Tag: New Zealand

National Mail, New Zealand, to sell off assets

National Mail directors have accepted the inevitable and are dismantling the dormant New Zealand company.
Chairman Richard Flower told about 20 shareholders at a low-key annual meeting that efforts to find a buyer for the company as a going concern had failed, but two overseas parties were interested in some of the company’s assets, which could be worth NZ$1 million.

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Report on the letter post monopoly (NZ)

On 12 November 1986 the Cabinet MCC/SOE Committee directed
officials to review the letter post monopoly by 1 April 1989.
This reporting date was subsequently brought forward to 31
October 1988 by Cabinet. The review is attached, and is
summarised in this paper. In compiling the review officials
consulted widely with interested parties, including New Zealand
Post.

The postal market

2 The Postal Services Act 1987 provides a monopoly to New
Zealand Post for the carriage of letters weighing 500g or less
unless a charge of $1.75 or more is made. There are a number of
other exemptions to the monopoly, the most significant being
unaddressed material (eg advertising material), self-delivered
letters, legal material, and transfers between document
exchanges.

3 New Zealand Post has a turnover of $502m (estimated
1988/89) employs 9800, and handles 820m items of mail a year (of
which are standard letters). It also provides a range of
agency services, including electoral roll maintenance, motor
vehicle registration and 230 PostBank branches. Turnover has
reduced compared with the 1987/88 year due amongst other things
to a reduction in agency services, the removal of the Government
subsidy and the rationalisation of shared facilities with
Postbank.

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Postal services amendment act 1990 (NZ)

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New Zealand
Postal Services Amendment Act 1990

[From http://www.knowledge-basket.co.nz/gpprint/acts/public/text/1987/ an/113.html]

Postal Services Amendment Act 1990 129
Commenced: 7 Sep 1990

An Act to amend the Postal Services Act 1987

BE IT ENACTED by the Parliament of New Zealand as follows:

1. Short Title— This Act may be cited as the Postal Services
Amendment Act 1990, and shall be read together with and deemed part of
the Postal Services Act 1987 (hereinafter referred to as the principal
Act).

2. Restriction on carriage of letters—(1) Section 3 (2) of the
principal Act is hereby amended by repealing paragraph (c), and
substituting the following paragraph:

(c) Letters delivered by a person engaged by the sender especially
for the purpose, not being a person in the business of
delivering or procuring the delivery of letters:”.

(2) Section 3 (2) (d) of the principal Act is hereby amended by
omitting the expression 500 grams”, and substituting the expression
200 grams”.

(3) Section 3 (2) of the principal Act is hereby further amended by
repealing paragraph (i), and substituting the following paragraphs:
(i) Letters of 200 grams or less in weight carried at any time in
the period commencing on the date on which the Postal Services
Amendment Act 1990 comes into force and ending with the 30th
day of November 1990 if a charge of $1.25 or more per letter is
made in respect of the carriage, taking charge, or sending of
each letter:
(ia) Letters of 200 grams or less in weight carried at any time in
the period commencing on the 1st day of December 1990 and
ending with the 30th day of November 1991 if a charge of $1 or
more per letter is made in respect of the carriage, taking
charge, or sending of each letter:

_x000c_

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(ib) Letters of 200 grams or less in weight carried at any time on
or after the 1st day of December 1991 if a charge of 80 cents
or more per letter is made in respect of the carriage, taking
charge, or sending of each letter:”.

(4) Section 3 (2) of the principal Act is hereby further amended by
repealing paragraph (k), and substituting the following paragraphs:
(k) Letters carried to the premises of a provider of electronic mail
services for the purposes of being transmitted as electronic
mail:
(l) Letters carried from the premises of a provider of electronic
mail services where the contents of such letters have been
carried and transmitted in accordance with paragraph (k) of
this subsection:
(m) Letters addressed to a person or persons outside New Zealand.”

3. New sections inserted in relation to furnishing of
information—The principal Act is hereby amended by adding the
following sections:

18. Information to be furnished in annual report—(1) For the
purposes of this section,—
Agency post office’ means an outlet that is owned and operated
by a person other than the Corporation and that offers postal
and other services pursuant to an agreement with the
Corporat

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Postal services act 1987 (NZ)

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New Zealand
Postal Services Act 1987

[From http://www.knowledge-basket.co.nz/gpprint/acts/public/text/1987/an/113.html]

Postal Services Act 1987 113
Commenced: 1 Jan 1988

An Act to regulate the provision of postal services

BE IT ENACTED by the Parliament of New Zealand as follows:

1. Short Title and commencement—(1) This Act may be cited as the
Postal Services Act 1987.

(2) This Act shall come into force on the 1st day of January 1988.

