
Rural mailboxes axed because of road safety: Canada Post
Canada Post is planning to cancel home delivery to nearly half of its customers along some rural routes in Quebec’s Eastern Townships because of road safety concerns.
The postal agency is evaluating the safety of mail routes across Canada, after three carriers died and 37 were injured while making deliveries since 2005.
Nearly 40 per cent of the routes examined in the Eastern Townships have failed the safety evaluation, because they present a hazard to carriers forced to stop on winding roads with high speed limits.
“Sometimes, because the shoulder is very narrow, [the carrier] has to stop on the road,” and that’s risky, said Canada Post spokeswoman Line Brien.
Community postboxes will replace individual deliveries on routes that failed to make the grade, Brien said.
The decision has angered many residents in the area.
Canada Post estimates it will cost about USD 500 million over the next three years to inspect all rural mailboxes in Canada.
About 843,000 Canadian residential addresses are served by rural mailboxes, Canada Post says on its website. Of the 14 million places where Canada Post delivers across the country, rural mailboxes represent about six per cent.