Tag: Domestic

Postal reform necessary

There must be deliberate policy in place as part of the repositioning of the Barbados Postal Service to ensure that the development and management of human capital is paramount.
This was the call from Attorney-General and Minister of Home Affairs, Freundel Stuart, as he addressed postal workers and guests at the Barbados Postal Service Retirement Banquet at the Plantation Restaurant recently.
Making the observation that postal reform had become necessary for all postal institutions, a process shortly to be resuscitated in Barbados, the Home Affairs Minister said several dynamics, including human resource development, came into focus.
He said postal services traditionally have been institutions established on the basis of legally protected public monopolies, and were now faced with the challenges of a technological revolution, globalisation and the opening up to competition in respect of the services they provide.
Among the dynamics impacting on modern postal development, Stuart said, were the principles of management independence, enhancing business/commercial strategies, improving operations, meeting customer needs through enhancing quality of service, and development and management of human resources.
That employees are the backbone of an organisation, are its most valuable asset, and not infrequently, its single largest investment, is an axiom of modern-day business enterprise. It must therefore be deliberate policy in the postal reform process that due attention be paid to development and management of our human capital, and as any good human resource practitioner would propose one must ensure a suitable staff complement, appropriate recruitment processes, personal and professional development, adequate compensation and appraisal systems and the like, Stuart said.
Noting that the present loss of human resource capital to retirement was significant for the Barbados Postal Service, Stuart said he hoped that appropriate succession planning had been undertaken to smooth the process and to minimise any negative impact on the organisation.
The Barbados Postal Service presently boasts a staff complement of six hundred, but Stuart said the loss of eighteen officers to retirement over a two-year period was nonetheless significant considering that this exodus represented a combined total of five hundred and five years of service. Three of those retirees, had each given in excess of forty years of service.
Furthermore, positions lost to retirement involve eight ranks ranging from as high as Assistant Postmaster General to postmen, affecting a wide range of activities across the Post Office.
This loss will undoubtedly be felt given the unmistakable value to the organisation of such a vast level of experience, Stuart said.

Read More

Canada Post signals changes for postal delivery

UNI’s Canadian affiliate, CUPW has advised that Canada Post has told the union that it is to introduce a technology update programme, called “Modern Post”. A central part of Canada Post’s “Modern Post” automation program is the new delivery model for letter carriers and Mail Sorting Centres. The main points of this new model include:
• 80pct of letter carrier routes in major urban areas to be affected, as well as about 35pct of all RSMC routes.
• About 90pct of letter-sized mail will be sequenced to line of delivery by machines in plants.
• Two or three letter carriers will use each A-62 case in shifts to sort the rest of the letter mail, flats, and packets.
• 80-85pct of letter carrier routes would be motorized where the new “Delivery Model” is in place.
• Motorized letter carrier routes would deliver all items for their delivery area, including parcels.
• Foot routes will remain in high density areas, generally the downtown core of cities with MSC parcel delivery in these areas.

Read More

GLS system now provides delivery status in real-time

At GLS, seamless parcel tracking has been a matter of course for years. At each interface, i.e. every time a parcel reaches or leaves a depot or vehicle, the individual parcel number is recorded with a scanning device. These status reports are transmitted to the GLS IT system, where they are made available to customers – via the Internet or telephone. Up until now, however, delivery information was transmitted to the system in the evenings when the driver returned to the depot. This has now changed. As of September, parcel tracking at GLS is now possible in real-time.

Delivery data is transferred directly “on tour” from the delivery vehicle. When the parcel is handed over to the recipient, the GLS driver utilises a handheld scanner to record both the parcel number and the consignee’s signature.

GLS thoroughly – and successfully – tested the mobile data transfer service at one of its subsidiaries. Based on these results, it is now implemented comprehensively throughout the entire group.

Read More

Potter names Gilligan Acting Chief Postal Inspector

USPS’ Post Master General (PMG) Jack Potter has announced the appointment of William Gilligan as Acting Chief Postal Inspector to replace Chief Postal Inspector Al Lazaroff, who retires Nov. 3.
Gilligan has been the Deputy General Counsel at Headquarters since May 2000. He began his postal career in 1973 as a clerk-carrier in Philadelphia. Gilligan worked as a postal police officer and an Inspection Service analyst prior to becoming an attorney in 1987.

Read More

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

P&P Poll

Loading

What's the future of the postal USO?

Thank you for voting
You have already voted on this poll!
Please select an option!



Post & Parcel Magazine


Post & Parcel Magazine is our print publication, released 3 times a year. Packed with original content and thought-provoking features, Post & Parcel Magazine is a must-read for those who want the inside track on the industry.

 

Pin It on Pinterest