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POSTAL NEWS January- June 2003
2005:
Jan|
Feb|
Mar| May| Jun| July| Aug| Sept.|
Oct| Nov| Dec
2004: Jan| Feb|
Mar|
Apr
May|
Jun|
Jul
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Aug
| Sept.| Oct|
Dec
2003:
July-Dec. 2003
|
|
Although Postal News in 2003 was dominated
with the Postal
Commission and
Early Out Retirements for APWU, NAPS, Mail
Handlers and Postal Reform--
other issues were also newsworthy. note: Some of the links below may not
be active.
Click
here for current postal news
|
| January |
-
As Automation Eliminates Jobs,
Postal Service Wants to Offer Early Retirements
– The U.S. Postal Service is seeking
permission to offer early retirement to mail clerks, mail
sorters and other workers who are no longer needed because of
automation. The Postal Service projects that automation will
eliminate 16,000 jobs by September, the end of the fiscal year.
Most of the jobs will be abolished as people quit or retire, but
the Postal Service expects that early-outs will be needed to
reach its job reduction target.
(Washington Post)
-
Postal Service Concedes Errors in Handling
Suspicious Letter at Hartford Facility
-
High-tech postal probe is detailed - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette -
They had teams of five agents following her around in separate cars. They
had a time-lapse camera hidden 15 feet up in a tree behind her Verona
house. They had a global positioning satellite tracking device attached
to the bottom of her Chevy conversion van. For years, U.S. Postal
Inspectors spied on Elaine Borghini,, because they suspected her of faking
a wrist injury to collect workers' compensation benefits she didn't
deserve. For some six years, the government says, Borghini has collected
about $30,000 a year in workers' comp checks while secretly working as a
housecleaner.
-
Postal Service Records a $1B Profit
– The Postal Service recorded a $1 billion profit in the first
quarter of the fiscal year, topping expectations by $200 million
-
Miami Gunman Surrenders After Hijacking
- A gunman seized a mail truck Friday and forced the
postal carrier to lead police on a 90-minute low-speed chase
through the streets of Miami before he finally released his
hostage and surrendered.
-
Postal officials want carriers off
street before dark -Postal officials in the Kansas City
area are allowing some carriers with heavier routes to start
their shifts earlier so they’ll be off the streets before dark.
Carriers may wear reflective vests at night.
-
Letter Carriers on Front
Lines in Drive forParcel Business-
-
Lengthy Agenda for Postal Reform Panel-More
mailboxes and fewer letters are spelling trouble for the U.S.
Postal Service, officials told the first meeting of a
presidential commission that will recommend ways to improve the
agency. Postmaster General John Potter said about 1.7 million
new addresses are added each year. “As new homes, towns and
cities are built, the Postal Service must grow with them,”
Potter said. While the Postal Service must pay the cost of
expanding its mailing network, its revenue is slumping. The
volume of first-class mail is dropping as more people pay bills
and correspond over the Internet.; These problems are among the
issues that will be considered by the commission appointed Dec.
11 by President Bush.
-
USPS decides to sell popular
postal tubs (white bins
-
Postal worker files lawsuit
against PMG Potter over Brentwood contamination-One
of the two postal workers who survived inhalation anthrax after
being exposed to the deadly bacteria has filed a multi-million
dollar lawsuit. Leroy Richmond, said the postmaster general
waited too long to shut down the Brentwood postal facility,
which was contaminated with anthrax.
-
GAO: Labor
needs to improve tracking of injury claims for injured
federal/postal workers
|see
pdf report
-
Virginia
Postal Worker played critical role in Brentwood cleanup
-
New Division To Help USPS Simplify
Tracking Mail-Standardizing bar codes on
envelopes and improving mail tracking will be the biggest job of
the U.S. Postal Service’s new Intelligent Mail and Address
Quality division. Charles Bravo is senior vice president
of the new division, which was announced by Postmaster General
John Potter Jan. 7
-
Pittsburgh Local APWU files federal suit against USPS,
claiming the agency has refused to abide by arbitration
decisions in grievance cases. According to the suit, filed in
U.S. District Court, the Postal Service has "wantonly" and
"willfully" violated the collective bargaining agreement between
the parties by refusing to implement arbitration awards stemming
from a series of 1997 labor disputes in the "small parcel bundle
service" operation. The union, which represents about 2,700
postal employees, said it won binding arbitration awards in all
of the cases.
