A postman who delayed almost 25,000 postal packets when he could not cope with the job was sentenced to eight months in jail suspended for two years today.
ic Wales
8 comments:
Anonymous
said...
We have those kind of people in the US Postal Service, too. Only, we call them managers, supervisors, and worse yet, 204b's.....say wot!!!!!!
The best way to describe this IDIOT is LAZINESS BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT. Now we know the real reason this person cannot hold down a full time job. Yes, we have the same people here in the U>S. Postal Service as mentioned in a previous comment section. This person is lucky that he got the sentence that he got. The truth is that he needs real jail time for the crime that he committed, and not the bleading heart sentence that he got. The punishment did not fit the crime. FROM LUMP'S LUMP
we have similar folks in the US, when they refuse to deliver mail unless it has the full complete correct address, though the customers have been at their address for decades, we recycle more mail at times then is delivered, management knows this is happening and does nothing to correct it other than saying, "if you know where it goes, deliver it" and then not following up to see if it actually being delivered.
RE:"we have similar folks in the US, when they refuse to deliver mail unless it has the full complete correct address"
Some mailers want the correct address (ie, address service requested). If you don't notify the sender of the correct address, you are denying the USPS of the revenue they generate from these pieces. The only way that these "wrong" addresses are going to be changed is if they are returned for correction. As far as regular mail, most people that receive the piece uncorrected, are unaware that there is a problem with it. In the case of a credit card bill, I've delivered them month after month with the incorrect address, and finally got a chance to mention it to the recipient, only to have them say, "Oh, I didn't even notice." I explain that there is a place inside on the part that they mail back for address changes. The next month I get it again, wrong address. Then it goes back "no such number." Mysteriously the following month it comes correct. With the new systems they are developing, the "full, complete, correct address" will be necessary for prompt delivery.
8 comments:
We have those kind of people in the US Postal Service, too. Only, we call them managers, supervisors, and worse yet, 204b's.....say wot!!!!!!
Plenty of them in the crafts, too.
Yeah, right on. Those are the 204b's I referred to in my above post.
Newman ??????? He must have not delivered on the days that it was raining. (Seinfeld humor)
The best way to describe this IDIOT is LAZINESS BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT. Now we know the real reason this person cannot hold down a full time job. Yes, we have the same people here in the U>S. Postal Service as mentioned in a previous comment section. This person is lucky that he got the sentence that he got. The truth is that he needs real jail time for the crime that he committed, and not the bleading heart sentence that he got. The punishment did not fit the crime.
FROM LUMP'S LUMP
Did anyone notice this happened in Wales?
we have similar folks in the US, when they refuse to deliver mail unless it has the full complete correct address, though the customers have been at their address for decades, we recycle more mail at times then is delivered, management knows this is happening and does nothing to correct it other than saying, "if you know where it goes, deliver it" and then not following up to see if it actually being delivered.
RE:"we have similar folks in the US, when they refuse to deliver mail unless it has the full complete correct address"
Some mailers want the correct address (ie, address service requested). If you don't notify the sender of the correct address, you are denying the USPS of the revenue they generate from these pieces. The only way that these "wrong" addresses are going to be changed is if they are returned for correction. As far as regular mail, most people that receive the piece uncorrected, are unaware that there is a problem with it. In the case of a credit card bill, I've delivered them month after month with the incorrect address, and finally got a chance to mention it to the recipient, only to have them say, "Oh, I didn't even notice." I explain that there is a place inside on the part that they mail back for address changes. The next month I get it again, wrong address. Then it goes back "no such number." Mysteriously the following month it comes correct. With the new systems they are developing, the "full, complete, correct address" will be necessary for prompt delivery.
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