportunities for international investors to run ports, utilities, postal services and public transport."

The latest issue of the National Association of Postal Supervisors Legislative Update has been posted on this site.

From PR Newswire: "The U.S. Postal Inspection Service is working with law enforcement agents from the FBI and ATF, as well as local and state agencies, to investigate two explosive devices sent to financial institutions since Jan. 31. While the investigation continues, Postal Inspectors are encouraging the financial industry to re-examine their procedures for handling correspondence and packages."

Postal News for February 10, 2007

Insurance Business Review has reported that "UK postal provider Royal Mail has reported an 86% drop in first half profits following a massive increase in its pension deficit. The troubled group has said it is now hoping to close its final salary pension scheme to new employees in a bid to stem any further growth of the current GBP6.6 billion deficit."

The BBC Monitoring Service has reported that "On the eve of the 28th anniversary of victory of the Islamic Revolution, President Mahmud Ahmadinezhad put his signature on a stamp printed by Iran Post Office on national nuclear programme. In a ceremony attended by Minister of Communications and Information Technology Mohammad Soleymani, President Ahmadinezhad put a seal of Iran Post Office on the special stamp printed to commemorate Iranian nuclear programme. The stamp was designed by Iran Post Office to convey the theme of Iranian nuclear programme and application of nuclear energy in medicine and agriculture."

According to Taiwan Headlines:

The Adirondack Daily Enterprise has reported that "Re-establishing postal service in Gabriels received some support Friday from Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, who, in a letter to the federal postmaster general, requested that temporary service be provided in Gabriels until permanent service can be offered."

The Glenwood Springs Post Independent has reported that "The U.S. Postal Service has decided against further investigating a proposal to move some regional mail distribution from Glenwood Springs to Grand Junction."

Dominican Today has reported that "the Dominican Postal Agency (INPOSDOM) and Aruba’s Postal Administration signed an agreement to allow sending and receiving postal money orders, as well as packages between the two."

The Herald & Review has reported that "The mayor of Mount Zion is still looking forward to getting a new post office built, despite recent political roadblocks Mayor Don Robinson said officials in Washington, D.C., have pulled the plug on a new post office in the village. "Federal postal officials are saying, based on today's standards, we have all the space we need," Robinson said. But he disagrees and says a larger facility is needed because the village is bursting at the seams with an increasing population and more housing developments popping up. He projects the village's population to be at least 5,400 in 2007. The population was 4,845 in the 2000 Census. Robinson has had some success after contacting the office of U.S. Rep. Tim Johnson, R-Urbana. He also is seeking help from U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., before possibly kicking off a grassroots writing campaign to federal officials."

FinFacts has reported that "The Irish Commission for Communications Regulation (ComReg) has today, following a public consultation, concurred with An Post’s application for an interim increase in the price of the basic stamp from 1st March next. ComReg is the National Regulatory Authority for the postal sector in Ireland and its prior approval is required for postal rate changes in the reserved area."

Delhi Newsline has reported that "the delivery of mails — both domestic and foreign — will soon speed up, with Delhi’s first Automatic Mail Processing Machine all set to be installed by the year-end at the airport’s Business Processing Centre. Two metros — Chennai and Mumbai — already have this facility. The machine will automatically read the pin codes with the help of an Optical Character Reader."

NATIONAL POSTAL FORUM: MARCH 25-28, 2007 - WASHINGTON, DC The National Postal Forum is the premier educational event/experience and tradeshow available to mail professionals today. Attend the National Postal Forum to get a complete education in the "Business of Mail." If your business or profession has anything to do with using mail, or any of the products and services available through the United States Postal Service... then this is the place you need to be!

 

Postal News for February 9, 2007

The latest issue of the PostCom Bulletin is available online. In this issue:

Hey! You've not been getting the weekly PostCom Bulletin--the best postal newsletter anywhere...bar none?  Send us by email your name, company, company title, postal and email address. Get a chance to see what you've been missing.
 


Who handles the distribution of the PostCom Bulletin?
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From the U.S. Postal Service: "Hold the Date for a Joint U.S. Postal Service – Postal Regulatory Commission Summit The topic will be “Meeting Postal Customer Needs in a Changing Regulatory Environment.” Tuesday, March 13, 2007 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. William F. Bolger Center 9600 Newbridge Drive Potomac, MD 20854-4436 We will announce a registration process soon. Space will be limited."

China Post has reported that "The Chunghwa Post Co. yesterday was renamed the Taiwan Post Co. although about 100 postal workers disrupted a meeting of its board in an attempt to block it from changing the state-run company's name. The state-owned Chinese Petroleum Corp., and the China Shipbuilding Company also adopted new names -- CPC Corp. Taiwan and CSBC Corp. Taiwan respectively -- in line with the government's push to underscore the island's identity. The postal workers, wearing protest headbands and displaying placards, burst into the meeting at the postal company's headquarters where the board was supposed to swiftly adopt a name change for the firm."

According to Forbes, "Real time is a goal and not a reality. Real communication cannot be instantaneous as it must travel from point to point, which does take a bit of time, even at the speed of light. Moreover, in the business world, delivery requires physical handling, and that takes more than a bit of time. Velocity Express appears to have a way of giving shippers an edge."

The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) reported a Fiscal Year 2007 first quarter loss of $2.7 billion due to the accelerated funding of retiree health benefits mandated by the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act signed into law on Dec. 20, 2006. The law requires the Postal Service to substantially fund its share of these benefits by 2017. Operationally, the Postal Service would have otherwise achieved a net income of $1.2 billion, in line with its first quarter financial plan.

Join us at the 2nd Annual Address Quality Symposium in Washington DC for a chance to hear firsthand from leading mailing industry authorities and key U.S. Postal Service executives on the key strategic opportunities for improving your Address Quality. Symposium Pre-registration is required for Forum Attendees. Please visit www.npf.org and click on the Personal Planner. You must create an attendee login. After this is completed search under category for Symposiums. A list of Symposiums will appear, please click the register button on the appropriate symposium. You must be registered for the National Postal Forum in order to attend the Address Quality Symposium. To register please go to www.npf.org.