2. Interpretation—(1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise
requires,—
Corporation” means New Zealand Post Limited, a company
incorporated under the Companies Act 1955 pursuant to the
State-Owned Enterprises Act 1986:
Dangerous enclosure” includes any explosive, dangerous, or
destructive substance or fluid, and any matter or thing capable,
as packed, of causing injury or damage to any postal article or
any person:
Document exchange” means a place where documents are deposited
for collection by the addressee:
Letter” means any form of written communication or other document
or article that is directed to a specific person or a specific
address and is to be conveyed other than by electronic means;
and includes a packet, package, or wrapper containing any such
communication:
Postage stamp” means an adhesive label or impression on any
stationery denoting payment of the fee chargeable for the
carriage of a postal article:
Postal article” means a letter, parcel, or other article that has
been posted and has not been delivered; and includes an article
that, although it may have been delivered within the meaning of
subsection (3) of this section, has not reached the hands of the
addressee:
Post office” means any building, house, room, vehicle, or place
where, under the control of the Corporation, postal articles are

_x000c_

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received or delivered, or where they are sorted, made up, or
dispatched.

(2) An article shall be deemed to have been posted when, for the
purpose of being conveyed or delivered by the Corporation, it has been
put into a Corporation letterbox, or delivered at a post office, or
accepted for the purpose of being conveyed by post by an employee or an
agent of the Corporation in the course of his or her duty or authority.

(3) A postal article shall be deemed to be delivered to the addressee
when it is delivered by the Corporation at his or her house or office,
or into his or her letterbox or rural delivery box, or into the proper
private box at a post office, or to his or her employee or agent or
other person considered to be authorised to receive the article, or
according to the usual manner of delivering postal articles to the
addressee.

3. Restriction on carriage of letters—(1) No person other than the
Corporation shall carry any letter for hire or reward.

(2) Nothing in subsection (1) of this section shall apply to—
(a) Trade announcements, circulars, printed extracts from newspapers,
or advertisements, not addressed to any person:

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Deed of understanding between the government and New Zealand Post

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THIS DEED OF UNDERSTANDING MADE ON THE 17th DAY OF FEBRUARY 1998
BETWEEN HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN in right of New Zealand, acting by and through the Minister of Communications (“the Minister”)

AND NEW ZEALAND POST LTD, a duly incorporated company having its registered office at 7-27 Waterloo Quay, Wellington (“New Zealand Post”).

Recitals
(A) The Government of New Zealand (“The Government”) has decided to remove the statutory protection for the delivery of certain postal services which had previously been conferred on New Zealand Post Ltd under the Postal Services Act 1987.
(B) The Government desires that New Zealand Post should continue to meet certain social, price and service quality obligations (“the social obligations”).
(C) The Government and New Zealand Post wish to record the social obligations which New Zealand Post will continue to provide.
(D) The Government has agreed that, for a period of 5 years, New Zealand Post will continue to be the sole designated postal administration for New Zealand for the purposes of acting as a representative of New Zealand at the Universal Postal Union and the Asian Pacific Postal Union and shall have the sole right to issue postage stamps on which the words “New Zealand”, or any abbreviation of those words appear, except where those words appear as part of the name of the postal operator by which the stamp is issued; and those words form part of the name under which the postal operator is registered as a company; and that company name of the postal operator appears in full on the stamp, with the words “New Zealand” appearing in the same typeface and point size as the company name.
(E) The Government and New Zealand Post have agreed that the deed entered into by the Government and New Zealand Post dated 6 April 1993, and extended by further deeds dated 11 March 1994, 14 March 1995, 28 March 1996 and 18 March 1997 shall be terminated with effect from the date that this deed comes into force.

BY THIS DEED:
1 This deed shall come into effect on the date that this deed is executed by both parties. In the event that the Postal Services Bill, as reported back to the House of Representatives in December 1997, is amended by the House in such a way as to impose additional social obligations on New Zealand Post, this deed shall be of no effect, and the parties will negotiate a further deed.
2 The Government shall review the terms of this deed three years after the deed comes into effect.

Statutory Protection
3 The parties acknowledge that this deed has been entered into on the basis that New Zealand Post shall continue to be the sole designated postal administration for New Zealand for the purposes of acting as a representative of New Zealand at the Universal Postal Union and the Asian Pacific Postal Union.

Frequency of Deliveries
4 New Zealand Post shall provide:
(a) six day per week deliveries to more than 95 percent of delivery points;
(b) five or six day per week deliveries to more than 99.88 percent of delivery points; and
(c) one to four day per week deliveries to the remainder of delivery points.

PROVIDED THAT in any case where a person elects to have the frequency of that person’s delivery service reduced, that person shall be regarded as continuing to receive the same frequency of service as before that election for the purposes of this clause.

5 New Zealand Post shall not increase the proportion of delivery points comprising counter s

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