Well it works, unfortunately there are a couple of them I'd rather not even see let alone talk to.That’s the new USPS meet your neighbor plan
Well it works, unfortunately there are a couple of them I'd rather not even see let alone talk to.That’s the new USPS meet your neighbor plan
So the system allows it to show delivered when it isn't? And the employees will go look for it even though it may not be there? Out of all the times I've looked for missing mail, not one person has ever explained that to me. Thanks.Informed delivery clearly states when you sign up it may not be the actual mail piece being delivered today since it is fed by the pieces upstream hitting automation equipment. I was Postmaster in Ada in the early 90’s for a couple of years. Fired 2 carriers while I was there and a couple more were on the way out the door when I left to go to Shawnee. Some good people but a few lazy ones as well. I liked the town of Ada for the most part except on food stamp day when they were lined up around the block. Most of them appeared able bodied to me but not a lot of them applied when I had a vacancy.
Obviously it was an improper scan by an employee or it was delivered to the wrong address but was “delivered”. I’m sure you’ll consider this just an excuse but I can tell you many times a delivered mail piece was delivered but someone in the house or business didn’t tell the person actually looking for it. In 34 years I only had a couple of times a piece of mail was actually lost. It’s always somewhere, just maybe not the place it’s expected to be. No one ever complains about the 98% of stuff delivered on time and mistakes do happen. In reading this thread you’d think it was every day to everyone. I’m sure things have changed a bunch since I left and I can only imagine trying to manage todays snowflakes. The times they are a changing.So the system allows it to show delivered when it isn't? And the employees will go look for it even though it may not be there? Out of all the times I've looked for missing mail, not one person has ever explained that to me. Thanks.
My uncle ultimately retired after working at the PO in Konawa.Informed delivery clearly states when you sign up it may not be the actual mail piece being delivered today since it is fed by the pieces upstream hitting automation equipment. I was Postmaster in Ada in the early 90’s for a couple of years. Fired 2 carriers while I was there and a couple more were on the way out the door when I left to go to Shawnee. Some good people but a few lazy ones as well. I liked the town of Ada for the most part except on food stamp day when they were lined up around the block. Most of them appeared able bodied to me but not a lot of them applied when I had a vacancy.
It's obviously area specific I would say, just like any other service, some good some bad.Obviously it was an improper scan by an employee or it was delivered to the wrong address but was “delivered”. I’m sure you’ll consider this just an excuse but I can tell you many times a delivered mail piece was delivered but someone in the house or business didn’t tell the person actually looking for it. In 34 years I only had a couple of times a piece of mail was actually lost. It’s always somewhere, just maybe not the place it’s expected to be. No one ever complains about the 98% of stuff delivered on time and mistakes do happen. In reading this thread you’d think it was every day to everyone. I’m sure things have changed a bunch since I left and I can only imagine trying to manage todays snowflakes. The times they are a changing.
So you would expect people to drive an hour or more round trip simply to get their mail? Doing away with rural post offices is a ridiculous statement.Nah, I’m retired and my last decent contact retired last month too. If it was up to me there wouldn’t be a post office in small towns like Medicine Park. I’m hoping Trump gets elected and brings me back as PMG. I’ve got some great ideas.
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