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Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
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Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
"Recliner" wrote in message
... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-26534175 Will that be a variation of the Post Office taking everyone for a ride with the guarantee that 1st Class Post will arrive by 10AM the next day? |
Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
On Tue, 11 Mar 2014 23:19:23 -0000, "gareth"
wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-26534175 Will that be a variation of the Post Office taking everyone for a ride with the guarantee that 1st Class Post will arrive by 10AM the next day? Where does it guarantee that First class mail will be delivered by 10am? On the Royal Mail Web site, it just says, "Aims to deliver the next working day including Saturdays". |
Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
On Wed, 12 Mar 2014 12:38:51 +0000, Recliner
wrote: On Tue, 11 Mar 2014 23:19:23 -0000, "gareth" wrote: "Recliner" wrote in message ... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-26534175 Will that be a variation of the Post Office taking everyone for a ride with the guarantee that 1st Class Post will arrive by 10AM the next day? Where does it guarantee that First class mail will be delivered by 10am? On the Royal Mail Web site, it just says, "Aims to deliver the next working day including Saturdays". It looks like confusion with e.g. "Special Delivery" which has two options of "guaranteed by 1pm" and "guaranteed by 9am". |
Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
In message , at 17:36:23 on
Wed, 12 Mar 2014, Charles Ellson remarked: Will that be a variation of the Post Office taking everyone for a ride with the guarantee that 1st Class Post will arrive by 10AM the next day? Where does it guarantee that First class mail will be delivered by 10am? On the Royal Mail Web site, it just says, "Aims to deliver the next working day including Saturdays". It looks like confusion with e.g. "Special Delivery" which has two options of "guaranteed by 1pm" and "guaranteed by 9am". SD also seems to have an informal "not before 7am", just so they don't wake people up too early! As for the rest of the deliveries, they do seem to have crept from 7.30am to noon over the last 20yrs (my anecdata). -- Roland Perry |
Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
On 12/03/2014 19:49, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 17:36:23 on Wed, 12 Mar 2014, Charles Ellson remarked: Will that be a variation of the Post Office taking everyone for a ride with the guarantee that 1st Class Post will arrive by 10AM the next day? Where does it guarantee that First class mail will be delivered by 10am? On the Royal Mail Web site, it just says, "Aims to deliver the next working day including Saturdays". It looks like confusion with e.g. "Special Delivery" which has two options of "guaranteed by 1pm" and "guaranteed by 9am". SD also seems to have an informal "not before 7am", just so they don't wake people up too early! It has to get to the office and be processed before it can be issued to the driver. As for the rest of the deliveries, they do seem to have crept from 7.30am to noon over the last 20yrs (my anecdata). Royal Mail went to first and second deliveries to just one some time ago. The last letter is in theory about 14.00, which counts as lunchtime. The first may be something like 10.30, but it will depend where you are on the round. You may get post earlier or later than this if the postie is covering for a colleague. -- Phil Cook |
Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
In message , at 20:14:29 on Wed, 12
Mar 2014, Phil Cook remarked: SD also seems to have an informal "not before 7am", just so they don't wake people up too early! It has to get to the office and be processed before it can be issued to the driver. But even if they get it earlier, the drivers I talked to (in my PJs) said they didn't try to deliver before 7am. As for the rest of the deliveries, they do seem to have crept from 7.30am to noon over the last 20yrs (my anecdata). Royal Mail went to first and second deliveries to just one some time ago. The last letter is in theory about 14.00, which counts as lunchtime. The first may be something like 10.30, but it will depend where you are on the round. So they have half the number of deliveries, and the first is a minimum of around three hours later than before. This is why people think they aren't getting as good a service any more. -- Roland Perry |
Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
"Phil Cook" wrote Royal Mail went to first and second deliveries to just one some time ago. The last letter is in theory about 14.00, which counts as lunchtime. The first may be something like 10.30, but it will depend where you are on the round. You may get post earlier or later than this if the postie is covering for a colleague. How it used to be: When my grandparents were courting, before WW1, my grandfather was in the Army, and didn't know until during the morning whether he'd be free to meet my grandmother that evening - so he'd send her a postcard which would be delivered during the afternoon. This was in Cork. Peter |
Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
In message , at 20:36:47 on
Wed, 12 Mar 2014, Peter Masson remarked: How it used to be: When my grandparents were courting, before WW1, my grandfather was in the Army, and didn't know until during the morning whether he'd be free to meet my grandmother that evening - so he'd send her a postcard which would be delivered during the afternoon. This was in Cork. In London in the 40's you could post a letter in the morning informing someone you'd be round for afternoon tea. By the 70's you could still post a letter at 9pm in a town in the Southeast and expect it to be delivered to someone in another town by 8am. -- Roland Perry |
Plans approved to open Mail Rail 'secret Tube' as ride
"Roland Perry" wrote In London in the 40's you could post a letter in the morning informing someone you'd be round for afternoon tea. By the 70's you could still post a letter at 9pm in a town in the Southeast and expect it to be delivered to someone in another town by 8am. In 1970 I could post a letter at the main post office in Oxford up to midnight and it would be delivered in South East London at breakfast time. Peter |
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