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FedEx, UPS warn mail delivery could be interrupted by winter storm as driver safety takes priority

FOX News

Fox News correspondent Mike Tobin reports that severe weather disrupts travel plans ahead of the holidays on'Special Report.' FedEx and UPS announced mail delivery could be interrupted by the massive winter storm moving across the U.S. after key distribution hubs were blasted by the severe weather conditions. On Friday, FedEx posted a statement to its website warning those who used its Express service that the guaranteed delivery date of Dec. 26 may not be met after the Memphis and Indianapolis hubs experienced "substantial" weather disruptions. The shipping company said actions have been taken to lessen any impact on delivery, but the safety of its team members is the "number one priority." "We recognize the importance of deliveries this holiday weekend and are committed to providing service to the best of our ability by implementing contingency measures where it is safe and possible to do so," the statement read.


Saturday mail deliveries to end in Japan as early as autumn next year

The Japan Times

A revision to the postal law was enacted Friday, allowing Japan Post Co. to scrap Saturday and next-day deliveries of ordinary mail as early as autumn next year. The bill to amend the postal law was approved at a plenary session of the House of Councilors. The move reflects a decline in mail volumes and is also aimed at improving post office personnel's work conditions. The government had delayed the submission of the bill to the Diet in order to allow the Japan Post Holdings Co. group to prioritize dealing with the issue of irregularities in sales of Kampo postal life insurance products at post offices. The revised law will reduce the frequency of general mail deliveries from at least six days a week to at least five days a week.


Japan Post closer to scrapping Saturday mail deliveries

The Japan Times

Saturday deliveries of ordinary mail from Japan Post may soon be a thing of past. During a Diet session set to begin on Oct. 26, the government plans to submit a bill scrapping such deliveries, sources have said. If the bill is enacted during the session, Saturday deliveries are expected to be abolished as early as autumn next year, the sources said. The government has been refraining from submitting the bill to revise the postal law in order to prioritize responses to sales irregularities involving postal life insurance products. The postal law currently requires Japan Post Co. to deliver ordinary mail six days a week or more.


Japan Post closer to scrapping Saturday mail deliveries

The Japan Times

Saturday deliveries of ordinary mail from Japan Post may soon be a thing of past. During a Diet session set to begin on Oct. 26, the government plans to submit a bill scrapping such deliveries, sources have said. If the bill is enacted during the session, Saturday deliveries are expected to be abolished as early as autumn next year, the sources said. The government has been refraining from submitting the bill to revise the postal law in order to prioritize responses to sales irregularities involving postal life insurance products. The postal law currently requires Japan Post Co. to deliver ordinary mail six days a week or more.


Judge blocks Postal Service changes that slowed mail delivery

FOX News

Fox News senior judicial analyst Judge Andrew Napolitano weighs in on debate over USPS and mail-in voting. A U.S. judge on Thursday granted a request to temporarily block controversial Postal Service changes that have been accused of slowing mail nationwide, calling them "a politically motivated attack " ahead of the 2020 presidential election. Judge Stanley Bastian in Yakima, Wash., said he was issuing a nationwide preliminary injunction against the USPS sought by 14 states that sued the Trump administration and the Postal Service. The states, all led by Democratic attorneys general, challenged the Postal Service's so-called "leave behind" policy, where trucks have been leaving postal facilities on time regardless of whether there is more mail to load. They also sought to force the Postal Service to treat election mail as first-class mail.


Mail delivery suspended at L.A. public housing complex with over 1,800 residents

Los Angeles Times

Mail delivery has been suspended at Mar Vista Gardens, a public housing complex with more than 1,800 tenants in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Del Rey, forcing residents to pick up mail and packages at a Culver City facility over a mile away. Culver City Post Office Postmaster Roderick Strong told officials at the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles this week that mail delivery was immediately being put on hold because of safety issues at the 43-acre housing complex. Strong had previously cited safety issues as a reason to set up centralized banks of mailboxes at Mar Vista Gardens instead of delivering mail to each door, an idea that troubled residents of the complex. Tenant leaders had raised concerns about voting in the upcoming elections and questioned why the same changes were not happening in wealthier areas. An L.A. politico helped select the new postmaster general.


Postmaster General's actions 'truly slowing down' mail delivery, says head of postal workers union

FOX News

Postmaster General DeJoy to testify before Senate; American Postal Workers Union president Mark Dimondstein weighs in. "The new Postmaster General has instituted a number of policies that are truly slowing down mail," Mark Dimondstein, president of the American Postal Workers Union, told "America's Newsroom" on Tuesday. Dimondstein made the comment in anticipation of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy testifying on Friday about the U.S. Postal Service amid the battle over mail-in ballots before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. The hearing comes after congressional Democrats over the weekend demanded DeJoy and the chairman of the U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors Robert Duncan testify over recent "sweeping and dangerous operational changes" at the agency that they claim are "slowing" the mail and "jeopardizing the integrity of the 2020 election. A source familiar with the plans told Fox News that DeJoy has agreed to appear on Monday. Host Trace Gallagher asked Dimondstein on Tuesday if he believes, as Democrats contest, that DeJoy "is trying to sabotage the election by making cuts that slow down the flow of mail?" "I can't really judge the motivation," he said in response. "We just have to look at the deeds and the deeds thus far is the new Postmaster General has instituted a number of policies that are truly slowing down mail.


Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Over Mail Delivery

U.S. News

The apartment complexes near Western Kentucky University sued the United States Postal Service and a postmaster in January after the agency began delivering mail in bulk to property management offices instead of tenants' mailboxes. The change came after the Postal Service reclassified the residences as dormitories, according to the lawsuit.


The Quiet Heroism of Mail Delivery

The Atlantic - Technology

On Wednesday, a polar vortex brought bitter cold to the Midwest. Overnight, Chicago reached a low of 21 degrees Fahrenheit below zero, making it slightly colder than Antarctica, Alaska, and the North Pole. Wind chills were 64 degrees below zero in Park Rapids, Minnesota, and 45 degrees below zero in Buffalo, North Dakota, according to the National Weather Service. Schools, restaurants, and businesses closed, and more than 1,000 flights have been canceled. Even the United States Postal Service stalled mail delivery, temporarily.


Robots Might Be The Future Of Mail Delivery

Huffington Post - Tech news and opinion

TROISDORF, Germany (Reuters) - Germany's Deutsche Post is testing robots that could help postal workers cope with increasing numbers of parcels on their delivery rounds, a company manager said on Thursday. The volume of parcels being delivered by Deutsche Post in Germany is rising steadily as more and more Germans buy goods online from retailers such as Amazon.com That is making up for declining letter volumes, but posing problems due to the larger size of items involved. "Robots could be used in deliveries in three to five years' time," Clemens Beckmann, head of innovation at the group's parcel and letter division, said in an interview with Reuters. The robots, which look like a table on wheels on which goods can be placed, would follow delivery workers, helping them to transport and carry heavy parcels. If the postie stops walking, the robot stops too, and it only starts again when they move on.