Tag: Domestic

Saudi’s postal delivery system being modernised

Saudi Arabia is getting ready for home delivery of mail. The kingdom’s entire postal delivery system is being modernised. Mailboxes have been put up almost throughout Jeddah, and in an effort to make the system smoother, Jeddah Municipality plans to overhaul the city’s street-naming system.

Jeddah’s streets currently have names, districts are numbered and buildings have numbers, though not always displayed. The current system is confusing, and since most people get mail delivered at office addresses or at post offices, so far there has little need for a clearly defined address system.

The plan envisages a more organised numerical system that would fit in with the kingdom’s new postal system.

Husain Al Hijari, head of the municipality’s naming and numbering department, assured that after implementing the new address system, people would find it much easier to identify their way and reach their destination through the clear and organised signs and structure numbers. He said that the numerical address system started more than 29 years ago, but it stopped because people did not understand it.

Al Hijari explained that under the new system, main thoroughfares are called ‘roads’ and smaller routes will be ‘streets’. Some major streets have been renamed. For example, Prince Muhammad bin Abdul Aziz Street (more commonly known as Tahliah Street) is now Prince Muhammad bin Abdul Aziz Road. The same change was made to all major routes, such as Prince Majed Road, Sari Road and Palestine Road.

The city will be divided into four quarters that will meet at the Al Bai’ah roundabout in downtown Jeddah. Each quarter will be divided into four sub-sections. Residences will get a more formal numbering system that will ascend out from the city centre. This will make it easier for residents, especially in apartment buildings, to know their residential mailing address once the new Saudi postal system goes into full swing.

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Britain's Royal Mail, Union Halt Talks; Postal Workers Want To Scrutinize Deal Terms

Britain’s Royal Mail and its postal workers’ union have agreed last Thursday 18th October to temporarily suspend negotiations on the terms of a new agreement that will end their four-month dispute.

Union officials insisted on closely scrutinizing the details of the deal, including the 6.9 percent pay adjustment over two years for postal workers, before putting the contract to a vote.

The review of the terms effectively delays the signing of the compromise that will finally put the labor dispute behind them.

BBC reported that Royal Mail had agreed to meet the Communication Workers Union (CWU) to clarify outstanding issues, but it added that “the agreement reached and endorsed last Friday by CWU general secretary Billy Hayes and deputy general secretary Dave Ward stands.”

Marathon talks between Royal Mail and CWU last Friday resulted in an outline for a settlement of the dispute. Contested areas included pay, pension fund reform, retirement age and working practices and these were expected to have been ironed out in the settlement.

The union’s executives should approve the deal and thereafter, put it to the vote by the CWU’s 130,000 members. The vote was originally set for middle of this week had the union officials endorsed the agreement.

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KDDI and Japan Post Service offer SMS to snail mail for holidays

Japan Post Service Co. and KDDI are dumping tech into the snail mail world with an SMS to paper mail service. KDDI customers will have the option to create a New Year’s cards on their mobile, then send them to the Holiday partnership for printing and mailing. Japan Post Service is said to be planning on using all of its 24,000 offices in the country to print and get the cards out for the expected 10 million customers. The opportunity for gag cards here boggles, we’re wishing we see something like this over here someday.

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