Dow Jones has reported that "Brazil's government has ruled out a plan to cancel the rights of local private-sector bank Bradesco SA (BBD) to provide financial services through governmental post offices, Brazilian Communications Minister Helio Costa said late Thursday according to local press reports."

The Guardian has reported that "It was a truly neat confluence: that Allan Leighton should unveil the finishing touches to his refinancing package for the Royal Mail and thus be able to claim that his work there is largely done on the same day as it became clear he is keen to get back to what he knows best, running shops."

The BBC Monitoring Service has reported that "Chunghwa Post Co., the state-owned postal service, will change its name Friday to show its Taiwan identity in a wave of name changes among state enterprises. The word "Chunghwa" means China. A new Chinese name translated as "Taiwan Post Co." will be applied after a board meeting Friday passes the proposal, although an official English name has yet to be decided, company officials said Thursday."

The Financial Times has reported that "Royal Mail announced its intention to close its final salary pension to new members yesterday. The plan, outlined as it unveiled an 86 per cent fall in half-year profits caused by a ballooning pensions deficit, could set a precedent for the public sector. Ministers backed the state-owned postal operator's plan to curb its pensions liabilities, with Alistair Darling, trade and industry secretary, stressing his "full support". His endorsement of tough action on pensions contrasts with the government's stance over public sector pensions, where it caved in to union pressure and ditched plans to make existing staff work until 65."

According to Seeking Alpha, "While United Parcel Service (UPS) and FedEx (FDX) both have attractive characteristics that should translate into above-average gains for shareholders, we think UPS has more to offer at this point. Not only is "brown" bigger, but in many cases it is also simply better. UPS is far more profitable, and its margins have consistently remained well above those at FedEx. In fact, the firm's margins and free cash flow generation are both at the top of the entire industry."

SmartMoney has reported that "United Parcel Service Inc.'s board late Thursday boosted its quarterly dividend to 42 cents from 38 cents, citing confidence in its financial prospects. The Atlanta company said that the board also voted to increase to $2 billion its authorization for the repurchase of class A and B shares."

According to Dow Jones, "European retailsers remain cautious about products on the Internet outside their home countries, a new European Commission survey has found. Fewer than one third of Internet retailers offer their products cross-border. Those that do often restrict sales to one or two European countries. Language difficulties are less of a concern for most Europeans, with only 43% or retailers saying this was an issue. The main obstacle is the insecurity of transactions, which 61% of retailers were concerned about, retailers said. More than 50% said they were concerned about other potential problems such as different tax regulations (58%), resolving complaints (57%), difficulties in ensuring after-sales service (55%) and delivery costs (51%)."

The Wilmington News Journal has reported that "The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has determined there is reasonable cause to believe DHL Express Inc. has engaged in unfair labor practices as claimed by the American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO. The NLRB Region 9 in Cincinnati issued a written complaint on Jan. 30, accusing DHL of "interfering with, restraining and coercing employees in the exercise of their rights" to a fair and free union election. The complaint stems from an NLRB investigation into unfair labor practice allegations filed in November 2006 by the union against DHL."

As DM News has reported:

ThisIsLondon has reported that "Postal workers threatened to strike yesterday over plans to shake up their gold-plated pension scheme. Union leaders said yesterday's announcement was "a complete shock" and described the changes as "irresponsible". They said delivery services would collapse if their 190,000 members went on strike. "We will fight as hard as possible to protect postal workers' rights," said Billy Hayes, of the Communication Workers Union."

The Direct Marketing Association Nonprofit Federation (DMANF) is asking the United States Postal Service (USPS) to delay the implementation of regulations that would more than double the postage for many nonprofit mail pieces. In its formal comments, the DMANF expressed serious concerns that the proposed regulations will dramatically increase postage costs for nonprofit mailers by pushing pieces that currently qualify as automation rate flats (as well as some letter mail that exceeds 3.5 ounces) into the significantly higher priced Not Flat-Machinable (“NFM”) and parcel rate categories. Among the mail packages that will be affected are flat-size pieces that contain a “front-end” premium such as a pen, magnet, greeting card, lapel pin or similar item. Compared to other fund-raising techniques, these types of front-end premiums perform particularly well in prospecting for new donors and drive large volumes of Nonprofit Standard Mail. Even with the discount afforded to nonprofit mailers, the cost of such mailings is likely to more than double under the proposed new rules. The DMANF believes that up to 40 percent of total nonprofit mail volume could be impacted. [Given the level of postal narcissm these days, DMANF might be better off starting a prayer group....And that's not meant to be snarky to the Federation. It's simply symptomatic of the utter frustration customers are feeling toward the Postal Service's rate making policies these days.]

 

Postal News for February 8, 2007

According to the Peterborough Evening Telegraph, The Royal Mail has announced plans to close its final salary pension scheme to new entrants after revealing that its pensions deficit had grown to £6.6 billion. The figure, believed to be the biggest of any UK organisation, has grown by £1 billion in the past year, with huge servicing costs helping to cut the postal group's interim profits by 86% in the first six months of the financial year. Union leaders expressed anger at the plan to close the final salary scheme to new workers, which they said had come as a "complete shock".

The Times has reported that "Post Office owner Royal Mail is heading for a possible run-in with unions today after unveiling controversial plans to shut its final salary pension scheme to new members."

From the PR Newswire: "The national president of the National Association of Letter Carriers union told key Washington state legislators today that passage of bills to create a "Do Not Mail" registry would be detrimental to the Postal Service, its workforce, and the general public. NALC President William H. Young, whose union represents 221,000 active city letter carriers in the nation, expressed his "fierce opposition" to the legislation in letters to Washington House Commerce and Labor Chairman Steve Conway and Senate Consumer Protection and Housing Chairman Brian Weinstein as Conway's committee held a hearing today on the legislative proposal. About 5,500 letter carriers reside in Washington state. Young said the proposal "could jeopardize the very future of America's postal system," adding that while it may be well-intentioned, it is being erroneously promoted as similar to "Do Not Call" limits on telemarketers." [Hurray for the letter carriers, because up to this point, the Postal Service has given neither a hoot nor a hollar on this one.]

