logo
‘Not good': Concerns revived over recommendation to end door-to-door mail delivery

‘Not good': Concerns revived over recommendation to end door-to-door mail delivery

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.
Her daughter, Kyara Moon, said Frank once broke a wrist after falling down.
Moon lives with her mother and also has some mobility issues. She said door-to-door delivery helps people maintain their independence.
'We're trying to keep seniors in their houses,' Moon said. 'I guess we're going to have to help people who aren't able to get their mail, if this is the way it goes.'
Concerns over Canada Post ending door-to-door mail delivery come after a recent Industrial Inquiry Commission report recommended phasing out the service and replacing it with community mailboxes.
The report says declining mail volume has made door delivery financially unsustainable. About 25 per cent of Canadian addresses, or roughly four million homes in older neighbourhoods, continue to receive mail at their doors.
Canada Post estimates it would save about $350 million per year by converting all addresses to community boxes, while providing select door delivery to those with disabilities.
Regina resident Joan Lang supports door delivery. Without it, she said some postal workers would likely lose their jobs.
But she said she could get used to going to a mailbox. Ways of life have changed before.
'We used to get milk delivered to our home, but now we're used to going to the store,' she said.
Calgary resident Frankie Thornhill said Canada Post could do door delivery once a week, not every day.
Many seniors require the service, she said.
'I ripped my hamstring off my pelvis three years ago, just from (slipping on) some ice that looked like a puddle,' said the 72-year-old.
'You get these older people and they got to walk two blocks to the box. That is not good.'
Canada Post has been in a dispute with the Canadian Union of Postal Workers over a new collective bargaining deal. The Crown corporation received strike notice Monday from the union and, late Thursday, just before a strike deadline, the union called for a stop to overtime work.
The union has said it disagrees with most of the report's recommendations and takes issue with 'some of the information on which it was based.'
Canada Post began phasing out door-to-door delivery in 2014, which resulted in about 830,000 households being converted to community boxes. The move was unpopular in many neighbourhoods, where residents complained about losing accessibility and convenience. Some also took issue with damage and litter around the boxes.
The federal Liberal government under former prime minister Justin Trudeau imposed a moratorium in 2015, preventing Canada Post from doing additional conversions.
Melissa Graham, executive director of the Manitoba League of Persons with Disabilities in Winnipeg, said replacing door-to-door mail with community boxes 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.'
The report says Canada Post has a program to accommodate those with accessibility needs and that the program should be reviewed and enhanced if required.
It also recommends lifting a 1994 moratorium that prevents Canada Post from closing rural post offices.
The report doesn't provide a list of post offices that should close, but it points out some in suburban communities that were classified as rural no longer are. For example, post offices in the Ontario municipalities of Milton and Richmond Hill no longer fit the rural criteria, even though they were classified as such in 1994.
The post office in the Ottawa suburb of Stittsville was also classified as rural before it was amalgamated by the capital city.
Glen Gower, a city councillor for Stittsville, said the community was rural 25 years ago but has changed. It now has a second Canada Post outlet, he added.
Gower said replacing the original post office with affordable housing makes sense for what the community needs, if one post office could handle all its mail.
'It is sitting on a huge piece of Crown land. But I do want to make sure postal services are maintained,' he said.
'I think (the original post office) is of less significance than it would have been 25 years ago.'
The report says ending the moratoriums on rural post offices and community boxes could cause massive public opposition.
'Even with public consultation, it is more likely than not that local communities will strenuously object, as will the union,' it says.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 24, 2025.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hundreds of Thousands Told To Limit Outdoor Activity in 12 States
Hundreds of Thousands Told To Limit Outdoor Activity in 12 States

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Hundreds of Thousands Told To Limit Outdoor Activity in 12 States

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Air quality alerts have been issued across large swathes of the United States on Thursday, as smoke from Canadian wildfires is expected to impact multiple states. The National Weather Service (NWS) has published alerts for parts of Maine, Michigan, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Maryland, Nebraska, Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Iowa, and Arizona. Health officials warned that deteriorating air quality poses a health risk to the public, particularly for sensitive groups such as children, older adults, and those with preexisting conditions. Residents in affected areas are advised to consider limiting strenuous outdoor physical activity to reduce the risk of adverse health effects. An air quality warning issued in Minnesota on Tuesday following wildfires in Canada. An air quality warning issued in Minnesota on Tuesday following wildfires in Canada. Mark Vancleave/AP This is a developing story and will be updated.

