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They seem to only lose the most important things I mail out. If you complain about their mistake, they tell you that you should've sent certified or another way to track, all of which cost extra, of course! Isn't it their job to get the mail to its destination? Why would I pay so much extra when 39 cents is supposed to get it there? They are so greedy!

2006-11-26 00:08:15 · 9 answers · asked by Jennifer 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

9 answers

People whine about the Postal Service, but it still provides the best value in service. Think about it: You can send a letter anywhere in the United States for only 39 cents. You can't do that with UPS, FedEx, or DHL.

Of course premium services should cost extra. It costs money to have tracking software and hardware. It costs money to ensure that a mail carrier gets a signature from a recipient. It costs money to ensure that a package reaches its destination within a tight time frame. When you send out a special package via Priority or Express, that package has to be taken out of the mainstream to ensure it gets to where it's supposed to go within the guaranteed time frame. It's no different from paying for reserved seating at a concert: You are paying to guarantee the package has a place on the truck or plane for the desired time. Otherwise, if space runs out, the package gets left behind and has to wait.

I don't think I have ever lost anything in the Postal Service system.

2006-11-26 00:23:43 · answer #1 · answered by Ryan R 6 · 0 0

The Postal Service is not really a government entity. They stopped being so after the reorganization of 1971. Back then it was the Post Office Department, and it was a Cabinet agency.

And 39 cents is a bargain compared to the rates charged by other industrialized nations.

I'm sorry you lost a piece of mail, but they handle billions per day, much more than any other country, and that's something that does not happen often. It would be impossible to make sure it NEVER happens.

2006-11-26 00:30:01 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

actually the post office is the only self reliant government branch that we have they, fund every thing from the stamps and other postal services that they offer. i think the entire government should run like it they don't need to raise our taxes to pay their salary's and thirty nine cents when ever i send a letter is a very small price to pay for the service they offer.

2006-11-26 05:49:32 · answer #3 · answered by cvgm702 3 · 0 0

They're not perfect but they've gotten the job done through sleet and snow. They are greedy but the trick is to have lots of one cent stamps on hand in case they raise the price again. 39 cents is still a deal compared to UPS and FEDEX.

2006-11-26 00:10:07 · answer #4 · answered by Reba K 6 · 3 0

I work in a letter shop that sends out about 300,000 pieces of mail a day.
All the postal employees that I deal with are very professional, know their jobs, do it to the best of their ability, and complain about their supervisors not having any experience in industry.
Please don't complain to them, nail the Postmaster in your area.

2006-11-26 00:18:23 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

USPS seems like a way to get letters around at very low cost. Send it UPS or FedEx and no doubt the letter would cost $10.00. You get the service you pay for.
Also, UPS and FedEx also loses packages all the time.

2006-11-26 00:11:47 · answer #6 · answered by Whoa_Phat 4 · 2 0

Its variety of interior the middle there. on the grounds that all of us pay for stamps and weighted postage, that would make it private. it somewhat is whether or not a central authority enterprise, i understand this because of the particularly tricky regimine to becaome a postal worker.

2016-10-13 03:31:34 · answer #7 · answered by cutburth 4 · 0 0

Here's to ya on that! Down with the lost office!!!

2006-11-26 00:17:17 · answer #8 · answered by Jeremy 4 · 0 1

No, the court system is worse. They legislate from the bench regardless of what the law actually states.

2006-11-26 00:09:51 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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