-
Postal center likely doomed -
Flint Journal - The U.S. Postal Service's Flint processing and
distribution center almost surely will close, in six months in
the worst case and four years in the best, a top postal official
said Wednesday. The closing would displace about 300 workers, a
huge loss of income tax for the city. The employees could be
allowed to transfer to a planned new Royal Oak-area sorting
center that could take over the Flint operations. While local
mail would be sorted in the Royal Oak, Lansing or Saginaw areas,
residents won't see any change in mail service, postal
authorities say. Union and political leaders learned of the
center's status during a 90-minute meeting with Peter
Allen, manager of operations support for the Postal Service's
Great Lakes region. Flint Journal
-
USPS Web Site Redesign Debuts Today
-
MIAMI APWU President sued -Top officials of the
local American Postal Workers' Union suspected something was
wrong when they started getting foreclosure notices on their
west Miami-Dade County headquarters building last year. Then
came the avalanche of overdue bills and court judgments.
Now Local 172 leaders say their longtime president, Judy
Johnson, has ''wrongfully taken'' at least $8,811. They claim in
a Miami-Dade Circuit Court lawsuit that she wrote at least 12
unauthorized checks to herself from the union's nonprofit
business, One Seven Two Holding Association, Inc.
|
February
-
Postal Governor Lends Voice for Reform-David
Fineman has been outspoken on the need for postal reform in his eight
years on the U.S. Postal Service’s Board of Governors. Fineman was elected chairman of the Board of
Governors in January and, last week he testified before President Bush’s
Commission on the Postal Service. Fineman believes some radical changes
are needed to keep the Postal Service functioning
-
Comments
to Presidential Postal Commission Received from postal workers-
How about early buyouts? That would lower
the labor costs.” “There way too many chiefs ( that do nothing to
move the mail! ) and not enough Indians ( that do move the mail! "I
work for the postal service as an RCA which means I have no benefits.
Let me make a suggestion: TURN THE HEAT DOWN IN ALL OF YOUR OFFICES."
I have been a Letter Carrier for almost 25 years. It is my belief, after these many years, that
reform of the Postal Service is badly needed."
-
USPS under fire for office supply deal>--Committee Chairman Don
Manzullo, R-Ill., and the panel's ranking Democrat, New York Rep. Nydia
Velazquez, asked the U.S. Postal Service to rescind its national office
supply contract with Boise Office Solutions after the General Accounting
Office found the Postal Service saved only $1 million through the deal.
-
SmartBox Survey: 53% Favor Eliminating Saturday
Delivery
-
House Post Offices' Ex-Supervisor Says He Stole
$200,000–
Terrence J. McAndrew was nearing retirement from the U.S. Postal Service
in May when he walked into the office of a Montgomery County defense
lawyer and made a startling confession. Over the last seven years,
McAndrew told the lawyer, he had embezzled at least $150,000 from the five
House of Representatives post offices he managed
-
UPS CEO Mike Eskew Seeks Viable, Focused USPS in the
21st Century
-
NALC President Young Tells Presidential Postal Commission-
6-day Universal Mail Service Must Continue; Supports Work Share Discounts
for Mail Processing Aid
-
Accused Postmaster Makes Bail –
Charles Allen Bailey bonds out of the Dade County
Justice Center Thursday afternoon after a judge grants a 50 thousand
dollar bond for the aggravated sodomy charge Bailey faces. The U.S.
Postmaster accused of sodomizing a female employee he supervised bailed
himself out of the Dade County Jail late Thursday afternoon. Bailey was
arrested at his Rising Fawn, Georgia post office Wednesday morning, after
a joint investigation by U.S. Postal Inspectors and the Dade County
Sheriff' s Department.
-
Post
office monitors are swiftly removed
– The baby monitors are
gone. Post offices in Everett and Marysville decided Wednesday to pull
the plugs after installing the devices to listen in as window clerks
talked with customers. The idea was bashed as an invasion of privacy by
clerks and customers after The Herald revealed Tuesday that the post
offices were using the devices in an attempt to improve customer service.