According to the Financial Express, "The Department of Post is planning to ramp up its ambitious plan of setting up postal financial marts. By the end of this fiscal it wants to raise its postal fin marts count to 300, said IMG Khan, secretary to the government of India, Department of Post, ministry of communications & IT. When asked if India Post will adopt the life insurance companies’ business model based on agents, he said, “We have lot of agents and field officers. Shortly we plan to hire retired officers for expanding our rural postal life insurance business."

KETV7 has reported that "A U.S. Postal Service airplane has crashed just outside Alliance in western Nebraska. The single-engine plane appeared to be approaching Alliance from the northwest early Thursday morning when it apparently clipped a machine shed, landed in an open field and then crashed into a utility pole, authorities said. The 2:25 a.m. crash happened a mile northwest of Alliance and about five miles northwest of the airport."

Here are two items from the Wall Street Journal hell bent on driving the direct mail industry to extinction:

The agenda for the February 22-22, 2007 meeting of the Postmaster General's Mailers Technical Advisory Committe has been posted on this site.

EuActiv has reported that "The EU is entering the final stages of a 15-year process to make European postal services more efficient by opening them up to competition. But member states will first have to overcome differences of opinion regarding the speed of liberalisation and how to achieve a universal service for consumers."

A request of the United States Postal Service for a recommended decision on classifications, rates and fees to implement a baseline negotiated service agreement with Bank of America Corporation has been presented to the Postal Regulatory Commission.

According to the Irish Times, "The Irish Postmasters Union (IPU) is to run candidates in up to 10 constituencies in the general election to highlight what it described as a crisis facing the post office network."

CBS2 has reported that "NEW YORK In 2006 alone more than 670,000 people had their identity stolen in America. The financial toll: $1.2 billion. CBS 2 cameras recently went undercover to tell you about a scam many people don't know about. It starts in your local post office, and right now there is nothing you can do to stop it. An identity thief hijacked Steve Zuckerman's name by stealing his mail, not from his mailbox in Great Neck, but by using a loophole in the U.S. postal system. We went undercover, inside several area post offices, and found it couldn't be easier. "People lose their homes over stupidity like this," Zuckerman said. The hidden cameras then showed something shocking. CBS 2: "I want to put a change of address form in today. Do you need an ID for this?" Postal worker: "No, you just fill this out and put in mailbox or give it to us." CBS 2: "No ID?" Postal workers: "No." You heard right. You don't need ID when you turn in a change of address card."

AllAfrica.com has reported that "former workers of the Nigeria Postal Service ( NIPOST), yesterday called on President Olusegun Obasanjo to prevail on the NICON Insurance Company to offset their outstanding pension and gratuity worth N450million."

From PR Newswire: "The Government has agreed the final terms of a financing framework for Royal Mail, designed to give the company the freedom to use its resources and borrowing facilities to modernise and succeed in a competitive market, Trade and Industry Secretary Alistair Darling announced today."

Online Media Daily has noted that "as its digital strategy continues to evolve, Hearst Magazines Wednesday said it is making a big push in mobile, adding several new phone-friendly sites accessible through Verizon Wireless and other carriers. New mobile sites for Seventeen, Cosmo Girl, and Cosmopolitan are now available in the magazines section of Verizon Wireless' Mobile Web 2.0 service. Sites for Esquire, Good Housekeeping, House Beautiful, Popular Mechanics, and Redbook are on the way, along with additional carrier deals. As early as 2003, Hearst was exploring mobile sites accessible only to subscribers paying between $1.99 and $2.49 monthly for tidbits from Seventeen and Cosmopolitan, among other titles. But as consumers and advertisers migrate away from print, Hearst is making a bigger push to beef up mobile. "The new mobile sites for all of our magazines will have richer, more interactive content and will be tied more closely to the magazine's editorial content, in addition to being free to any consumer," said one company spokeswoman."

BBC News has reported that "Royal Mail has said it is consulting on closing its final salary pension scheme to new entrants, to help tackle its pensions deficit which had hit £6.6bn." See also the Financial Times.

The Daily Star has reported that "A huge increase in the Royal Mail's pensions deficit helped cut the postal group's interim profits by 86% in the first six months of the financial year, it has been announced. The profit figure fell to £22 million between April and September compared with £159 million in the same period a year earlier. The pensions deficit rose by £1 billion to £6.6 billion, with servicing costs increasing from £280 million to £730 million in the past year."

The Associated Press has reported that "At least six people have been injured by seven letter bombs in Britain over the past three weeks, in what police said could be a campaign by animal rights extremists or a disgruntled motorist fed up with this country's automobile laws -- or both."

As Haaretz has noted, "Despite his personal fortune and impressive lineage, Arthur Sulzberger, owner, chairman and publisher of the most respected newspaper in the world, is a stressed man. Why would the man behind the New York Times be stressed? Well, profits from the paper have been declining for four years, and the Times company's market cap has been shrinking, too. Given the constant erosion of the printed press, do you see the New York Times still being printed in five years? "I really don't know whether we'll be printing the Times in five years, and you know what? I don't care either," he says. Sulzberger is focusing on how to best manage the transition from print to Internet."

