Tag: UK

Joint statement – Royal Mail dispute

Following a meeting between Royal Mail and the Communication Workers Union last Thursday 9th August, the national postal strike has been called off.

At a meeting today between Allan Leighton, Adam Crozier, Billy Hayes and Dave Ward, it was agreed:

• That both parties commit to talks on all the issues between them, hosted and facilitated by the TUC and supported by ACAS. Both sides commit to reach an agreement by 4 September
• That during this period the talks are on a confidential basis with no media or internal briefings unless explicitly jointly agreed. The CWU Executive and Royal Mail Board will receive regular updates on progress and would also be expected to undertake this confidentiality clause
• That for that period, Royal Mail will not serve notice or take any unilateral action to impose changes by executive action
• That for the same period CWU will suspend industrial action
• That the signatories to this joint statement will review the process as and when necessary

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Royal mail response to Postcomm price control proposals

Commenting on Postcomm’s proposals on a review of Royal Mail’s price control, Royal Mail’s Marketing Director, Alex Batchelor, said:

“Royal Mail knows that if we are to succeed in a very tough and open market we urgently need to modernise and become more efficient. Royal Mail is losing business to rivals whose costs and prices are lower than ours because they have the modern technology Royal Mail urgently needs to install. We have already made progress and have shown we can deliver the great quality of service our customers expect. What we must do is to move forward at pace to use the GBP 1.2 billion loan which the shareholder – the Government – has made available to modernise the letters operation with new technology to give it world-class productivity. That’s the focus for Royal Mail.

“Our costs are too high and the simple fact is that our prices are being undercut by rival postal operators and that’s resulting in one letter in every five this current financial year being handled by rivals.

Mr Batchelor added: “We absolutely reject suggestions from Postcomm that we have not capitalised on growth opportunities in the postal market. Despite intense competition, Royal Mail is delivering around 60% of all items bought online and we continue to develop new products and services to support this sector.”

Royal Mail is studying the Postcomm proposals carefully and will respond formally in due course.

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Post Office brings MoneyGram to all 14,000 branches

The Post Office and MoneyGram now offer by far the largest international money transfer network in the UK and also have a new fully computerized service making it even faster to send and receive cash too.

In just ten minutes, cash can travel from any Post Office branch to 125,000 locations in approximately 170 countries and territories worldwide. So, from Brighton to Bangladesh or Shetland to South Africa, it’s never been easier to use the Post Office and MoneyGram service.

MoneyGram was previously available at around 3,500 Post Office branches, but now all branches are equipped with the latest technology meaning MoneyGram transfers can be sent to and received from all 14,000 Post Office branches. Unlike some other money transfer services it is not necessary to have a bank account to send or receive a MoneyGram transfer.

An estimated GBP 2.7 billion* is sent overseas from the UK through international money transfer services each year and this is continuing to grow. In many cases, cash is being sent to friends and family overseas to cover educational or medical fees, or emergency funds.

* Department for International Development – UK Remittance Report 2005

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Postcomm's statement of policy in relation to financial penalties

Postcomm has decided to revise its statement of policy in relation to financial penalties (‘statement of policy’).

Under the Postal Services Act 2000, Postcomm has the discretionary power to impose a financial penalty on a license holder that has contravened – or is contravening – one or more of its license conditions. Postcomm must prepare and publish a statement of policy, in relation to imposing a penalty and the amount of that penalty.

Postcomm published its current statement of policy in February 2002. Since then, Postcomm has imposed four financial penalties on Royal Mail and there have been a number of significant changes in the postal services market, including the full opening of the market in January 2006 and the adoption of a new price control for Royal Mail in April 2006. Postcomm said, at the time the statement of policy was introduced, that it would consider revising the statement in the light of experience in its application. Postcomm has decided that it should consult now on revising its statement of policy.

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Royal Mail must deliver modern service

As Royal Mail faces continuing industrial unrest in a dispute with postmen and women over pay and modernization, Huw Roberts, Director of Welsh Affairs, Royal Mail Group, gives an insight into the imperative for change in Britain’s postal services

“The simple fact is that Royal Mail has to modernize. We are not immune from change – we are all sending fewer letters, the alternative electronic communication channels are growing and our competitors are taking a larger share of a smaller postbag. Strike action means our rivals, like Dutch-owned TNT and German Deutsche Post, will seize even more of the profitable business post market.

For the first time in years, we have been provided with an opportunity to invest in new technology and new equipment to transform our operations with a GBP 1.2bn loan, on commercial terms from the Government that will give us the means to compete successfully. This is taxpayers’ money and we urgently need to press on with using this loan wisely.

We can’t go on running a business based on sorting millions of items by hand every day, when newer companies are now using modern technology to do it faster and more cheaply. And none of our competitors has shown any interest in carrying ordinary post or delivering to the 1.56 million addresses in Wales or the 27 million letterboxes in the UK.

We are proud of the fact that more First Class letters arrive the next day than ever before. In the SA postcode area covering Swansea and West Wales, for example, we recently reported that 94.9 pct of First Class mail arrived the next day during 2006/2007– the best consistent quality of service results in years.

We are very sorry for the disruption to our customers’ mail services caused by the recent strike action and we are doing all we can to mitigate the impact with management volunteers collecting mail from Post Office branches and delivering as much Special Delivery and business mail as possible.

The reality is we are no longer a monopoly and rivals this year will be handling one letter in every five posted. They are winning an increasing share of the mail market – not because they work harder than our people – but because technology has made them more efficient.

The postal market is also declining – by 2.5 pct a year – in the face of competition from email and broadband development.

The simple fact is that rivals pay their people 25 pct less than Royal Mail and they are 40 pct more efficient than Royal Mail, because they have already modernized – so their costs and prices are lower.”

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