//I want to send a birthday card from Land's End to John o' Groats. Royal Mail will charge me 68p. Please tell me which carriers can compete with that, and how much they charge.//
You can send one over the internet for nothing. You can send it when you like, you don’t have to go out in the rain to post it, you are sure it will get there in time, the recipient can acknowledge it and thank you by return – also for nothing.
//Appointments,hospital letters, traffic fines etc. are another kettle of fish. These depend on a reliable service.//
There Is no way the NHS should be using snail mail to notify patients of appointments and results. They have a phone number for almost all their patients and e-mail addresses for many of them. Apart from its unreliability it is too expensive to send letters and the NHS (we are told) is skint.
The Interpretation Act provides a “presumption of service” for legal documents in criminal and some civil proceedings. The sender merely has to prove posting and the recipient has to rebut the presumption of delivery if he wants to claim he did not receive it. Some procedures involving Road Traffic Offences have already been adapted to accommodate electronic communication. It would not be beyond the wit of man to modify many of the procedures so that entire processes can be carried out electronically.
The CWU is living in the seventies when people had no choice but to use the mail service. Now they do and many of them already have or will alter their arrangements. Times they are a-changing and if the CWU does not realise this their members soon will.
//My postlady says she's exhausted from having to deliver the backlog.//
Did you perchance mention to her, tilly, that had she and her colleagues not gone on strike, there would not be a backlog.