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Royal Mail failing to deliver as Capital faces wait for post



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Published Date: 30 May 2008
NEARLY a fifth of Edinburgh and the Lothians' first class mail was not delivered on time last year, new figures have revealed today.
Just 83.2 per cent of first class post was delivered the next working day in the EH postcode area during 2007/08 – with last summer's strike action being blamed for the drop from 93.8 per cent in 2006-2007.

Edinburgh was ranked 15th out of the 20
worst-performing postcodes across the UK over the course of the year at delivering first class mail the next day.

The Scottish average for first class mail delivery was 85.2 per cent. The target for deliveries within one working day was 93 per cent.

Last summer's strikes saw Royal Mail workers mount pickets at a number of depots and sorting offices across the Capital.

The Royal Mail today said it was looking to get back to the record levels seen before last year's dispute.

But post watchdogs today hit out at the latest performance figures.

Alan Alexander, chairman of Postwatch Scotland, said: "Royal Mail's recovery was severely blown off course by last summer's strikes.

"Figures released today confirm that customers received poor levels of service.

"Furthermore, the fourth quarter results show that Royal Mail's recovery from the industrial action was in some respects disappointingly slow.

"The minimum target for first class mail has failed to be met in any postcode area, and five Scottish postcode areas remain in the bottom twenty.

He added: "What the figures do not reveal is what effect the strikes have had on the posting habits of social and business customers.

"Many of these customers had to find other ways to communicate. This will have reduced postal volumes, which will in turn damage Royal Mail's financial stability for years to come. Average daily volumes are down from 84 million items to about 80 million. It looks like the start of a downward trend partly caused by customers being forced to find other ways to pay bills, receive statements, order goods or respond to enquiries."

Last summer saw a series of strikes involving up to 130,000 members of the Communication Workers Union staging a series of 48-hour strikes over jobs, pay and pensions.

The Royal Mail came under fire in the weeks after the strike when they were asking customers to pick up their own post as they struggled to clear a backlog.

A Royal Mail spokeswoman said: "As previously announced, industrial action last year damaged services for postal customers. However, the 2007-08 quality of service report also shows that the large majority of mail, including all bulk business mail, was performing at target or above target levels as the financial year ended in March 2008.

"The objective for everyone working in the business is to deliver further improvements."





The full article contains 479 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 May 2008 1:33 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

alex paterson,

embra 30/05/2008 13:53:05
Not delivered on time last year,we still get our mail between 1400-1700 everyday not a good advert for the Royal Fail.
2

Annoyingboi,

Edinburgh 30/05/2008 14:20:55
Does anything actually work in this town
3

,

30/05/2008 15:04:27
Comment Removed By Administrator
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4

,

30/05/2008 15:07:11
Comment Removed By Administrator
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5

Speedy Gonzales,

Edinburgh 30/05/2008 15:15:30
#1
As long as you get your mail at a regular time everyday, does it matter?
I used to get my mail, 6 days a week, before 09:00hrs. Now, I only get 2, maybe 3 deliveries a week, generally about 11:00hrs. I'm not sure if my postie is part time but I don't get deliveries every day as I've tested this by sending 7 SAE's on 7 consecutive days, they came in 2 batches!
I maybe in the minority here but I'd now prefer to collect my mail from the local post office as I'd be guaranteed daily deliveries(by myself).
6

gotalottosay,

east lothian 30/05/2008 15:20:22
you used to be able to set your watch by the postie but nowadays, no way. sometimes ours comes about 11am and sometimes about 3pm. you can't rely on posting something first class to arrive the next day either. this was a service that did work, can't they all get round the table and figure our where they have gone wrong now as opposed to "the old days"
7

SPG,

edinburgh 30/05/2008 16:01:05
The government had to kow tow to their EU masters that commanded them to open the service up to competition. Unregulated private firms pinched the lucrative business leaving RM underfunded dealing with the crap and regulations. You wanted a choice, you've got it. Tough luck.
8

alex paterson,

embra 30/05/2008 16:09:43
#6
You used to be able to set your watch by the postie,but now you can set your compass by him,where the hell is he going.
9

Watcher58,

Edinburgh 30/05/2008 19:02:05
I worked as a postie for 6 months. The day you whingers are ready to get up at 4am six days a week, start work by 5 at the latest, sort bundles of often poorly-addressed mail then trek anything up to 20 miles per day (often having to do 2 walks as cutbacks have sliced the number of posties per sorting office) with 15 kilos of mail on your back in all weathers is the day you are entitled to crawl out from under your duvets and say your piece. As SPG said, the money-making side of things was hived off to the private pirates and Royal Mail was left with the rest. There is no mail service in the world which can compare favourably with Royal Mail - in the US for example, if you don't have a mailbox, you don't get mail. They don't deliver to your door. Walk a mile in a postie's shoes before you feel qualified to criticise what they do.
10

James (1),

30/05/2008 19:35:40
#9 Quite right, why should the customer get to complain about poor service. Its not like this poor service just appeared overnight. Royal Mail have slowly introduced this poor service over years in the hope the public will put up with it.
Staff have no loyalty. Some only stay 6 months but in those 6 months they become experts. Am I right #9?
So lets give a cheer for the postie who might get your mail to you sometime in the future. Please do not write to complain as this only increases their workload.
11

Goskun,

30/05/2008 19:52:56
...and if you need more ammunition for your whingeing..as of next week duties that are vacant due to long term sick, will be covered by other staff members, before taking out their own delivery. No overtime, no coverage by reserves or part time staff, just another management whim.
#5 Offices have to be cleared each day, as they are subject to checks. We only deliver what we receive..ergo.. the problem seems to be the sorting / mail handling at the mail centre. 'Nuff said..away tae ma bed.
12

,

30/05/2008 20:17:09
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13

Bravetart,

30/05/2008 20:28:11
#9 You're a postie, that is your job. If you don't like it then find another! Personally I think posties do a good job but the whole organisation is faltering, not their fault though.

Our post has been chronic since the strikes last summer. The amount of post that goes missing, is late, arrives days after it has been posted. I received a parcel last week which had been posted from England on 7th May - nearly 3 weeks to be delivered. Yet another parcel from the US came 4 days after being posted in Chicago.

So there is something going drastically wrong here. But it isn't the fault of the posties at the end of the line, they can only deliver what they are given.
14

Julian,

EDINBURGH 30/05/2008 21:55:12
#6 Alex,

How could you set your compass by the postie if you didn't know where he was going?
15

celtic4,

USA 31/05/2008 00:47:51
#9 Watcher...Listen here, fellow or gal, or whatever you are... I happen to LIVE in the USA, and our Postal Service IS the best in the world! I, myself, can set MY watch on the postal delivery! And they dooooo go up to the door, here, and they do not have to walk and carry a heavy bag like my Dad, who was a postman for 25 years. They now have carts they drive, and can deliver to you whereever you are! Get real and get a life, and quit talking about something you know nothing about to start with!
16

kengo,

Dalkeith 31/05/2008 12:01:07
I agree with the comments from my American friend Celtic4. Doesn't it say a lot for the UK Postal Service and our Government when the Royal Mail CEO can hack away at our postal services, generally makeing a complete dogs dinner of it, and forcing their customers to pay for this by much higher prices, much poorer services and considerably fewer post offices/ boxes, and yet he gets a nice pat on the back with a massive, ad totally disgusting bonus in his pay packet? When most companies, especially State owned relate bonuses or pay increases to improved productivity. I respect the CEO of British Airways as he declined a large amount of money recently as his company had not fared well over T5. With Royal Mail, the worse you do the more you will get paid.

 

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