Leejohn
Elite Member
I think the USPS is private ran now.
Our mail carrier brings anything that won't fit in our mailbox up the driveway to our door. We filled out a card a couple years back asking what our preferences were for things that won't fit in the mail box. Is this something that is up to the local postmaster's policies maybe? The other place we lived in Maine, we got the pickup card, like you described.
I too find the USPS lacking vs UPS but USPS was setup to deliver a 1000 pieces of mail (950 pcs junk mail) and maybe several packages on any given day per 100 residences. UPS per was set up to deliver boxes and packages and to the same 100 residences maybe at the rate of 20 a day.
USPS had to refine their infrastruture to do packages and compete that FedEx and UPS have had for a long time. Not defending USPS but they have somewhat different primary objectives.
Am unaware of any option to have packages delivered to the house...about 100 yards down road from mailbox. I complained once about an item which would, obviously fit since it was about the size of an old time Sears catalog, and was told ... someone else did the sorting today...I would have put it in your mail box....no mention of a way to sign up to get it delivered all the way to the house. Perhaps being unkind, I mark it down to lazy and not wanting to carry something....oh, yes, I also now remember something about somebody having an injured arm and not being able to lift over 10 lbs or so for a while. As usual, these things don't stand up to scrutiny... or logic...it's just "that's the way it's done."
texasjohn said:My experience, USPS tracking is just one step ahead of a complete joke. It says...it's shipped, and gives an expected arrival date...I don't seem to be able to follow it thru the system the way I can with a UPS package. Further, although I have an extremely large mail box, any package bigger than a big envelope is held at the post office with a "too large for mailbox" note in the mailbox. In actuality, the mail folks simply didn't want to mess with carrying a package and make me go pick it up. True, MY box is BIG and many, many packages will fit in it, but they simply remember all the other smaller mail boxes along the road and treat me as I am a small box kinda guy.:mur:
Maybe the USPS could have developed a package delivery system back in the 1970's-80's, but they didn't.
They had a system in place as far back as the 1930s; just didn't keep up to date. I don't remember just when it was, but my grandfather, who hauled mail between the train station and the post office in Ardmore, OK, from the early 40s until trains quit hauling mail, told about the first parcel post delivery system. It was a contract job and the guy who got the bid to deliver parcel post in Ardmore showed up the first day with his horse and wagon, dumped all the packages into the wagon, climbed up on the seat, picked up the first package, and took off to deliver it. Poor guy didn't think about sorting and laying out a route. My grandfather always laughed about it; said the guy nearly ran his horse to death, back and forth across town, showed up at the end of the day with nearly half the packages still on the wagon, and quit after that one day.:laughing:
And before I worked 5 years in the Dallas Post Office as a clerk, my first postal job was delivering parcel post. In 1957, the Postmaster in Plano, TX, asked me if I could work part time as a mail carrier (he had a carrier in the hospital and was short handed). But when he found out I was 17, he said you had to be 18. But the next day, he came back and had gotten special permission to give me a temporary 3 month appointment, when that expired me gave me another 3 month appointment, and when that expired I was 18 and he gave me a one year appointment.:laughing:
Now in those days, the postman (letter carrier) walked and went up to the door at each house, so a different person delivered the parcel post, and that was my first job. The Plano Post Office at the time had one vehicle; a 1949 Willys panel truck with no driver's door, no muffler, and no key; just a toggle switch. And anyone could deliver all the parcel post in 2 hours or less, then return to the Post Office and go on a walking route.:laughing:
I think the USPS is private ran now.