There also were lingering questions of whether the practice was legal or
ethical. Customers were never told they were being listened to by post
office supervisors when they approached a postal service window. No signs
were posted, and the monitors were hidden on clerks' desks. Postmasters
said the intent was for supervisors to ensure clerks asked the proper
questions of customers mailing packages, not to eavesdrop on
conversations. But postal authorities now say the listening devices
likely violated the U.S. Postal Service's code of conduct, which plainly
prohibits post office employees from monitoring or recording oral
communications of any person without the consent of all parties. -Everett
Daily Herald -(dead link)
-
Post offices listen in on clerks –
Everett Daily Herald - Watch what you say at the post office. Listening
devices recently were installed in the service windows at three post
offices in Snohomish County, becoming the only ones in the Northwest and
perhaps the nation taking such measures. Postal supervisors say the
devices -- off-the-shelf baby monitors -- are intended to ensure that
clerks ask the proper security questions of customers mailing packages.
Managers can listen in using a receiver in a back office. But the
microphones also pick up conversations between clerks and unknowing
customers. The monitors are set off to the side, hidden in the mix of
stamps, scales and registers near the clerk's desks. No warnings are
posted notifying customers that their conversations may be monitored.
Postal supervisors insist the conversations, while being listened to, are
not being recorded. They say their interest is only in improving customer
service. But the postal clerks union says workers feel demeaned by the
practice (dead link)
-
Invasion of privacy A Postal Service supervisor violated an employee’s privacy rights by telling
his co-workers that the employee was HIV-positive, according to a decision
by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
-
Postal officials drop idea of halting some deliveries to
dangerous areas
|
March
-
Nebraska Postmaster Bans Book, Then Suspends and Fires Union
Representative
-
GAO revisits postal IT center closing
-
USPS Gathers Bids To Automate Sorting of
Magazines -The U.S. Postal
Service hopes to save up to $3 billion a year by automating the
sorting of periodicals moving through the mail. In
December, the Postal Service solicited proposals for systems
that could sort the 50 billion periodicals, catalogs and other
pieces of so-called flat mail that the Postal Service delivers
each year. Proposals were due Feb. 28. The Postal
Service hopes to begin installing the new sorting equipment as
early as 2006. The system is intended to simplify delivery
for mail carriers and follows a successful automation of letter
sorting
-
Senate panel votes to let Postal
Service keep retirement plan surplus
-
APWU Preparing to Implement Voluntary Early Retirements
– The union and management are discussing procedures for
offering voluntary early retirement to APWU-represented
employees, despite the fact that Office of Personnel Management
has not yet responded to management’s request for authority to
do so. A favorable decision from OPM is expected within several
weeks. When approval is confirmed, notice will be provided to
employees immediately. In the interim, it would be helpful to
have an estimate of the number of employees who are considering
voluntary early retirement, and the installations that would be
affected. Notwithstanding statements made by local or regional
postal officials to the contrary, unless OPM disapproves the
Postal Service request, the early outs will be offered to all
APWU-represented employees nationwide (APWU)
-
Union, Congressional Rep Intercede on
Postal Plant Closing-
-
U.S. Attorney investigating mail dumping in Bluffton SC –The
U.S. Attorney's Office is reviewing an investigative report
about mail dumped at the old Bluffton post office and will
decide whether any criminal charges should be filed
-
Postal worker sues co-worker after being forced to walk away nude
-
Postal worker accused of stealing $100,000– A
longtime U.S. Postal Service employee was arrested yesterday on
charges he stole mail and dozens of U.S. Treasury checks valued
at more than $100,000 while working at the Honolulu airport post
office last summer.
-
Bizarre Postal Bonding by Inspector General Staffers cost
millions
-
Postal Service Defends Non-Postal
Offerings – prc.gov
-
Postal Service Operators Receive Free
Tax Advice, Preparation – Come
April 15, top officers at the U.S. Postal Service have another
reason to smile. Thanks to a little-known perk, postal
ratepayers have been picking up the tab for officers' tax
preparation since 1998. The federal agency has also provided
its top brass with individual financial counseling, including
retirement and estate planning. No other federal agency offers
such benefits. The postal perk, which less than a dozen of the
top 42 officers have been using, came to light recently when the
Postal Service advertised for a new firm to handle the service.
Arthur Andersen's accounting firm, which had the contract, is
defunct. Gerry McKiernan, a postal spokesman, said the agency
is authorized to compensate its officers "on a standard of
comparability" to that of private business (Knight-Ridder)
|
| April
|
May
-
Senate passes bill that warns of health emergencies-State
lawmakers say it was wrong that workers at a Wallingford postal
sorting facility didn't know the full extent of anthrax
contamination at their workplace almost two years ago. The
Senate has passed a bill requiring employers to immediately
notify workers, as well as state health officials, of the
potential risks from such health emergencies. A General
Accounting Office report found that state health and postal
officials didn't tell mail workers in Wallingford about the
seriousness of the anthrax contamination believed to have killed
a 94-year-old Oxford woman in November 2001.
