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#1
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"Brimstone" wrote in message
... Tony Wilson wrote: Of all the horrors of the early years of tendering in London, something which really bugged me (out of all proportion if I'm honest!) was the taking away of our red buses. This was particularly true where I lived at the time as even the route London Buses retained were transformed into the horrendous Bexlybus operation. It really felt like they were taking some of our London heritage away, which is all the more sensitive when the Royal Mail tells everybody you live in Kent. Are you suggesting the Royal Mail is wrong? As far as I'm aware Bexley has always been in Kent, it's only the grasping of London suburbia that has caused Bexley to become attached to the metropolis. 1. If you live in Bexley, how much of your council tax goes to Kent County Council? 2. The Royal Mail dropped the requirement for county names in addresses many years ago. Type your postcode into their address finder. Peter. |
#2
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![]() "Peter Goodland" wrote in message ... "Brimstone" wrote in message ... Tony Wilson wrote: Of all the horrors of the early years of tendering in London, something which really bugged me (out of all proportion if I'm honest!) was the taking away of our red buses. This was particularly true where I lived at the time as even the route London Buses retained were transformed into the horrendous Bexlybus operation. It really felt like they were taking some of our London heritage away, which is all the more sensitive when the Royal Mail tells everybody you live in Kent. Are you suggesting the Royal Mail is wrong? As far as I'm aware Bexley has always been in Kent, it's only the grasping of London suburbia that has caused Bexley to become attached to the metropolis. 1. If you live in Bexley, how much of your council tax goes to Kent County Council? As much as those who live in Medway pay. So? Kent the "entity" is more than just the administrative KCC area. 2. The Royal Mail dropped the requirement for county names in addresses many years ago. Type your postcode into their address finder. And most post still uses the county field. Nick |
#3
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Peter Goodland wrote:
"Brimstone" wrote... Tony Wilson wrote: Of all the horrors of the early years of tendering in London, something which really bugged me (out of all proportion if I'm honest!) was the taking away of our red buses. This was particularly true where I lived at the time as even the route London Buses retained were transformed into the horrendous Bexlybus operation. It really felt like they were taking some of our London heritage away, which is all the more sensitive when the Royal Mail tells everybody you live in Kent. Are you suggesting the Royal Mail is wrong? As far as I'm aware Bexley has always been in Kent, it's only the grasping of London suburbia that has caused Bexley to become attached to the metropolis. 1. If you live in Bexley, how much of your council tax goes to Kent County Council? None now, but AIUI some did before the GLA was created, as KCC were responsible for some of the roads. 2. The Royal Mail dropped the requirement for county names in addresses many years ago. Type your postcode into their address finder. A significant proportion of mail is still hand sorted, and that is still done by county. |
#4
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"Aidan Stanger" wrote in message
... 1. If you live in Bexley, how much of your council tax goes to Kent County Council? None now, but AIUI some did before the GLA was created, as KCC were responsible for some of the roads. 2. The Royal Mail dropped the requirement for county names in addresses many years ago. Type your postcode into their address finder. A significant proportion of mail is still hand sorted, and that is still done by county. Are you sure ? The last time I was in a medium-sized sorting office, all manual sorting was based on the PostTown and the first half of the Postcode only. That, plus the fact that counties are now not part of the recommended postal address, makes me doubt your statement. -- Richard |
#5
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Richard Rundle wrote:
"Aidan Stanger" wrote... 1. If you live in Bexley, how much of your council tax goes to Kent County Council? None now, but AIUI some did before the GLA was created, as KCC were responsible for some of the roads. 2. The Royal Mail dropped the requirement for county names in addresses many years ago. Type your postcode into their address finder. A significant proportion of mail is still hand sorted, and that is still done by county. Are you sure ? The last time I was in a medium-sized sorting office, all manual sorting was based on the PostTown and the first half of the Postcode only. That, plus the fact that counties are now not part of the recommended postal address, makes me doubt your statement. It was true when I worked for them (back when they were called Consignia) but I suppose they could've changed it since then (though somehow I doubt it). Your statement is partly correct - they were sorted by post town. However, there are too many post towns for single stage manual sorting, so letters were sorted in two stages. Primary sorting was done mainly by county (or in some cases, groups of counties). There were also boxes for London sectors (W,N,SE etc) and the busiest London postcodes (mainly in Central London) had their own boxes, as did several cities. Where the county boundary did not match the postcode boundary (e.g. the part of Bedfordshire with an MK postcode) they generally went with the county rather than the postcode. I can recall only one exception: anything with a CH postcode went in the Cheshire box, even the places that were actually in Wales! Anything ambiguous (such as letters addressed to Keston or Kingston without a postcode or county) went in the "Blind" box. |
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