subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Sat, Nov 21 2009 

Resources

print this story   Print this story
  Post to del.icio.us

Photos


Centralized locked mail boxes like these near East High School are common in new subdivisions, and the Postal Service would like to see more city mailboxes move from homes to the curb.
John Cross


Published September 07, 2007 11:43 pm - The Postal Service is increasingly trying to move mail delivery away from the door and out to the street.

Postal service curbs deliveries
Push on to move boxes to street

By Tim Krohn
Free Press Staff Writer

NORTH MANKATO

When Bob Meyer reached out the door to the mail box on his Sherman Street home recently, he had a postcard from the U.S. Postal Service.

“The post office said they would install a rural-type mailbox for me free at the curb in front of my house,” Meyer said.

He wasn’t impressed.

“It’s dumb. It would enable me to walk to the curb to get my mail instead of the mail carrier inserting the mail in the mailbox at my front door.

“And having all those boxes sitting out on the curb doesn’t look good.”

Acting Mankato Post Master Paul Johnson said the slow but steady move to mailboxes on the street is for good reason: to save money and for safety.

“We’re going to continue to encourage it. Every time a letter carrier parks the vehicle and does a walking route, you have a number of hazards,” Johnson said.

Those hazards include everything from walking on icy and sometimes unshoveled sidewalks to nasty dogs.

“And from the efficiency standpoint, it’s much quicker and easier to drive up to the box,” he said.

Johnson said he and postmasters around the country are looking for ways to be more efficient, especially when there are 2 million added addresses for the Postal Service to deliver to each year.

“If we can be more efficient, you increase the time span between (postage) rate increases.”

Johnson said there no set plan for which neighborhoods to try to convert to curbside boxes and no time frame.

“Every route is so different. It depends on a lot of things.”

He said on some routes a lot of boxes are already on the curb, so it makes sense to move all of them there.

Sometimes, it’s dog problems. “If there’s a block where we have issues with a dog, we’ll require them to move the boxes to the curb.”



print this story    email this story   
Click here to load this Caspio Bridge DataPage.
Click here to load this Caspio Bridge DataPage.






autoconx

Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Premier Guide

 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index