The National Association of Major Mail User (NAMMU) has told its members that "With thanks to Jim Wiseman, Transcontinental – RBW, Owen Sound, a NAMMU Canadian Mailers meeting will be held March 6 in Buffalo, to address the implications with USPS of planned data access restrictions. The session will be hosted by Ms. Kimberly Peters, District Manager, United States Postal Service. A recommendation to have an on-site meeting with USPS representatives of a major Canadian mail entry point was agreed by members as an important step in the understanding/resolution process. The planned implementation by USPS of data access restrictions in August 2007, impact any Canadian organization that needs to update addresses in the United States. Registration is required by February 15. Information and registration: click here.:

From the U.S. Postal Service: "The U.S. Postal Service has been notified that the National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association (NRLCA) membership rejected the tentative contract agreement that the Postal Service and NRLCA leadership reached on December 8, 2006. The parties will now meet to decide how to proceed."

Postal News for February 7, 2007

Postal Regulatory Commissioner Ruth Goldway will be speaking on Saturday morning, February 10th before the Elections Committee Session of the National Association of Secretaries of State Winter Conference. Her topic will be Postage Rates under the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA). Details are available at: http://www.nass.org/conference/2007%20Winter%20Conference/Agenda%20-%20F ull%20Conference.pdf

According to KLTV, "A Dallas-area lawmaker, Rep. Bill Zedler of Arlington, is trying to do for junk mail what the Legislature did for phone solicitations a few years ago. His bill would direct the attorney general's office to compile a list of names and addresses of consumers who object to receiving certain types of unsolicited mail, more commonly referred to as junk mail. "We want to treat it the same way as unwanted phone solicitations," Mr. Zedler said, noting that he filed the measure in response to complaints about junk mail from some of his constituents. "This would apply to anyone offering credit cards or sending out mail where there is the possibility of identify theft," the Arlington Republican said, adding, "I personally shred all that stuff because I'm afraid to put it in the trash." As written, the bill would apply to credit card and loan applications, sweepstakes promotions that contain information about the consumer, and mailouts - with personal information - that encourage the purchase of property, goods or services. If the bill were to become law, consumers could get their address on the list for three years for $3 per household. Companies that mail to consumers on the list would be subject to fines of $1,000 to $3,000 per violation."

AMEInfo has reported that "The 'World Mail and Express Logistics Middle East, Africa & South Asia,' a major conference on the international transportation industry's calendar, will be held in Dubai from February 27 to 28, 2007, with Emirates Post as the host sponsor."

Pacific Business News has reported that "Thousands of white collar federal employees in Hawaii may decide that they would like to lose their cost-of-living adjustments, because what they get in return could be better. The office of Sen. Daniel Akaka, which said Monday it would look into an administration plan to eliminate federal employee COLAs, said Tuesday that the plan is to replace the COLAs with locality pay, now given to federal employees on the Mainland. The proposed plan affects about 15,000 white collar federal employees in Hawaii who get non-foreign COLAs as well as 2,611 additional postal employees."

CEP News (Courier-Express-Postal), published by the MRU Consultancy, has reported that:

Britain's Chancellor Gordon Brown has urged the EU member states to follow the example of Britain in opening their postal markets.
Despite a 1% drop in consignment volumes, Belgiums La Poste managed to increase its turnover by 6% to 2.25bn euros last year.
In Switzerland opposition is growing against continued subsidies for newspaper distribution.
The Association of Mayors in France AMF (Association des maires de France) has publicly voiced fears that La Poste could shrink its service range further.
Many private mail service providers in Germany are sceptical toward Franz Müntefering, Minister of Labour and Social Affairs, and his demand for a minimum wage, which is also supported by trade union ver.di.
The Dutch trade union CNV has launched an attack on the country's private mail service providers.
TNT Post Italy ended the last financial year on a turnover of 147m euros. Unaddressed direct advertising mail was the strongest profit source.
Sweden;s Posten AB intends to save millions by introducing later mail delivery times.
Austria's Österreichische Post AG has bought 51% of Scanpoint Europe, a company specialising in the digitalisation of documents.
Last weekend, Algérie Poste announced a series of technological innovations. In densely populated areas, so-called "points postaux de proximité" will be set up, offering customers information on postal services, access to Algérie Postes web pages, cash withdrawal facilities and stamp sales.
Last year, La Poste received well over 22,000 complaints over missing items.
Postcomm, Britain's regulator for postal services, has requested responses by `next Tuesday to its consultation on Royal Mail’s current compensation schemes for loss, damage and delay.
Norway's Posten Norge is facing growing competition in the domestic express and logistics market.
German trade union ver.di has demanded 5.5% higher wages for around 5,500 employees working for Deutsche Post subsidiaries.
British CEP operator Business Post (BP) and FedEx have agreed on the consensual termination of their co-operation contract.
German Logistik-Initiative Hamburg is evidence that logistics really is a growth industry.
In Poland, e-commerce seems to be growing faster (2006 turnover: over 1.16bn euros) than the capacity of courier services.
Currently an anonymous small town in Hungary, Záhony could soon become a household name in the European logistics market. At a meeting in Kiev last weekend, representatives from Russia, Ukraine and Hungary agreed to set up a new central hub for their three countries in Záhony.
Increasing numbers of undeliverable letters marked "Deceased" have been found in Spain by Correos customers lately, it is claimed.

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 queRecommendations by a public committee to raise postal rates "too high" are threatening to cause the "collapse" of the Israel Postal Company, workers' union head, Reuven Karazi, charged on Tuesday. Communications Minister Ariel Attias is due to decide soon whether to accept the recommendations, which the union head said would bring about "rigidity" in rates and make it "impossible for the Postal Company to compete" with private entrepreneurs. ions 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.)

The Jerusalem Post has reported that "Recommendations by a public committee to raise postal rates "too high" are threatening to cause the "collapse" of the Israel Postal Company, workers' union head, Reuven Karazi, charged on Tuesday. Communications Minister Ariel Attias is due to decide soon whether to accept the recommendations, which the union head said would bring about "rigidity" in rates and make it "impossible for the Postal Company to compete" with private entrepreneurs."

The DM Bulletin has reported that "Royal Mail has lost another major piece of business to its rivals, with Business Post taking the contract for TV Licensing, worth up to £8.1m a year."

