ChatterBank0 min ago
Saturday Postal Service May Be Scrapped
For letters, anyway, the Royal Mail wants to deliver parcels only on Saturdays. That would suit me just fine. Official letters that need dealing with always seem to arrive on a Saturday when the offices are closed, leaving me stew over the weekend.
Would you miss receiving letters on Saturdays? https:/ /www.th eguardi an.com/ busines s/2020/ nov/26/ royal-m ail-clo ser-to- ending- saturda y-lette r-deliv eries-a fter-of com-rev iew
Would you miss receiving letters on Saturdays? https:/
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No best answer has yet been selected by barry1010. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.They've been talking about this for ages. I think they knocked the Saturday delivery on the head for two or three weeks where I live at the start of the pandemic. It wouldn't bother me too much. I don't receive much by snail mail and when sending anything (which is mainly confined to birthday cards etc.) I just assume that Saturday is a non working day anyway, so send it to arrive by Friday.
//My only concern would be that people may have their vaccination letters delayed.//
Which begs the question why are the invitations being made by post? Apart from the cost, there is no guarantee that the invite will reach the recipient. There are severe problems with the mail in many parts of the country. Very few people have no means of electronic communication. Just about everybody has either a landline or a mobile. Many have both as well as e-mail. My GP has my address, my landline number, my mobile number and my e-mail address. More than that, if an invitation is made electronically the recipient can respond promptly to inform the sender whether or not they will be attending. This could offset some of the problems that London is experiencing with large numbers of "no shows".
Which begs the question why are the invitations being made by post? Apart from the cost, there is no guarantee that the invite will reach the recipient. There are severe problems with the mail in many parts of the country. Very few people have no means of electronic communication. Just about everybody has either a landline or a mobile. Many have both as well as e-mail. My GP has my address, my landline number, my mobile number and my e-mail address. More than that, if an invitation is made electronically the recipient can respond promptly to inform the sender whether or not they will be attending. This could offset some of the problems that London is experiencing with large numbers of "no shows".
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