Post Office: Please Clear Route for Carriers
Snow and ice make mail delivery slow and dangerous, said Chuck Keeney, Romeoville postmaster/officer-in-charge.
This article was provided by the U.S. Postal Service:
With a snow and ice expected to blanket the region during the next couple days, one seasonal tool is expected to make its return at homes and businesses – the shovel.
To help letter carriers deliver mail, the Postal Service is asking customers to clear snow and ice from sidewalks, stairs and mailboxes.
“Snow and ice make delivery dangerous and slow,” said Romeoville Postmaster/Officer-in-Charge Chuck Keeney. “Maintaining a clear path to the mail box – including steps, porches, walkways and street approach – will help letter carriers maintain consistent delivery service and help them get those cards and packages delivered in time for the holidays.”
Customers receiving door delivery should make sure their sidewalks, steps and porches are clear. Customers receiving curbside delivery should remove snow piles left by snow plows to keep access to their mailboxes clear for letter carriers.
Delivery service may be delayed or curtailed whenever streets or walkways present hazardous conditions for letter carriers or when snow is plowed against mailboxes. “The Postal Service curtails delivery only after careful consideration, and only as a last resort,” says Keeney. “Any curtailed mail is attempted the next delivery day.”
Blue collection boxes also need to be kept clear for our customers to deposit their mail and for the Postal Service to collect the mail for delivery. Residents and businesses with collection boxes near their property are asked to keep them clear of snow and ice. “We want our letter carriers to be safe,” adds Keeney. “We can only do this with the help of our customers.”
The Postal Service receives no tax dollars for operating expenses and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations.
Dan
12:09 pm on Tuesday, February 5, 2013
wow Shannon----you won,t see UPS or FDX asking for special treatment or complaining about sidewalks and other areas not cleared. What a statement to make "The Post Office receives no tax dollars and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations" Not true at all and here are just a few examples as to why. The post office pays no federal, state or local taxes including fuel tax even though they are one of the biggest uses of fuel in the country. They do not pay parking tickets and our not subject to the same laws and regulations that others businesses must follow.
KATHY
12:52 pm on Tuesday, February 5, 2013
just clean your sidewalks and quite being lazy i have to get the bus for work and when the sidewalks are not cleaned i have to walk in the street just do it!!!!!!!!!
Vicki Pawlowski Dallmann
1:18 pm on Tuesday, February 5, 2013
They sure are getting the word out early this year, so we all "get those cards and packages delivered in time for the holidays"! ;-)
Common Sense
3:19 pm on Tuesday, February 5, 2013
An inscription on the James Farley Post Office in New York City reads:
Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.
I guess that was made before the postmen became unionized.