-
Supreme
Court to Hear Postal Antitrust Case – The Supreme Court said it
will decide next year whether the U.S. Postal Service can be sued for
antitrust violations over the way it handled contracts for mail sacks.
Flamingo Industries Ltd. claims the Postal Service is trying to create a
monopoly in the mail sack business, driving U.S. companies out of business
by transferring work to foreign manufacturers. An appeals court ruled
that the Postal Service is a "person" and can be sued under federal
antitrust laws. Flamingo's attorney, Harold Krent, said Congress intended
for the Postal Service to be run like a business. "Preventing the Postal
Service from anticompetitive behavior would further, not hinder, Congress'
intent that the Postal Service compete on an equal footing with entities
such as Federal Express and UPS," Kent told justices in a filing. The
case is U.S. Postal Service v. Flamingo Industries, Ltd.
-
Stamps.com Introduces Hidden Postage - Stamps.com offers a new
shipping capability called Hidden Postage that lets its PC Postage
customers print a shipping label that does not contain the cost of the
postage . It is designed to reduce complaints from customers who might
object to shipping and handling charges after seeing the postage.USPS
permit holders can also send mail without revealing postage costs.
WindowBook offers postal productivity software to work with permit holder
accounts
-
The Ghosts of Brentwood- Despite
anthrax tests, workers debate returning. The toxic gas turned
the dark blue carpet in the upstairs offices a light brown. It
blurred family photos people were forced to abandon on their
desks, rendering the faces ghostlike
-
If you don't think privatized mail works, ask Sweden, Germany
and Australia- Jewish World Review –Lexington Institute
adjunct fellow Max Pappas comments, “As the President's
Commission on the U.S. Postal Service desperately seeks a way to
stop the agency's financial nosedive, it ought to reach out and
grab the hand brake of privatization. If it foregoes the
privatization solution, the commission is left only with
firebreak reforms that won't cause the necessary long-term
changes that powerful market forces will bring
-
APWU
Critical of Postal Commission Survey of Workers –
apwu.org - Commission Hires Consultants To Query Workers About
Pay Survey on Bargaining Issues ‘Totally Inappropriate’
-
Postal Service IG Defends Tactics, Costs -
Washington Post - Corcoran: 'I'm Being Tried in the Media'. One
way or another, Karla W. Corcoran, the U.S. Postal Service
inspector general, is going to be out of her job next year. The
question is whether she will leave on her own terms or be sent
packing following allegations of mismanagement at her 750-person
agency
-
Should the U.S. Postal Service be privatized to help finances?
CON: Privatizers would put end to universal service
-
Watching the Watchdog – ABC News - Person Responsible
for Rooting Out Waste at Postal Service Accused of Excesses.
The job of the inspector general at the U.S. Postal Service is
to root out waste, but the management practices of Inspector
General Karla Corcoran have been wasteful and frequently just
plain odd, a number of past and present employees, two U.S.
senators and a citizen taxpayers' group say.
-
Mailhandler Secretary-Treasurer Mark A.
Gardner's Report:To the Postal
Commission and to Congress: We Need Changes; Make Them the Right
Changes.
-
Can
the U.S. Postal Service be sued for antitrust
violations
-
Mailer Groups Back Potter's USPS Recommendations –
Direct Newsline - Mailer groups for the most part supported
Postmaster General Jack Potter's latest recommendations for
maintaining the U.S. Postal Service, which he made before the
President's Commission on the USPS
-
Deaf Employees File
Lawsuit Against USPS for Civil Rights Violations
-
-
USPS
makes deal with Hallmark Gold Crown stores - USPS
and Hallmark Gold Crown stores are bringing the Post Office to greeting
card shoppers in a new partnership that lets greeting card customers shop
and ship in the same convenient location. The agreement allows
participating Hallmark Gold Crown stores to sell official USPS products
and services at Post Office prices — Priority Mail up to 20 lbs,
First-Class Mail and selected special services like Delivery Confirmation,
Signature Confirmation, Insurance, Certified Mail and Return Receipt. The
driving principle behind the partnership — provide better service to our
non-business customers by giving them alternate service options with
extended times and locations, without building new Post Offices. By
improving ease of use for customers through Hallmark's shopping mall
presence, USPS can improve brand value and raise revenue, key objectives
of the Transformation Plan usps.com
-
Senators Seek Ouster of Postal Chief - Washington Post -
Charging that the post office's inspector general is responsible for more
wasteful spending than she prevents, two Senate Democrats are calling for
her to be fired.