The National Postal Forum Personal Planner is now up and running! Whether you already are a registrant or just thinking about attending the National Postal Forum, the industry's most compelling and complete internet planning tool is now available for your use. The NPF Personal Planner allows you to view up to the minute session information as well as the time and location for every event at this year's Forum. The Personal Planner also lists all participating vendors, their products and services. This unique tool helps you schedule your time to maximize the value of your attendance at the Forum. Don't miss this opportunity to attend the premier mailing industry event. Click on “My Personal Planner” to see what's happening at the National Postal Forum in Washington, D.C. March 25-28, 2007, or visit www.npf.org to register.
 

Postal News for February 6, 2007

The International Herald Tribune has reported that "hundreds of state bureaucrats and postal workers marched Tuesday in Romania's capital and other cities to demand higher wages."

The U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General has posted the following on its website today. If you have additional questions concerning the report, please contact Agapi Doulaveris at 703.248.2286.

The Associated Press has reported that "Wal-Mart Stores Inc. has launched its long-awaited online movie download store, entering a market that has yet to catch on with consumers but is expected to grow rapidly."

As WDBJ7 has noted, "Each year the U.S. Postal Service joins in the National Consumer Protection Week effort. This year's theme is "Read Up and Reach Out to be an Informed Consumer".

The Economic Times has reported that "State-owned carrier Indian on Tuesday said it is considering partnership with India Post and GATI for its proposed cargo service expected to be launched by the middle of this year."

The report of the U.S. delegation to the October 2006 Council of Administration is on the State Department website. Please also note that Section 405 of the 2006 Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act on "International Postal Arrangements" now appears on the State website

IT Backbones has reported that "As per a Research Analyst’s view at RNCOS, who has recently researched a report on “RFID - Outlook China”, China is aware of the role RFID tags can play in improving the competence of manufacturing and supply chain management and data collection. Considering the vast variety of potential applications and the power it has to cut the supply chain costs significantly, the RFID market is anticipated to record an exponential growth in China in the coming years."

According to Belfast Today, "Despite a total trade Ireland-wide of 35 billion to North America in 2005, the North Atlantic Trade and Transport Study described the lack of a direct shipping route as very surprising. "Being on Europe's outer periphery and closer to North America, we should have the edge over the rest of Europe," said Bombardier Chairman Sir George Quigley. "But we are not able to capitalise on our geographical advantage because there are no direct lift-on lift-off or roll-on, roll off shipping services from the island to North America. Everything has to be transhipped through a port in Great Britain or on the continent."

Postalnews.com has noted that "the NRLCA membership has rejected the proposed 2006 contract. As a result, the national mail count that was scheduled to begin on February 17th, 2007 will not occur."

Forbes has reported that "Deutsche Post World Net AG has invited trade union Ver.di and 'other interested parties' to talk about the foundation of an employers' federation to implement national wage agreements in the postal delivery sector, a company spokesperson said. Ver.di said it welcomes the initiative and added that it has started talks with other mail delivery companies to secure comprehensive wage agreements."

DM News has reported that:

ThisIsMoney has reported that "Royal Mail lost another huge Government contract today as Business Post won the mailing contract for BBC TV Licensing, worth up to £8.1m a year."

The National Association of Major Mail Users (NAMMU) has told its members that "The planned implementation by USPS of data access restrictions in August 2007, impact any Canadian organization that needs to update addresses in the United States. Through various Councils and their initiatives, NAMMU is actively pursuing a positive resolution(s) for all types of members. A recommendation to have an on-site meeting with USPS representatives of a major Canadian mail entry point was agreed by members as an important step in the understanding/ resolution process." [Just great....Now we have an international postal incident over some ruling that comes from Memphis. Here we go again. Another contest to take over Fort Ticonderoga.]

Please find attached the Issue Statement for the new MTAC Work Group (WG) # 114 "Establish Service Standards and Measurements for Market-Dominant Products". If you have an interest in participating in this Work Group please contact Industry WG Leader Kathy Siviter at kathys@postalconsulting.com (tel. # 703-237-1740) or USPS WG Leader Jeff Lewis at jeffery.w.lewis@usps.gov (tel. # 202-268-4757). FYI this WG will have its first meeting on Wed Feb 21 in USPS HQ Room 1P410 from 8:30 am - 11:30 am. Please note that the WG will be divided into four subgroups as follows: First-Class Mail Periodicals Mail Standard Mail Single-Piece Package Services Please make an effort to respond by February 14th and indicate the particular subgroup on which you are most interested in participating. Your timely response will facilitate planning for this first meeting.

UPS has ordered 27 new Boeing 767-300ER freighters to support its growing package business while providing broad options for the management of its jet fleet. The 27 aircraft will be delivered between 2009 and 2012. The value of the contract was not disclosed.

PostCom welcomes its newest member:

Quadriga Art, Inc. 825 Hylton Road Pennsauken, NJ 08110-1307, represented by Judy Costello, Director of Mail Production

Postal News for February 5, 2007

Display & Design Ideas has reported that "San Diego-based Postal Connections, a retail network of franchise stores in the retail postal and business services industry, has been acquired from its parent company, Global Business Services Inc., by a partnership formed by two members of the Postal Connections management team. Both are former executives of Mail Boxes Etc. Fred Morache, managing director of postal connections, who served since 2002 as Postal Connections' operating officer, and Andy Thompson, also managing director of Postal Connections and previously the company's executive officer, formed the partnership that acquired Postal Connections. Postal Connections, which has a nationwide network of 90 locations sold or open in 24 states, offers packaging, shipping, mail receiving and forwarding, copies, scanning, fax sending and receiving, Internet access, eBay auction support, notary, and other products and services."

For the third year in a row, Americans have rated the U.S. Postal Service as the number one agency they trust to protect their privacy. Not only did the Postal Service retain the top spot, customer satisfaction and trust scores increased from the previous year, a national study shows. Ponemon Institute LLC published its "2007 Privacy Trust Study of the United States Government" during National Consumer Protection Week. The study sought to understand the level of confidence Americans have in the many government agencies that routinely collect and use the public's personal information.

