I have to agree, Gromit.
Whilst many postal workers are hard working, a large proportion of them are not and they (and their �Spanish Practices�) are eagerly supported by their union, the CWU. (A former General Secretary of the CWU is one time Marxist sympathiser, Tesco shelf-stacker and postman, now Secretary of State for Health, Alan Johnson).
The CWU has been probably the most intransigent of all trade unions in recent years. Attempts to make the mail service more efficient have been continually blocked by them and yes, even Mrs Thatcher did not manage to persuade them to change their ways.
The chickens seem finally to have begun their long journey home to roost. Whilst they have been away the victims of the CWU�s intransigence have mainly been the mail service�s customers. Many of them have found cheaper, more reliable alternatives, but many � mainly householders � have no such luxury and now suffer probably one of the worst postal services in Western Europe.
But the biggest victims will be the very people the CWU says it wants to protect � the postal workers themselves. Instead of a gradual decline in staff numbers, properly managed to minimise the impact, they may now find that large numbers of them are thrown out of work at short notice with little recompense.
Much as I dislike �Lord� Madelson, it is no use shooting the messenger. This reform has been long overdue; the report to which My Good Lord has responded was in the making long before he returned to the fold of the Great and the Good, and if he had not reached today�s conclusions, then somebody else would have.
Meanwhile the Communication Workers Union said its members in Liverpool, Coventry, Stockport, Oldham, Oxford, Crewe and Bolton would walk out on 19 December - the day before the last Christmas posting day for first-class letters.