Country Geek
Gold Member
Delivering the "last mile" is the most expensive for the shipper. UPS and FedEx have made deals with the USPS to handle the last mile of the delivery. If the UPS of FedEx truck gets to the post office and they sort the packages before they start their routes you get your package that day, if they don't you wait an additional day or more until things get sorted out. If the package is larger it seems to be delivered by the shipper and not transferred to the post office, however, smaller packages seem to end up at the post office for delivery.
Logically this all makes sense and could help to keep the USPS in business and regular mail being delivered in rural areas. Giving the post office a piece of the delivery pie keeps the mail coming as well. This would give the post office one less excuse to stop mail delivery and force us all to go to the post office to pick up the mail.
The UPS and FedEx handing off to the USPS seems to happen more in rural areas then in the cities. I guess it has to do with population density and the miles a truck would have to travel to deliver all the small packages.
Not only this a good, concise explanation but it's also something people should keep in mind when they say things like "we don't need the post office, FedEx and UPS do a better job."
Because in the end they rely on the post office to make their system work.