MarketWatch has reported that "Pitney Bowes said the highlight of the quarter was the December passage of postal-reform legislation. It expects the act to shore up the U.S. Postal Service's finances by releasing more than $100 billion in excess pension payments, to increase mail growth by instituting an annual price cap and to encourage the postal service to engage more in private-sector partnerships. "We're proud of the role we played in helping lead the industry's advocacy of this needed reform to enhance the viability and growth of the U.S. postal network," said CEO Michael Critelli. "During the next 18 to 24 months, the implementation of the legislation will be fleshed out, and we intend to be as active in helping influence and support the specifics of implementation as we were in the passage of the legislation itself," he said in a conference call with investors. Critelli also said the company planned to discuss first-quarter results and postal reform at an April 30 meeting with investors in New York."

Welcome to PostCom Radio
Postal Podcast Number 10
Join PostCom President Gene Del Polito, MFSA Postal Affairs Director Leo Raymond and Postal Services Consulting President Kathy Siviter in a discussion of the second round of USPS proposals and mailers' comments on the R2006 implementing rules AND...another rate case at the end of this calendar year.

Left to Right: DelPolito, Raymond, Siviter

The Postal Service section of the President's 08 Budget was submitted to Congress today. As expected, the Budget proposes an appropriation of $88.864 million for free mail (not available until October 1, 2008), and no funding for revenue forgone reimbursement. This compares with USPS requests of $124.447 million for free mail, and $29 million for revenue forgone reimbursement.

Bloomberg has reported that "Pitney Bowes Inc., the world's biggest maker of postal meters, said fourth-quarter earnings increased 80 percent as acquisitions helped fuel sales. Net income rose to $159.3 million, or 71 cents a share, from $88.6 million, or 38 cents, a year earlier, the Stamford, Connecticut-based company said today in a statement. Sales climbed 8.3 percent to $1.55 billion. Chief Executive Officer Michael Critelli shed units and spent more than $900 million in 2006 to buy companies, cut debt and pay dividends to shareholders. He made at least seven acquisitions last year to move beyond postage meters and focus on mailing and marketing."

UK Fundraising has reported that "On 2 April 2007 the Royal Mail will increase its charges. A first class letter will rise to 34p for stamped mail and 32p for metered mail. Second class letters will rise to 24p for stamped and 22p for metered mail. Royal Mail Special Delivery® Next Day charges will also increased by 20p to £4.30 for mail up to 100g."

AFX has reported that "Deutsche Post AG supports the introduction of a minimum wage for German postal employees, a company spokesman told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung. "It is unacceptable that competitors only pay three to four euros per hour," the spokesman said."

According to the Taipei Times, "With virtually no experience in lending money, China's huge postal savings system faces a steep learning curve as it transforms into the nation's fifth largest bank, analysts say. The China Postal Savings Bank (中國郵政儲蓄銀行) has been given approval by the nation's regulator to start operations, primarily in the countryside, home to 800 million underprivileged people."

The International Herald Tribune has reported that "Singapore will fully liberalize the city-state's postal sector by opening the market for basic mail services, the government said Monday. Singapore Post Ltd. will no longer have exclusive access to the segment — which includes the collection and delivery of letters and postcards within, into, and out of the country — when its license expires in March, Minister of Communications, Information, and the Arts Lee Boon Yang told reporters." See also Channel News Asia.

The Jamaica Gleaner has reported that "Postmaster General/CEO Michael Gentles is pleased that corporate Jamaica has identified Jamaica Post as an entity worthy of pursuing mutually beneficial marketing ventures. In a statement to The Gleaner Company, Gentles expressed the view that the postal service can no longer be regarded as the same organisation as in its historical roots, given its immersion into a new organisational culture."

The Washington Post has reported that "Innovations Group of Fairfax won a $27.9 million contract from the Postal Service for lease or rental of a mailing system."

Postal News for February 4, 2007

According to La Tribune, "La Poste, the French postal service operator, is to sell its air freight subsidiary, Europe Air Post, in order to concentrate on its rail freight services. Europe Air Post, which was created as a successor to Aeropostale, is France's second largest airline, with a fleet of 25 aircraft, and has a workforce of 400 people."

The Great Falls Tribune has reported that "A customer service representative with the U.S. Postal Service in Great Falls vaguely remembers a number of people complaining in January 1999 that their checks never reached their destination. That mystery was finally solved Thursday.  About eight years after those complaints, 435 pieces of mail came to the Great Falls Tribune Friday, including stacks of checks from newspaper subscribers intended for a Jan. 16, 1999 delivery. When a postal clerk was distributing mail on that day in 1999, the Tribune's share was placed in the wrong locker, one that's rarely used by the agency, she said. And there it sat until Thursday, when a customer who was assigned the locker made the discovery after opening the drawer."

The Seattle Times has asked: "Want your refund faster? Have it deposited directly into your bank account. More taxpayers are choosing direct deposit as the way to receive their federal tax refunds.The payment is secure — there is no check to get lost. Each year, thousands of refund checks are returned by the U.S. Postal Service to the IRS as undeliverable mail. Direct deposit eliminates undeliverable mail and is also the best way to guard against theft of a tax refund."

Computerworld has reported that "Organisations that fail to have their mailing databases certified as being compliant with the new New Zealand Post addressing standards by July 1 2008 will lose their bulk mailing discounts, the state-owned enterprise says. Last year, NZ Post changed both the postal codes and the presentation standards for addressing. This was done to allow for the automation of the mail sorting system, so as to reduce processing costs. Discounts begin at 300 pieces of mail and range up to the 20% mark, so a lot of money is at stake. From July 1 next year, addressing data must be 85% accurate when compared with NZ Post’s files. Each year, New Zealand Post has 22 million mail items returned because they are wrongly addressed."

