Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
Royal Mail still has the expensive service obligations to fulfill as well - it has to deliver to all households and a certain number of times/days per week. It may have managed to reduce the number of deliveries(no second post).
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Apparently in days gone by in Sheffield it was possible for someone to go to work in the morning, then write a letter or short note informing others in their family when they would return home later in the day, and it would be delivered to the not too far outer reaches - Dore - Totley etc. by the second or third posts, having been transported by rail.
Different times!
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We need an Utter Madness thread.
Just had a letter from Royal Mail.
Inside was an unopened letter we had sent to the correct address as given on the form we filled in (Stamp Swap, Freepost), together with a brand-new preprinted envelope to put the returned letter in, to send to:
You guessed!
Stamp Swap
Freepost
admittedly with a full address in Edinburgh too.
No wonder the organisation is losing money hand over fist!
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I'm still waiting for letter to arrive, posted to me on 8 December. (No, I haven't replied yet because I haven't had the letter).It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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I treasure two postcards , posted in the early 1960s, which I found inside the sleeve of a second-hand Lp of Sibelius' Violin Concerto. The former owner was a compulsive achivist who kept everything and noted it in charts and lists.
He had replied to a 'for sale' advert in Gramophone. His letter would have gone from Liverpool to a box number in Kenton, Harrow. The first card (from the vendor in Crewe) replied to this. The second replied to his next letter agreeing to buy the disc, which was sent to him trusting he would send the money. All this happened in a week! Halcyon days...
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI'm still waiting for letter to arrive, posted to me on 8 December. (No, I haven't replied yet because I haven't had the letter).
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostApparently in days gone by in Sheffield it was possible for someone to go to work in the morning, then write a letter or short note informing others in their family when they would return home later in the day, and it would be delivered to the not too far outer reaches - Dore - Totley etc. by the second or third posts, having been transported by rail.
Different times!
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
A former neighbour in Hampshire told me should could post a letter in the morning to her sister in Putney, who would receive it in the afternoon. I can't be sure now, but I think this was probably the 1940s, postwar.
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In the Sunday Times yesterday, an article detailing of their investigation (reporters sent to work in delivery offices as postpersons) into the many, many complaints of sporadic delivery of letters - including court notices and hospital appointments received after the relevant dates.
Staff are briefed that the commercial future for the loss making Royal Mail is the delivery of parcels - predominantly small parcels from important large and regular customers. And when a postman has been unable to deliver all of the items in their round they are to ask what to do - and the manager invariably will say to prioritise the parcels.
Senior management staunchly hold the line that there is no such policy and the legal requirement to deliver mail 6 days a week to reach the set targets is the operational reality on the ground. Senior management either out of touch, wilfully ensuring they are ignorant of the reality, or are duplicitous actors to which the truth is a stranger. Given the postmaster scandal, who would have thought it possible... ?
I asked our postman about the delayed delivery of an important letter, eventually in a big batch of mail, and he regretfully explained that when he was on holiday, most days his round wasn't covered, or only partially and he faced the backlog when he returned. He encouraged me to complain - he seemed heartily sick of the situation.Last edited by Cockney Sparrow; 19-12-23, 01:30.
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