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AGAR: Once a week is just fine for Canada Post mail delivery

AGAR: Once a week is just fine for Canada Post mail delivery

Yahoo26-05-2025

The post office can no longer afford to deliver mail to your door every day. Get over it.
Perhaps the solution is not community mailboxes.
I'm from a community on the Prairies that's never had home delivery of the mail. That's why I find it surprising to read of people who think the sky will fall and it will rain frogs if they don't get their mail delivered to their sofa every day.
Global News ran a story that begins, 'Judy Frank says no longer getting mail at her door would make life harder.
'The 78-year-old Regina woman is unable to walk more than a few steps and says she would need someone to pick up her mail if Canada Post stops door-to-door service.
''It's very dangerous,' Frank said in a recent interview, pointing to the uneven and cracked sidewalk outside her home.'
I don't know how older or housebound people got their mail in Gilbert Plains, Manitoba, back in the day. My father ran the post office and I don't remember him taking the mail to anyone's house. Perhaps a friend or relative handled it.
Most of the people in my town lived farther from the post office than people live from their community mailbox — and somehow, we all survived.
Canada Post estimates it would save about $350 million per year by converting to community boxes and says it can do that while still delivering to those with disabilities.
Okay, then Frank has nothing to worry about if her mail is still being delivered to her home.
Global also interviewed Melissa Graham, executive director of the Manitoba League of Persons with Disabilities in Winnipeg, who said replacing door-to-door mail with community boxes has created barriers.
'(Boxes) used to ice up. They used to be in areas that were difficult to get to, if you had a mobility disability,' Graham said. 'They often didn't have braille, so you could not find your mailbox easily.'
I'm sure some people never leave the house for family visits, groceries, doctor appointments, etc., such that they can't go half a block for the mail a few days a week.
Regardless, I still think the post office's solution of community mailboxes is the wrong way to go.
You cannot convince me, with so much of what we do online, that we need daily delivery of the mail to residences.
Businesses are a different matter.
Perhaps you get a flood of mail every day that is of an essential nature, but I go days with no mail. I am good with that.
Instead of community mailboxes, how about once-a-week delivery of the mail?
That would still get the mail to your door, but it would cut the need for postal employees by a huge amount.
The post office is hemorrhaging money and there is nothing to suggest the situation will get better.
Postal workers should make a good living. But we don't need as many of them as we have now.
A caller to my show said he delivers mail and once a week would result in too high a load of flyers for delivery to doorsteps. If it is that high, why isn't it paying the bills?
Once a week, the day before garbage day.
Get the connection?

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