Postal News for February 3, 2007

The Norman Transcript has reported that "The ground was still muddy from melting snow when a groundbreaking ceremony was held Jan. 24 for a third, on-campus training facility at the Postal Service's National Center for Employee Development on Highway 9. The new building was approved as a 117,768 square foot structure. It was designed by Gralla GH2 Architect. The Postal Service awarded a construction contract to Wynn Construction of Oklahoma City in December and dirt work began then. But icy weather delayed the ceremonial groundbreaking. ? Manager Scott Morgan will oversee the training that NCED's new Northeast Learning Center will accommodate. "The new building will primarily support training for Postal Service systems that will further automate processing of flats-mail such as magazines and large envelopes," Morgan said."

InForum News has reported that "James Chalupnik saw the bins full of undelivered CDs and DVDs inside Fargo’s U.S. Post Office as trash. He took thousands of the discs during nearly five years of working inside the building as a janitor for a company with a federal contract to clean the building. And he wasn’t alone. He claims that others inside the building, including postal employees, took discs, books and baby formula that were returned to the Post Office for various reasons and destined for the landfill. A federal judge saw it differently Friday, when he ordered Chalupnik, a 46-year-old Fargo man, to pay $78,818 restitution to BMG Columbia House Inc., the company that sent the discs to customers."

AZ Central has reported that "Hundreds of buckaroos of all ages clapped and shouted "Hashknife" as 36 trail-weary but dedicated Pony Express riders galloped Friday into downtown Scottsdale. The riders' high-noon arrival at the Scottsdale Main Post Office, 7242 E. Osborn Road, kicked off this year's Parada del Sol celebration. The men carried nearly 25,000 pieces of specially postmarked mail, a record for the Hashknife riders who are officially sanctioned by the U.S. Postal Service to deliver mail."

The Associated Press has reported that "Authorities yesterday were investigating whether there was a link between two similar explosive devices mailed this week with notes to office buildings in Chicago and Kansas City. The devices were sent through the mail - the first on Wednesday to American Century Investments’ mail facility in Kansas City and the second on Thursday to a downtown Chicago high-rise, said U.S. Postal Inspection Service Inspector Wanda Shipp. Both devices were defused without incident, she said."

The Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum has announced that Daniel A. Piazza will join the museum staff as the Winton M. Blount Research Coordinator. Piazza, who starts Feb. 20, will coordinate NPM research projects with researchers on-site and throughout the philatelic, academic and postal business communities. Duties will range from planning symposia and lectures to improving access to museum resources to seeking scholarly articles for the museum Web site. The newly-created position has a dual reporting responsibility to Nancy A. Pope, head curator for postal operations, and Cheryl R. Ganz, acting chief curator for philately.

Postal News for February 2, 2007

The latest issue of the PostCom Bulletin is available online. In this issue:

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Postmaster General Jack Potter announced today that Linda Kingsley, Vice President of Strategic Planning since 2003, will be serving in the new position of Senior Vice President, Strategy and Transition.

According to the International Herald Tribune, "when the German government ends Deutsche Post's monopoly on simple letter delivery next Jan. 1, in the name of better service and lower prices for consumers, the postal service will have to open its sorting and delivery system to other players — in much the same way that former telecommunications and transportation monopolies have had to adjust. For its part, Deutsche Post is fighting back, putting competitors on notice that access to its postal sorting and distribution network will come only if they meet the company's specifications for humble letters — "no bills on beer coasters," a spokesman, Hans Jürgen Thomeczek, said. And since this will be a business, and not a public utility, newcomers will have to pay for the privilege."

Senator Akaka, who along with Senator Thad Cochran (R-MS) first identified serious management challenges facing the U.S. Postal Service during their tenure on the Senate Postal Subcommittee, said he was especially pleased that the bipartisan, bicameral effort to enact postal reform legislation has resulted in postal transformation no longer being on the High-Risk List.   “Senator Cochran and I worked hard to impress upon our colleagues the need to modernize the Postal Service.  I’m delighted our early efforts helped pave the way for last year’s success.”

According to the Arcadia Weekly, "Tax time means added opportunities for identity thieves to steal your identity. The documents taxpayers send and receive this time of year contain all the information identity thieves look for. Your name, address, bank and credit account information and, most importantly, your Social Security number. For the identity thief, tax time provides a treasure chest of opportunity. It is important to remember to be especially careful handling tax-related documents this time of year....During tax season; be sure to retrieve your postal mail every day. Uncollected mail is an invitation to an identity thief. When mailing your tax documents, always try to take them directly to the Post office, dropping them in a box inside the building. If you use an outside Post Office box, it’s best to drop your mail before the last pick-up of the day. Leaving mail overnight gives a thief more opportunity to steal mail. Don’t leave tax mail in an outgoing box at work, or in an unlocked box for pickup. Unguarded mail is a theft waiting to happen." [Of course, if there are ANY of those blue neighborhood collection boxes still around, you could deposit your precious items there too.]


In case you've forgotten, this is what a postal collection box used to look like.

The Hindustan Times has reported that "in a recent initiative by the postal department, women have been engaged in delivering posts. In the first round, the department has appointed six women for this purpose. These women will undergo a training for three months and then they will be associated with the various post offices around the state."

According to GovExec.com, "When William H. Young, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, responded to Bush's signing of the first postal reform bill in decades, he pointed out in a message to NALC members that the bill "preserves our collective bargaining rights - rights that many workers at Homeland Security and the Department of Defense lost earlier in the Bush years."

NY1 has reported that "Josephine Baker is still causing a stir more than 80 years after she took Paris by storm with her nearly naked dance review. Her step-son got a taste of Post Office censorship after he tried to mail post cards featuring a watercolor of the famous dancer. The U.S. Postal Service apologized for any inconvenience this may have caused, and said the clerk may have made an error. "

From Business Wire: "Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c49705) has announced the addition of “European Express Benchmarking 2006” to their offering. The product includes market shares for the leading players in each country under study in key markets / categories: "Express" vs. "Parcel", B2B vs. B2C, Domestic, EU and Rest of the World destinations. Through primary research, this study gives unique insight into the European express market, and the companies that make it up."