-
Timid Steps Won’t Stop Postal Service From
Hurting Economy
-
GAO: Retest Postal Facilities for AnthraxThe
U.S. Postal Service should retest as many as 261 facilities
nationwide to guarantee they were not contaminated by anthrax,
the General Accounting Office’s chief technologist told a House
subcommittee May 19
-
Bringing Automation Full Circle
-Technology
in the USPS
-
Supporting Postal Workers in Turbulent Times
-
Senators call for firing of postal
inspector general
-
Issue Brief: The Postal Service’s
Dangerous Game
-
Going Postal" and Beyond: Dynamics
Triggering Workplace Violence
-a psychotherapist reflects
on his experience as a stress and
violence prevention consultant as it
pertains to the postal workforce.
-
Citizens Against Government Waste
Calls for Postal Inspector's Removal-CAGW
today called on USPS Board of Governors to remove USPS Inspector General (IG) Karla Corcoran from her
position due to extensive, ongoing mismanagement
•
Senator
probes 50+ complaints about Postal Inspector General-Wash
Times
-
USPS adds online service for businesses – The Postal
Service this week announced a new online service aimed at
simplifying transactions for business customers. USPS' Online
Payment Services Business Edition enables users to make bill
payments electronically rather than mailing checks
|
June
-
An interview with
PMG Potter – Federal Times - In the last two years, the U.S.
Postal Service has been at the center of a lot of news. The mail system
was used to deliver biological weapons for the first time. The
organization’s future financial prospects have taken a turn for the worse
amid widespread use of the Internet and dropping mail volume. And
President Bush has appointed a commission to consider whether the
organization is in need of its biggest overhaul since it was created in
1971. As postmaster general since June 2001, John Potter has been
overseeing the agency through these tumultuous times.
-
The Douglas Factors:
Disciplining employees is a fact of life-Disciplining employees is a fact
of life for federal managers. In this time of enhanced missions and smaller
staffs, agencies can ill afford to carry employees whose unacceptable
behavior eats up their bosses’ time, distracts their co-workers and hinders
accomplishment of the agency’s goals. In a recent case, aPostal Service
employee during an argument with her boss, threw a can of soda, which hit
the wall a foot away from him. Although the woman had 20 years of service
and an impeccable conduct and performance record, she was fired. On
appeal, the MSPB said it “will modify an agency-imposed penalty only when
it finds the agency failed to weigh the relevant factors [i.e., the
Douglas Factors] or the agency’s judgment clearly exceeded the bounds of
reasonableness.” The deciding official told the board he interpreted the
Postal Service’s zero tolerance policy on “violence, threats, harassment,
intimidation or bullying” to mean automatic dismissal. For this sin
against Douglas, the board changed the removal to a 45-day suspension.
-
McHugh: This may
be the year for postal reform
-
First-Class Mail Volume Continues to Decline – usps.com -
Revenues in Quarter III continued to fall below plan due to stagnant mail
volumes, Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President Richard
Strasser told the Postal Service Board of Governors today at its regular
monthly meeting. Revenue for Quarter III was $483 million below plan at
$16.048 billion. Expenses were $15.824 billion, $370 million under plan.
Net income for the quarter was $224 million, $112 million under plan
-
Senator
Carper Introduces Postal Reform Bill – senate.gov - Madam
President, I rise today to introduce the Postal Accountability and
Enhancement Act of 2003, legislation that makes the reforms necessary for
the Postal Service to thrive in the 21st Century and to better serve the
American people
-
Insurance Firm Facing $2.4 Million Bill From Post Office - Pueblo
Chieftain - Pueblo Chieftain -> A
$2.4 million
out-of-court settlement has been proposed that would end a civil case
claiming John Hightower, owner of Consumer
Insurance
Group Inc., underpaid postage on bulk mailings. Hightower's Consumer
Insurance
Group,sells
insurance
for Federal Kemper Life Assurance Co. and Fidelity Life Association,
according to court records. In 2000, Hightower told The Pueblo Chieftain
that he uses four
insurance
carriers regularly and obtains customers through the Internet. The 1999
civil case came to light when Mary L. Holmes, Poncha Springs postmaster,
reported the alleged underpayment of postage for certain bulk mailings
made by CIG from September 1994 through October 1997 at the U.S. post
office in Howard. Hightower said he has established a Web site,
www.postalserviceabuse.com , in which he says, "The USPS is not properly
training their rural postmasters, yet when their employees make mistakes
in the postal rates or regulations, the USPS is using extreme measures to
force their customers to retroactively pay for the USPS mistakes."
