Scooter wrote:So why isn't FedEx or UPS allowed to place letters in the mailbox I paid for? Is there some kind of law? Because I'd gladly pay double what the PO charges for Fedex to handle my daily mail. They'd do a much better job.
The PO is the biggest crock of bull I've ever seen. "One low flat rate, if it fits it ships" You've gotta be effin' kidding me. The clerk always hits me with a dozen questions. How heavy is it? What's the destination? When do you want it to arrive? Simple, indeed.Post office=Government sanctioned failure.
Forgive my negativity, my posts arent usually this negative. I'm having a bad day.
Oh, and another thing. COUPON DAY That's when the PO crams a big bundle of loose trash in my mailbox that's impossible to remove without losing in the wind. If a private individual tried to mail such a bundle the postmaster would call homeland security on his azz. Yet big marketing agencies can mail whatever they want (At one low, flat rate no doubt.). That's your postal service. Your government at work. Ain't it grand?
Article I, Section 8, Clause 7 of the United States Constitution, known as the Postal Clause or the Postal Power, empowers Congress "To establish Post Offices and post Roads".
With that power comes responsibility.
Unlike the USPS, FedEx and UPS are allowed to not deliver to far out rural homes. And, they can charge more to deliver to rural communities than they do for urban deliveries.
The Post Office MUST deliver mail to outlying areas for the same price as they charge to deliver in urban areas.
Besides, if any company could put mail in your mailbox, it would be stuffed everyday with garbage by companies that do NOTHING other than junk mail.
BTW, I use those flat-rate envelopes and boxes all the time, and never have issues with the PO. Again, I do my labels and postage online, and don't ever need to talk to a PO desk clerk. I drop my boxes off, and walk out the door. Done.
CD