Tag: Mail Services

UPU celebrates 60 years as a UN specialized agency

The Universal Postal Union is officially celebrating its 60th anniversary today as a specialized agency of the United Nations.
Indeed, it was on 1 July 1948 that the UPU became a member of the United Nations Organization. Since then, our organization has contributed to worldwide efforts to improve communication between people, promote development, reduce poverty, improve health and access to education for all, and make our world more safe and stable, among many other things.

“Communication, which the UPU develops between peoples through the efficient operation of postal services as part of its mission, is at the heart of efforts to maintain peace, promote health and education and provide humanitarian aid where needed,” says UPU Director General Edouard Dayan. “In addition to its legal commitments under the agreement and its participation in UN conferences, the UPU has become involved in activities and specific projects to help achieve UN objectives, particularly the Millennium Development Goals.”

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also marked the anniversary during a visit to the UPU International Bureau in Berne, last 28 April. In a speech to staff, he said: “The UPU may be one of the smallest specialized agencies of the UN, “but its work is key to the broader mission of our Organization.”

2008 is an important year for the UPU, as the organization prepares for its 24th Universal Postal Congress, which is being held in Geneva, Switzerland, from 23 July to 12 August.

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Business Postal Services UK

Main findings:
The barriers to entry for mail collection and delivery are high, although, due to advances in digital printing, they are starting to come down. Competition has primarily come from the logistics sector, which also provides courier and express parcel-delivery services. New technology, however, could see new entrants from other quarters. Existing providers are already developing hybrid mail systems that allow users to e-mail their mail content, which is then sorted electronically before being sent, again electronically, to the nearest printing plant to the final destination point where the mail is printed, collated, put into envelopes, sorted according to Royal Mail’s Walksort criteria and delivered in that location.
This not only saves time and money, but also reduces the amount of traffic on the roads. It is likely that a number of location-specific printing houses, using advanced mail-printing technology, will develop across the UK.
All competition has concentrated in the B2B and business-to-consumer (B2C) mail market: The Royal Mail continues to collect, sort and deliver mail from consumers through its Post Office services. The Post Office division of The Royal Mail’s business continues to be unprofitable and, in 2007, some tough and unpopular cost-cutting measures were introduced with the start of a programme, continuing into 2008, that sees the closure of many post offices across the UK.
With strike action from Royal Mail postal workers over pay and working conditions in 2007, and threatened again in 2008, coupled with post office closures, the Royal Mail brand has received much negative publicity. However, its strength has cast it as a venerable UK institution and there are, as yet, no serious contenders to threaten its position.
Nevertheless, with full deregulation, the UK Government is committed to ensuring that the UK postal market is fully competitive, and has commissioned a review of the market and how it is regulated.
This Key Note Market Assessment report examines the market as it stands, as well as looking at how the mail markets operate on an international level, and suggesting how the market will develop in the future. Extensive research has been conducted using information from the regulatory body Postcomm, as well as individual companies and European and international information sources. Key Note also invited key industry practitioners to take part in a virtual roundtable, to elicit views from within the industry itself. Their responses can be found in Chapter 8 — Industry Dynamics — of this report.

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The Postal Corporation of Kenya (PCK) preparing to raise mail charges

The Postal Corporation of Kenya (PCK) has filed an application with the communications sector regulator seeking permission to increase mail box charges.

A notice published in the current issue of the Kenya Gazette indicates that charges for corporate, individual, and special groups may go up from August.

If approved, corporations will pay Sh 6, 000 for the mail box every year up from the current rate of Sh 4,200 per year.

Individuals will add Sh 400 to the current rate of Sh 1,400 while the special groups will add Sh 500 to the current rate of Sh 3,700. Charges for the sub postal office will, however, remain unchanged.

In the gazette notice signed by the acting CCK director general Peres Nkonge, the Postal Corporation cites the steep rise in the cost of renting premises for leased operations, administrative costs and purchase of the letter boxes.

Consumers have 30 days from Friday last week to make representations or objections to the proposed new tariffs. Such representations or objections must be made in writing to the director general of CCK.

The drive for higher rental charges comes amid a shift by majority of consumers from postal to email services.

PCK has responded to this change by diversifying its portfolio to new business lines such as cyber services. It is however bound by the Universal Service Obligations to offer basic postal services to all customers including remote parts of the country.

1.00 USD = 64.9500 KES

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Postmen to have beat codes for fast delivery of letters

The Postal department has introduced a postman beat code along with the pin code for fast delivery of letters and parcels. The new service was introduced all over the country a few months ago.

Haryana Postal Services Director Manisha Bansal Badal said, “The scheme was introduced in Haryana in March and has helped a lot in delivering letters and parcels in time.”

The scheme was introduced in the city last week. Badal, who has served as Senior Superintendent of Post Offices in Ludhiana, said, “Any one who is posting a letter is supposed to write the pincode and the postman beat code of the area where the letter is being sent. This will help in delivering the letter to its destination soon. While sorting out the letters, the postal employees will just read the postman beat code of the city and put that letter in his tray. This way the time, which the postal employees used to take earlier for reading the whole address, is saved.”

The city has 14 delivery offices of the Postal department from where about 300 postmen collect the postal articles for delivery every day. So there will be about 300 postman beat codes.

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