-
Postal Service testing
system that could train its employees
-
Capital-One Negotiated Service Agreement Approved - usps.com -
In a precedent-setting move, the U.S. Postal Service Governors today
approved the first Negotiated Service Agreement (NSA), a pricing strategy
that gives business mailers a mechanism for customized rates and services
that addresses their unique mailing needs and encourages cost-efficient
behavior
-
Postal Service and Microsoft Team-up on Electronic Postmark -
AuthentiDate Holding Corp., the provider of the USPS Electronic Postmark
service, today announced that the USPS EPM, which enables users to verify
authenticity, provide tamper detection, and date and time stamp their
electronic documents and files, will be integrated with Microsoft Office
Professional Edition 2003
-
The Postal Service’s Surplus Real Estate
-
Postal revenue down as mail volume stagnates
-
Body Found
In Burned Car Identified; Investigation Continues – WLKW
Louisville - A body found in the back seat of a burned car has been
identified, but the investigation into his death is far from over. State
forensic anthropologist Emily Craig used dental records to identify the
badly burned body as Scott May
-
Marketers go postal with art, toys, furnishings - USA Today -
Don't look for cappuccino- flavored stamps anytime soon. But the
financially struggling United States Postal Service is about to push the
envelope on marketing — big time. Even as it plans to cut nearly $3
billion in yearly costs from its $69 billion budget, the Postal Service
expects to add tens of millions of dollars in licensing revenue by
transforming the nation's seventh-most familiar brand and — as domestic
diva Martha Stewart did — bringing it into people's homes.
-
McHugh sees base closing commission as model for deciding Post Office cutbacks
-
Presidential Commissioner discusses outsourcing workers comp program
'Commissioner Carolyn Gallagher met with representatives from
GAB Robins to discuss the
benefits of the Postal Service using a third party administrator for their
worker’s compensation program.'
-
Mailman Dies In Shopping Plaza Shooting
-
Kansas City Mail Carrier Says She Was Fired For Delivering Harry Potter
Book Early
-
General Time Line Set for Early Outs
-
Inspector General work identifies $81.5 million in potential savings
and benefits for USPS
-
USPS settles Seattle casual grievances for $7.5 million?
-
Postal Service to Eliminate Police in Six Cities
-
Appeals Court upholds arbitration award that demoted manager
-
Crime and punishment on the job: the Douglas Factors
-
Postal worker fights 'disabled' label, loses
-
Leading Postal
Service Through Trying Times-
Federal Times interview with PMG Jack Potter
-
NALC: Carriers being denied penalty OT?
NALC President William H. Young has directed all shop stewards to review
the time cards of employees to make sure that all letter carriers are
being paid properly. Stewards who find any problems or incorrect pay
should contact their National Business Agent immediately. USPS
headquarters has assured President Young that it will work with NALC to
correct the situation.
-
USPS training center in Oklahoma to add $8 million APPS facility-
USPS
has announced an $8 million maintenance training facility will be built on
the campus of its National Center for Employee Development. The
60,000-square-foot addition will house three automated package processing
system (APPS) machines, each occupying about 7,500 square feet. The
building will include classrooms, labs and offices. It will be located on
a 10-acre site east of the NEDC Housing Facility. NCED manager Steve
Mosier said the postal service will provide maintenance training to
support a 16-month deployment of 74 APPS machines throughout the country,
and ongoing APPS training. Initially, 420 postal electronics technicians
and 210 mail processing equipment mechanics will go through the new
training program. Mosier said construction of the one-story training
facility is expected to take about seven months, followed by six weeks’
installation time for the new equipment. “We plan to begin APPS training
early next year,” he said.
-
Letter Carriers Collect 61.7 Million Pounds of Food In Annual Drive to
'Stamp Out Hunger' in America
- Postal innovation zips toward 40th
anniversary July 1
|