Regulator criticizes relaxed labour mobility rules, says some Manitoba nurses can't perform 'very basic' tasks
Regulator criticizes relaxed labour mobility rules, says some Manitoba nurses can't perform 'very basic' tasks

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Regulator criticizes relaxed labour mobility rules, says some Manitoba nurses can't perform 'very basic' tasks

Manitoba's nursing regulator says some of the province's newest nurses struggle with basic tasks like taking blood pressure or administering medication, as the College of Registered Nurses of Manitoba speaks out against a recent ministerial order to remove what it calls a guardrail for patient safety in the interest of labour mobility. On Wednesday, the college said in an April letter, Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara ordered it to remove a requirement stating nursing applicants registered to practise elsewhere — known as "labour mobility applicants" — needed to have a certain number of hours of practise in Canada in the last two to five years before being allowed to work in Manitoba. College registrar Deb Elias says in 2022, Manitoba's former Progressive Conservative government waived the rule that nurses from other jurisdictions must prove they had worked recently. That means a nurse can now live in Manitoba, but register in another province where it might be easier to get a licence. Elias says it means some new Manitoba nurses missed "critical checks for patient safety," contributing to 35 complaints against labour mobility registrants that involved severe patient harm and two deaths, according to a February college report — something Elias called "deeply concerning and very morally distressing." "The allegations are about really significant, gross nursing incompetence," she told CBC News on Wednesday. "One example is applying a medication patch to an article of clothing, as opposed to skin where it should be — so it's very basic nursing practice issues that have significant effects on patient safety." Manitoba's Labour Mobility Act states that any worker certified by a regulatory authority in another province is recognized as being qualified in Manitoba. But not all Canadian jurisdictions require the same clinical competence assessment. From 2018 to 2022, Manitoba received an average of 168 labour mobility applications, but the number jumped to 637 — a near 300 per cent increase — in 2024, the college said in its February report. Complaints also rose alongside the increase of labour mobility registrants, the report says. Labour mobility registrants were involved in about seven per cent of all complaints in 2023, but that number tripled to nearly 22 per cent the following year. The college says 91 per cent of labour mobility registrants who were subject to a complaint did not meet its standard threshold of 450 registered nursing hours in the last two years, or 1,125 hours in the past five years. Back in December, the college reinstated the rule for Canadian work experience, until the province stepped in. In Asagwara's April letter to the college, the minister cited concerns about compliance with internal trade agreements and provincial legislation, the college says. But Elias claims some nurses are "finding loopholes using the Canadian Free Trade Agreement in order to become registered elsewhere," she said. "Then we have to register them here, so then they're put into practice and potentially put into situations that they're not adequately prepared for." No registered nurses lost their licence due to the change the college made in December, the college said. However, Elias said she'd like to see any nurses who don't have the desired work experience in Canada complete more training before returning to work. "It may delay them being a registered nurse for a period of time, but then when they enter the system, they'll be there for the long haul, providing safe care," she said. Elias says some may think of the requirement as a barrier, but the college sees it as a guardrail for patient safety that's in the public interest. She added that the college is not targeting internationally trained nurses, and that the issue involves "a small group [who are] looking for loopholes to get registered." "We know people are eager to get to work, but being eager and being ready to practise are two different things." Manitoba Nurses Union president Darlene Jackson says her organization agrees with the college, because without proper training, nurses are set up to fail. "They are coming into our system unprepared for what a Canadian health-care system is," she told CBC News on Wednesday. "We want these nurses in our system. We want them out there working, but we want them practising [safely]." Health Minister Asagwara says all complaints are being handled, but it's unfair to judge all nurses in the same way. "We have to be reasonable in how we welcome nurses … to the front lines of our health-care system," Asagwara said in a Wednesday interview. "There are hundreds of internationally educated nurses who have come to Manitoba through that pathway, who are successfully working on the front lines of our health-care system and providing excellent patient care every single day."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store