Bookselling This Week has reported that "On December 20, the United States Postal Service (USPS) proposed changes to its International Mail products that could have a serious effect on overseas book sales. The USPS wants to discontinue its traditional international Surface Mail and replace it with International Surface Air Lift (ISAL) and ISAL "M-bags" that would have much higher rates. The USPS is accepting comments on its proposed changes until February 2, 2007. "This will have a huge and negative impact ... on export sales by U.S. publishers, distributors, and booksellers," said Phil Bevis of Arundel Books, which includes retail stores in Seattle and Los Angeles, an online store, and two warehouses in Washington State. He believes that the new rates would "in essence" triple shipping costs on over 50 percent of international orders." [Sometimes you gotta wonder. With the increases the USPS wants to put into effect for some domestic and international services makes you question whether postal officials even WANT your business. If the USPS REALLY wants mailers to go elsewhere, then get rid of the #@$% letter mail monpoly.]

DM News has noted that "The Postal Regulatory Commission has established its Office of Inspector General, beginning a transformation mandated under the recently signed Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act. The law reconstitutes what was the Postal Rate Commission into a regulatory body with greater authority and responsibility. The first inspector general is to be appointed within 180 days....A PRC notice will appear shortly in the Federal Register, inviting public comment on many topics facing the commission in fulfilling the new law's requirements, Mr. Blair said. Comments are due within 60 days of the date of publication of the notice...."I cannot stress enough how much the [PRC] desires and is going to need the comments of every postal stakeholder," Mr. Blair said. "This begins a dialogue that will be essential to the future of mail in this nation, and I encourage everyone to make their thoughts known as we go forward with our efforts."

Postal News for February 1, 2007

PostCom Members! Posted on this site is the latest PostCom Issue Brief. This brief is on Postal Volume Trends. The 8-page report provides a detailed look at the trends in mail volume over the past 15 years. The charts clearly illustrate that the Postal Service's business model has changed. This might prove a useful report to share with your company's top executives, as it highlights the ongoing evolution of the Postal Service's core business. Any member that wants the original Excel charts, and the worksheets from which the charts were made, please contact Kate Muth at kmuth@postcom.org. We also have some information on Periodicals and International Mail in Excel format.

Sen. Trent Lott published in the Congressional Record a very fine tribute to former Postal Rate Commission chairman George Omas.

The lastest DMM Advisory from the U.S. Postal Service has been posted on this site.

dBusiness News Potomac has reported that "Innovations Group Inc. (IGI) today announced that the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) has awarded the company a contract to provide Mailing Systems to thousands of Contact Postal Units nationwide. The system will provide operators a Point of Sale functionality to sell postal products and services to consumers. The contract includes application software development, system integration, human factors engineering, software certification, program management, training and documentation, deployment services, help desk services, software maintenance and systems lifecycle support."

The Express has reported that "there is just over one month until the March 8 deadline for responses to the Government's consultation on the Post Office network. It seeks to take a strategic approach to secure the network's long-term future by addressing the considerable problems Post Offices currently face."

The Detroit Free Press has reported that "Detroit Police are crediting a U.S. postal worker today for assisting cops in catching a 38-year-old man, who shot his girlfriend in the hand after an argument on the city’s east side." [It gives new meaning to the phrase "bulk male delivery."

The Kansan has reported that "A tractor-trailer hauling mail for the U.S. Postal Service caught fire overnight Wednesday on Interstate 70, closing the highway for about 11 hours, authorities said."

According to Business Week, "United Parcel Service (UPS), buffeted by headwinds from the slowing U.S. economy, announced financial results on Jan. 30 that disappointed the market. But the Atlanta package delivery giant has been trying to build up its presence in countries like China during recent years, and its business overseas has been staying afloat."

Dow Jones has reported that "Brazil's government plans to cancel the rights of Brazilian giant private-sector bank Bradesco SA (BBD) to provide financial services through governmental post offices, Communications Minister Helio Costa said late Wednesday."

The Montclair Times has reported that "Proving that ordinary citizens can have a global impact, staff members at Montclair High School raised $950 in December to benefit American troops stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan. While the cause may be a familiar one in these war-torn times, the fundraiser was unique in one respect: all of the money will go to purchase Silly String. Aerosol cans are considered hazardous materials because there’s a propellent in it,” she explained. Since the U.S. Postal Service won’t transport hazardous substances, Shriver and her helpers have made arrangements with Atlas Air to pilot the shipment overseas, she said."

Union Network International has told its members that "Organising and signing agreements with world's biggest companies are key themes of the annual meeting of UNI staff, being held in Nyon, Switzerland. "We face amazingly powerfully companies that are increasing in size," UNI General Secretary Philip Jennings told the opening session of the intensive four-day meeting. "There are more mergers and acquisitions than ever seen before and there are a trillion dollars of investment funds out there waiting to buy companies." Global organising efforts and signing agreements with multinationals to ensure labour rights wherever those companies operate were two key priorities to emerge from UNI's second World Congress in Chicago in August 2005. "We have to organise in multinational companies and we have to ensure trade union rights in multinationals," said Philip."

The Independent has reported that "The Union Haddiema Maghqudin suspended its industrial action directives at Maltapost after the management withdrew the proposals it had submitted for a new collective agreement, the UHM said in a statement."

PostCom Members! The Association for Postal Commerce has filed its comments on the Postal Service's proposed rules concerning the R2006-1 implementation mailing standards, which were first published in the Federal Register on September 27, 2006, and published a second time with some revisions on January 17, 2007.

Transport Intelligence has reported that:

The latest issue of the National Association of Major Mail Users eView is posted on this site. For information on joining NAMMU, contact membership@nammu.org.